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WATCH THE FLAMING LIPS COVER A DAVID BOWIE CHRISTMAS SONG

READ MORE: Pitchfork

They perform Bowie and Bing Crosby’s “Peace on Earth/Little Drummer Boy” medley in a new music video

by Matthew Strauss
Associate Editor
December 20, 2018

The Flaming Lips have shared a new music video in which they cover David Bowie and Bing Crosby’s Christmas medley “Peace on Earth/Little Drummer Boy.” The Lips recorded and filmed their version at Wayne Coyne’s Pink Floor Studios in Oklahoma City. Watch the trippy visuals, directed by Coyne and George Salisbury, below.

WATCH HERE

posted by derek brown - Dec 20, 2018 - 0 comments

THE FLAMING LIPS SCHEDULE UNDERGROUND NYE PARTY

READ MORE: Jambands

Known as the home of PBS’s Bluegrass Underground, The Caverns in Pelham, Tenn. will host The Flaming Lips for a subterranean New Year’s celebration on Dec. 31. The underground venue dates back millions of years and sits below the base of Montagle Mountain.

The Flaming Lips will be joined by opening act Uni for their one-off New Year’s celebration, and VIP/Hotel packages will be available starting on Saturday, Sept. 22 at 9:00 a.m. CT.

General onsale will start on Tuesday, Sept. 25 at 11:00 a.m. CT.

posted by derek brown - Dec 14, 2018 - 0 comments

FLAMING LIPS’ WAYNE COYNE CREATES PSYCHEDELIC DESIGN FOR WRAP UP HOMELESS CAMPAIGN

READ MORE: The City Sentinel

By Darla Shelden
City Sentinel Reporter

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK – The 2018 Wrap Up Homelessness Campaign is now underway giving Oklahoma City residents an oppotunity to help those who are transitioning through homelessness.

For the third year in a row, the Curbside Chronicle has partnered with local artists to design holiday wrapping paper for sale to the public. The wrapping paper is sold by vendors for The Curbside Chronicle, a program of the Oklahoma City Homeless Alliance.
The Curbside Chronicle is the state’s first and only “street paper” created to provide both a voice and employment opportunities for people who are homeless. Sales of the Chronicle enables people to earn enough money to get into housing and end their homelessness.

The holiday wrapping paper has been created by professional Oklahoma artists with designs ranging from traditional to funky holiday themes. Each package includes five 24″x36″ sheets of wrapping paper and is sold for prices ranging from $8 to $20.
Local artists include Kris Kanaly, Katelynn Knick, Aditi Panchal, JUURI, Marissa Raglin, Betty Refour, Emily Hamm, Tony Thunder, Arjan Jager and Mark, a Curbside vendor.

“I wanted to make sure my design didn’t resemble any of the other artists,” Tony posted on Facebook. “That’s when I decided to illustrate something so original and off the wall that there would be no way of that ever happening. I called in E.T. and dressed him in iconic Christmas movie costumes. The rest is history.
“

In addition, this year a special package design will feature custom artwork by Wayne Coyne, lead singer of the Flaming Lips. Known for his eccentric art, Coyne’s wrapping paper will be sold separately.

Packages of wrapping paper can be purchased directly from Curbside vendors who are transitioning out of homelessness. Individuals selling the wrapping paper will be easily recognizable wearing their green Curbside Chronicle vests. They can be found selling the Chronicle at intersections, sidewalks, public spaces and events throughout Oklahoma City.

Packages will be available at local retailers throughout the metro area like DNA Galleries and various holiday events such as the Indie Trunk Show. This year, wrapping paper will also be sold each weekend at the Holiday Pop-Up Shops in the Midtown OKC area.
“The wrapping paper is a great way to make your gifts extra special this year,” said Ranya Forgotson, program director of The Curbside Chronicle at the Homeless Alliance. 

”It features unique, local art and directly supports people who are working their way out of homelessness. You’ll not only be giving a gift to your friend or family member, but you’ll be giving the gift of empowerment to someone in Oklahoma City who is working to make their situation better.

