The Flaming Lips | |
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![]() The Flaming Lips in 2006 | |
Background information | |
Origin | Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, U.S. |
Genres | |
Years active | 1983–present |
Labels | |
Members |
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Past members |
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Website | flaminglips |
The Flaming Lips are an Americanpsychedelic rock band formed in 1983 inOklahoma City, Oklahoma. The band currently consists ofWayne Coyne (vocals, guitars, bass, keyboards),Steven Drozd (guitars, bass, keyboards, drums, vocals), Derek Brown (keyboards, guitars, percussion), Matt Duckworth Kirksey (drums, percussion, keyboards) and Tommy McKenzie (bass). Coyne and Drozd have remained the band's only consistent members since 1991, with Coyne being the only remaining founding member following the departure of bassist and keyboardistMichael Ivins in 2021. However, since 2025, Drozd has not been touring with the band for the first time since joining. It remains uncertain if he is still part of the band or has left permanently.
The group recorded several albums andEPs on an indie label,Restless, in the 1980s and early 1990s. After signing toWarner Brothers they releasedHit to Death in the Future Head (1992), followed byTransmissions from the Satellite Heart (1993) and the hit single "She Don't Use Jelly" which broke the band into the mainstream. They later releasedThe Soft Bulletin (1999), which wasNME magazine'sAlbum of the Year, followed by the critically acclaimedYoshimi Battles the Pink Robots (2002). In February 2007, they were nominated for aBRIT Award for "Best International Act". The group has won threeGrammy Awards, including two forBest Rock Instrumental Performance. They were placed onQ magazine's list of the "50 Bands to See Before You Die" in 2002.
The Flaming Lips formed inOklahoma City in 1983 withWayne Coyne on guitar, his brotherMark singing lead vocals,Michael Ivins on bass and Dave Kotska on drums. The band debuted at Oklahoma City's Blue Note Lounge. After they hired Dave Kotska as the drummer, Richard English joined the band in 1984. That same year they recordedThe Flaming Lips EP,[1] their only release with Mark singing lead vocals.
There are several theories as to how the band chose their name. One possibility is that it was inspired by the 1953 feature filmGeraldine, in which comedianStan Freberg sings several songs, including one named "Flaming Lips". Another possible source is from the 1964Shirley MacLaine filmWhat a Way to Go! in whichGene Kelly's character stars in a film titledFlaming Lips. However, according to an article in the September 16, 1993, issue ofRolling Stone, Mark and Wayne[2] came up with the name as a reference to a rumor about a classmate who contractedgenital herpes after receivingcunnilingus from a partner with activecold sores. Wayne elaborated:
When Mark and I were in, I think it wasJunior Year in High School, there was a rumor about this girl who got herpes from this guy at a party. He went down on her with a cold sore. I don't think we knew the girl, and I'm not sure if she even existed, you know how kids just spreadbullshit. But when we were thinking of band names one night over a pack ofSchlitz and someleft-handed cigarettes and remembered how we joked that they both had "Flaming Lips" and it just stuck.
After his brother's departure, Wayne assumed the vocal duties and the band recorded their first full-length album,Hear It Is,[1] on Pink Dust Records (the psychedelic-rock imprint ofEnigma Records) in London's Southern Studios, in 1986. This line-up recorded two more albums: 1987'sOh My Gawd!!! and 1989'sTelepathic Surgery, the latter originally planned to be a 30-minute sound collage.
Drummer Nathan Roberts replaced English and guitaristJonathan Donahue (also a member of the alternative rock bandMercury Rev) joined in 1989.In a Priest Driven Ambulance, their first album with producerDave Fridmann, was recorded at theState University of New York inFredonia for $5 an hour on a $10,000 budget.[3] The album was host to a marked expansion in the band's sound and their previous experiments intape loops and effects were given a more prominent role. During this period, Coyne made his transition to a higher, more strained vocal style akin toNeil Young, which he first used onTelepathic Surgery's "Chrome Plated Suicide" and has employed ever since.
In 1990, the band caught the attention ofWarner Bros. Records and was signed promptly after a label representative witnessed a show at which the band almost burned down the venue (American Legion Hall in Norman, Oklahoma) with the use ofpyrotechnics.[4]
In 1991, the band started recording their major label debutHit to Death in the Future Head. The album's release was halted for nearly a year because of the use of a sample from Michael Kamen's score for the filmBrazil in the track "You Have to Be Joking (Autopsy of the Devil's Brain)", which required a lengthy clearance process. After the recording of this album, Donahue left the band to concentrate on Mercury Rev, and Roberts left the band as well, citing creative differences. They were replaced by Ronald Jones andSteven Drozd, respectively.
