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The Flaming Lips To Do Dark Side at Bonnaroo

The Flaming Lips To Do Dark Side of the Moon at Bonnaroo

The Flaming Lips

According to an interview at spinner.com (thanks for the tip Pitchfork), The Flaming Lips will perform Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon in its entirety at this year’s Bonnaroo. In the interview singer Wayne Coyne indicated that the Lips would perform one set of their own material followed by a set of Dark Side on Friday night.

“We did it at the New Year’s Eve show just knowing everybody’s gonna be taking acid, staying awake until five in the morning,” said Coyne. “I don’t think it’ll be that much of a stretch to think Friday night at 2:30 in the morning at Bonnaroo would be that much different than being in Oklahoma City on New Year’s Eve.”

Bonnaroo will announce the entire lineup for the June 10-13 event on Tuesday, February 9.


Maine’s Nateva Fest: July 2-4, Flaming Lips Confirmed

NATEVA MUSIC AND CAMPING FESTIVAL TO BE HELD JULY 2-4 IN OXFORD, ME

The Flaming Lips

The Nateva Music and Camping Festival will be held July 2-4, once again at the beautiful 100-acre Oxford Fairgrounds in Oxford, ME. The Flaming Lips will appear, along with many other artists to be announced soon.

The Oxford Fairgrounds are regionally accessible – just two and half hours from Boston and 45 minutes from Portland, ME – and feature easy parking, RV hook ups, bathrooms, water, and dozens of buildings that will include all the camping/festival necessities.

Weekend camping passes are $179 and VIP options are also available. Tickets are available now, and you can buy them here.

Nateva will be a relatively intimate festival, and advance ticket purchase is encouraged to guarantee a camping spot.


Black Lips | 01.21 | San Francisco

By: Justin Gillett

Black Lips :: 01.21.10 :: Great American Music Hall :: San Francisco, CA

Black Lips :: 02.08.08 by Josh Miller

Over the past ten years, Atlanta’s Black Lips have earned a reputation for being one of the crudest live acts on the touring circuit. The band’s affinity for discharging bodily fluids while onstage, as well as playing nude and performing sexual acts on one another, has led some to consider the band distasteful at best and a gimmick at worst. While this behavior has kept the four-piece garage rock outfit from mainstream appeal, it has attracted a different audience; a sort of anti-establishment, anarchistic mass that’s drawn to artists who do what they want regardless of any possible consequences and who prove this with their actions as much as their music.

During Black Lips’ recent layover in San Francisco at the Great American Music Hall, the band was surprisingly tame compared to the depravity of its old self. The group still put on a high energy live show, to the admiration of the sold out crowd, but the band seems to have matured a bit and grown out of its “shock rock” ways. Whether this is a calculated move or something that just kinda happened naturally, it was clear that Black Lips are entering a new chapter and are intent on evolving as a band. This isn’t to say that they’ve totally changed ethos, but the group has toned down its antics a bit. However, the band still has an unpredictable stage presence and its S.F. stop proved that the rabblerousing nature of Black Lips is still somewhat intact.

At first sight of the band coming onstage, people in the audience became very agro – setting the tone for how the audience would act for the duration of the show. As Black Lips played it was clear with the liberal amount of mic reverb that the band doesn’t really care about crispness of sound or clarity of vocals. It almost sounded like they were playing through speakers that were intentionally set up to sound like they were blown out. While bassist Jared Swilley sang the majority of lead vocals, the entire band had mics and sang spastically. The guys are not accomplished singers, and the vocals sounded extremely rough, but the approach helped add to the overall renegade quality they exude.

Black Lips :: 02.08.08 by Josh Miller

As the members onstage jumped and flailed about, the rambunctious crowd matched their actions in intensity. For a bunch of pretentious looking fans, everyone really got excited by the music, with people crowd surfing, getting thrown onstage and then leaping back into the crowd to rage some more.

