The Flaming Lips Embryonic
  full reviewuser ratings (100) 
Tracklist:
1. Convinced of the Hex
2. The Sparrow Looks Up At The Machine
3. Evil
4. Aquarious Sabotage
5. See The Leaves
6. IF
7. Gemini Syringes
8. Your Bats
9. Powerless
10. The Ego’s Last Stand
11. I Can Be A Frog
12. Sagitarrius Silver Announcement
13. Worm Mountain
14. Scorpio Sword
15. The Impulse
16. Silver Trembling Hands
17. Virgo Self-Esteem Broadcast
18. Watching The Planets

Ranking: #60 for 2009

user rating
3.9
excellent
Chart.
other reviews
Kashmir09 (5)
The Flaming Lips have entered themselves on the ballot, along with Radiohead as becoming the modern ...
Rudy Klapper CONTRIBUTOR (2.5)
The Flaming Lips say a lot without really saying anything at all....

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  On 42 Lists

4.0
excellent
George Menhal III USER (2 Reviews)

2009-10-10 | 97 comments | 5,640 views

Summary: For those who have followed the Lips through more than one iteration of their sound, or at least have taken the effort to discover the diversity of their creative palette, Embryonic is faith-rewarding and massively essential.

19 of 22 thought this review was well written

Review based on stream:
http://monsterfresh.com/2009/09/26/embryonic-flaming-lips-full-album-stream-mp3/



Half the battle of any Flaming Lips album is putting it into proper context, especially because their sound has been purposefully and carefully mutated with each subsequent release. But with regards to that mutating sound, the Lips are more prone to taking incremental steps of refinement as opposed to giant leaps of madness, and their discography is great evidence of this. In a Priest Driven Ambulance set the stage for Hit to Death in the Future Head, just as Clouds Taste Metallic expanded upon and refined to glowing perfection what had been hinted at with Transmissions From the Satellite Heart. Played chronologically, back-to-back, these albums bleed into each other and help make sense of the Lips' fascinating musical trajectory, but not since Zaireeka have they released something as uncharacteristic and truly out of left field as their schizophrenic 2009 double album, Embryonic.

The 2000s have been a very transformational and fortuitous time for the Lips, and it says a great deal about the visionary genius of their ambition that the groundwork for their success had been laid in 1999--before anyone had a clearly conceptualized sense of where the culturally ubiquitous technological encroachment of the new millennium would lead us. Looking back, though, The Soft Bulletin is not the earth-shattering phenomenon it was hyped to be, but an album that logically expanded on the technological fascination of Zaireeka while incorporating more structured elements of pop and lyrical revelation. By the time the Lips released 2003's Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots, the scene around them had seemingly caught up, and it was becoming more and more obvious just how refreshingly, honestly anachronistic the band had always been. For several reasons worth noting, the culture around the band had changed in such a way that allowed for their commercial success to occur, especially considering that they'd been critical darlings since at least Transmissions From the Satellite Heart.

It seems strange to say, but the events of September 11, 2001 were crucial for the Lips. Most importantly, it was the true starting point of the anti-Bush fever pitch that affected so much about music in the American 2000s. Coupled with the introduction of the mp3 player as the dominant form of music media and the fact that a vast majority of the country's youth were now discovering bands via the internet and blogosphere as opposed to radio and television (that is, proactively discovering music as opposed to passively listening), it makes perfect sense why the Lips came into such commercial acclaim. In the age of musical irony (oppressively and enduringly contextualized by the overall dismal political atmosphere of Bush's anti-intellectualism and anti-internationalism), a time when dance had returned as both rebellious and subversive, there was the Lips--a band that was actually, genuinely having a good time.

But things change quickly. The landslide election of Barck Obama has all at once reflexively balanced and quite desperately unhinged the ironic, cynical-yet-hopeful validity of dance rock and much of the general mood of this very tumultuous, warring decade. The result is that 2009 feels decidedly different than the years leading up to it--the public can no longer rationally rally against the lightning rod that was George Bush (something the Lips themselves took part in with 2006's At War With the Mystics, specifically on "Haven't Got a Clue"), yet the mandate for change represented by the election of Obama has left nearly everyone scratching their heads, wondering and even fearing whatever may come next.

