Re: A Review of Every Single King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard Album
Posted: Fri Dec 03, 2021 10:40 am
Welcome to 2017. On the 24th of February, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard dropped their ninth studio album: Flying Microtonal Banana (FMB). It would be their first of five albums that year. FMB is the band's first major exploration into microtonal music. Usually in western music, we only go up an down by semitones, but on this album the band used specially made microtonal instruments to get quarter tones. You get twenty four tones, instead of only twelve.
Stu with his microtonal guitar. Look at all those frets!
The album was very successful, and was the first KGLW album to chart on the Billboard 200. FMB is just over forty minutes long and consists of nine tracks:
1. Rattlesnake
2. Melting
3. Open Water
4. Sleep Drifter
5. Billabong Valley
6. Anoxia
7. Doom City
8. Nuclear Fusion
9. Flying Microtonal Banana
FMB retains the band's psych roots, but takes them into a new, unexplored territory. It can be a weird listen at first, because these are not sounds that we are used to hearing in music. It feels foreign, and of course it is: the album takes a lot of inspiration from Middle-Eastern music and even includes some instruments from the region. This, along with the microtonality, makes FMB a truly unique listening experience. Keeping in good old KGLW tradition, Billabong valley is a song with some western themes, sung by Ambrose. Nothing on the album goes truly hard, but there isn't really anything super mellow going on either. There is always a bunch of things going on musically and its truly a rewarding listen even just to figure out everything that's going on.
This album definitely takes some getting used to, and I think it grows on me with every listen. I know a lot of people consider this to be the best of the 2017 releases. It isn't mine, but its pretty great. My favourite tracks are Rattlesnake, Melting, Open Water, and Nuclear Fusion.
8/10