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Sketches of Brunswick East
Barnes and Noble
Sketches of Brunswick East
Current price: $13.99
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Barnes and Noble
Sketches of Brunswick East
Current price: $13.99
Size: CD
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Trying to make sense of, and/or keep up with,
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard
can be a daunting prospect. They are nothing if not prolific, and nothing if not willing to throw curve ball after curve ball. After releasing two albums already in 2017, the microtonal experiment
Flying Microtonal Banana
and the synth prog epic
Murder of the Universe
, they hooked up with
Alex Brettin
of the soft rock weirdos
Mild High Club
to concoct the smoothed-out psychedelic jazz album
Sketches of Brunswick East
. It proves to be a winning combination all around, with
Brettin
's warped pop sensibilities mingling nicely with the sonic exploration that the lads of
Gizzard
do so well. The album comprises small snippets, where the warm keyboards team with woozy samples and piping flutes to conjure up mental images of warmly lapping waves and trippy colors, and more fleshed-out songs that have a perfect blend of imaginative arranging and melodic charm. The instrumental segments are nice moments of cool-breeze Zen, helping the listener achieve the perfect state of relaxed calm, while the actual songs have the opposite effect and really get the blood flowing, not in the usual sense that
King Gizzard
albums do -- it's not a raging volcano of excited blood -- but in a more laid-back, happy-all-over way that fills the body and mind with warmth. The lovely "Countdown" has a nocturnal groove and cocktail bar feel, turned strange by
Stu Mackenzie
's treated vocals; "Tezeta"'s warped waltz and odd vocals can't hide the swooningly sweet melody, which sounds like something a
Wilson
brother might have come up with while on a three-day bender; "The Spider and Me" finds them effortlessly hitting the sound bands like
Tame Impala
work way too hard to reach; and the stuttering African jazz-rocker "The Book" brings in some of their previous microtonal theory and stretches it out into a very satisfying jam. It's fun to hear
being reshaped by
's soft rock wizardry, and in the process making their third album of the year the most listenable so far. Conversely, working with the Australian wildmen gives
's work an unpredictable nature not found on
albums. This mutual benefaction means
is a collaboration that works wonders for both sides and will also make fans of both groups very happy. ~ Tim Sendra
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard
can be a daunting prospect. They are nothing if not prolific, and nothing if not willing to throw curve ball after curve ball. After releasing two albums already in 2017, the microtonal experiment
Flying Microtonal Banana
and the synth prog epic
Murder of the Universe
, they hooked up with
Alex Brettin
of the soft rock weirdos
Mild High Club
to concoct the smoothed-out psychedelic jazz album
Sketches of Brunswick East
. It proves to be a winning combination all around, with
Brettin
's warped pop sensibilities mingling nicely with the sonic exploration that the lads of
Gizzard
do so well. The album comprises small snippets, where the warm keyboards team with woozy samples and piping flutes to conjure up mental images of warmly lapping waves and trippy colors, and more fleshed-out songs that have a perfect blend of imaginative arranging and melodic charm. The instrumental segments are nice moments of cool-breeze Zen, helping the listener achieve the perfect state of relaxed calm, while the actual songs have the opposite effect and really get the blood flowing, not in the usual sense that
King Gizzard
albums do -- it's not a raging volcano of excited blood -- but in a more laid-back, happy-all-over way that fills the body and mind with warmth. The lovely "Countdown" has a nocturnal groove and cocktail bar feel, turned strange by
Stu Mackenzie
's treated vocals; "Tezeta"'s warped waltz and odd vocals can't hide the swooningly sweet melody, which sounds like something a
Wilson
brother might have come up with while on a three-day bender; "The Spider and Me" finds them effortlessly hitting the sound bands like
Tame Impala
work way too hard to reach; and the stuttering African jazz-rocker "The Book" brings in some of their previous microtonal theory and stretches it out into a very satisfying jam. It's fun to hear
being reshaped by
's soft rock wizardry, and in the process making their third album of the year the most listenable so far. Conversely, working with the Australian wildmen gives
's work an unpredictable nature not found on
albums. This mutual benefaction means
is a collaboration that works wonders for both sides and will also make fans of both groups very happy. ~ Tim Sendra