A year later (February '91) STORMCLOUDS were back with yet another release, "Psychotronic", (again on ACID TAPES). Steve: "This was a tribute to all my favourite movies and TV shows. Also I wanted to do an album that was keyboard dominated rather than heavy with fuzz guitars. I also wanted a slightly more otherworldly/ psychedelic feel to the whole thing." Reviews of "Psychotronic" were mixed. Hairy Hi-fi: "Tacky Sci-Fi and psych beat in the best 'Clouds tape yet. Several spacy 'Clouds classics and some newies are fed into, a continuous programme of cute galactic distortion." Midnight In Hell: "A collection of lightweight songs intended as a tribute to the group's favourite SF TV and movies. The fact that the songs all sound the same becomes very irritating after a while." Unhinged: "Initially this sounded a weaker release than their normal standard because the roar of fuzz is gone. The whole project developed from them acquiring a keyboard with a rhythm box and writing to fit its constrictions. The songs mostly come from Sci-Fi films, titles like "Galaxina", "The Boy With The X-Ray Eyes", "The Day The Earth Stood Still" or the obvious Star Trek reference in "He's Dead Jim". If anything the heavy use of echo and the softly bubbling keyboards makes this more underwater, like something out of Stingray than something out of space. The songs are all cut about with sound steals from the relevant films - like being hit by a kaleidoscope of ear camera angles. The keyboards strangeness makes this more like a fairground, listeners riding in a daze on a carousel, Louise singing in subdued tones like she's not sure whose dream she's in. Where this scores over other 'out of your senses' releases of the last few years is that STORMCLOUDS never belabour the point, allowing the inbuilt dislocation of the structure to make this queasy listening rather then the heavy psyc tack of as good as shouting "HEY THIS IS WEIRD!" in your face all the time. And, as you can trust by now, the songs all fall inside the three minute limit, totally safe from the rock opera/concept album elongation." Following this Unhinged magazine put out "Junk" a collection of demos and outtakes from earlier tapes. Henry Race reviewed it in Unhinged: "It provides a worthy insight into the peculiar world of a band whose songs are as much influenced by Rupert Bear, Rip Van Winkle, The Space Family Robinson and Mick Farren as they are by the Ramones, Jesus And Mary Chain. T. Rex and The Archies. - a combination that I'll settle for any day. Almost all of the ten tracks on this tape demonstrate a frighteningly well developed pop sensibility, you know the stuff, a handful of chords, chilling harmonies and hook lines in the chorus that you'd kill to have written yourself. Paul Ricketts had this to say: This collected together a bunch of unreleased songs such as "Metropolis", "The New Gods", where Steve shows flashes of lead guitar, almost the first time he's stepped outside the Johnny Ramone guitar ethos of 'chord only and buzz', "Jellyclouds" a fond memory of their days in the JELLYCLOUDS with the strange claim in the lyrics that they were jumping up and down: as far as I recall they barely moved on stage, "Remember" a tribute to the long forgotten Michael Stipe, "Winter's Frozen Hand" and "Santa Is A Spaceman" and alternative takes of "Down To The Sea", "To Sleep, Perchance To Dream", with its keyline in STORMCLOUDS philosophy that "Life is just a dream", "When Worlds Collide", and "Let's Talk About Love".