King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard's sense of unfettered sonic exploration makes it easy to mistake them for a long-forgotten relic of the psych explosion of the 1960s. With a far-out sound that, at times, feels barely held together, King Gizzard evoke the eclectic rock experimentation of Frank Zappa's early work with the Mothers of Invention, the anything-goes feeling of the Flaming Lips, and the demented glee of a random, obscure '60s group plucked from a Pebbles compilation as they follow their musical flights of fancy wherever they might lead. King Gizzard's prolific nature has led them to release albums at a frenetic pace, and their intense desire to seek out new sounds and follow new paths -- from expansive jazz-rock (2015's Quarters) to semi-acoustic ballads (the same year's Paper Mâché Dream Balloon), and from sci-fi prog (2017's Murder of the Universe) to trippy garage rock (2014's I'm in Your Mind Fuzz) and explorations of microtonal tunings (2017's Flying Microtonal Banana, 2020's K.G) -- means that every one of their multitude of releases sounds different from the last. Some of their albums, especially Nonagon Infinity from 2016, stand shoulder to shoulder with the best psychedelic rock ever made, and even their most daring moves -- like releasing a death metal concept album (2019's Infest the Rats Nest) or one built around bubbling analog synth loops (2021's Butterfly 3000) -- land like a knockout punch. Formed in 2011 in Melbourne, Australia, by a group of friends who jammed frequently, then decided on a whim to play a show, the lineup consisted of vocalist/guitarist Stu Mackenzie, harmonica player/singer Ambrose Kenny-Smith, guitarists Cook Craig and Joey Walker, bassist Lucas Skinner, and dual drummers Michael Cavanagh and Eric Moore. They released two garage rock-inspired EPs in 2011, Anglesea and Willoughby's Beach, then in 2012 released their debut album, 12 Bar Bruise. Working at the kind of feverish pace that became their standard, King Gizzard followed up just five months later with 2013's Eyes Like the Sky, which the band described as a "spaghetti Western audio book" complete with narration by Ambrose Kenny-Smith's father, the noted Australian musician Broderick Smith. A third full-length, Float Along, Fill Your Lungs, was released in 2013 and was quickly followed by 2014's Oddments and I'm in Your Mind Fuzz. Still working quickly, in early 2015 they released the Quarters EP, which featured four trippy, free jazz-inspired jams that each timed out exactly at 10:10. After signing to ATO Records, King Gizzard's sound took a detour from expanded jams and fuzzy freak-outs to tightly constructed, but still weird, laid-back pop songs played exclusively on acoustic instruments on the 2015 album Paper Mâché Dream Balloon. The follow-up, 2016's Nonagon Infinity, was recorded at Daptone Studios and featured some of the band's heaviest, most forceful psych-rock to date. It was recorded so that one track bleeds into the next, then jumps back to the beginning after the last song. They tout it as the "world's first infinitely looping album." The band spent time touring and getting five albums ready for release in 2017. On the first of them, Flying Microtonal Banana, King Gizzard decided to investigate microtonal tuning, a non-Western way of tuning that involves intervals smaller than a semitone. They had a custom-made guitar gifted to them, and the bandmembers bought new gear and altered the instruments so they could be microtuned in a way that made them compatible. The group's second album of 2017, Murder of the Universe, arrived two months later in March. It was broken into three long sections, each one telling a different apocalyptic tale of the human race being taken over by cyborgs and AI while featuring heavy use of synths and spoken word narration. Just before that album's release, the band finished a collaboration with Mild High Club's Alex Brettin, who traveled from L.A. to King Gizzard's Flightless HQ studios in East Brunswick, Melbourne, where he and Stu Mackenzie put together some rough ideas. The duo was then joined by the rest of the band to fill those ideas in. Titled Sketches of Brunswick East, the album was a heady mix of soft rock, psych-pop, and cosmic jazz. It was released by ATO in August 2017, mere months before their next record arrived. The relatively straightforward (for King Gizzard) psychedelic opus Polygondwanaland was given away for free and the master tapes were offered to anyone who wanted to press the album up and sell it. ATO was one of the first to take advantage of this, and several other labels followed suit. Fulfilling the group's pledge to put out five albums in 2017, they snuck in Gumboot Soup just under the deadline. The collection of thematically and sonically unconnected songs, a rarity for the group, was issued digitally on December 31, then given a physical release in April 2018. King Gizzard took the rest of 2018 relatively easy, playing occasional shows and not releasing any albums until November, when ATO reissued their first five records on the same day. The group took a relatively relaxed approach to releasing new music in the first half of 2019, too, issuing a single in February, "Cyboogie," that hinted at a new blues-based approach, then another in early April, "Planet B," that swerved into thrash metal territory. When their first album of the year, Fishing for Fishies, was released in late April, the sound was