The Flaming Lips

Fearless Freaks

Editor's Review:

It’s an unlikely story: noise-punks from culturally sparse Oklahoma City score an unlikely novelty hit about a girl who puts Vaseline on her toast, and ascend to experimental greatness with a four-disc album (that should be played simultaneously on four stereos) and a loose concept piece about a Japanese girl who fights evil pink robots. Bradley Beasley’s Fearless Freaks documents two decades of the Flaming Lips and is full of charming, visually stimulating surprises. Heavy on the early years, the movie almost glosses over the Lips’ more recent exploits; a shame, considering the impressiveness of their more recent material versus their vaguely interesting, yet unexceptional beginnings.
– Maurice Spencer Teilmann

Write Your Own Review
Bookmark: Post to BlinkBits Post to BlogMarks Post to Del.icio.us Post to Digg Post to Fark Post to Furl Post to Google Post to Ma.gnolia Post to MyWeb Post to Netscape Post to NetVouz Post to Newsvine Post to RawSugar Post to Reddit Post to Scuttle Post to Shadows Post to Simpy Post to Slashdot Post to Spurl Post to Technorati Post to Wists
Album Cover
Record Label Flaming Lips
Released October 2005

Tracks

Comments down for maintenance.

Site Search

Related

Bio[+]
Originating from Oklahoma City in 1983, The Flaming Lips purportedly assembled when singer / guitarist Wayne Coyle stole music gear from a local church hall and formed the group with Michael Ivins (bass guitar) and brother Mark Coyle. Since then the group has cycled through drummers (eventually adding Steven Drozd to the mix in 1992) and guitarists (Jonathan Donahue of Mercury Rev joined in 1989, was replaced by Roland Jones in ’92, who departed after 1995’s Clouds Taste Metallic), but has always maintained a cutting edge approach to music. For instance, 1997’s Zaireeka was a four disc album that required each disc to be played simultaneously, while 1998’s The Soft Bulletin explored the limits of sonic orchestration within a pop format. Their highlight, however, was being featured on Beverly Hills 90210 as a party band following 1993’s unforeseen smash hit, “She Don’t Use Jelly” off of Transmissions From the Satellite Heart, prompting the famous Ian Ziering quote: "You know, I've never been a big fan of alternative music, but these guys rocked the house!".

– Maurice S. Teilmann (July, 2002)