2/26/2021

King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard releases new album 'L.W.'

KING GIZZARD & THE LIZARD WIZARD
RELEASES NEW STUDIO ALBUM L.W.

SHARES CLIP SET TO ALBUM CLOSER
"K.G.L.W."

BAND TO DONATE $1 FROM
EVERY BANDCAMP DOWNLOAD OF L.W.

Photo credit: Jamie Wdziekonski
Today, King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard have released their seventeenth studio album L.W. The album serves as a direct follow-up to last year's full-length K.G., and is the third volume in the band's explorations into microtonal tunings (which began with 2017's Flying Microtonal Banana). Hear the album HERE.

To celebrate the album's release, the band has shared some appropriately hellish footage created by the band's longtime collaborator Jason Galea and set to album closer "K.G.L.W." Watch the clip HERE. "Jase went to Hell and captured some incredible footage," frontman Stu Mackenzie says.

"This download of L.W. comes with tree (that’s right tree)," the band wrote on their Bandcamp page. "$1 from every download will be donated to Greenfleet, who plant native biodiverse forests in Australia and New Zealand.

We’re aiming to make 2000 downloads which is enough to revegetate 1,000m2 at Pearsons Block in Central Victoria. Some of the species endemic to this region include Yellow Box (Eucalyptus melliodora), Varnish Wattle (Acacia verniciflua) and Sweet Bursaria (Bursaria spinosa).

You will be creating habitat for the local wildlife species, playing a vital role in reconnecting parts of the Wychitella Biolink. Some of the species known to the area are Lace monitors, Quolls and the vulnerable Mallee Fowl. Other native and endangered bird species can be found in the area as well, including Shy Heathwrens and Inland Thornbills.

Protected for 100 years, these trees will grow into a thriving and resilient forest restoring the native ecosystem in the area and increasing the overall biodiversity and resilience. Good stuff!"

HEAR L.W. IN FULL

WATCH THE "K.G.L.W." CLIP

WATCH THE "PLEURA" VIDEO

Following the recent releases of "If Not Now, Then When?" and "O.N.E.", both featured on L.W., the band shared new track "Pleura" last week -- hear the track HERE, and watch the video HERE. The video -- which consists of a live performance from the band's studio and was filmed just last night -- was directed by John Angus Stewart, who also helmed the band's 2020 concert film Chunky Shrapnel.

Last year, the band released their sixteenth studio album K.G (the second volume in the band's previous explorations into microtonal tunings), as well as Live In S.F. '16 (ATO Records), a live album recorded during the band's 2016 U.S. tour stop at San Francisco venue The Independent. Stream/purchase K.G. HERE, and stream/purchase Live In S.F. '16 HERE.

Shortly before the album release, the band delighted fans with a full concert film accompanying Live In S.F. '16. Unlike their previous film release with Chunky Shrapnel, fans are able to own the film with a purchase of a stream. Stream/purchase the Live In S.F. '16 film HERE, and watch "Evil Death Roll" from the film HERE.
Freewheeling six-headed freak-rock beast King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard return with seventeenth album L.W.

Serving as both a companion piece to its 2020 predecessor K.G. and a stand-alone work in its own right, L.W. sees the Melbourne-based innovators produce a truly original work. After a full decade of increasingly frenzied productivity, the inability to tour during 2020 and into 2021 allowed the band to find a window of time in which, as frontman Stu Mackenzie puts it, “reset our brains, and try to figure out how to do a different thing.” 

Where in the past King Gizzard might have recorded fourteen or fifteen songs to make the cut on a ten-track album, thanks to having extra time on their hands, they instead recorded nineteen complete tracks back to back. “For me personally, making a record is always a certain percentage of fun and a small percentage of agonizing over it too,” says Mackenzie. “But there’s always a wild alchemy going into it. Like, you don’t really know what you’re doing, you’re just kind of throwing all of your emotional energy into nothing, which becomes…something?”

The result is a twin-set of records that expands upon the band’s microtonal explorations first heard on 2017’s Flying Microtonal Banana – regarded by many fans, and Stu himself, as one of their favorite Gizzard albums. Then as now, the band embarked upon a search for “the notes between the notes”, via modified instruments and the middle eastern tunings usually found on the bağlama, a Turkish stringed instrument. “We wanted to make new music that was somehow more colorful this time around, and which maybe reflected the many new things that we have learned along the way,” Stu explains. “After recording Flying Microtonal Banana the songs expanded when we played them live, so we felt ready to tackle the microtonal landscape again. Making these two new records was not expected, but because they were recorded in a way that was new to us – not being in the room at the same time – there was a feeling of almost being over-prepared, which is definitely not normal for us. Whatever normal is.”

