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Flaming lips soft bulletin review
Flaming lips soft bulletin review






flaming lips soft bulletin review

Though my least favorite song on this CD, it can stand next to most songs out there and win hands down. Drozd layers his drums until the lick would be impossible to play with one person. This is the first song where the listener really realizes the layering and distortion occurring with the drums. A single hammered note from the guitar is tossed into the foreground, with hard-hitting base and drums unfolding in the background. Well, explodes in the context of this CD. A few choruses from background hummers later, the song explodes. Coyne's voice comes in as soft as ever, chanting a few nonsensical rhyming lines. It's one of the most upbeat, poppiest songs on the CD, and a fine choice for the opening track.įollowing that is A Spoonful Weighs a Ton, which starts off with a little introduction of what seems to be flutes and harps. The Soft Bulletin starts off with Race for the Prize (remix), which almost gives you the feeling of a race.

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Almost more than any other single instrument, the drums can change the feel of the song, and rather than just improving it somewhat, can upgrade it from good to great with a single fill. Steven Drozd is the drummer (though percussionist may be a more appropriate title), and uses a vast array of percussion instruments to create an environmental feel for the song. Probably the first thing you notice when listening to this album is the drums this is one of the few albums where drums play so large a role in the music. From the first track, however, one would see that this is not your ordinary 'indie pop' CD. Being the music neophyte I am, I would take a stab at the dark in this and call it 'indie pop', to simplify terms. This, however, makes them nearly impossible to define into one category. Backed by a ridiculous array of instruments (pianos, church bells, xylophones, strings) and masterful studio magic, the Lips have achieved a fully enveloping sound. Frontman Wayne Coyne leads an imaginary orchestra through 58 minutes of atmospheric melodies. The Flaming Lips' The Soft Bulletin - this is imaginative, fanciful music.








Flaming lips soft bulletin review