Much of this mood permeates Embryonic, right down to its core compositional philosophy. Perhaps what is most shockingly unique about the album is the overall lack of anything resembling a pop structure. Many of its best songs are short, unconstructed, dissonant, weightless, utterly without hooks, and tinged with sad reality. Wayne Coyne has just about completely shied away from his self-created pied piper image and life-affirming universality this time around. His voice intones an honest weariness that is simply not present on any other Lips album. Simultaneously, he maintains a ceaseless lyrical theme of empirical potentiality resting ever-so-delicately upon the fault line of human decision, effectively ending the participatory good-time freak-out that served as their calling card for the entirety of the 2000s.

Embryonic is neither friendly nor inviting, but a tad austere on the personal and emotional level. Originally planned as a double album consisting of eighteen tracks, it should also serve as somewhat of a difficult listen for anyone unfamiliar with the recently once-forgotten noisier aspects of the band. The pre-released opening track, "Convinced of the Hex," is emblematic of at least one half of Embryonic's dual musical atmosphere, which oscillates organically between noisy jam session and spacey quietude. "Convinced" adequately represents the former, itself coming into shape out of obnoxiously underproduced guitars and the minimalist hammer-on bass lines that repeat throughout the entire album--occasionally marring it into purposeless murk (such as on the overall great "Powerless," which ends the first half of the album, and on the overall droning-yet-loud/quiet nothingness of "Ego's Last Stand," which begins the second half).

The spaced-out synth introversion that represents the adjacent dimension of Embryonic's overall mood begins and peaks with its third track, "Evil." But this is only so because "Evil" feels more like a fully realized vision rather than inconsequential segue. One essential track, the all-too-brief "IF," very masterfully presents Embryonic's most enduring message, and does so with a delicate sensuality that is lacking for the remainder of the album. With little more than a cheap melody, Coyne reveals his primary vision, crooning "people are evil, it's true / but on the other side / they can be gentle too / if they decide." This theme of personal responsibility and the enormous power, not only of human decision but also of disciplined perception, is reiterated virtually everywhere there is a lyric to be found.

Meanwhile, "See the Leaves" and "Worm Mountain" compete for the title of overall heaviest track. The former is sneering and ploddingly mechanical while the latter ultimately emerges victorious due to its sheer, elated dynamism. And although Embryonic is a double album in the truest sense, representing one band from competing and complementary musical vantage points, there are a handful of tracks that manage deft cohesion, and this is where the album shines most brilliantly. "Your Bats" is the finest example of this, managing to be hazy but loud, warm but confrontational, and painfully engrossing but short and unrefined. "Silver Trembling Hands" is another standout, achieving the explosive largeness of a more inclusive, pop oriented Lips song without ever actually becoming one.

Had Embryonic been released at literally any other stage in this band's erratically experimental career, it may have been considered a misstep--a branching-out into the abandonment of the Lips' most endearing qualities. But, again, it helps enormously to consider the context under which this album was delivered. Had they simply produced another variation on The Soft Bulletin, as was their m.o. in the 2000s, it would have seemed contrived and, undoubtedly, their status as pioneers would have weakened tremendously. Instead, for better or for worse, the Flaming Lips have respectfully moved on and into rather unmarked territory, maintaining their credibility and possibly attempting to predate the steady emergence of an interwoven and unprecedented noise scene that is sure to manifest over the next decade.

Embryonic will ultimately draw the most comparisons to Zaireeka, although these two albums sound and feel nothing like each other. The idea behind the comparison is that both of these albums capture the Lips at a time where their confidence had waned and they were once again faced with the bane of reinvention, something they have always confronted with persistence and immense, enthralling creativity. Zaireeka is the better album, more creative and maddeningly original, but Embryonic is nevertheless a smoldering sore-thumb in the discography of a band that is fortunate enough to be able to continually create, refine, and discard whatever musical identity it whimsically materializes. It's hard to imagine that this album specifically will translate into any further commercial success for the band, but for those who have followed the Lips through more than one iteration of their sound, or at least have taken the effort to discover the diversity of their creative palette, Embryonic is faith-rewarding and massively essential.

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Comments:Add a Comment 
Kirgasm


Comments: 2140
10.10.09

Album Rating: 4

i love how well you put this album into context. very, very well written.

Digging: Miles Benjamin Anthony Robinson - Summer Of Fear

alakazam9891


Comments: 23
10.10.09

Album Rating: 3.5

thanks, I did my best

EVedder27


Comments: 1322
10.10.09

Album Rating: 3.5

excellent and original review. I haven't listened to this enough to give it a final rating, but its a pretty good album.

Digging: Porcupine Tree - Stupid Dream

mutatedfreek


Comments: 2970
10.10.09

Album Rating: 4

Excellent review for an excellent album, hats off to you sir.

Digging: Julian Casablancas - Phrazes for the Young

CelestialDust


Comments: 908
10.10.09

Album Rating: 4.5 | Sound Off

nice! finally a review for this awesome album, really good detailed review
you should get featured asap

Digging: Kiss Kiss - Reality Vs. The Optimist

elephantREVOLUTION


Comments: 471
10.10.09


the review is good, but it's a little long

Digging: DJ Douggpound - Pound It

CelestialDust


Comments: 908
10.10.09

Album Rating: 4.5 | Sound Off

it is but the album is long as well

mutatedfreek


Comments: 2970
10.10.09

Album Rating: 4

yeah double album = double length review.

CelestialDust


Comments: 908
10.10.09

Album Rating: 4.5 | Sound Off

this might be my favorite lips album
the drummer really deserves lots of praise, the drum patterns throughout are so energetic

StreetlightRock
Staff Reviewer


Comments: 2363
10.10.09

Album Rating: 4

Epic review buddy.

Digging: Gaza - He Is Never Coming Back

klap4music
Contributing Reviewer


Comments: 1058
10.10.09

Album Rating: 2.5

should change the summary on this bad boy for the homepage

Digging: Annie - Don't Stop

cirq


Comments: 3746
10.10.09


what rudy said
great review though

Digging: Deadmau5 - For Lack Of A Better Name

kingsoby1
Staff Reviewer


Comments: 1630
10.10.09

Album Rating: 2.5 | Sound Off

meh... pink robotswas so much brtter

Digging: Wale - Attention Deficit

Niceinvader


Comments: 270
10.10.09


Wow great review man.
I never really liked these guys but you got me interested to listen to this album.

Digging: Coalesce - 0:12 Revolution in Just Listening

Chewie


Comments: 3869
10.10.09


holy shit, big and awesome review. For two reviews you have a bright future here. And I second that editing this for the homepage is a very wise idea.

although I think "Barck Obama" may want to be changed.

Digging: My Chemical Romance - The Black Parade

pianotuna
Contributing Reviewer


Comments: 1392
10.11.09

Album Rating: 4.5 | Sound Off

ruuules

Digging: Los Campesinos! - We Are Beautiful, We Are Doomed

Mendigo


Comments: 2178
10.11.09

Album Rating: 4

hell of a review. can't wait to get it.

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scotish


Comments: 281
10.11.09


been wanting to listen to this for ages, but the review (which is awesome) is pretty much saying that this needs to be heard in the context of their other work... but I take it that this is still worth listening to on it's own merits, yeah?

Digging: Idlewild - Post Electric Blues

pianotuna
Contributing Reviewer


Comments: 1392
10.11.09

Album Rating: 4.5 | Sound Off

doesn't really need any context; i think a lot of people suddenly fell under some spell that said their older, nosier stuff was better than their mystics era stuff which is supposedly experimental but not really. both rule, but this rules more. sort of both of their old styles and more, so you can just check out their older stuff afterwards

p.s. love the review : )

CelestialDust


Comments: 908
10.11.09

Album Rating: 4.5 | Sound Off

see the leaves/ worm mountain are so good



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