In 1993, they releasedTransmissions from the Satellite Heart. This was the only studio album sinceIn a Priest Driven Ambulance, to date, in whichDave Fridmann has not been involved. Because of the success of the album and the single "She Don't Use Jelly", the band was featured on four popular television series:Beverly Hills, 90210,Late Show with David Letterman,Charmed andBeavis and Butt-head. The success of this record led to long stints of touring, opening for bands includingRed Hot Chili Peppers andCandlebox.
Clouds Taste Metallic was released to much critical fanfare in late 1995, though it did not achieve the commercial success of its predecessor. The strain of the year-longClouds tour, added to the stress from the three years touring in support ofTransmissions, was a major factor in the departure of Jones in late 1996. He was said to be suffering from a severe case ofagoraphobia, although the documentaryFearless Freaks states that he left because of his growing concerns over Drozd's drug use.
In September 2014, the band paid tribute to Jones and the impact his music had on their developing sound by performingTransmissions from the Satellite Heart live atFirst Avenue. In February 2015, they performedClouds Taste Metallic at the same venue. Later, in December, a 20th anniversary box set calledHeady Nuggs: 20 Years After Clouds Taste Metallic 1994–1997, was released.
The departure of Jones and a general dissatisfaction with standard "rock" music led to the three remaining members of the group redefining the direction of the band with the experimentalZaireeka (1997), a four-CD album which is intended to be heard by playing all four CDs in four separate CD players simultaneously. The music incorporated both traditional musical elements and "found" sounds (as inmusique concrète), often heavily manipulated withrecording studio electronics.
As part of the development of this project, the band conducted a series of "parking lot experiments" and then later, "boombox experiments". In the parking lot experiments up to 40 volunteers were given cassettes created by the band to be played at a parking lot in their cars' stereo systems simultaneously. In the "boom box experiments" an orchestra composed of up to 40 volunteers with modified "boombox"-type tape players was "conducted" – directed to vary the volume, speed or tone of the tape they were playing (again composed by the band) – byWayne Coyne.[5]
Meanwhile, a series of unfortunate events (recounted in the 1999 song "The Spiderbite Song") beset the band. Drozd's arm was almost amputated needlessly because of what he claimed was aspider bite (it turned out to beabscessed as a result of Drozd's heroin use),[6] Ivins was trapped in his car for several hours after a wheel spun off of another vehicle into his windshield, and Coyne's father died after a long battle with cancer.
Though their experimental endeavors received some press coverage, their real breakthrough came with the 1999 release,The Soft Bulletin. Marrying more traditional catchy melodies with synthetic strings, hypnotic, carefully manipulated beats, booming cymbals and oddball but philosophical lyrics (sung much more strongly than on earlier releases), the album quickly became one of the underground hits of the year, even widely considered to be one of the best albums of the entire decade.
Compared by many music critics tothe Beach Boys'Pet Sounds because of its inclusion of harmonies and orchestrated sounds,The Soft Bulletin also featured greater use of synthesizers,drum machines, sound effects and more studio manipulation. After this album was released, Coyne stated that, "if someone was to ask me what instrument do I play, I would say the recording studio."[7] As the band considered an attempt to recreate this complex album live solely with additional musicians to be complex and expensive, they decided to tour as a three-piece and make extensive use of pre-recorded music to fill out those parts that were not performed live by the members of the band. This led to the decision to have Drozd play primarily keyboards and guitar live instead of the drums. The band utilized video recordings and projections of Drozd playing the drums for some of the band's older songs. The band later added Kliph Scurlock on drums and percussion, with Drozd focusing on guitars, keyboards, bass (when he played bass, Ivins played keyboards), and occasional vocals. When Drozd sung, Coyne played guitars, keyboards andtheremin.
To enhance the live experience for their audience and to accurately reproduce the sound ofThe Soft Bulletin live, the Lips devised the concept of the "Headphone Concert". A low-poweredFM transmitter was set up at shows, and the concert was simultaneously broadcast to smallWalkman-style receivers and headphones made available for free to audience members. This would, in theory, allow the audiences greater sonic clarity while still feeling the power of a full liveP.A. This concept was debuted inDallas, Texas, and at theSouth by Southwest conference inAustin, Texas, in March 1999, and was subsequently used on theInternational Music Against Brain Degeneration Revue tour. This tour featured Japanese bandCornelius,Sebadoh,Robyn Hitchcock,Sonic Boom's E.A.R. andIQU.