Throughout the show it was interesting to look at the interplay between guitarists Cole Alexander and Ian Saint Pe. As both guys played it was clear that neither of them were that skilled on their instrument. They both played well, in the confines of the music, but both rarely took a solo, and when one did it was slightly droll and uninteresting. The lack of instrumental prowess is excusable though. Black Lips is a band that doesn’t need virtuosity to propel itself. By not being tied down to playing fast or particularly adept, the band is surprisingly able to write memorable songs that are easy to listen to.

As the self-proclaimed “flower punks” kept lighting up the room, it became evident that the band has grown since its adolescent years, developing a potent stage show that mixes rock and theater with compelling results. Black Lips’ relentless touring schedule is testament to their dedication to music, and even though the band still looks like a bunch of skate rats, they are noteworthy performers who have earned their spot in the musical zeitgeist.

Black Lips tour dates available here.

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The Flaming Lips & Pink Floyd Dark Side for NYE & Album Too

The Flaming Lips Cover Pink Floyd’s Dark Side for NYE & Album To Follow

The Flaming Lips will be covering Pink Floyd‘s Dark Side of the Moon in its entirety on New Year’s Eve. The psychedelic celebration will go down on December 31 at the Cox Center in Oklahoma City, OK. The show will also feature Wayne’s nephew Dennis Coyne’s band Stardeath and White Dwarfs. According to the poster for the show (featured below), “Starting at midnight: A special performance of Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon.”

Pitchfork.com via the L.A. Times is also reporting that the Lips plan to record all of Dark Side for what will likely be an iTunes-only album release. While there are few details as of now, the project will include Stardeath and White Dwarfs, Henry Rollins and Peaches. We’ll be sure to report back as more info surfaces.

And in case you missed the crazy naked bicycle video for “Watching The Planets,” check it here:


Watch The Flaming Lips’ KCRW Performance/Interview

The Flaming Lips on KCRW

The Flaming Lips return to KCRW to perform songs off their new album Embryonic. Morning Becomes Eclectic host Anne Litt listens in and catches up with the band, check it out here:

For more on The Flaming Lips, see our exclusive feature/interview with Wayne Coyne here. The Flaming Lips tour dates available here.


The Flaming Lips Blow It Up On Conan O’Brien

The Flaming Lips on The Tonight Show With Conan O’Brien

Last night (10.13) The Flaming Lips pulled off a huge live TV performances on The Tonight Show With Conan O’Brien. Performing “Watching the Planets,” the last song on their brand new album Embryonic (released October 13), they even had a giant flashing gong! Check it out, it’s super psychedelic and awesome. And for more on the Lips, see our exclusive feature/interview here.


The Flaming Lips: Melt Your Head Again

By: Nancy Dunham

The Flaming Lips

For all the cool things that can be said about Wayne Coyne, perhaps the coolest is that he just doesn’t take himself that seriously.

At a recent concert outside of Washington, D.C., the frontman and founder of The Flaming Lips spent 20 minutes or so working with the band’s roadies to set up equipment before the show. And with his help, one of the typical Lips high-energy extravaganzas was underway.

“I love it. I love it like I love my wife and my family and my dogs,” said Coyne of his band and its music, “but I am completely untrustworthy – a fanatic. I don’t climb mountains or shit like that. So, I put my energy into music and I act like it’s the most important thing in the world. But I know it’s not. Everybody should love the things they do in their lives, the people in their lives, more than [they love] some stupid rock band. I know that.”

Let’s face it, you don’t hear many rockers who have won three Grammy Awards plus a multitude of critical and commercial kudos dissuading people from obsessing over the music they create. Yet perhaps that self-effacing manner is why Coyne, who in 1983 started the psychedelic rock band that has morphed into something of a cultural phenomenon, is so much more successful than many of his peers. While the majority of his contemporaries in other groups have long since disbanded or are now relegated to shows at small venues and state fairs, Coyne and his bandmates still play amphitheatres and have fans pining for new material.

