SOUNDTRACK: KING GIZZARD AND THE LIZARD WIZARD-Live from Gizzfest (December 1, 2018).
King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard are such a big deal in their native Australia, that they have created their own festival called, naturally, Gizzfest. It began in 2015 as a touring festival with a dozen or so bands. 2018’s festival was only one day (in Melbourne) and some kind soul recorded it and posted the KGATLW set online.
The set lasted for about an hour and 40 minutes and touched on nearly every release. It even included a few never before played live tracks from Eyes Like the Sky!
The recording quality isn’t great and you can hear a lot of people talking through the set. It sounds like it might be pretty far away from the speakers as well. Having said that, the music isn’t hard to hear (it’s not like it was recorded at a low level) it’s just not very clean. Having said THAT, it’s not like KGATLW are an especially clean band, since they are often shrouded in fuzz, echo, distortion and more.
The songs are not chronologically played. In fact, they start right in the middle with I’m in Your Mind Fuzz. They play the first two tracks, “I’m in Your Mind” and “I’m Not in Your Mind” seamlessly together, including the nifty solos throughout “Not.”
But they do not play the third song (which segues on the album). Rather, they jump right to Murder of the Universe with “The Balrog.” It’s an intense start to the show and after a little breather they play the far slower and very delightful “Stressin'” from Oddments. Unfortunately, the recording is very quiet and more muddy for this song. Not sure what happened there.
But things get much louder very quickly, as they jump to their then newest album Gumboot Soup. They play only one song from the record, the totally rocking “The Great Chain of Being.” To much celebration, they jump into Polygonswannaland’s “Crumbling Castle.” All the elements are there and they sound great playing it (even if the audio quality isn’t great). The song segues perfectly into the album’s final track, “The Fourth Colour.”
After all of that rocking, they slow things down but stick with Polygondwannaland with the groovy “Deserted Dunes Welcome Weary Feet” which segues into the middle section of that albums’s “Castle in the Air.”
Ambrose gets to the mic to say they’re gonna to do some silly stuff now.
“Dead-Beat” goes all the way back to their first EP, Willoughby’s Beach. The really dumb lyrics “pull my finger and punch my face” are so much clearer here than on the album. I wish I could hear if people are singing along. Then they play a track from their first album 12 Bar Bruise “Cut Throat Boogie.” This one is sung by Ambrose and features lots of his wailing harmonica. Ambrose gets another lead vocal on another old-school one, Float Along–Fill Your Lung‘s “Let Me Mend the Past.” It’s a respite of slower rock n roll with some nice piano accompaniment.
They play a surprising “Tezeta” from Mild High Club. It’s slow and groovy with nice clear sound, although I can’t hear if there are any groovy backing vocals or not.
After these slower moments the band roars back with a wild “Rattlesnake” from Flying Microtonal Banana which whips the crowd into a sing-along frenzy.
And then they pause to introduce their special guest: Ambrose Kenny-Smith’s dad, Broderick Smith, writer and narrator of the Eyes Like the Sky album. Broderick does a great recitation and the band plays these rarely played Western songs perfectly: “Eyes Like the Sky,” “The Year of Our Lord” and “The Raid.”
They jump in with the opening to the jazzy wonderfulness of Quarters‘ “The River,” but they only play about 3 minutes of it, because as the band is quieting down during the slow bit (down down down) with the falsetto “a river” backing vocals, Stu starts singing the lyrics to “Wah Wah.” For a few beats, the “a river” backing vocals continue, which is pretty cool. “Wah Wah” rips louder and louder and as the song starts feedbacking out, the super fast drums of “Road Train” begin. For this is the Nonagon Infinity portion of the show. “Road Train” is the last song on Nonagon infinity so its fun that they do some nonagon infinity chants and then continue with “Robot Stop,” the first song of the infinite loop album. It’s full of that spiraling guitar and wild harmonica solos. But rather than seguing into the next song on the record they jump to the super catchy “Gamma Knife.”
The concert more or less ends with “Some Context,” the 46 second riff that’s a transitional piece on Murder. That’s how they ended the show when I saw them. It’s a great riff, too. But they weren’t quite ready to end the show.
After some quiet, they began their 16 minute epic “Head On/Pill” This version is certainly slower than the record, but it is still trippy. It’s still got those soaring riffs and chanted vocals. Things quiet down to almost a whisper around three minutes in, but by 4 minutes, the whole band kicks in for a truly rocking jam. After nine minutes, they start a medley that begins with a rather quiet “Alter Me” which is more of a jam than the song. Some more jamming leads to the opening of “Am I in Heaven?” They end more or less with “Cellophane” which everyone can chant along to.
It’s basically a career spanning set in which they play songs from all of their fourteen releases (in FIVE YEARS), except for their folky Paper Mâché Dream Balloon.
Although the sound quality isn’t great, this is a fantastic show in front of a very happy hometown crowd. When I saw them back in 2018 they focused primarily on the five albums they had released the year before with six songs from Murder of the Universe, 4 from Polygondwannaland, and 3 each from Gumboot Soup and Flying Microtonal Banana. I love that they can play such diverse sets–playing new songs for people who haven’t heard any of them and then playing a whole career’s worth for the locals.
How their sets can stay under two hours when they have that much music is still a mystery. And yet no one leaves disappointed.
[READ: March 1, 2019] Spill Zone 2
I enjoyed Book 1 but I really didn’t like this part. For some reason I thought this book had at least three parts. But it seems that it has ended with book two which makes it all the more disappointing.
I didn’t even find the art to be evocative or charming. It just felt kind of ugly an over the top.
As the book opens Addison goes to her art dealer and gets a million dollars. Of course she went to the buyer directly, cutting out the sketchy middleman. And he is not happy about that, so he goes to the North Koreans with some information about Addison and her pictures. Of course they have no time for bit players like him.
Meanwhile back in North Korea, Don Jae had entered the Spill Zone there and was having visions about the one in America. He knew he had to go there. He winds up visting the art buyer. He gives her some of the radioactive dust so she can truly see what’s going on in the pictures she’s buying.
Back home Addison is trying to deal with her sister who will not let go of the possessed doll which the spirit of Vespertine is in. And when Don Jae shows up he is shocked to learn that Vespertine is a spirit from the other side.
Don Jae teaches Addison how to make the best use of the powers she has gotten–she need not be afraid of going into the zone anymore–the zone should be afraid of them.
When they return to the zone, the crazy animals and colors are all around. Then we learn just what has been going on (sort of). Apparently Vespertine fled the zone because she didn’t want to marry the spirit that killed her parents (meanwhile, it was Vespertine who killed Addison’s parents and everyone else). Vespertine asked to cross from the zone and Lexa was the one who invited her (by saying Beetlejuice 3 times (more or less)).
As the story reaches its end, the military get involved. There’s potential for missiles and the death of everyone and there is sill the matter of a betrothal.
And then it is three years later. My favorite part of this was that Lexa looks grown up–I love the little details that make her seem not like a little girl anymore–great work from Puvilland. I also love that Addison and Don Jae are making the most of their powers. I don’t exactly understand what is happening with Lexa and her phone–is that Vespertine texting her? So yea, confusing and disappointing. Two words no one wants to see at the end of a series.

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