#20 on the 2024 Bacon Top 31 — King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Flight b741 by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
As I wrote in my entry for the band here at #20 in last year’s Top 31 for their two 2023 albums (at #5 last year), I was only recently indoctrinated into the lighthearted cult that is King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard. Now that another full year has passed since I wrote that, I am fully vested in the band. To whit: I jumped on their latest album, the phenomenal Flight b741, and devoured it as soon as it came out in August; I got to see the band perform a balls-to-the-wall 3-hour set at my favorite summertime venue, The Gorge; and I’ve now bought a ticket, a flight, and a hotel room for a one-night excursion to see the band in another city (San Diego) in 2025. I am 100% all in.
Go back and read last year’s entry (linked above) to learn more about the band and their 15-year history. As is their wont, Flight b741, their 26th album (and surprisingly, the only album they released in 2024), is completely unlike either album they released in 2023. Gone is the barking, driving rhythms of heavy metal and the techno-centric bleeps and bloops. In its place, there’s wailing harmonica, high-energy fuzzed-out guitar, and swinging southern-blues rock & roll. Forget Metallica and Animal Collective, and instead think of Lynyrd Skynyrd and The Black Crowes. It’s a complete 180, but it’s expected from KGLW, and it’s great.
Thus is the power of King Gizzard. These six guys from Melbourne have a knack for adaptation and synthesis. To my ears (admittedly still in elementary school when it comes to KGLW), the only consistent sound across their albums is the “wooo!” from the band’s most consistent frontman, Stu Mackenzie1.
After having spent many Memorial Day weekends at the Gorge in the 00’s and 10’s for the best-ever music festival (Sasquatch), it holds a special place in my heart. When I saw King Gizzard play there in September, that feeling came back — not just because of the venue, but because of the breadth of music played by the band. With 26 albums in their catalog, and so many genres to pull from, you’d think you’d get a bit of whiplash going from genre to genre to genre. But instead, you’re guided along, each song feeling like it belongs with the previous and the following, as if the band is some aural trail guide taking you on a previously unexplored adventure. We left there feeling as if we’d been to a full music festival, rather than having seen a single band peform.
KGLW also did something completely unheard of for last year’s tour: they had a multi-camera film crew stream every show live on the web for free. And afterwards, anyone could choose to host the live video on their own YouTube channel, again, for free. Eventually the band put the livestreams up on their own YouTube channel (watch “Live at the Gorge ’24”). I found out as I was researching for this article, in the link description for that Gorge performance the band posted the full high-quality audio files from the show for download, again for free. They also provided a separate Dropbox link to be able to download the stems from the show – meaning, anyone could have Cavs’ (Michael Cavanagh’s) drums, or Ambrose Kenny-Smith’s2 keyboards singled out from the 3-hour performance, to remix and use however they see fit. All for free. This type of overabundance of goodwill towards their fans goes a long long way in creating the kind of adoration from their fans that evokes the “cult” label.
While being prolific on the tour circuit, they were pretty subdued on the recording front. They’ve only produced one video for Flight b741, linked above, for the song “Le Risque.” But it’s a good video, and it shows just how much fun these guys have together. I’m jealous.
Despite only releasing one album in 2024, later in the year the band released a non-album track called “Phantom Island” and announced that they indeed did have another album in the hopper, that was recorded at the same time as Flight b741:
And that is why I will be flying to San Diego to see them perform later this year – in promotion of the yet-to-be-released album, they’ll be touring with a full 28-piece orchestra, and they decided they weren’t bringing the orchestra anywhere near the Pacific Northwest. So, to them, I go, because of course I do.
It feels as if eventually everyone will become a fan of KGLW. They are infectious, and they produce so many different kinds of music, they’re bound to land on something you like. If you didn’t like last year’s albums, give this year’s album a try. And if that’s not your bag, maybe their 2025 release(s) will float your boat. It’s ok if it takes time; I know eventually everyone will come around.
1. A quick aside here to give a shoutout to the anonymous writer on Mackenzie’s wikipedia entry, who quipped, “Mackenzie formed King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard as a casual band for his friends in the Melbourne music scene to play together in without needing to rehearse or practice. They have since recorded 26 studio albums.”↩
2. I’m ashamed to admit I never did get around to listening to Ambrose’s side-project album he made with Jay “GUM” Watson, called Ill Times, but I’ve heard good things about it.↩
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