more like the former single, with the band digging deep into boogie rock, biker jams, and blues-rock, all fed through their unique musical and lyrical filter. They followed in the direction of the "Plan B" single later that year on Infest the Rats Nest, a blistering metal album that revolved thematically around the death of Earth and the population of nearby planets. It was recorded by a stripped-down version of the band, often just a trio, and released in August. Around that time, King Gizzard launched a worldwide tour; recordings made at various stops were compiled on the 2020 live album Chunky Shrapnel. A like-named feature film documenting the tour was also made and released alongside the record in late April. Never one to let something, even a global pandemic, slow down their frantic recording pace, the band started working on an album while holed up in their respective homes in Melbourne. Taking up the custom-made instruments featured on Flying Microtonal Banana, the group ended up making something of a sequel to that album while also adding some acid disco to the mix on the track "Intrasport." K.G. was issued in November 2020, the same day a double-live album titled Live in San Francisco '16 hit the shelves. The former was their first record without drummer Eric Moore, who left in August to devote more time to his record label, Flightless. K.G. was only half of the results of the group's socially distanced sessions; the remaining songs were released in early 2021 as L.W. King Gizzard weren't content to stay in one lane, as usual, and their second album of the year was one of their most audacious to date. Constructed from loops made on vintage modular synths, Butterfly 3000 is all major-key melodies, warm-as-the-sun arrangements, and positive vibes. It was released by the band's own KGLW label in June, just before the group played their first post-lockdown show in Norway. The band were scheduled to go out on the road following the album's release, but rescheduled the dates for 2022. Fans had to be satisfied by the steady release of archived live shows, and the release in early 2022 of Butterfly 3001, a remix album that featured a number of artists reworking songs from Butterfly 3000. Some, like Héctor Oaks and Fred P, guided the songs to the dancefloor, while others, like Flaming Lips and Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith, took a headier approach. The band weren't idle during this time off the road, gathering in the studio as soon as they could to begin work on 2022's album Omnium Gatherum. Touching on styles as diverse as lite-jazz, thrash metal, hip hop, and funk, the album was their first in a long time to not have a central sonic ditrection or over-arching theme, and was instead intended as a random collection of songs. The band headed out soon after its release in April of 2002 on an exhaustive slate of live shows.© Gregory Heaney & Tim Sendra /TiVo Read more
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard's sense of unfettered sonic exploration makes it easy to mistake them for a long-forgotten relic of the psych explosion of the 1960s. With a far-out sound that, at times, feels barely held together, King Gizzard evoke the eclectic rock experimentation of Frank Zappa's early work with the Mothers of Invention, the anything-goes feeling of the Flaming Lips, and the demented glee of a random, obscure '60s group plucked from a Pebbles compilation as they follow their musical flights of fancy wherever they might lead. King Gizzard's prolific nature has led them to release albums at a frenetic pace, and their intense desire to seek out new sounds and follow new paths -- from expansive jazz-rock (2015's Quarters) to semi-acoustic ballads (the same year's Paper Mâché Dream Balloon), and from sci-fi prog (2017's Murder of the Universe) to trippy garage rock (2014's I'm in Your Mind Fuzz) and explorations of microtonal tunings (2017's Flying Microtonal Banana, 2020's K.G) -- means that every one of their multitude of releases sounds different from the last. Some of their albums, especially Nonagon Infinity from 2016, stand shoulder to shoulder with the best psychedelic rock ever made, and even their most daring moves -- like releasing a death metal concept album (2019's Infest the Rats Nest) or one built around bubbling analog synth loops (2021's Butterfly 3000) -- land like a knockout punch.
Formed in 2011 in Melbourne, Australia, by a group of friends who jammed frequently, then decided on a whim to play a show, the lineup consisted of vocalist/guitarist Stu Mackenzie, harmonica player/singer Ambrose Kenny-Smith, guitarists Cook Craig and Joey Walker, bassist Lucas Skinner, and dual drummers Michael Cavanagh and Eric Moore. They released two garage rock-inspired EPs in 2011, Anglesea and Willoughby's Beach, then in 2012 released their debut album, 12 Bar Bruise. Working at the kind of feverish pace that became their standard, King Gizzard followed up just five months later with 2013's Eyes Like the Sky, which the band described as a "spaghetti Western audio book" complete with narration by Ambrose Kenny-Smith's father, the noted Australian musician Broderick Smith. A third full-length, Float Along, Fill Your Lungs, was released in 2013 and was quickly followed by 2014's Oddments and I'm in Your Mind Fuzz. Still working quickly, in early 2015 they released the Quarters EP, which featured four trippy, free jazz-inspired jams that each timed out exactly at 10:10.
