Do You Like My Tight Sweater?

Do You Like My Tight Sweater? is the first album by the electronic/dance duo Moloko, released in October 1995. The title of the album is derived from the singer Róisín Murphy's chat-up line to Mark Brydon at a party in 1995: "Do you like my tight sweater? See how it fits my body!" A romantic and professional relationship between the two continued for several years after. Do You Like My Tight Sweater? combined three tracks from a 1995 independently released EP Where is the What if the What is in Why? with fourteen new recordings. It was reported by Billboard that in 1996 total sales have reached 100,000 copies. As of 2003 it has sold over 250,000 copies worldwide.

This is the only Moloko album to receive a release in the United States (via Warner Bros. Records) as part of the electronica hype of the late 1990s. The album's first single, "Fun for Me", was used on the soundtrack of the 1997 film Batman and Robin, and was used as the theme for a Lucky Strike advertisement.

The album was certified silver by the British Phonographic Industry in July 2013, for UK sales exceeding 60,000 copies.

Track listing
All songs written and produced by Brydon and Murphy.
 * 1) "Fun for Me" – 5:08
 * 2) "Tight Sweater" – 0:15
 * 3) "Day for Night" – 5:23
 * 4) "I Can't Help Myself" – 5:44
 * 5) "Circus" – 0:19
 * 6) "Lotus Eaters" – 7:32
 * 7) "On My Horsey" – 0:34
 * 8) "Dominoid" – 4:11
 * 9) "Party Weirdo" – 7:01
 * 10) "Tubeliar" – 0:25
 * 11) "Ho Humm" – 5:38
 * 12) "Butterfly 747" – 4:30
 * 13) "Dirty Monkey" – 0:23
 * 14) "Killa Bunnies" – 2:19
 * 15) "Boo" – 5:47
 * 16) "Where is the What if the What is in Why?" – 4:16
 * 17) "Who Shot the Go-Go Dancer?" – 6:58

Singles

 * "Where is the What if the What is in Why?" (#189 AUS )
 * "Fun for Me"
 * "Dominoid" (#65 UK, #148 AUS )
 * "Fun for Me" (re-issue) (#36 UK, #4 U.S. Hot Dance Club Play )
 * "Day for Night" (#37 U.S. Hot Dance Club Play )

Personnel

 * Róisín Murphy – vocals
 * Mark Brydon – bass guitar, keyboards, guitars, programming, production