Someone Else's Déjà Vu is the third full-length studio album by American alternative indie rock band Son, Ambulance. It was released on July 8, 2008 via Saddle Creek Records. Recording sessions took place at ARC Studios in December 2007. Production was handled by Joe Knapp, Jeff Koster and A. J. Mogis.
The album is divided into four parts: A View of Minstrel Town (tracks 1-3), About the Public Square (tracks 4-7), To A Deserted Town (tracks 9-11), and Farewell Pulse (the final two tracks). Track 8, "And" (a forty-three second noise track), is not included in the list (though one would assume it to finish About the Public Square).
Someone Else's Déjà Vu was met with generally favourable reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 67, based on nine reviews.[1]
AllMusic's Tim Sendra praised the album, saying "it's too bad such a fine record has to end with a misfire, but you can just hit stop before you get there and be completely satisfied with the really good album Son, Ambulance have crafted".[2] Andrew Earles of Spin wrote: "Omaha-based multi-instrumentalist Joe Knapp spent three years making Someone Else's Déjà Vu, and the album is another reminder that lush studio-reliant soft and prog rock of the late '70s can still offer legitimate inspiration".[6]
In mixed reviews, Ian Cohen of Pitchfork found that the album "would've benefitted from Knapp making a stronger claim of ownership to his lofty visions".[4] Chris Beanland of Drowned in Sound stated: "the man wants so much to create a '70s-apeing epic, but fails. Yet that's not to say this is a bad record per se, it's just that Knapp's whole Son, Ambulance project has a good few obvious clangers dragging it down".[3] Bob Marshall of Tiny Mix Tapes called "Knapp and Koster’s experiment was more failure than success".[7]