
Sometimes the stars align and a perfect moment is created: Your team is behind and an old-timer hits one out of the park, thus saving the day; the mistake in the petri dish is discovered to be a powerful antibiotic, capable of saving millions; in an attempt to do some routine lab work, a wacky scientist stumbles uponโflubber. It is a collection of just such occurrences that led to the Flaming Lipโs critically lauded ninth album, The Soft Bulletin. In this case, the Lipโs almost two-year sessions for their 4-CD set, Zaireeka, resulted in a batch of brilliant residualsโsongs โtoo normalโ for the 4-CD concept album. Ironically, these โhappy accidentsโ became the Lipโs most adored record to date, the album for which the band will most likely be remembered.
Itโs been a sonic and aesthetic evolution for the Lips since their formation more than 15 years ago. One of the last โ80s bands to be signed to a major label, theyโve managed to survive corporate downsizing with their record deal and integrity intact. By staying in Oklahoma City, the band has remained curiously undiluted, distilling their sound down to its purest essence by ignoring the mainstream. Theyโve also realized that coming from the Midwest gives them outsider cachet in a scene full of bands from โcoolโ places.
Frontman guitarist/vocalist Wayne Coyne grew up the youngest of six in a house full of music fans. โAt the time, I thought everything was normal musicโI didnโt think that there was โweirdโ music and mainstream music,โ says Coyne from his Oklahoma City home (described by one interviewer as a two-story Frank Lloyd Wright-style structure with gargoyles). Some mornings heโd catch a ride to school with his older brothers in their truck. โTheyโd be smoking pot and listening to music for 20 minutes,โ he says. He has a vivid memory of hearing John and Yokoโs Somewhere in New York City, โwhich is an unlistenable hunk of shit,โ he now says, wonderingly. โIt wasnโt until I got older that I realized we were listening to the worst experimental racket and accepting itโlike you can do that to music.โ
With their โ91 Warner Brothers debut, Hit to Death in the Future Head, the Lips were seen as everything from space-truckinโ acid-gobbling revivalists to oddball rock experimentalists. The band allowed their mystique to grow. If their fans wanted to believe it, so be it. It didnโt hurt that now-balding bassist Michael Ivins (a co-founder with Coyne) was sporting a Syd Barrett mop or that Coyneโs wheezed lyrics were as weird as their sound.
โWe played into it,โ Coyne now admits, adding, โIf people didnโt think we were doing drugs theyโd just think we were retarded.โ He goes on to describe the early days of the band, back when they all shared an equipment-filled duplex. โWeโd go to the blood bank and give blood to get the $12 or $13 to buy cigarettesโthen succumb to the heat,โ he says, โand I think people would look at us and say, โOh. Just a bunch of junkies playing music.โ And we thought, โOK,โ otherwise weโd just look like a bunch of fools following some dream that isnโt going to happen.โ In actuality, Coyne and the band were much too absorbed in sonic experimentationโespecially in the studioโto dull their creative edge by ingesting tons of chemicals.
The Flaming Lips had a hit โat just the right timeโ with โShe Donโt Use Jellyโ (from โ93โs Transmissions from the Satellite Heart), says Coyne. โAfter we sold 350,000 copies of the โJellyโ stuff we knew that [the hit] would buy us another couple of years,โ he says. Having produced a hit, the band felt free to experiment. โWe did Clouds [Taste Metallic] and Zaireeka under the guise of, โWe know weโre going to do these records because we donโt really have to worry about them.’โ
Working with long-time producer David Fridmann at his upstate New York studio, the Lips had the luxury of time. What the band had envisioned as an eight-week project stretched out to two years. โIt became a bigger behemoth along the way,โ Coyne says. โIf you had said that by the end of this you guys are going to be doing 200 tracks โฆ โ
Enamored of the possibilities, sonic accidents and โwhat-ifsโ that expand the parameters of performed music into the realm of accidental or created โsound,โ Coyne concedes that the process is everything. (โIf you ask me what I play, I say, โthe studio,โ Coyne says.โ) Lyrically, the band goes for a simple, almost goofy approach. Check out โBugginโโits humming โinsectโ sounds and allusions to being bitten (the love bug?) combined with the visceral image of little bug exoskeletons splattering on a windshield. In the Lipsโ hands, this song is breath-catchingly beautiful.
After a period of bizarre personal tragedies within the group (drummer/keyboardist Steve Drozd being bitten on the arm by a highly poisonous brown recluse spider, Ivinsโ car crash, Coyneโs fatherโs battle with cancer), Coyneโwhose lyrics always tended toward the abstract or surrealโrealized his own life had plenty of material. โI had never felt comfortable talking about my own life,โ he admits. โI always thought I had to make it more surreal or freaky, because I thought my life was normal.โ But with all the crises in the band, Coyne turned his experiences into inspiration, tackling such universal themes as love, humanity, science and death. โWe knew we had made this sort of leap, he says of the Soft Bulletin. โI think thatโs what people are drawn toโthey hear their own life in it,โ he says. Indeed, The Soft Bulletin struck a universal chord with fans and critics, landing the band on virtually every criticโs Top 10 list.
Still touring for The Soft Bulletin, the Lips are bringing their bona fide ROCK SHOWโfake blood, screens, pre-recorded tracks (Drozd plays keyboards live), hand puppets and headphonesโback to the Cradle. Unspontaneous? Maybe, but in an entertaining, performance-art sort of way. โI think our best stuff is where weโve thought about it for a long time, weโve worked out all the bugs and we think itโs going to work,โ explains Coyne. โI always loved it when bands played their songs the way they are on the record. I donโt know when it ever became cool to jam on in any kind of way regardless of how the song was supposed to be. Weโve taken the approach that if you like the song on the record, here it is and weโd love to sing it for you,โ Coyne says.
โAfter the show, maybe people will say, โIsnโt it great? Wayne poured blood on himself and there were rabbits there,’โ Coyne says, adding, โItโs just flat out, bombastic entertainment: blood and animals.โ 


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