After signing to ATO Records, King Gizzard's sound took a detour from expanded jams and fuzzy freak-outs to tightly constructed, but still weird, laid-back pop songs played exclusively on acoustic instruments on the 2015 album Paper Mâché Dream Balloon. The follow-up, 2016's Nonagon Infinity, was recorded at Daptone Studios and featured some of the band's heaviest, most forceful psych-rock to date. It was recorded so that one track bleeds into the next, then jumps back to the beginning after the last song. They tout it as the "world's first infinitely looping album."
The band spent time touring and getting five albums ready for release in 2017. On the first of them, Flying Microtonal Banana, King Gizzard decided to investigate microtonal tuning, a non-Western way of tuning that involves intervals smaller than a semitone. They had a custom-made guitar gifted to them, and the bandmembers bought new gear and altered the instruments so they could be microtuned in a way that made them compatible. The group's second album of 2017, Murder of the Universe, arrived two months later in March. It was broken into three long sections, each one telling a different apocalyptic tale of the human race being taken over by cyborgs and AI while featuring heavy use of synths and spoken word narration. Just before that album's release, the band finished a collaboration with Mild High Club's Alex Brettin, who traveled from L.A. to King Gizzard's Flightless HQ studios in East Brunswick, Melbourne, where he and Stu Mackenzie put together some rough ideas. The duo was then joined by the rest of the band to fill those ideas in. Titled Sketches of Brunswick East, the album was a heady mix of soft rock, psych-pop, and cosmic jazz. It was released by ATO in August 2017, mere months before their next record arrived. The relatively straightforward (for King Gizzard) psychedelic opus Polygondwanaland was given away for free and the master tapes were offered to anyone who wanted to press the album up and sell it. ATO was one of the first to take advantage of this, and several other labels followed suit. Fulfilling the group's pledge to put out five albums in 2017, they snuck in Gumboot Soup just under the deadline. The collection of thematically and sonically unconnected songs, a rarity for the group, was issued digitally on December 31, then given a physical release in April 2018.
King Gizzard took the rest of 2018 relatively easy, playing occasional shows and not releasing any albums until November, when ATO reissued their first five records on the same day. The group took a relatively relaxed approach to releasing new music in the first half of 2019, too, issuing a single in February, "Cyboogie," that hinted at a new blues-based approach, then another in early April, "Planet B," that swerved into thrash metal territory. When their first album of the year, Fishing for Fishies, was released in late April, the sound was more like the former single, with the band digging deep into boogie rock, biker jams, and blues-rock, all fed through their unique musical and lyrical filter. They followed in the direction of the "Plan B" single later that year on Infest the Rats Nest, a blistering metal album that revolved thematically around the death of Earth and the population of nearby planets. It was recorded by a stripped-down version of the band, often just a trio, and released in August. Around that time, King Gizzard launched a worldwide tour; recordings made at various stops were compiled on the 2020 live album Chunky Shrapnel. A like-named feature film documenting the tour was also made and released alongside the record in late April.
Never one to let something, even a global pandemic, slow down their frantic recording pace, the band started working on an album while holed up in their respective homes in Melbourne. Taking up the custom-made instruments featured on Flying Microtonal Banana, the group ended up making something of a sequel to that album while also adding some acid disco to the mix on the track "Intrasport." K.G. was issued in November 2020, the same day a double-live album titled Live in San Francisco '16 hit the shelves. The former was their first record without drummer Eric Moore, who left in August to devote more time to his record label, Flightless.
K.G. was only half of the results of the group's socially distanced sessions; the remaining songs were released in early 2021 as L.W. King Gizzard weren't content to stay in one lane, as usual, and their second album of the year was one of their most audacious to date. Constructed from loops made on vintage modular synths, Butterfly 3000 is all major-key melodies, warm-as-the-sun arrangements, and positive vibes. It was released by the band's own KGLW label in June, just before the group played their first post-lockdown show in Norway. The band were scheduled to go out on the road following the album's release, but rescheduled the dates for 2022. Fans had to be satisfied by the steady release of archived live shows, and the release in early 2022 of Butterfly 3001, a remix album that featured a number of artists reworking songs from Butterfly 3000. Some, like Héctor Oaks and Fred P, guided the songs to the dancefloor, while others, like Flaming Lips and Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith, took a headier approach. The band weren't idle during this time off the road, gathering in the studio as soon as they could to begin work on 2022's album Omnium Gatherum. Touching on styles as diverse as lite-jazz, thrash metal, hip hop, and funk, the album was their first in a long time to not have a central sonic ditrection or over-arching theme, and was instead intended as a random collection of songs. The band headed out soon after its release in April of 2002 on an exhaustive slate of live shows.