On L.W. very different - and occasionally wonky - worlds collide. Album opener ‘If Not Now, Then When?’ morphs from mangled eastern rock into taut funk in a manner that somehow makes complete sense, while the amorphous and exotic ‘Pleura’ is a pungent gumbo of heady microtonal strings, tumescent riffs and endless surprises. Then there’s the slinky ‘Ataraxia’ which slithers like a sidewinder through the dusty catacombs of the imagination and the utterly disorientating ‘See Me’, which is nothing less than the national anthem of a scorched planet hitherto undiscovered. Here is an album that pulls, pushes and contorts western music into new shapes. Though some might categorize it as such, this is not ‘world music’ but ‘universal music’.

Only when this new clutch of songs was nearing completion did it become apparent they would form two separate releases. Such creative ambition and bold ideas have been King Gizzard’s stock in trade since day one. Let’s not forget this is a band whose innovative ideas have included – amongst other things – giving away the parts of an entire album for scores of international indie labels to press and sell themselves, have written a suite of songs that clock in at precisely 10 mins and 10 secs each, as well as a sludgy-stoner concept album about a lonely robot. Why record one album when you can record two?

Narratives are woven through the music across both release: L.W. ends, for example, with the same track that K.G. opens with (‘K.G.L.W’, obviously). Fans of the band will already be aware of similar such patterns embedded throughout their oeuvre: the award-winning, hard-riffing 2016 album Nonagon Infinity was a never-ending Möbius strip of music that looped in on itself. It was the type of iridescent collection of interlocking songs that you could imagine playing forever in a black hole as it spins on ever-deeper into the darkest reaches of the cosmos.

“I like to order a record early,” says Stu of these intricate structures and grand thematic concepts, in whose creation piles of maps and diagrams are often required. “That's something that I often do. And usually, the easiest one to slot in is the opener, so listening back to L.W. a theme song of sorts emerged. The outro is like a mirror image of the intro. And as we worked on it, it kept growing, as a lot of our songs do. In this case it just kept getting more and more ridiculous. I’m not sure how he acquired them, but Joe (Walker, guitarist) got all these crazy samples that he put on there. There’s an MRI machine, hammers, power tools, a drawbridge, a chainsaw, an angle-grinder. Cookie played a hammer and an anvil. It’s very metal. Literally.”

As the band enter their second decade – and their frontman still only thirty years old - the creative future of this most 21st century of outfits only promises to be bolder, madder and more imaginative than ever. Their place in the pantheon alongside such disparate predecessors such as Grateful Dead, Hawkwind, Frank Zappa, The Doors, Black Sabbath and AC/DC is assured; though rest assured The Gizz prefer to always face the future than the past.

“We're actually probably not as considered as people think that we are,” Stu concludes. “I’m always just trying to be in the band that I want to be in. But I’m also trying to be the band that I wish I could follow as a fan; so we’re both of those things at the same time. And I think that’s where my decision making lies: I’m always asking, what is the most fun thing we can do? If there’s a strategy at all, then it’s that.”

If the rumors emanating out of Melbourne are to be believed, King Gizzard are about to entire another fertile purple patch.  
KING GIZZARD & THE LIZARD WIZARD
L.W.

1. If Not Now, Then When?
2. O.N.E.
3. Pleura
4. Supreme Ascendancy
5. Static Electricity
6. East West Link
7. Ataraxia
8. See Me
9. K.G.L.W.
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard are: Stu Mackenzie (vocals/guitar), Ambrose Kenny-Smith (harmonica/vocals/keyboards), Cook Craig (guitar/vocals), Joey Walker (guitar/vocals),
Lucas Harwood (bass) and Michael Cavanagh (drums).
 
Album discography: 12 Bar Bruise (2012), Eyes Like the Sky (2013), Float Along – Fill Your Lungs (2013), Oddments (2014), I'm In Your Mind Fuzz (2014), Quarters! (2015), Paper Mache Dream Balloon (2015), Nonagon Infinity (2016), Flying Microtonal Banana (2017), Murder of the Universe (2017), Sketches of Brunswick East (2017), Polygondwanaland (2017), Gumboot Soup (2017), Fishing for Fishies (2019), Infest The Rats’ Nest (2019), Chunky Shrapnel (live album) (2020), K.G. (2020), L.W. (2021)
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