Three years later, in the summer of 2002, the Flaming Lips joined bandsCake andModest Mouse on theUnlimited Sunshine Tour. They also released the full-lengthYoshimi Battles the Pink Robots to much critical acclaim. Featuring guest musicianYoshimi P-We (who inspired the album's title track) and demonstrating more use of electronic instruments and computer manipulation thanThe Soft Bulletin,Yoshimi is widely considered to be the Flaming Lips' first criticaland commercial success after nearly twenty years as a band. The final track on the album, "Approaching Pavonis Mons by Balloon (Utopia Planitia)", earned a 2003Grammy Award forBest Rock Instrumental Performance, and the album was certified gold on April 10, 2006. In March 2007, the band revealed that they had recently teamed up with screenwriterAaron Sorkin to produce a Broadway musical based on the album.
In January 2012,Pitchfork TV released a forty-five-minute documentary onThe Soft Bulletin. The documentary featured several rare archival photos and videos along with interviews from the members, producerDave Fridmann, and manager Scott Booker.[8] The same year,Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots was adapted into a musical after being in development for years after the album's release.
BothThe Soft Bulletin andYoshimi Battles the Pink Robots have been released onDVD-Audio.
Following the success of "Yoshimi", Steven Drozd completed rehab for heroin addiction. This decision was spurred by a physical altercation between Drozd and Wayne Coyne.
Shortly afterYoshimi andThe Soft Bulletin, the Flaming Lips released twoEPs in the same vein of their previous album's robotic theme which contain remixed songs fromYoshimi,Fight Test andEgo Tripping at the Gates of Hell. They also appeared on the track "Marching the Hate Machines (Into the Sun)" on theThievery Corporation albumThe Cosmic Game. In 2002 they were invited to work withthe Chemical Brothers. Steven Drozd performed lead vocals, while Wayne Coyne performed harmony vocals, on the single "The Golden Path", which was included on the Chemical Brothers compilation album,Singles 93-03.
In 2002, they performed as the opening act, as well as the backup band, for singerBeck on hisSea Change tour. In the summer of 2004, it was announced that the Flaming Lips would appear among the headliners on the 2004Lollapalooza tour, alongside such artists asSonic Youth andMorrissey; however, the tour was canceled because of lack of revenue.[9] Also in 2004, the band recorded the song "SpongeBob and Patrick Confront the Psychic Wall of Energy" for thesoundtrack ofThe SpongeBob SquarePants Movie. Following the concerts' cancellation, the band entered Tarbox Road Studio with producerDave Fridmann and began work on their eleventh album, the more organic-soundingAt War with the Mystics. The record, aimed to be a more guitar-based and heavier effort than recent albums, featured more politically conscious lyrics than any of their previous releases, and was released in April 2006 to a mixed yet mostly positive reception.
In 2005 the band was the subject of a documentary calledFearless Freaks, featuring appearances by other artists and celebrities such asGibby Haynes,the White Stripes,Beck,Christina Ricci,Liz Phair,Juliette Lewis,Steve Burns,Starlight Mints, andAdam Goldberg. In that same year, the Flaming Lips contributed a version of "Bohemian Rhapsody" to the albumKiller Queen: A Tribute to Queen. Also in this year, the Flaming Lips released the DVDVOID (Video Overview in Deceleration), which chronicles all of their ventures into music video that have been produced since they signed with Warner Bros in 1991. In October 2005, the Flaming Lips recorded a cover of "If I Only Had a Brain" for the soundtrack of the video gameStubbs the Zombie, which features modern rock bands covering songs from the 1950s and 1960s. Additionally, the band released one new song, "Mr. Ambulance Driver", for the soundtrack of the2005 filmWedding Crashers (a slightly edited version of the song found its way onto the new record).
The band released two singles fromAt War With the Mystics: "The W.A.N.D.", which was featured in a Dell commercial and which was originally put out as a download-only single in early 2006, and "The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song", which became their highest-charting single on theUK Singles Chart, peaking at No. 16. A 4-track EP, entitledIt Overtakes Me, was released later in the UK that year. The only instrumental on the album, "The Wizard Turns On... The Giant Silver Flashlight and Puts on His Werewolf Moccasins", earned a 2006Grammy Award forBest Rock Instrumental Performance,[10] making it twice in a row the Lips have been nominated in that category and won.
