eMusic Review
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 »