The Early Years

What started as something of a lark for Coyne, his brother Mark and bass guitarist Michael Ivins – who has said that rampant drug use as kids is what led them to make “weird music” – has developed into one of the most influential bands of the day. The Lips could even be considered role models for alt-rockers with Coyne serving as the wise elder statesman. But it wasn’t always that way, and the path has been long and twisted.

The Flaming Lips circa 1989

After releasing its self-titled debut in 1985 with Hear It Is following in 1986, the band played a Buffalo, New York show supporting the Butthole Surfers. That show resulted in Coyne meeting Jonathan Donahue who later became the group’s sound technician and guitarist.

Despite what Coyne and Ivins call a more cohesive feel to their sound, it wasn’t until 1991 that the Lips signed to Warner Brothers. The Lips’ major label debut, Hit to Death in the Future Head, was released in 1992 and was quickly followed by Donahue’s departure to focus on his other band, Mercury Rev.

It took several more years – where the band appeared everywhere from MTV’s annual Spring Break broadcast to a lip-synched performance on Beverly Hills 90210 – for the band to build buzz. Of course, that was helped by a bit of PR when 90210 cast member Ian Ziering – in the role of Steve Sanders – said, “You know, I’ve never been a big fan of alternative music, but these guys rocked the house!”

The band flirted with commercial success at various times only to stumble and land back in cult status. In 1996, it seemed the Lips would implode due to an array of injuries and odd accidents. Then various strange musical experiments, including 1997′s Zaireeka, a set of four discs designed to be played simultaneously, created the impression that Coyne and his band were just plain odd.

“Sometimes you want everything to be like it was with your first album where everything is new and anything is possible,” Coyne said. “If you have enough experience you always know everything involved. We have made about 12 records by now and you get in these quagmires. It can be difficult.”

The Flaming Lips

But, according to Ivins, a brotherhood of sorts is what has always keeps the band moving ahead musically.

“I would hope that in the big picture that we have arrived at this point that we are making Flaming Lips music, our own sound,” said Ivins. “It’s odd to look back at ourselves. I think for a while we were making record collection music and stumbling accidentally on twists and turns in music. We never actually sounded like we wanted to sound. At points earlier in our career we thought that birthday party stuff sounds cool and then we got it wrong and had some weird songs. Since the late 1990s, we were able to make or break or at least get a handle on how to really use the language of music – the melodies and lyrics – and put them together in a way that made sense.”

That language of music, according to Coyne, isn’t always easy to grasp but you simply have to keep trying. Because even when difficult, it’s often through the process of doing it, of just going into the studio and working, that meaning can be found and magic can happen.

“The worst thing that happens – I think it happens with all things – is you walk in there and you think you have this great song or great ideas and you record them and they are just boring,” Coyne said, “and they are not thrilling you, they are not thrilling [others] and you don’t even pursue them. What we have learned is that is going to happen but you still have to work through them anyway and keep going. I think you just have to keep fighting and if something hits you, you have to have the imagination and energy and make something happen.”

Continue reading for more on The Flaming Lips…

 


Sometimes you have to make music really at the edge of what you’re comfortable with. We aren’t one of those groups that want to make the same song over and over.

-Wayne Coyne

 

Having A Ball

Confetti, lasers and balloons are just some of the props that have engaged audiences since the band was quite young. And to the delight of fans, including Vince Herman, founding member of Leftover Salmon, Coyne doesn’t show any signs of stopping.

The Flaming Lips :: Coachella 2004 by Jay Blakesberg

“[We saw The Flaming Lips] a few years back and at one point Wayne gets up, sings and [the floor] starts to dissolve. Then suddenly we look down the eight-story atrium and he’s laying there with what looks like blood pouring out,” said Herman of a classic Coyne theatrical stunt he began in various forms almost 20 years ago. “It was amazing. I am a huge fan.”

Such antics are what sets the band apart from others, according to Ivins.

“When you start out in a band there is a general level of insecurity that you have to overcome to forge your way,” said Ivins. “We just kept going on and doing things. In a lot of ways, people compare us with Pink Floyd in that sort of way. That is something we have always tried to aspire to. You come to see The Flaming Lips show and you walk into a different world.”

The band first began entering that “different world” with wild New Year’s Eve parties, but soon realized every night could be New Year’s Eve if you played it right.

“We always upped the ante [every NYE], threw more stuff in to make it more exciting,” said Coyne. “Then we started thinking that we should do this every night. Why not make our shows a celebration every time, make these things permanent parts of the show?”

The band shoved personal insecurities and self-consciousness aside and began to bring massive numbers of balloons, buckets of confetti and other props into the shows until they struck the tone they wanted.

The Flaming Lips

“Think of New Year’s Eve and these other cliched markers in people’s minds,” said Coyne. “Regardless of where you were – at a hotel, some boring party – when you got home you turned on the television and watched the ball drop in Times Square and wished you were there.”

In thinking through the musicians that made the biggest impact on them – The Beatles, Pink Floyd, and others of that ilk – the Lips realized that those groups mirrored culture which, of course, made them even more relevant.

“Everything about it is an art form – the way you stand, where you stand, how you play,” said Coyne. “People don’t come to rock shows just to hear the music. You don’t go and say, ‘I heard the Rolling Stones.’ It is an event that really goes beyond listening. There may be purists out there that think the show can overwhelm the music, but I’d think not many. I always think about a Pete Townshend quote – who was never about just playing music – [where he] said he never lets the music get in the way of the show.”

Ivins goes even further, noting that The Flaming Lips’ concerts are beyond a “show” classification.

“It is a performance so it should be big and exciting and bombastic and not a bunch of guys just standing playing instruments,” said Ivins. “Plenty of bands do that. We aren’t all that interested in that. We are into being able to do everything with video screens and confetti and balloons, making [the concerts] New Year’s Eve and birthday parties and a celebration every night. We are out here celebrating life and are able to let the audience know it’s all right not to worry, to just uncoil at this time and jump around and have a good time.”

And what about that giant plastic ball that Coyne climbs into and launches so that he can roll around on top of the audiences?

“That image of me in the bubble,” said Coyne reflectively, “you never know the thing you are doing that is going to capture some unique essence. The space bubble thing I did at a Coachella show, I did it and I don’t even know when we were doing it or why. You fear you will do something like that and pick up the reviews the next week or the next morning, and people will think it’s a dumb gimmick. With that, we played this giant festival with Radiohead and The Cure and I picked up the paper the next day and I was on the front page of the paper in that giant bubble. That’s what people remember at the shows. I think you just get lucky and you capture something people love.”

Behind The Music

The innovative stage shows and ever changing music of the Lips has led journalists and fans alike to consistently wonder what master plan Coyne and his bandmates follow to keep their music fresh. On October 13, the band will release their twelfth album, the 18-track Embryonic, that’s already garnered a plethora of chatter for being edgier and more psychedelic than anything since 2002′s breakout Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots.

Wayne Coyne

“I’m glad to hear when people enjoy it,” Coyne said. “We never know what to think. We have embraced recording with computers. It’s a fascinating, strange way to make music, sort of piecemealing things together, sound by sound.”

In a way, this new album was perhaps more experimental than most in their catalog as it was born from an impromptu session between band member Steven Drozd and Coyne.

“Steven’s a great drummer and I’m not a good bass player but we still said, ‘Let’s get some stuff out and just bang around, see what develops.’ We didn’t know what would come of it and we were surprised by things that happened,” said Coyne. “You do stumble upon these little accidents, these grooves that are exciting when you find yourself moving in some direction that you weren’t prepared for. There are all these cliches about recording that [say] musicians instinctively go where [the music] takes you. That’s bullshit. That’s why you have the same people making the same song over and over and over again.”

Yet Coyne said with experience comes a form of intuition, which guides many musicians through rough patches, prying their holds off certain parts of songs so they can move on and develop more artistically.

“It’s interesting to see if we have any intuitive skills,” said Coyne. “A lot of [Embryonic] is almost a first take. Perhaps a section of the songs we lock in and then it gets intense, or whatever the word would be. When people say, ‘We like it,’ we say, ‘Oh, good,’ because sometimes you have to make music really at the edge of what you’re comfortable with. We aren’t one of those groups that want to make the same song over and over.”

Coyne is modest about his music, saying that a combination of luck and timing made his band move from “not very good” to a powerhouse while changing their sound. Coyne and Ivins both indicate that the Lips are the opposite of many other bands that took solid music and developed a stage show. For the Lips the show, in a way, came before the solid musical footing of the band. Now that the band members have been in the business more than 20 years, they feel more comfortable than ever letting experimentation lead the way musically.

“That’s our style,” said Coyne. “We would do a lot of things in the computer that didn’t sound the way we expected. We would go to great lengths to make sounds sound spontaneous and real. That gives it an air of authenticity. Sometimes we want to take everything and make it perfect. Everyone can take a sloppy drumbeat and throw it in a machine and make it perfect, but ‘better’ isn’t always in time, it isn’t always perfect.”

The Flaming Lips tour dates are available here.


<td style='padding:2px 1px 0px 5px;' colspan='2'The Flaming Lips – Convinced of the Hex
The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
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The Flaming Lips: NYE in OK

The Flaming Lips: New Year’s Eve in Oklahoma


The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips have confirmed that they will play their hometown of Oklahoma City on New Year’s Eve, December 31, 2009, at the Cox Center. Tickets for the show are on sale now and range from $10 – $25 (plus venue/transaction fees). Special Guests will be Oklahoma brethren and label mates Stardeath and White Dwarfs.

Tickets available at Ticketmaster.com.


The Flaming Lips on ColbertStream Entire Album Now!

The Flaming Lips on Colbert Report / Album Stream Available Now

Last night (9/16/09) on Colbert Report The Flaming Lips debuted their song “Convinced of the Hex” (watch the video below) off their forthcoming double-album Embryonic (out October 13).

And what’s better than a live version of one song, a stream of the entire album! Embryonic is streaming now on www.colbertnation.com (top left corner of the page). Dig in and get all psychedelic with it! We’re all very excited to see the Lips embracing their weirdo roots.

In addition to the live performance we’ve included a video of Wayne Coyne being interviewed by Stephen Colbert, see below, second video.

<td style='padding:2px 1px 0px 5px;' colspan='2'The Flaming Lips – Convinced of the Hex
The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full Episodes Political Humor Health Care Protests

<td style='padding:2px 1px 0px 5px;' colspan='2'Wayne Coyne
The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full Episodes Political Humor Health Care Protests


L.A.’s FYF Fest: Black Lips, Lucero
Wavves, PB Wolf, No Age, AA Bondy

FYF Fest Presents “Save Our State Parks” At The Los Angeles

Historic State Park In Downtown L.A. On September 5

Performers Include: The Black Lips, Lightning Bolt, Tim & Eric, No Age, Lucero
Converge, Peanut Butter Wolf, The Thermals, Wavves and more


The Black Lips

The FYF Fest (formerly F Yeah Fest) is set to take place at the Los Angeles Historic State Park in downtown L.A. on September 5. With independent rock acts like Lightning Bolt, The Black Lips, No Age, Crystal Antlers and Wavves as well as Lucero, AA Bondy, Peanut Butter Wolf and many more, the FYF Fest looks to be one of the more interesting SoCal music events this year. Tickets are on sale for the low price of $20 and can be purchased at fyffest.com.

Now in its sixth year, 24-year-old festival organizer Sean Carlson has taken the festival he started when he was 18 from Echo Park to the Los Angles Historic State Park. In addition to being one of the premier independent music festivals in Los Angles, the event is also attached to an important and urgent awareness campaign. Due to the recent budget cuts by Gov. Schwarzenegger, many vital programs are beginning to lose their lifelines – one of which is the California State Park System, where the governor decided to cut $14.2 million in funding, bringing over 100 California State Parks to the brink of closing down. FYF hopes that this event will send a message to all of the California state lawmakers stating that these parks are vital components of our communities should not be cut.

The 2009 Lineup includes:

Lightning Bolt (first U.S. Festival performance)
Black Lips
Tim and Eric (comedy duo from Adult Swim)
F***ed Up
Lucero
Converge
Glass Candy
Wavves
Times New Viking
No Age
Crystal Antlers
Telepathe
Mika Miko
Cold Cave
The Thermals
Japanther
Ninjasonik
AA Bondy
Matt Skiba (of Alkaline Trio)
Carbonas
The Strange Boys
Har Mar Superstar
Peanut Butter Wolf
Kurt Vile
Eat Skull
Katie Stelmanis
Nobunny
Darker My Love
Avi Buffalo
Dios



The Flaming Lips | 07.28 | Australia

Words & Images by: Alex Anastas

The Flaming Lips :: 07.28.09 :: Hordern Pavilion :: Sydney, Australia

src="http://images.jambase.com/bands/theflaminglips/090728_Anastas/7_1.jpg">
The Flaming Lips :: 07.28 :: Sydney, Australia

If Willy Wonka had music piping through his personal quarters at the Chocolate Factory, The Flaming Lips would be in heavy rotation. Their contagious zest for life, underlying political consciousness and general wacky Prankster behavior is rare in today’s minimalist scene. Often times I wonder if Rip Taylor or Wavy Gravy have ever seen or been a part of a Lips show. If either of those unique characters were present, Wayne Coyne‘s hard-working crew would certainly have to bring even more confetti and balloons, if that’s actually possible.

Kicking off their show at Sydney’s Hordern Pavilion with an enthusiastic synthesizer laden groove, Melbourne standouts Midnight Juggernauts laid down a backbeat reminiscent of Ziggy Stardust-era Bowie. Featuring voice box effects, heavy metal vamp endings and a Floydian flair for dramatic key changes, the Juggernauts received a warm reception from the now anxiously frothing audience, many dressed appropriately in a variety of costumes. Perhaps having seen the film 24 Hour Party People one too many times, Vincent Vendetta spilled forth youthful exuberance in his operatic vocal turns and ambivalent posturing. Meanwhile drummer Daniel Stricker never relented his pounding on the skins, even when his comrades joined him on an electronic percussion jam center stage. However, Andrew Juggernaut stood out as he led his fellow bandmates with commanding skills on the bass, guitar and synth, taking almost all the solos. Juggernaut and Vendetta occasionally switched instruments, most successfully while sampling some Daft Punk during a “Welcome to the Freakshow” jam. Ending by stating, “This is the third time we’ve shared the stage with The Flaming Lips in as many days,” Wayne Coyne certainly enjoyed his protegees, smiling like a Cheshire cat in the shadows side stage.

While the crowd swelled to near sold out capacity, the master of ceremonies, Wayne Coyne, repeatedly surveyed his band’s equipment, stalking back and forth across the stage while his mates sound-checked their gear. Soon disappearing backstage, their massive lo-fi display screen came to life, depicting a naked, glowing neon woman contorting as an emanating light from between her widely spread legs sent the words “birth” out to the band and crowd. This must be seen to be believed as one by one band members opened a hidden door in the screen and marched down a plank positioned by stagehands. With guitar/synthesizer wizard Steven Drozd positioned behind his rig stage left, Kliph Scurlock sitting atop his drum throne center stage, and the always cool Michael Ivins seated bass in hand off to the right, the crew slowly inflated Wayne’s now customary sphere. Bouncing around the first few rows of the crowd as the Lips opened with “Race for the Prize,” Coyne’s shit-eating grin inside his clear bubble was matched by every fan that pushed his orb back towards the stage.