Following the April 4, 2006, release ofAt War with the Mystics, the band began a tour to support the album in the United Kingdom, including a finale at theRoyal Albert Hall and performances at theO2 Wireless Festival. At the Leeds England date of the festival, the band opened forthe Who, of whom they are long standing fans.
The band continued to tour throughout the fall of 2006 stopping inMontreal, the Virgin Festival on the Toronto Islands,Atlantic City's House of Blues, TheUniversity of Vermont inBurlington, their hometownOklahoma City, theAustin City Limits Music Festival inAustin, Texas, and New York City,NY as well as several other cities. The homecoming show in Oklahoma City was performed at theZoo Amphitheater and included the unveiling of a newUFOstage prop, and would provide footage for the U.F.O.s at the Zoo concert DVD.
In November 2006 then mayor of Oklahoma CityMick Cornett proposed naming a downtown alley after the band.Vince Gill andCharlie Christian were also to be given street names by the city.[11]Flaming Lips Alley is at the center of Oklahoma City's entertainment district, Bricktown. At the official dedication in 2007, Coyne said of Oklahoma City, "...We're on the way to becoming, I think, the fucking coolest city in America."[12]
In 2001, the Flaming Lips began filming a low-budgetindie film entitledChristmas on Mars. Filming for the movie ended in late September 2005 and premiered on May 25, 2008, at the Sasquatch! Music Festival.[13] The film tells the story of the first Christmas of a colony set-up on the surface of Mars and was written by Wayne Coyne, and co-directed by Wayne Coyne, Bradley Beesley andGeorge Salisbury, with the band and their friends acting in the movie.[14]
The band brought the film to rock festivals across America during the summer of 2008 and screened it in a large circus tent they had bought for that purpose. The film was released on DVD on November 11, 2008, along with a soundtrack written and performed by the Flaming Lips.
The band released their first live concert DVD,UFO's at the Zoo: The Legendary Concert in Oklahoma City, on August 7, 2007. The band also contributed original songs to the soundtracks of several 2007 films, including "The Supreme Being Teaches Spider-Man How to be in Love" forSpider-Man 3, "I Was Zapped by the Super Lucky Rainbow" forGood Luck Chuck, "Love the World You Find" forMr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium, and "Maybe I'm Not the One" and "Tale of the Horny Frog" forThe Heartbreak Kid.
In March 2009 "Do You Realize??" was announced as the official rock song of Oklahoma. Ten choices were put to a public vote, and out of 21,000 votes cast nearly 51% were for "Do You Realize??"[15][16][17] TheOklahoma Senate approved this choice unanimously. TheOklahoma House of Representatives failed to confirm the choice after Rep. Mike Reynolds, R-Oklahoma City attacked the band for its use of offensive language, and Rep. Corey Holland, R-Marlow said he had been "really offended" when Michael Ivins came to the announcement ceremony in March wearing a red T-shirt with a yellowhammer and sickle. However, that evening, Oklahoma governorBrad Henry announced he would sign an executive order naming the song the official rock song. Henry said that for more than 20 years the Flaming Lips have produced "creative, fun and provocative rock music." "The music of the Flaming Lips has earned Grammys, glowing critical acclaim and fans all over the world", the governor said. "A truly iconic rock n' roll band, they are proud ambassadors of their home state... They were clearly the people's choice, and I intend to honor that vote."[18] However, it was revealed in 2013 thatRepublican governorMary Fallin removed this designation by not renewing Brad Henry's executive order upon taking office in 2011.[19] An alley in Oklahoma City had been named for the band in 2006.[20]
In 2009, the band released their twelfth studio album and first double album,Embryonic. The album, which was the band's first to open in theBillboard top 10, was widely critically acclaimed for its new direction; late in the recording the band added Derek Brown on keyboards, percussion and guitar. In December of the same year, the band released their second album of the year and thirteenth overall,The Flaming Lips and Stardeath and White Dwarfs with Henry Rollins and Peaches Doing The Dark Side of the Moon, a track-for-track cover ofPink Floyd'sThe Dark Side of the Moon, which was recorded withStardeath and White Dwarfs and features guest appearances fromHenry Rollins andPeaches. The album was released physically on vinyl and CD in 2010.
