Zaireeka
The Flaming Lips
Warner
Bros., 1997
Reviewed by
Troy Carpenter
The Flaming Lips' Zaireeka is a great step in evolution for the band , and the recording age of music. The Lips completely throw out
convention in creating the first multiple sound source record. The concept, created by
singer Wayne Coyne, is four recordings of the same album - eight tracks in the same order
with the same length. The catch is that they're not the same sounds.
Each CD contains different parts to each of the tracks - on "Okay
I'll Admit That I Really Don't Understand," for instance, the drum and bass are on
CD1, the piano and voice on CD2 and rising and descending vocal melodies on CDs 3 and 4.
But there is no rhyme or reason for the distribution of sounds from track to track. The
extensive liner notes advise that the CDs can be simultaneously listened to in any
combination, with the full effect only realized by
using all four.
Zaireeka grew out of Coyne's
experiments with multiple sound sources, beginning with a parking lot full of cars with
tape decks. Somewhere along the way, Coyne learned the key to the album concept: CD
players will not play in synch with each other. Thus, each listen to an album like Zaireeka
should result in different sonic possibilities.
Ambitious yet impractical, this album takes a lot of work to listen to.
Even if you can get four CD players together, you also need enough interested friends to help push the play buttons at the same time.
And don't go looking for the sequel to
"She Don't Use Jelly" (the Lips' 1994 alternative pop hit) here. Augmenting the
guitar/bass/drums format the band used to work with are pianos, horns, distorted screams,
computer-game blips, and many other unidentifiable noises. "How Will We Know
(Futuristic Crashendos)" is laden with extremely high and low frequencies and
accompanied with a warning that the sounds "can cause a person to become disoriented,
confused or nauseated." I kept my hands on my ears during the whole song but at the
same time wanted to congratulate the band for having the gall to put that kind of thing on
disc.
The album closer, "The Big Ol' Bug is The
New Baby Now," evolves into a vocals-up chorus with orchestral beauty when listened
to on all four discs. "The March Of The Rotten Vegetables" is a monstrosity of a
drum solo, with clashing, angular bits of distorted percussion coming from alternating
sides of your room.
Sounds like a lot to handle, doesn't it?
Well, it is, but that's OK. At a list price only a couple bucks more than
any other CD, you really do get more creativity than you pay for. The biggest thing is,
alongside any electronic needs, Zaireeka requires patience. But think of it as the
first foray into a new type of media. The Flaming Lips haven't necessarily produced the
best multiple sound source album, just the first. As
musical pioneers, they should be commended for Zaireeka and hopefully somebody will
one day top it.
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