My top 10 albums of 2016 so far.

It’s been a good year so far for music.  I’m finding excellent stuff every month.  We’re halfway through the year, so here’s a quick recap of my top 10 records of 2016 so far.

  1. David Bowie – Blackstar: A powerful way to end one’s career, let along a legendary life.
  2. The Besnard Lakes – A Coliseum Complex Museum: It’s still the most lush, beautiful record I’ve heard so far this year.
  3. Night Beats – Who Sold My Generation: This band gets better with each record, and this one is a tour de force.
  4. King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard – Nonagon Infinity: Easily the craziest record of the year so far.  You can play it on an infinite loop beginning with any track and it will repeat without any noticeable pauses, stutters, or breaks.
  5. WALL – self-titled EP: WALL are currently my favorite discovery of 2016.  They’ve brought back a fierce post-punk edginess that I didn’t know I was yearning for until I heard them.
  6. Underworld – Barbara, Barbara, We Face a Shining Future: This record is so good that it might go higher on my Best of 2016 list by the end of the year.  It’s a fabulous return for the band and wonderfully optimistic.
  7. Radiohead – A Moon Shaped Pool: One word to describe this record – Heartbreaking.  Most of the songs are about the end of Thom Yorke’s 20+ year relationship with his girlfriend.
  8. All Them Witches – Dying Surfer Meets His Maker: This is simply a great rock record.  No muss, no fuss.
  9. The Duke Spirit – Kin: I’m so happy they’re back and even happier that they’ve put out the best shoegaze record of the year so far.
  10. Golden Dawn Arkestra – Stargazer: Pure cosmic funk that can induce dancing in even the grumpiest of grumps.

Keep your mind open.

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King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard – Nonagon Infinity

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Holy crap.

King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard have come to “fuck shit up” (as they put it) on their new record – Nonagon Infinity.

The band (Ambrose Kenny Smith – harmonica, vocals, synths, Cook Craig – guitars and bass, Eric Moore – drums, percussion, theremin, Joey Walker – guitar and vocals, Lucas Skinner – bass, Michael Cavanaugh – drums, Stu Mackenzie – guitar, vocals, flute) is wildly prolific and able to switch musical styles faster than a chameleon changes colors.  Their last album, Paper Mache Dream Balloon, is a lovely bit of psychedelic hippy pop music with some rock and blues touches.

Nonagon Infinity, however, is the most blistering rock record I’ve heard in a long while.  “Robot Stop” explodes from the opening seconds like a land mine hit by a tank.  Each track flows seamlessly into the next.  This happens so well that the album loops on itself by the end.  I’ve read interviews with the band in which they had planned this all along.  The album can be listened to on loop without any noticeable bumps in the road.  In fact, you could start Nonagon Infinity on any of the nine tracks and it would still loop itself without stumbling.  It’s an incredible piece of audio engineering.

“Big Fig Wasp” emerges from “Robot Stop” like a train emerging from a tunnel.  Everything is layered in wall-flattening guitars, double drumming, and slightly distorted vocals before launching into “Gamma Knife” like a rocket leaving Cape Canaveral.  The harmonica on “Gamma Knife” is the booster on that rocket, taking the song out of orbit.  “People Vultures” follows it, with lyrics about rampant consumerism and a heavy Jethro Tull feel.

“Mr. Beat” has a great trippy groove before “Evil Death Roll” comes in with heavy reverb on the guitars and a cool mix of stoner rock and psychedelia.  “Invisible Face” sounds like they recorded it while diving 80mph down a dark desert road.  “Wah Wah” refers to both the guitar effects and the near mystical chant lyrics as it builds to mind-blowing intensity.  It melts your brain into the closer (or is it the opener?) – “Road Train,” which might crush any sanity you have left by this point.

As stunning as Nonagon Infinity is, I’m sure it is even better live, so don’t miss them on their current tour.  You won’t regret it, or buying this record.

Keep your mind open.

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Levitation Austin artist spotlight: King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard

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Australian psych-rockers King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard return to Levitation Austin on May 1st.  My wife and I were lucky enough to see their first performance on U.S. soil at the festival two years ago, and I’m keen to see them again.  Their new album, Nonagon Infinity, is a sizzling rocker that loops on itself from multiple directions.  Hearing it live should be mind-blowing.

Keep your mind open.

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King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard’s “Nonagon Infinity” now available for pre-order.

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Prolific Australian psych-rockers King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard have  another album ready to roll on April 29, 2016.  Nonagon Infinity is now available for pre-order through the band’s Bandcamp page and the first single, “Gamma Knife,” can be heard there.  It’s a loud rocker with heavy harmonica and some of their fastest drumming.

Nonagon Infinity will be released the first day of Levitation Austin, at which King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard are playing, so I’m looking forward to hearing this album live.

Keep your mind open.

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King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard – Paper Mache Dream Balloon

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Australian psych rockers King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard (Stu Mackenzie – piano, vocals, bass, sitar, flute, Lucas Skinner – piano and bass, Joey Walker – guitar, vocals, and bass, Cook Craig – percussion, guitars, vocals, Ambrose Kenny-Smith – vocals and harmonica, Michael Cavanaugh – percussion, Eric Moore – “Nothing.”) have returned with perhaps the hippiest record I’ve heard in years – Paper Mache Dream Balloon.

“Sense” almost sounds like a modern rap track at the beginning until it slides into a mellow plea to take care of Mother Earth. “Bone” is a clever song about the afterlife with lyrics like “If heaven is a place I know, I won’t be taking my bones. Will all my stitches be unsown? And when I’m gone and I’m dead, what will be inside my head?” Mackenzie’s flute carries the track and makes it fun instead of maudlin. “Dirt” is about ditching a relationship that’s toxic for both involved and it sounds like something you’d hear strummed in a southern California park on a summer day.

The title track encourages us to let go of troubles. They aren’t worth it. The song walks along at an easy pace before jumping up to a happy dance tune best suited for waving a bubble wand and hugging whoever gets close enough to seize. “Trap Door” is a quick, weird rocker about keeping our anger under control. “Cold Cadaver” is another tune about death and trying to keep the Grim Reaper at bay. The vocals are distorted just a bit, but to good effect, and the background harmonica and sitar add nice touches.

Then comes “The Bitter Boogie,” a song about the pain of drug addiction that dives headlong into the great subgenre of blues-psych. The whole band lays down a groove best suited for dry Arizona roads and sexy, possibly demonic hitchhikers. Kenny-Smith’s harmonica is particularly good here, as is the acoustic guitar work and the slithering bass line. “N.G.R.I. (Bloodstain)” seems to be about a man waking up to find himself in a crime scene, but the song is jumpy and toe-tapping instead of dark and brooding.

The next two songs mirror each other. “Time = Fate” is about the importance of living in the present (“Pondering things in the past makes you blind.”). “Time = $$$” is a trippy psychedelic track with blues lyrics (“Why is time money? ‘Cos it sounds funny to give me so much time and no money nearby.”).

“Most of What I Like” is both a ballad and a song of lament. The lyrics speak of a man who can’t live without his lover (“Most of what I like is given to me by the one that I love, bears the onus every time.”), but knows that his dependency is killing the relationship (“You always shut your eyes when you look me in the eyes.”).

The whole album is full of these neat combinations – psychedelic rock and blues, death and life, love and lament. King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard will be returning to the Levitation Austin music festival this year, and I look forward to seeing them again. I was lucky enough to see them two years ago when they played their first U.S. gig there. They came to rock and didn’t disappoint. I’m sure they’ll knock it out of the park again.

Keep your mind open.