In 2010, the band performed "I Can Be a Frog" on the Nick Jr. television seriesYo Gabba Gabba!.[21]
In January 2011, the Lips announced their intention of releasing a new song every month of the year. In February, they released the first track titled "Two Blobs Fucking". The song exists as 12 separate pieces onYouTube and must be played simultaneously to be heard as intended.[22]
In March 2011, the Lips released the EPThe Flaming Lips with Neon Indian. In April, the band released theGummy Song Skull EP, a seven-pound skull made of gummy bear material with a gummy brain, which contained a flashdrive with 4 songs on them. This release was extremely limited, but was soon leaked on the internet shortly after its release.
In May, the band released its second collaboration EP titledThe Flaming Lips with Prefuse 73. It contains four songs and was released in a similar way to the earlier Neon Indian EP, in that the run was extremely limited and consisted of randomly colored, one of a kind discs. This EP was briefly available on the band's official website but sold out shortly after it was put up for sale.
June saw several releases by the band, the first beingThe Soft Bulletin: Live la Fantastique de Institution 2011, a live-in-studio recording of the band's 1999 albumThe Soft Bulletin which was on a flash drive embedded in a marijuana-flavored brain inside a strawberry flavored gummy skull. This was only released at the band's two night show at theHollywood Forever Cemetery on June 14 and 15. This show was a special two-night, one morning event in which they played the entirety ofThe Soft Bulletin one night and a new revamped version ofThe Dark Side of the Moon and collaborated withEdward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros for a performance of "Do You Realize??" at dawn of the second day. Also included on this flash drive was a best-of compilation titledEveryone You Know Someday Will Die. It included songs from every portion of the band's career as well as a newly recorded intro. The final June release was theGummy Song Fetus EP which consisted of three songs on a flash drive embedded in a bubblegum-flavored fetus made of gummy bear material.
In July, the band releasedThe Flaming Lips with Lightning Bolt, a collaborative EP with experimental rock groupLightning Bolt, featuring the songs "I Wanna Get High But I Don't Want Brain Damage" and "Working at NASA on Acid". This EP was released on randomly colored vinyl as with the previous two collaborative EPs.
In late August, the band announced that it would be recording a six-hour-long song titled "I Found a Star on the Ground". This, along with two other songs, was released in September packaged with a set of spinning discs with animations on them. This release is officially calledStrobo Trip. Featured in "I Found a Star on the Ground" isSean Lennon who, withhis band, opened for the Lips in early 2011. In the song Lennon reads off several lists of names of people who donated $100 to the Oklahoma City SPCA and Academy of Contemporary Music at University of Central Oklahoma. 212 names are featured in the song.
At midnight October 31, 2011, a 24-hour song was released titled "7 Skies H3". The song played live on a never-ending audio stream on a special website set up by the band[23] and was made available for purchase as a hard drive encased in an actual human skull, limited to 13 copies.[citation needed]
The band's last release of 2011 was a 12" EP collaboration,The Flaming Lips with Yoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band, sold only at the band's annual New Years shows in Oklahoma City.
With their previous contract withWarner Bros. Records having expired in 2011, the band re-signed to Warner Bros. for the United States and toBella Union in Europe in early 2012. The first release under these new deals wasThe Flaming Lips and Heady Fwends, initially released as a limited edition vinyl-only package forRecord Store Day on April 21. The album features collaborations with artists such asKesha,Nick Cave, andErykah Badu. In an interview withAmerican Songwriter, Coyne stated that "Since we were releasing music every month, we thought it would be a little bit boring for us each month to say 'Well here's four more Flaming Lips songs.' We just thought 'Well we'll get some of our friends, and we'll do collaborations and see what happens.'"[24] The album later received a wider release on CD and digitally on June 26 in the US and July 30 in Europe.
The Flaming Lips brokeJay-Z'sGuinness World Record for the most live concerts (8) in 24 hours, on June 27 and 28, 2012. The attempt was part of theO Music Awards, and wasLivestreamed online for the entire 24 hours. The attempt started inMemphis on the afternoon of June 27 and ended inNew Orleans on the afternoon of June 28, with 20 minutes to spare. The band played with guests includingGrace Potter and the Nocturnals,Neon Indian, Linear Downfall andPhantogram and HOTT MT, among others.
