Sold Date:
March 31, 2021
Start Date:
May 18, 2018
Final Price:
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LP KING GIZZARD & THE LIZARD WIZARD
Gumboot Soup
Limited Edition In Orange Vinyl
Country of release: UK, 2018
Originally released: 2017 (Download Only)
Label: Heavenly
Catalogue number: HVNLP156C
Barcode: 5414940009538
Klappcover/Gatefold Sleeve: Nein/No
Includes Innersleeve And Free Download
Condition Record: MINT
Condition Cover: MINT
LP ist noch verschweißt / LP IS STILL SEALED !!!
(Photo von meiner eigenen LP / Photo taken from my own copy)
Tracks Side 1:
1. Beginner's Luck (4:26)
2. Greenhouse Heat Death (4:13)
3. Barefoot Desert (3:44)
4. Muddy Water (3:39)
5. Superposition (3:35)
6. Down The Sink (4:00)
Tracks Side 2:
1. The Great Chain Of Being (4:50)
2. The Last Oasis (3:35)
3. All Is Known (3:34)
4. I'm Sleepin' In (3:00)
5. The Wheel (5:37)
Listen At YouTube:
The Aussie psych-rock group’s fifth album of 2017 is anything but a
tossed-off afterthought, showing a new dedication to pop craftsmanship.
If anyone had reason to celebrate this past New Year’s Eve, it was King
Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard. On December 31, the Australian
psych-rock collective finally fulfilled their long-standing promise to
release five new albums in 2017, surreptitiously making Gumboot Soup
available on their Bandcamp page hours before the year came to a close.
Whether they were scrambling to make the deadline or were just
withholding the new record until the last possible moment for dramatic
effect, the photo finish felt just right for a wildly unpredictable band
that always seems to be flying by the seat of its cut-off shorts, yet
always manages to get the job done. The remarkable thing about King
Gizzard’s 2017 isn’t just that they managed to release five records—it’s
that not a moment of them felt half-assed. They didn’t cook the books
by dropping a 30-minute improv jam or cobbling together a bunch of
acoustic song sketches and calling it an album. Whether it was released
by a big label like ATO, a small Aussie indie like Flightless, or, well,
you, each of their 2017 releases is an elaborately constructed,
carefully considered statement that opened up new universes for the band
to explore.
A title like Gumboot Soup might suggest a sloppy collection of
leftovers, but the record features some of the most delicately rendered
songs ever released by this bull-in-a-china-shop band. In it, you’ll
hear echoes of the band’s other 2017 releases—the ominous eco-conscious
parables of Flying Microtonal Banana, the over-the-top motorik metal of
Murder of the Universe, the jazzy looseness of Sketches of Brunswick
East, the pastoral prog of Polygondwanaland. But there’s an emphasis on
pop craftsmanship and concision here that greatly distinguishes it from
its immediate predecessors (not to mention a gesture toward late-’70s
Bowie-esque art-funk, via “Down the Sink,” that constitutes another new
look for this stylistically promiscuous group).
Where the vocals in a given King Gizzard song tend to mimic the pattern
of the main guitar riff or underlying rhythm (often encouraging mantric
repetition), here, the arrangements rally around the melodies.
Keyboardist Ambrose Kenny-Smith’s atypically relaxed voice leads the way
on the gently swinging cocktail-lounge pop of “The Last Oasis,”
gradually submerging the song in a blissful, aquatic whirl. And the
dreamy, psychedelic soft-rock of “Beginner’s Luck” is so enchanting, you
could be forgiven for thinking its scenes of high-stakes casino
gambling constituted a celebration of excess, rather than a cautionary
allegory for unchecked greed. (The spastic, squawking guitar solo that
overtakes the song in its final minute brings the band’s subversive
intent to the fore.)
The Aussie psych-rock group’s fifth album of 2017 is anything but a
tossed-off afterthought, showing a new dedication to pop craftsmanship.
If anyone had reason to celebrate this past New Year’s Eve, it was King
Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard. On December 31, the Australian
psych-rock collective finally fulfilled their long-standing promise to
release five new albums in 2017, surreptitiously making Gumboot Soup
available on their Bandcamp page hours before the year came to a close.
Whether they were scrambling to make the deadline or were just
withholding the new record until the last possible moment for dramatic
effect, the photo finish felt just right for a wildly unpredictable band
that always seems to be flying by the seat of its cut-off shorts, yet
always manages to get the job done. The remarkable thing about King
Gizzard’s 2017 isn’t just that they managed to release five records—it’s
that not a moment of them felt half-assed. They didn’t cook the books
by dropping a 30-minute improv jam or cobbling together a bunch of
acoustic song sketches and calling it an album. Whether it was released
by a big label like ATO, a small Aussie indie like Flightless, or, well,
you, each of their 2017 releases is an elaborately constructed,
carefully considered statement that opened up new universes for the band
to explore.