src="http://images.jambase.com/bands/theflaminglips/090728_Anastas/19_1.jpg">
The Flaming Lips :: 07.28 :: Sydney, Australia

The show’s energy may have peaked early with Coyne introducing the third tune, “The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song,” as an ode to the new President of the U.S. of A. However, throughout the evening The Flaming Lips frontman was extremely cordial and talkative with the rabid crowd, stating the last time they were in Australia was for 2004′s Big Day with Metallica, The Strokes and The Mars Volta, and that they’d be back sooner if “only Australia wasn’t 9,000 fucking miles away.” So true. Dedicated to their “cosmic brother Nick Cave,” “Vein of Stars” had the Worm King and frogs stage left grooving with the Fat Sun and hot bunny dancers stage right in the wild party atmosphere of pure bliss that a Lips concert perpetuates. A ballad version of “Yoshimi… Part 1″ followed closely by Coyne on trumpet for “Taps” mellowed the show with olfactory sensations of dank, possibly brought from their recent stop at Byron Bay’s Splendour in the Grass days before.

Closing their set with a video display of The Daily Show‘s Jon Stewart introducing “She Don’t Use Jelly,” this smash tune off 1993′s Transmissions from the Satellite Heart, let the rapturous Tuesday night crowd show they had a little more in their tank. Before capping it all off with “Do You Realize?,” Coyne proclaimed, “The Flaming Lips audience is the greatest ever. You’re not cynical. We throw balloons and confetti and you treat each as a magical piece of fairy dust or squishy magical piece of plastic. Through all this happiness, there are a couple people out there experiencing real sadness in their lives, too, and YOU give them a reason to think that tomorrow will be a brighter day.”

During the extremely brief encore break, Coyne quickly ducked backstage to grab two of the frog people for a marriage proposal center stage, to which the female frog proclaimed, “It’s about time.” After a blowout night of Flaming Lips bombardment, I think many of their Australian fan-base would agree.

The Flaming Lips :: 07.28.09 :: Hordern Pavilion :: Sydney, Australia

Race for the Prize, Silver Trembling Hands, The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song, Fight Test, Enthusiasm for Life, Convinced Of The Hex, Mountain Side, Vein Of Stars, Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots – Part 1, Pompeii Am Götterdämmerung, Taps, The Wand, She Don’t Use Jelly

Encore: Do You Realize??

The Flaming Lips tour dates available here.

Continue reading for more pics of The Flaming Lips in Australia…

Midnight Juggernauts

The Flaming Lips

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Pitchfork Fest | 07.17 – 07.19 | Chicago

Images by: Chad Smith

Pitchfork Music Festival :: 07.17 – 07.19 :: Union Park :: Chicago, IL

Friday, July 17

Bathroom Line

The Jesus Lizard

The Jesus Lizard

Tortoise

Yo La Tengo

Built To Spill

Built To Spill


Continue reading for pics of Saturday at the Pitchfork Music Festival…

Saturday, July 18

The Pains of Being Pure at Heart

Disappears

The Dutchess & The Duke

The Dutchess & The Duke

Plants and Animals

Plants and Animals

Fucked Up

Fucked Up

Bowerbirds

Final Fantasy

Ponytail

Ponytail

Yeasayer

Yeasayer

MF Doom

Matt & Kim

Matt & Kim

Beirut

Beirut fan

The Black Lips

The Black Lips

The Black Lips

The Black Lips

The National

The National

The National


Continue reading for pics of Sunday at the Pitchfork Music Festival…

Sunday, July 19

Blitzen Trapper

Blitzen Trapper fans

Wayne Coyne checking out Blitzen Trapper

Pharoahe Monch

Women

The Thermals

The Thermals

DJ/Rupture

The Walkmen

The Walkmen

Japandroids

Japandroids fans

M83

M83

Vivian Girls

Grizzly Bear

Grizzly Bear

Grizzly Bear

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

The Flaming Lips

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