The concerts, which were required to be at least 15 minutes long, as per Guinness rules, featured a mix of special covers, songs rarely or never performed live by the band before, and new songs fromHeady Fwends.[25][26]
In November 2012 the band's Lovely Sorts of Death Records released a collaborative track-by-track reinterpretation ofKing Crimson'sIn the Court of the Crimson King withStardeath and White Dwarfs, Linear Downfall, New Fumes, and Space Face entitledPlaying Hide and Seek with the Ghosts of Dawn on vinyl and on their own 'Satellite Heart Radio' website.[27]
They also worked on Kesha'sWarrior album (on "Past Lives") andLipsha. She also featured on their collaborative albums.
The band's next studio album, titledThe Terror, was originally due for release on April 2, 2013, in the US and on April 1 in Europe, the tour began with a new member: keyboardist and guitarist Jake Ingalls, Derek Brown focused on percussion and additional guitars and keyboards.[28][29][30] Because of a corruption while mastering the record on vinyl, the US release was delayed for two weeks, until April 16.[31]
In anticipation of the album's release, their song, "Sun Blows Up Today", was featured in aHyundaiSuper Bowl XLVII commercial. The band also released a lyric video onVideo onYouTube for "Sun Blows Up Today" with animations created by long-time Lips collaborator George Salisbury. The band premiered the new album live at a free outdoor concert atSXSW on March 15, 2013.
Critical reception of the album has tended to focus on its thematic bleakness and the turgid noisiness of its instrumentation. Like the three albums often referred to as "a trilogy"[32] accounting for the majority of the band's mainstream production over the past 15 years (consisting ofThe Soft Bulletin,Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots, andAt War With the Mystics),The Terror adheres to the love story/space opera narrative structure while taking a much darker approach. As noted in a review by Pitchfork, "The Terror deals in more personal turmoil– loneliness, depression, anxiety... Perhaps not coincidentally, the album was preceded by news of Coyne's separation from his partner of 25 years, Michelle, and of multi-instrumentalist Steven Drozd relapsing temporarily."[33]
Jon Pareles ofThe New York Times summarized the thematic content of the album fairly succinctly when he wrote, "The lyrics [of 'The Terror'] find cosmic repercussions in a lovers' breakup; loneliness turns to contemplation of grim human compulsions and the end of the universe."[34] Another critic goes so far as to say that the album underlines theLacanian psychodynamics structurally inherent in the conventions of thespace opera.[35]
Wayne Coyne's own description of his process or the theme of the album jibes well with this critical diagnosis:[35]
"We want, or wanted, to believe that without love we would disappear, that love, somehow, would save us that, yeah, if we have love, give love and know love, we are truly alive and if there is no love, there would be no life. The Terror is, we know now, that even without love, life goes on... we just go on... there is no mercy killing."
In November 2013 they produced and curatedThe Time Has Come to Shoot You Down…What a Sound, a reworking of theStone Roses' debut album featuringNew Fumes,Spaceface,Stardeath and White Dwarfs,Foxygen,Peaking Lights,Poliça and others.[36]
In March 2014, longtime drummer and percussionist Kliph Scurlock left the band and was replaced by drummer, percussionist, and keyboardist Matt Duckworth Kirksey and percussionist and drummer Nicholas Ley. Derek Brown began focusing on guitars and occasional keyboards and percussion. In May, Scurlock claimed he had been fired for negative comments about Wayne Coyne's friendChristina Fallin, the daughter of Oklahoma's governor and leader of a band called Pink Pony. Fallin had recently been criticized forcultural appropriation after she wore a Native American headdress in a publicity photo.[37] According to Scurlock, his criticism of Fallin's actions led to conflict with Coyne and his dismissal. In response, Drozd said, "[t]his Lips/Kliph bullshit has gone too far. We parted ways because of the usual band musical differences. The rest has been blown way out."[38] Coyne went even further, calling Scurlock a "pathological liar" and stated that he never meant his defense of Fallin, which included posting a photo of his dog in a feathered headdress, to be offensive but that he was "very sorry, to anybody that is following my Instagram or my Twitter, if I offended anybody of any religion, any race, any belief system. I would say you shouldn't follow my tweets; you shouldn't even probably want to be a Flaming Lips fan because we don't really have any agenda."[39]
