Embryonic

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (370 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK
  • Artist: the Flaming Lips (See All Albums by the Flaming Lips)
  • Date Released: Oct 9, 2009

  • Genre: Alternative/Punk, Style: Alternative, Commercial Alternative

  • Label: Warner Bros.

Total Tracks: 18   Total Length: 70:49

eMusic Review

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Christopher R. Weingarten

eMusic Contributor

Christopher R. Weingarten is a freelance music writer living in Brooklyn, whose work can currently be seen in The Village Voice, Spin, Revolver, NYLON, and much...more »

01.11.10
The Flaming Lips return to form and reclaim their throne as psych-pop kings
2009 | Label: Warner Bros.

Sounds like someone's gotten into the acid again! Since 1999's The Soft Bulletin, the Flaming Lips spent a solid decade riding giddy, audacious waves of indie-rock cult-superstardom; erupting like a snugglier, daffier Radiohead; racing for the prize of enormous harmonies, ostentatious psych freak-outs and arena rock that doubles as a cuddle party. But Embryonic turns that formula on its head, escaping back into the expressionist, hyper-distorted, LSD-soaked avant-punk roots hiding under Wayne Coyne's salt-and-pepper curls. Like an indie-pop approximation of Miles Davis's On The Corner, Embryonic builds a monumental, 70-minute wonderworld around gnarled grooves and disorienting musique concrete: lightning bolts of cinematic chimes, pillows of dark-hued reverb, ugly pulses of static, uneasy radio signals crossing the transom. Of course, being the Lips, it's still presented in the spirit of puckish pranksterism and cheery pop joy, as wolves howl, syrupy Lawrence Welk bubbles gloop out, Karen O snickers and the hilarious prickle of cell phone interference breaks up the otherwise serious "The Sparrow Looks Up At The Machine." Maybe it's the nothing-to-lose attitude surrounding the crumbling music industry (both Portishead and Broadcast released similarly "weird" albums around this time) or the liberating influence of contemporary indie rock… read more »

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Back to their roots

ccomerfo

Their least poppy album in years, the Flaming Lips show they can still bring the noise, even when being quiet.

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Great!!!!

Melodyman50

It sounds current, but there is definitely a major influence from the psychedelia of the 60's. Thanks to emusic, I have been rediscovering a lot of great psychedelic music from the 60's that fell through the cracks so to speak. Embryonic is great to me because it sounds like the best of that era, but it's fresh and current sounding as well. Very few groups (like the Flaming Lips) can achieve this. I think I'll go pick up the bonus tracks available on the other CD version of Embryonic (also on Emusic)!

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Hugely Recommended

trs3

The Lips are back at polarizing. While Yoshimi provided the logical extension of The Soft Bulletin into poppier lands and Mystics turned up the guitars but forgot the off-road tires, Embryonic makes rock music. Yes it's "weird" and "psychedelic" but who cares. It rocks, it works, and it's a 25 year old band proving it takes more than cleverness to make a good record.

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They Say All Media Guide

Christmas on Mars might be the Flaming Lips’ bona fide sci-fi epic, but Embryonic is the musical equivalent of the final scenes of 2001: A Space Odyssey: transformative chaos that results in a new start. From The Soft Bulletin onward, the Lips seemed focused on tidying the loose ends of their earlier work, almost to the point of constraining themselves. Their wilder side is unleashed on Embryonic’s 18 tracks, and the band sounds more off-the-cuff than it has in years — some tracks are barely longer than snippets, others are rangy epics, and it all holds together so organically that listeners might wonder just how much these songs were edited. Musically, Embryonic is the least polite the Flaming Lips have been in nearly two decades, mixing in-the-red drums, blobby, dubby bass, squelchy wah-wah guitars, and sparkling keyboards into a swirl of sounds that are strangely liquid and abrasive at the same time. Occasionally, the band uses noise in an almost ugly way, as on “Convinced of the Hex,” which scrapes eardrums with static and distortion before falling into a loose but driving Krautrock groove that adds to the song’s tribal pull (complete with growling and wailing in the background). The Miles Davis-inspired “Aquarius Sabotage” opens fuzz bass and keyboards so chaotic, it isn’t just free jazz, it’s free-for-all jazz, while “Your Bats” is as soulful as it is noisy, piling roomy drums atop more delicate hand percussion, strings, and brass. The Lips balance these confrontational tracks with calmer moments like the vocodered loveliness of “The Impulse ” and “Gemini Syringes,” an expansive respite that features “additional spoken announcements” by mathematician Thorsten Wormann. Embryonic might not be a literal concept album, but it often plays like one. An astrology motif runs through the ultra-spacy “Virgo Self Esteem Broadcast” and the tumbling instrumental “Scorpio Sword,” another track that suggests that the album’s ultimate concept may be that chaos is a profound agent of change. It’s also the Flaming Lips’ most emotionally raw album, despite — or perhaps because of — its free-flowing nature. Wayne Coyne often sounds like he’s singing from another dimension, musing on humankind’s frailty with the wonder of an alien or a newborn on “If” and “The Sparrow Looks Up at the Machine.” This is also some of the band’s most bittersweet work; on the beautiful “Powerless,” Coyne sings “no one is ever really powerless,” but the music dwells on the weighty implications of that thought rather than its potential freedom. Even the playful “I Can Be a Frog,” which features Karen O as a one-woman noisemaker, is minor-key. Then again, little about Embryonic is clear-cut or straightforward — these noisy, pensive, sometimes meandering songs take awhile to decipher and often feel like they’re still in the process of becoming. These very qualities, however, make these songs some of the Flaming Lips most haunting and intriguing music in some time. – Heather Phares

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