© Gregory Heaney & Tim Sendra /TiVo
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Butterfly 3000
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by KGLW (King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard) on 11 Jun 2021
This is a new mutation of King Gizzard! The ten tracks on Butterfly 3000 see Stu McKenzie and his team develop their cryptic language. Against a dazzl ...
24-Bit 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Omnium Gatherum
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by KGLW (King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard) on 22 Apr 2022
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard became an indie rock institution by constantly evolving, quickly and effortlessly shifting their approach from album ...
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
L.W.
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by KGLW (King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard) on 25 Feb 2021
While in lockdown, the dudes in King Gizzard spent their time recording songs. No shock there since that's just about all they seem to do given the pr ...
24-Bit 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Butterfly 3001
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by KGLW (King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard) on 21 Jan 2022
Another KGLW album? No, Butterfly 3001 is a double album of Butterfly 3000 remixes released in June 2021. Here, electro big shots from very different ...
24-Bit 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
K.G.
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by KGLW (King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard) on 20 Nov 2020
Going longer than a year without releasing anything is rare for Stu Mackenzie’s hyper-productive band. The young Australians have brought out fifteen ...
24-Bit 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Infest The Rats' Nest
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by Flightless Records on 16 Aug 2019
Prolific is the word. King Gizzard And The Lizard Wizard are out with their 15th studio album in 9 years of existence (!): 34 minutes of pedal-to-the- ...
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
Flying Microtonal Banana
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by Heavenly Recordings on 24 Feb 2017
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard spent their early years honing their tripped-out psychedelic pop sound, then after proving themselves masters of the ...
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
Paper Mâché Dream Balloon
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by Heavenly Recordings on 6 Sep 2006
After dazzling fans of long, twisting, freak-out jams with their epic Quarters album, the ever-whimsical Australian group King Gizzard & the Lizard Wi ...
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
Fishing For Fishies
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by Flightless Records on 26 Apr 2019
After taking a break from releasing new albums for over a year, the always entertaining, often brilliant King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard returned in ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Chunky Shrapnel
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Metal - Released by KGLW on 24 Apr 2020
Needless to say, they’re one of the best garage bands of our time. The wacky King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard have captured fans all over the world wi ...
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
I'm In Your Mind Fuzz
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by Heavenly Recordings on 31 Oct 2014
Arriving just eight months after the amiable Aussie psych-rockers' Oddments LP, I'm in Your Mind Fuzz finds King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard doing wha ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Nonagon Infinity
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by Heavenly Recordings on 29 Apr 2016
The prolific Australian psychedelic pop combo King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard aren't the kind of band prone to repeating themselves. Over the cours ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Butterfly 3000
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by KGLW (King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard) on 11 Jun 2021
This is a new mutation of King Gizzard! The ten tracks on Butterfly 3000 see Stu McKenzie and his team develop their cryptic language. Against a dazzl ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Gumboot Soup
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by Heavenly Recordings on 31 Dec 2017
When 2017 started, the guys in King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard unveiled a plan to release five albums before the year was out. As the year came to a ...
24-Bit 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Black Hot Soup (DJ Shadow “My Own Reality” Re-Write)
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by KGLW (King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard) on 7 Jan 2022
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Live in San Francisco '16 (Live in San Francisco '16)
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by ATO RECORDS on 20 Nov 2020
Though the majority of King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard's albums have plenty of unhinged energy, their live shows are where the band really cut loose ...
24-Bit 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Dripping Tap
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by KGLW (King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard) on 8 Mar 2022
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
Cellophane
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by Heavenly Recordings on 17 Nov 2014
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Butterfly 3001
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by KGLW (King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard) on 21 Jan 2022
Another KGLW album? No, Butterfly 3001 is a double album of Butterfly 3000 remixes released in June 2021. Here, electro big shots from very different ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Oddments
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by Flightless Records on 7 Mar 2014
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Eyes Like The Sky
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Alternative & Indie - Released by Flightless Records on 15 Feb 2013
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo