representative of American Recordings did not foresee the album as being viable in any mainstream music stores, and some retailers went as far as to ban it from being sold.After the album was released, Frusciante played three small performances, and participated in a few magazine interviews to promote the album; explaining in one interview that people would only be able to understand his work if “their heads are capable of tripping out”. At one point shortly after release, Frusciante began searching for a string quartet to play the album with him on tour. The idea was eventually discarded when he could not find a band that “understands why Ringo Starr is such a great drummer, can play Stravinsky, and also smokes pot.” The concept of a tour was ultimately abandoned as well, due to Frusciante’s diminishing health.
Niandra Lades and Usually Just a T-Shirt was not widely reviewed, but yielded a generally positive response from critics. Steve Huey of Allmusic, who rated the album four out of five stars, said that “[the album was] an intriguing and unexpected departure from Frusciante’s work with the Chili Peppers”, and that “the sparse arrangements of the first half help set the stage for the gossamer guitar work later on.”He went on to say that Usually Just a T-Shirt—the latter half of the album—contained “pleasant psychedelic instrumentals with plenty of backward-guitar effects.” Ned Raggett, also of Allmusic, noted that “there’s nothing quite so stunning as [Frusciante’s] magnificent remake of Bad Brains’ ‘The Big Takeover’.” Adam Williams of PopMatters said the album “fall[s] somewhere between madness and brilliance”. He went on to compare Frusciante to Syd Barrett, and felt it was a “hint at a deeply cerebral artist looking within for