A title like Gumboot Soup might suggest a sloppy collection of
leftovers, but the record features some of the most delicately rendered
songs ever released by this bull-in-a-china-shop band. In it, you’ll
hear echoes of the band’s other 2017 releases—the ominous eco-conscious
parables of Flying Microtonal Banana, the over-the-top motorik metal of
Murder of the Universe, the jazzy looseness of Sketches of Brunswick
East, the pastoral prog of Polygondwanaland. But there’s an emphasis on
pop craftsmanship and concision here that greatly distinguishes it from
its immediate predecessors (not to mention a gesture toward late-’70s
Bowie-esque art-funk, via “Down the Sink,” that constitutes another new
look for this stylistically promiscuous group).
Where the vocals in a given King Gizzard song tend to mimic the pattern
of the main guitar riff or underlying rhythm (often encouraging mantric
repetition), here, the arrangements rally around the melodies.
Keyboardist Ambrose Kenny-Smith’s atypically relaxed voice leads the way
on the gently swinging cocktail-lounge pop of “The Last Oasis,”
gradually submerging the song in a blissful, aquatic whirl. And the
dreamy, psychedelic soft-rock of “Beginner’s Luck” is so enchanting, you
could be forgiven for thinking its scenes of high-stakes casino
gambling constituted a celebration of excess, rather than a cautionary
allegory for unchecked greed. (The spastic, squawking guitar solo that
overtakes the song in its final minute brings the band’s subversive
intent to the fore.)
As “Beginner’s Luck” makes clear from the outset, Gumboot Soup’s tilt
toward pop accessibility doesn’t come at the expense of the band’s
burgeoning social conscience. King Gizzard’s recent records have toed
the line between wacky and woke, but on Gumboot Soup, the apocalyptic
allusions become all the more vivid, as if bearing the crushing weight
of all the geopolitical misery that 2017 wrought. Over a rumbling Can
groove, the self-explanatory “Greenhouse Heat Death” finds ringleader
Stu McKenzie singing of environmental degradation from the Earth’s
perspective in the pained croak of a torture victim. And the growling
“Great Chain of Being” would verge on heavy-metal parody if only its
megalomaniacal ravings (“I usurp the precious stones/I have come to take
the throne/I transcend the natural flesh/I will lay your god to rest”)
didn’t resemble dispatches from the Oval Office. Even the band’s clarion
call for off-the-grid living, “Muddy Water,” is rendered as a
sax-blasted blitzkrieg boogie, as if to suggest that our time to enjoy
nature’s spoils is rapidly running out.
But if there’s a song here that best sums up the events of the past
year—for both the band and the world at large—it’s “I’m Sleepin’ In.” In
its downsized, vacuum-sealed sound and slumberous spirit, it’s a worthy
successor to the pantheon of John Lennon songs about getting some
shut-eye. And like those tunes, it’s less a slacker’s anthem than a cry
for help, a plea to disconnect from the pressures of the outside world.
“I need to locate the switch hidden in me/Which will turn me off,”
McKenzie sings. Given that he’s just released five musically and
ideologically dense albums in 12 months, dude has more than earned the
right to power down. (Stuart Berman/pitchfork.com)
Michael Cavanagh - Drums (Track 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,7, 8, 9, 11)
Stu Mackenzie - Vocals (Track 1, 2, 4, 7, 8, 10, 11), Percussion (Track
1, 2, 4, 9, 10, 11), Bass (Track 1, 10), Keyboards (Track 1, 4, 6, 8,
10, 11), Mellotron (Track 1, 6, 8, 10), Flute (Track 1, 4, 5, 6),
Synthesizer (Track 2, 7), Guitar (Track 4, 7, 9, 10), Saxophone (Track
4, 5, 6, 9), Drums (Track 10)
Lucas Skinner - Piano (Track 1), Bass (Track 2, 3, 7, 9), Keyboards (Track 8, 11)
Ambrose Kenny-Smith - Vocals (Track 1, 2, 3, 8, 9, 10, 11), Synthesizer (Track 7), Harmonica (Track 9, 10), Keyboards (Track 9)
Cook Craig - Guitar (Track 2, 3, 6, 7, 9), Vocals (Track 3, 6), Keyboards (Track 3), Bass (Track 3)
Joey Walker - Guitar (Track 2, 4, 5, 7, 9), Synthesizer (Track 5), Bass
(Track 5, 6, 8, 11), Vocals (Track 5), Percussion (Track 5), Keyboards
(Track 6), Mellotron (Track 6)
Eric Moore - Drums (Track 7, 9)
Versand innerhalb Deutschland (versichert mit GLS - generell innerhalb von 24 Stunden) 6,00 Euro
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