“Because of creative campaigns like this, Curbside was able to help 41 vendors end their homelessness last year — overcoming over 215 years of combined homelessness,” Ranya added.

The Wrap Up Homelessness initiative is sponsored by Fowler Automotive, Citizens Bank of Edmond, and Orthodontic Arts.

“This is a great campaign, not only because of the people that it’s helping, but it introduces local artists to a broader community,” said Kristen Vails, arts advocate and director of community outreach with Fowler Automotive. “It’s pretty special that people will have custom Oklahoma art under their tree.”
All proceeds from packages purchased from individuals will go directly to that individual who is working their way out of homelessness. Proceeds from store purchases will benefit The Curbside Chronicle and its mission to employ and empower men and women transitioning out of homelessness in Oklahoma City.

To purchase wrapping paper online or for more details about Wrap Up Homelessness, visit wrapuphomelessness.com.

posted by derek brown - Dec 11, 2018 - 0 comments

THE FLAMING LIPS ANNOUNCE NEW ALBUM ‘KING’S MOUTH’, NARRATED BY THE CLASH’S MICK JONES

READ MORE: NME

Wayne Coyne said the collaboration was "quite unbelievable"

Rhian Daly
Dec 5, 2018 5:58 pm

The Flaming Lips have announced details of their new album, ‘King’s Mouth’, which will be narrated by The Clash’s Mick Jones.

The record, which succeeds 2017’s ‘Oczy Mlody’, will be released on April 13, via Warner Records.

Frontman Wayne Coyne shared the news on his Instagram page yesterday (December 4). “…ok.. so… our King’s Mouth album that will be coming out on @recordstoredayus in April has Mick Jones on it,” he wrote.

“yeah Mick Jones from The Clash and Big Audio Dynamite.. he’s doing the narration… he’s on almost every song… it really it quite unbelievable.. ill post a little video clip so you can hear him … but yeah!!!!! Man!!! Sooooo cool.”

He also tagged the likes of Nile Rodgers, Miley Cyrus, Dan Deacon, and Post Malone in the post. It is currently unclear whether those artists will also appear on the record or not.

Earlier this year, Coyne told NME he would be interested in working with Malone. “I would love to do something with him, he’s got a great melodic thing about him,” he said. “Even though it appears like he’s a rapper, he’s also a good singer and has a cool style and a good way of blending rap with some melodic stuff. His name and tattoos are great.”
The frontman also revealed his desire to release a vinyl record with Cyrus’ pee in it, following the Flaming Lips’ releases with beer and blood in. “We’d get a good amount of Miley’s pee and mix it with some glitter and put that in,” he explained. “I think that would up the ante. Don’t you?”

posted by derek brown - Dec 5, 2018 - 0 comments

FLAMING LIPS WILL HEADLINE SECOND ANNUAL “HI, HOW ARE YOU” DAY

READ MORE: Austin360

By Peter Blackstock

Posted Nov 16, 2018 at 3:50 PM
Updated Nov 16, 2018 at 4:27 PM

Flaming Lips, Yo La Tengo, Built to Spill, the Moth & the Flame and more will play the second annual Hi, How Are You Day, a celebration of heralded Texas songwriter Daniel Johnston’s birthday, at ACL Live on Jan. 22, 2019.

It’s a big step up for the mental health awareness event and fundraiser, which made its debut in January 2018 at the Mohawk. That night was a grand success, with local acts including Kathy McCarty & Brian Beattie, Moving Panoramas, Jane Ellen Bryant and Will Courtney performing Johnston’s songs and Johnston himself making a brief but memorable appearance.

Tickets, $49-$79, go on sale at noon Monday, Nov. 19, via the venue’s website. Other participating artists will be announced in the coming weeks.

Hi, How Are You Project co-founders Tom Gimbel and Courtney Blanton created the event “to educate people worldwide about the importance of mental health and well-being while promoting a culture of inclusion,” according to a press statement announcing the show.

Flaming Lips leader Wayne Coyne said in the statement that his band is taking part “because we love Daniel’s music, and being part of a thing that celebrates his music with a bunch of other artists is always fun...and we love Austin...any excuse to play there is cool with us.”

Dick Johnston, Daniel’s brother and a co-founder of the project, added: “The mission of Hi, How Are You Day is to get the word out about Daniel’s art and music AND to make it routine that we recognize the worth of people struggling with depression, anxiety, learning disabilities or mental illness.”

posted by derek brown - Nov 16, 2018 - 0 comments

THE FLAMING LIPS SCHEDULE UNDERGROUND NYE PARTY

READ MORE: Jambands

Known as the home of PBS’s Bluegrass Underground, The Caverns in Pelham, Tenn. will host The Flaming Lips for a subterranean New Year’s celebration on Dec. 31. The underground venue dates back millions of years and sits below the base of Montagle Mountain.

The Flaming Lips will be joined by opening act Uni for their one-off New Year’s celebration, and VIP/Hotel packages will be available starting on Saturday, Sept. 22 at 9:00 a.m. CT.

General onsale will start on Tuesday, Sept. 25 at 11:00 a.m. CT.

posted by derek brown - Sep 18, 2018 - 0 comments

TAKE A DIVE INTO THE FLAMING LIPS’ SALAD DAYS WITH ‘SEEING THE UNSEEABLE’

READ MORE: PopMatters

By CHRIS INGALLS
08 Aug 2018

It can be difficult to fathom the fact that the Flaming Lips have been together in some form or another for 35 years. And while the consistent thread throughout the band's discography has been a unique strain of "weirdness", it's also breathtaking to take in their evolution over the course of 14 studio albums and various projects and collaborations.

But before the band of oddballs from Norman, Oklahoma became the de facto indie experimental freaks the world knows and loves, there was an early, rawer, more direct sound to their music. That's where Seeing the Unseeable: The Complete Studio Recordings of the Flaming Lips, 1986-1990 comes in. A collection of their first four full-length studio albums in addition to two discs of rarities from that period, Seeing the Unseeable is the Flaming Lips in all their nascent, punk rock, salad-day glory. Before the freak pop hit that landed them on Beverly Hills, 90210, before singer/guitarist Wayne Coyne's rumpled white suit, before the boom-box experimentalism of Zaireeka, before the head-scratching Miley Cyrus collaborations, the Lips were signed to Restless Records and recorded a string of rough, strange, aggressive music at the tail end of the 1980s.

Released in 1986 - two years after their self-titled debut EP and following the departure of Wayne's brother Mark - Hear It Is shows relatively little of the sound that the Flaming Lips would pursue on later albums. At this point, the band consists of Coyne, bassist Michael Ivins, and drummer Richard English. Opening track "With You" alternates between the acoustic folk of the verses and the pummeling electric crush of the choruses. Elsewhere, the band seems to adopt a sound that is freakishly close to that of the Replacements, largely because Coyne's vocals were a dead ringer for Paul Westerberg.


The 'Mats comparison carries over to the music as well, to some degree. While rough-hewn guitars and a bash-it-out, DIY aesthetic hovers over all ten tracks on Hear It Is, there are glimpses of greater ambition. "Jesus Shootin' Heroin" doesn't just kick off the band's penchant for knocking over the sacred cows of Christianity; musically, it owes more to Black Sabbath than Bob Stinson with its doom-metal guitar chords and almost Gothic tone. Additionally, "Godzilla Flick" combines a whimsical pop culture touchstone with breezy acoustic guitar and an almost anthemic sense of musical richness. Hear It Is has plenty of punk elements, but the Lips were already looking further over the horizon.

The pieces continue falling into place on the follow-up, 1987's Oh My Gawd!!! Sure, the hyperactive "Everything's Exploding" follows the standard guitar-heavy college rock playbook, but the psychedelics soon kick in with "One Million Billionth of a Millisecond on a Sunday Morning", arguably their first "epic" track, where rambling electric guitar-led balladry collapses into slashing rock riffage, sounding like an early Pink Floyd jam session. There's also the impossible-to-grasp utter insanity of songs like "Maximum Dream for Evil Knievel", where Coyne's acid trips seem to take on a life of their own as stop-start guitar figures suggest a penchant for progressive rock. Oh My Gawd, indeed.


Photo: George Salisbury / Courtesy of Warner Records

As Seeing the Unseeable progresses, the Flaming Lips begin inching closer and closer to the sound they were to perfect in the late 1990s and early 2000s, and Telepathic Surgery seems to bear this out to a fairly excessive degree. Initially conceived as a 30-minute sound collage, a "standard" (relatively speaking, of course) album was eventually created, with a somewhat rough concept at play, spread across 14 tracks. These tracks include everything from tiny snippets like "Michael, Time to Wake Up" (an atonal electric guitar freakout) and "The Spontaneous Combustion of John" (a brief blip of dark folk) to the epic, 23-minute experimentalism of "Hell's Angels Cracker Factory", which includes twin-attack distorted guitar riffs, odd , Zappa-esque horn outbursts, manic, thundering drum fills and bits of operatic vocalizing. "Chrome Plated Suicide" is one of Telepathic Surgery's high points and also an important step in the band's evolution as the cracked power ballad – melodically cribbed from "Sweet Child o'Mine" – introduces Coyne's now-famous strained, Neil-Young-on-acid vocal style.

In a Priest Driven Ambulance, released in 1990, is the final album the Flaming Lips made for Restless Records, and it also marks the first major line-up shifts since Mark Coyne's departure. Drummer English is out, replaced by Nathan Roberts, and guitarist Jonathan Donahue – who would also helm indie darlings Mercury Rev – gives the band additional texture. At this point, Coyne is totally committed to that out-of-tune nasal holler, and on "Shine on Sweet Jesus", the band uses standard power pop chord structures as a foundation for a noisy, distorted sonic mess. It's as if they realize that nobody cares how unhinged they sound, so they go for it. But there's nothing really "forbidden" about the sound. It's a celebration, and everyone's invited. Donahue's presence underscores the heavier sounds of "Unconsciously Screamin'" and the spacey guitar fills of "Five Stop Mother Superior Rain". For good measure, they even close the album with a typically trippy take on "(What a) Wonderful World".


Seeing the Unseeable is rounded out by two additional discs of recordings from the same era. Restless Rarities includes an interesting collection of covers: an occasionally tender, occasionally head-banging take on Neil Young's "After the Gold Rush", a live version of Sonic Youth's "Death Valley '69", and a medley of the Sonics' garage band nugget and Nick Lowe's "Peace, Love and Understanding". The choice of covers ranges from bold to somewhat predictable, but the gusto with which the Flaming Lips attack these songs is remarkably consistent. Alternate versions of "Stand in Line" and "Five Stop Mother Superior Rain" and a Sub-Pop 7" version of "Drug Machine in Heaven" are some other highlights of Restless Rarities.

The sixth disc in the collection isn't really an unearthed treasure unknown to hardcore Lips enthusiasts – in fact, The Mushroom Tapes was first released in 2002 as the second disc of the deluxe reissue of In a Priest Driven Ambulance (then titled The Day They Shot a Hole in the Jesus Egg), essentially a collection of Priest-era demos. It's a treat to hear some of these songs in their early stages, and additional songs that didn't make the final cut are also included, like the brief, self-explanatory "Jam" and "God's a Wheeler Dealer", a truly bizarre number in which noise effects and guitar feedback compete for attention with Coyne's vocals.

Soon after the release of In a Priest Driven Ambulance, the Flaming Lips caught the attention of Warner Brothers, who signed them and released their major-label debut, Hit to Death in the Future Head. Then came Transmissions from the Satellite Heart, which included the ubiquitous freak hit "She Don't Use Jelly". Once multi-instrumentalist and resident musical wizard Steven Drozd joined the lineup, it was only a matter of time before they cranked out albums like Zaireeka (a four-disc set meant to be played simultaneously on four CD players) and the Pet-Sounds-on-harder-drugs masterpiece The Soft Bulletin, gaining fame and notoriety by simply making strange music completely on their own terms. Seeing the Unseeable is an expansive look into the early days of the Flaming Lips, when they left it all on the field, and it all paid off.

posted by derek brown - Aug 8, 2018 - 0 comments

THE FLAMING LIPS’ WAYNE COYNE EMBRACES BEING A ‘CREATIVE WEIRDO’

READ MORE: Huffington Post

Thirty-five years into his career, the frontman talks longevity and what makes him tick.

By Lauren Moraski

Wayne Coyne was at a ski shop once in Aspen, Colorado, when he heard a batch of Flaming Lips songs.

“I assumed that the people getting us the skis and all that, one of them must’ve been a Flaming Lips fan and thought, ‘How fun is it going to be? I’ll put on the Spotify playlist while they’re in the store,’” the Flaming Lips singer told HuffPost. “Which is fun, but it’s a little bit embarrassing.”

It brought up a key question, though: Which Flaming Lips songs are the most popular? Thanks to playlists on Spotify and other streaming services, Coyne gets to see firsthand what the world thinks of their music, at least in terms of popularity. This came in handy when curating the Lips’ new greatest hits collection.

The Flaming Lips have more than a dozen studio albums to their name, so there was lots of material from which to choose for the newly released “Greatest Hits Vol. 1,” which coincides with the band’s 35th anniversary. For Coyne, this isn’t just a throwaway collection of tunes. He was involved in nearly every step of the process, from tracklisting decisions to song remastering. In the end they came up with a mix of more popular tracks, B-sides and rarities.

“It really is a celebration,” Coyne said. “A lot of ‘Greatest Hits’ are put out in protest. Like the group doesn’t want it, but the record company wants it. ‘Greatest Hits’ are kind of just thrown out there sometimes. But that’s not the case with us, and it’s not the case with some of the greatest hits albums we’ve loved over the years.”

It’s also a time for reflection for the 57-year-old singer, who started the band in Oklahoma City without any major or long-term expectations.

“If my future self would have come back to my 22-year-old self and said, ‘Dude, you’re going to be doing this when you’re almost 60 years old and you’re going to love it,’ I would’ve been like, ‘Get out of here, you’re crazy! I’m not that responsible. I don’t want the things I’m doing when I’m 20 to still haunt me when I’m in my 40s and 50s,’” he said. “I would not want to be thinking of this as the beginning of this long, long story and legacy and this beginning of this big family. I would have been crushed by that. I thought the whole thing was only going to last six months, a year. And I’d figure out what the next phase would be.”

That six months turned into a three decade-plus career that’s seen Grammy wins, worldwide tours, art-inspired performances and critical acclaim. Coyne says he’s glad the success they’ve amassed over the years has come “a little bit at a time.”

“I see now how success ruins people and it pushes you off your trajectory of being creative and evolving,” he said. “The success that happened to us early on was just enough to keep us confident and to keep us doing it, and it didn’t give us any superpower over other people. It allowed us to see so much... We were lucky. We got to make our records, and people left us to ourselves because we weren’t trying to sell 100 million records. People weren’t giving us billions of dollars to make our records... If you had to do all that in two years when you’re 19 years old, you’re probably going to be crazy.”

Those little bits of success continue for the Flaming Lips. This year, they received a Tony nomination for their work on the score of “SpongeBob SquarePants: The Broadway Musical.” Coyne also attended the Tony Awards ceremony in New York City last month.

“We just embraced the absurdness of that stuff. Part of you thinks, ‘What are these awards ceremonies? Are they stupid? Are they useless? Is it just the industry celebrating itself?’ You can look at it as cynical as you want. But none of that is really true,” he said. “It’s all fun, creative, cool stuff to us. And to be invited into that world and be able to dress up and walk down the red carpet, some people think all that stuff is superficial, but we don’t.”

Now Coyne is eyeing the next Lips project: a new album to accompany his art installation “King’s Mouth.” With this ongoing creative momentum, Coyne likens the Flaming Lips to “Batman” movies or comics, where fans continue to follow a plotline.

“I can understand why people like that, because you’ve already established these characters and the story. And you can keep moving. I feel like we’re a lot like that in a way. We’re like a comic book that goes on and on. They keep having adventures,” he said. “They’re timeless in a way.”

But more than that, Coyne hopes they’ve been able inspire people over the years.

“By being yourself, you attract other people that want to be themselves,” he said. “I think that’s the greatest lesson that we’ve learned. People will say to us, ‘Man, I saw you standing there doing your thing and it made me want to do my thing’... I really do love being a creative weirdo.”

“If you asked me what would be the perfect day? If you could do whatever you wanted to do? It would be filled up with making something music and doing some art in my kitchen. I’m never longing to be free of that,” he added. “The Flaming Lips gives me this endless vehicle in which I can make another chapter.”

posted by derek brown - Jul 10, 2018 - 0 comments

FLAMING LIPS’ RESTLESS LABEL RECORDINGS REMASTERED AND RELEASED TODAY WITH ‘SEEING THE UNSEEABLE

READ MORE: NewsOK

by BRANDY MCDONNELL
Published: Fri, June 29, 2018 7:09 PM

The treats keep coming for fans of Oklahoma City-based art rockers The Flaming Lips, who are celebrating their 35th anniversary in 2018.

Rhino Entertainment releases today “Seeing the Unseeable: The Complete Recordings of The Flaming Lips 1986-1990,” a six-CD box set that includes remastered versions of the band's four albums for the indie Restless label — “Hear It Is” (1986), “Oh My Gawd!!!...The Flaming Lips” (1987), “Telepathic Surgery” (1989) and “In a Priest Driven Ambulance (With Silver Sunshine Stares)” (1990) - plus two discs of rarities, including the legendary "Mushroom Tapes" sessions and a collection of tracks from singles, flexis and compilations.

The box set also features sonic treasures such as "Unconsciously Screaming," “One Million Billionth of a Millisecond on a Sunday Morning” and the Lips' cover of "(What A) Wonderful World,” with all the music remastered by producer David Fridmann, with the Lips’ Wayne Coyne and Michael Ivins. Coyne told my excellent colleague Gene Triplett in a recent interview that remastering their old music was a time-consuming process.

“We knew that if we didn't put anything out — that's my biggest dilemma, as well, is putting out another record — if we didn't put anything out, it would allow us a good year or so to make these things and put them out. And so that's why they're all coming out this year. We started to work on it right after (“Oczy”) came out," he told Gene in the interview, which you can read here.

As previously reported, the Grammy-winning experimental rock band, which was founded in Norman in 1983 and signed in 1991 with Warner Records, released earlier this month “The Flaming Lips Greatest Hits Vol. 1.," a three-disc compilation – a massive 52 tracks - ranging from 1992's “Hit To Death In The Future Head” through last year’s “Oczy Mlody," along with a handful of rare B-sides and previously unreleased material.

In other interesting Flaming Lips news, Rolling Stone listed the lovely band's anthem "Do You Realize??" at No. 57 on its list of "100 Greatest Songs of the Century - So Far".

posted by derek brown - Jun 29, 2018 - 0 comments

THE FLAMING LIPS SHARE DEMO OF THEIR ‘SPONGEBOB MUSICAL’ SONG

LISTEN: "We Only Have Tomorrow"

READ MORE: Pitchfork

by Sam Sodomsky
Associate Staff Writer
JUNE 15 2018

The Flaming Lips have shared their original demo recording of “Tomorrow Is,” their contribution to the Tony Award-winning SpongeBob SquarePants: The Musical. Their version is titled “We Only Have Tomorrow.”

The Flaming Lips recently released a greatest hits album and launched a podcast. They are currently on tour and will perform at this year’s OctFest: Two-Day and Single Day tickets are on sale now at Octfest.co. For more information, including lineups, news, and updates, visit Oct.co and follow @Pitchfork and @ReadOctober.

posted by derek brown - Jun 15, 2018 - 0 comments
 

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