On August 30, 2015, after hosting the2015 MTV Video Music Awards,Miley Cyrus announced thatMiley Cyrus & Her Dead Petz, the free, 23-track experimental album that Cyrus and the Flaming Lips wrote and recorded together, was available viaonline streaming. The album is described by Coyne as a combination ofPink Floyd andPortishead and "a slightly wiser, sadder, more true version" of Cyrus' pop music output.[40]
According to the Tarbox Roads Studio's website,[41] the Flaming Lips began recording a new album with Dave Fridmann on January 27, 2016.In a June interview with Danish music blog Regnsky, Wayne Coyne said that a new album would come out in January 2017, even though they had originally planned for it to be released in October 2016.[42] Wayne Coyne later confirmed in a September interview withConsequence of Sound, that they would release a new album at the beginning of 2017.[43] On October 20, the band confirmed the January 2017 release date for the album.[44] The band embarked on a tour in support that was described as "rock's greatest acid punch party" with "balloons, confetti cannons and rainbow visuals".[45] On January 13, 2017, the fourteenth Flaming Lips albumOczy Mlody was released, and featured a guest appearance by Miley Cyrus.[46] The album charted in both the UK and US.[47][48]
OnRecord Store Day, April 22, 2017, the Flaming Lips releasedOnboard the International Space Station Concert for Peace, a re-recording of seven tracks fromOczy Mlody in a faux live setting.[49]
The band's next studio album,King's Mouth, was released on April 13, 2019, forRecord Store Day.Mick Jones ofthe Clash andBig Audio Dynamite narrates the album; Wayne Coyne said of Jones that "he’s on almost every song... it really is quite unbelievable."[50]
In late 2019, Coyne and Drozd collaborated with garage rock duoDeap Vally to form a new band, Deap Lips.[51] The project's self-titled debut album was released on March 13, 2020.
On March 23, 2020, Drozd announced that the band's sixteenth studio album,American Head, was due for release in the summer.[52] The band officially announced the album's release date as September 11, 2020, along with the single "My Religion Is You" on June 6, 2020.[53]
During theCOVID-19 pandemic, the band performed a concert in their hometown of Oklahoma City on October 12, 2020, while entirely encased within inflatable human-sized bubbles. Audience members were also protected by plastic bubbles.[54] They performed in this fashion onThe Late Show with Stephen Colbert and again in 2021.[55] In 2022,The Flaming Lips Space Bubble Film, a documentary film covering these experimental concerts was released.
On August 16, 2021, Jake Ingalls announced on his Instagram page that he left the band on amicable terms.[56] Also in August, Coyne commented on his Instagram that Michael Ivins was no longer in the band, leaving Coyne as the only original member.Micah Nelson has been on bass for recent live performances. He was soon replaced by Tommy McKenzie, who joined the band later in 2021.
In November 2021, the band releasedWhere the Viaduct Looms, featuring 13-year old Canadian musician Nell Smith. The album covers nine songs by the Australian musicianNick Cave.[57] Smith died in a car accident on October 6, 2024, at the age of 17.[58][59]
The Flaming Lips are known for theirexperimental approach to songwriting and composing, and have been classified aspsychedelic rock,alternative rock andpop.[60][61] In addition topsychedelia andbubblegum pop, the band is also known to take musical cues fromnoise rock.[62]
Current members
| Former members
Current touring members
Former touring musicians
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Studio albums
The Flaming Lips won their firstGrammy Award in 2003, for their track "Approaching Pavonis Mons by Balloon (Utopia Planitia)".[63] To date, the band has been nominated for six Grammy Awards, and won three times.[63]
Year | Nominated work | Award | Category | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | The Soft Bulletin | NME Award | Best Album | Won | [64] |
Album of the Year | Won | [64] | |||
2003 | "Approaching Pavonis Mons by Balloon (Utopia Planitia)" | Grammy Award | Best Rock Instrumental Performance | Won | [63] |
2004 | Fight Test EP | Grammy Award | Best Alternative Music Album | Nominated | [63] |
2007 | The Flaming Lips | Brit Award | Best International Group | Nominated | [65] |
At War with the Mystics | Grammy Award | Best Alternative Music Album | Nominated | [63] | |
Grammy Award | Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical | Won | [63] | ||
"The Wizard Turns On..." | Grammy Award | Best Rock Instrumental Performance | Won | [63] | |
2008 | At War With the Mystics 5.1 | Grammy Award | Grammy Award for Best Surround Sound Album | Nominated | [63] |
2018 | "Tomorrow Is" forSpongeBob SquarePants: The Broadway Musical | Outer Critics Circle Award | Outstanding New Score | Won | [66] |
Tony Award | Best Original Score | Nominated | [67] |