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The Flaming Lips - Embryonic


Flaming Lips - Embryonic

Album Details

  • Artist: The Flaming Lips
  • Album: Embryonic
  • Label:
  • Year of Release: 2009
  • ME Rating: 2 out of 5
  • Reviewed by: tosnob on 2009-10-28
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I guess I'm just going to have to face it, gone are the days when you could rely on the Flaming Lips to provide you with quirky, humorous pop songs. The new double album, Embryonic, may be the final nail in that coffin.

This latest expansion of the Oklahoma group's use of electronics and programming has sucked the life out of a band whose music had once been simultaneously catchy and elegant. In it's place we get unstructured clatter ("Worm Mountain", "Convinced of the Hex") with a healthy side dish of drone ("See the Leaves", "The Sparrow Looks Up At the Machine").

While there are a handful of intriguing experiments, like Karen O's animal noises on "I Can Be a Frog" and the slight World rhythm of "Scorpio Sword", these efforts generally disintegrate into seemingly interminable noodling. The alternative isn't much better though. "Powerless", for example, seems to be a half-thought out ambient track which sags into a spacey snoozer.

On the plus side, "Aquarius Sabotage" and "Gemini Syringes" both combine clatter with a glorious twinkle to decent effect. "Watching The Planets" and "Silver Trembling Hands" lean on more conventional song structures resulting in the most memorable rumblings of the discs.

Alas, after exploring Embryonic if fear it may be time to give up the Flaming Lips.

TO Snob

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Review:
on 2010-05-11 Jonathan_Kroening Said:

For all the things Embryonic does so well, too much of the material is unborn song ideas.

After twenty-six years as a group, Wayne Coyne and friends are still making relevant music -- as relevant as experimental spacey rock can be. With their twelfth studio LP, neo-psychedelia band The Flaming Lips have again received widespread attention for their work. Embryonic is the first double album the band has attempted and can be both inventive and indulgent, as Coyne openly admits that the two-disc format gave them the freedom to sprawl a bit. So sprawl they did. At eighteen tracks and seventy minutes, Embryonic is obscure and messy, yet sustains a clear concept overall.

In an interview with Billboard, Coyne stated that part of the reason he likes some of his favorite albums (exs. The Beatles White Album, Led Zeppelins Physical Graffiti) is that theyre not focused. Theyre kind of like a free-for-all and go everywhere. Using this as motivation for their double-LP, The Flaming Lips reveal their self-indulgence. This isnt abstract art, and as such, Embryonic needs a level of focus. There is a definite theme found in the music, however the problem is that with so many tracks, some of them needless freak-out vibe jams (Aquarius Sabotage, Your Bats), the album wanders a bit off track and the concept is lost on all but those who try hard to find it.

As its title would suggest, Embryonic is about the unborn. As a concept album about the nature of humankind, human motivation, desire, freedom, and choice, The Flaming Lips offer a warning lesson to the unborn embryonic being about the perils of life and the threat of evil (Evil, If, Sagittarius Silver Announcement). Its a wonder that they are able to carry this theme through such a sporadic journey, and for that their efforts are commendable. Yet had the track listing been pared down and tightened up, the concept would so permeate each musical device that its impression would be inescapable.

See The Leaves is one of the first tracks on the record that doesnt come across as an unfinished idea. Unlike most of the songs on Embryonic that feel like they are short bass riffs stretched into 2-3 minute trances, its complete in its expression. Its lyrical content revolves around the circularity of life and the music contains more than just a singular chord repetition. Another track that exhibits multiple parts is the standout Silver Trembling Hands. Moving through a motivated bass line, it is one of the few songs to have a recognizable verse-chorus feel.

The crunchy distorted bass driven tracks are generally the strongest of the bunch, such as The Sparrow Looks Up At The Machine and Worm Mountain -- the latter a collaboration with MGMT -- and there are also some easily overlooked pieces that are much more subtle. One such song being The Impulse, a well disguised pop construct, that is uncommonly effective in its focus on melody by making the words of secondary importance. Its at this point that it feels like the album is getting a bit lengthy. The Impulse wouldve made an excellent closer to the record, but songs such as Silver Trembling Hands and Watching The Planets have yet to be explored and it becomes unmistakable that a tightening up of the track listing wouldve been appropriate.

Embryonic doesnt claim to be accessible. When is psychedelia ever accessible? It requires a training in experimental marathons to make it through this album in one sitting. Further, it takes many loops through the track listing to familiarize oneself with the convoluted structure. Its not that the album is failure in whole, its just a bit overreaching. Many of the ideas are incomplete and are only faintly held together by a strong lyrical thread. While its entirely possible it was the intention of The Flaming Lips to use unborn musical snippets to elevate the concept of a yet unborn embryo, Embryonic doesnt emerge having enough fleshed out parts.

2.5 / 5 stars

-Jonathan Kroening
http://www.itsjustmusic.net
Rating: 5/10



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