Flaming Lips - Embryonic

Flaming Lips
Embryonic


Released 2009 on Warner Bros
Reviewed by Shiffi Le Soy, 23/10/2009ce


Disc One

1. "Convinced of the Hex"
2. "The Sparrow Looks Up at the Machine"
3. "Evil"
4. "Aquarius Sabotage"
5. "See the Leaves"
6. "If" 2:05
7. "Gemini Syringes" (featuring Thorsten Wörmann and Karen O)
8. "Your Bats"
9. "Powerless"

Disc Two

10. "The Ego's Last Stand"
11. "I Can Be a Frog" (featuring Karen O)
12. "Sagittarius Silver Announcement"
13. "Worm Mountain" (featuring MGMT)
14. "Scorpio Sword"
15. "The Impulse"
16. "Silver Trembling Hands"
17. "Virgo Self-Esteem Broadcast" (featuring Thorsten Wörmann)
18. "Watching the Planets" (featuring Karen O)

The more I learn, the more I don't know. Except that a little learning is a dangerous thing.

But if I'm sure of one thing, it's that at this stage in their career the Flaming Lips have nothing to prove to anyone.

Though not a huge commercial success, their hypnotic, experimental pop has justifiably earned them critical praise and The Soft Bulletin stands as perhaps the last truly great experimental pop record of the twentieth century.

It can't have been easy following up that masterstroke. So wrapped up is Flaming Lips' identity in that blissful, self-defining tour de force, they probably felt they had to run quite a ways to find themselves. Thus after Bulletin we got the flawed genius of Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots (2002) and the meandering cul-de-sac of At War With the Mystics (2008).



The band have heralded their new double album Embryonic as their White Album. Like that fab landmark it's a great single LP padded with self-indulgent – though not necessarily unlistenable - filler. And like their own Yoshimi it's a half-realized concept album stuffed with free-form prog-rock jams and wig-out fantasies.

It's also packed with empathy, love of life and a philosophy which is decidedly 21st century in its naturalistic world view. A psychedelic jam session for hippies, brights and eco-warriors, if you will.

Best of all, Embryonic is a head-spinning return to form.

This will come as a mighty relief to those of us who were beginning to fear that the steady decline of the band's recorded output since the astral heights of Bulletin and the better bits of Yoshimi was irreversible.

Happily nothing could be further from the truth. Like life itself, where chaos and uncertainty periodically give way to moments of clarity, Embryonic's random sense impressions somehow organize themselves into a compelling philosophy. This feeling is reflected track-by-track throughout this infuriatingly uneven and brilliant album.

Opener Convinced of the Hex is a case in point as the band throw caution to the wind and dump anything and everything into the mix. Nothing seems too far out to make the final cut, yet Hex sets out the central thesis of the album in no uncertain terms: "That's the difference between us / I believe in nothing / And you're convinced of the hex."

Just as the best science fiction leads to the big questions, The Sparrow Looks Up At The Machine grapples with the meaning of experience. A dead ringer for Yoshimi's sublime Are You a Hypnotist, the song presses home Wayne Coyne's obtuse secularism: "What does it mean/To dream what you dream / To believe what you've seen? / Why do we feel 
/ To try to find real / Underneath a machine?"

Then there's the eco-grunge of See the Leaves, one of the record's key statements. Bereft of hope and love, the song's conflicted protagonist refuses to believe life has no end as she sees the natural world decomposing and re-emerging around her.

The title of Embryonic reminds us that humankind is still in its infancy and has barely started to fulfil its emotional potential. It also makes perfect sense when you realize how many of these tracks seem barely developed from their rudimentary beginnings. The magical faux-naivete of If - multi-instrumentalist Steven Drozd invoking the ghost of Skip Spence – feels like an audio verite moment that went wonderfully right:

"People are evil, it's true
But on the other side, they can be gentle too
If they decide
But they don't always decide
We live on the impulses
Love is powerful
But not as powerful as evil."

But while inspired improvisation preserves the freshness of the moment, it occasionally leads to throwaway ditties like Scorpio Sword, which sounds like Syd Barrett on a bad day. And half-realized jams like Powerless bring to mind the Lips' origins as a spaced out head band.

Having said that, this is the Flaming Lips, so hope is never far away. Post-Nietzschean popsters par excellence, the fearless freaks continue to ask the big questions, attempting to reconcile the unimaginable vastness of our inner and outer worlds with the miracle of existence.

Like previous Flaming Lips records, Embryonic is filled with references to planets, nature, technology and philosophical riddles. Its theme will be familiar to Lips fans: the struggle of the modern human to negotiate the impasse between magic and mathematics in order to overcome evil and approach a transcendent reality. Thus Sagittarius Silver Announcement spookily exhumes the ghost of Ian Curtis to announce "We can be free / We can be like they are / We can be one with the silver machine."

In typical Wayne Coyne style, The Ego's Last Stand celebrates the mystery of a sunbeam, while Worm Mountain invokes the wonder of creation in its litany of frogs, bears and mountains.

Insisting that our cosmic solitude be seen as a source of wonder, Flaming Lips stand with the avatars of the new naturalism as they stand up to the challenge facing a post-religious world: to find meaning in a godless universe while avoiding the pitfalls of ennui and nihilism.

We can do this, they suggest, by immersing ourselves in a kind of serene eco-mysticism, good old-fashioned love and peace, and a healthy dose of shit-kicking rock 'n' roll. They're all part of the same thing, and if you've ever held a flower in your hand, beheld a sunrise, or heard a Flaming Lips record, I have a feeling you'll know exactly what I'm talking about.


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