Just as previous releases had influenced the likes of Grandaddy and Mercury Rev, The Soft Bulletin and its successor Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots have informed acts including MGMT and Empire of the Sun. Ultimately, this record paved the way not only for The Flaming Lips to enjoy commercial success far beyond their homes, but also opened the doors for younger acts with a spirit of adventure in their blood to breach the pop charts. Race for the Prize and Waitin' for a Superman - these are anthems built for mass celebration, and while the crowd isn't wholly won over yet, fast-forward a few years and the reverence for these tracks is clear wherever The Flaming Lips pitch up with their travelling freak(ishly brilliant) show. In the presence of Wayne Coyne and company, with hand puppets in place of crowd-surfing bubbles and multiple dancers dressed up as aliens, everything's exactly as it should be though. That stage, after 17 years: the New Bands tent. Seventeen years and nine albums since their formation, The Flaming Lips are headlining at Glastonbury, playing to a packed tent. It's proggy, it's rocky - but it's not prog-rock, really nothing that the average man on the street can't lean an ear towards and be immediately rewarded. Experimentation has been tempered the group's out-there tendencies reined right in for a collection that sings with the same warmth and composure that characterised The Beach Boys' Pet Sounds. The Flaming Lips, Oklahoma oddballs responsible for the four-discs-at-once headache of 1997's Zaireeka, have crossed into the mainstream courtesy of The Soft Bulletin, NME's album of 1999. But this is something I only witness in passing, as another band has had an equally brilliant year. The crowd for them goes back, back, and back some more, fires flickering up the hillside. Travis have had an amazing 12 months, their second studio album The Man Who earning the Scottish outfit the Best Album and Best Newcomers awards at the Brits in March. And Saturday's Pyramid Stage headliners could well be described similarly. Glastonbury Festival, in the summer of 2000.
Records 1992-2002ĭavid Starkey: Best of 99 (number: 2) (order: 2) Pitchfork: Top 10 Albums of 1999 (number: 2) (order: 2) Scott Sepich: Best of 99 (number: 4) (order: 4) Steve Lichtenstein: Best of 99 (number: 5) (order: 5) Peter Solderitsch: Best of 99 (number: 18) (order: 18) Justin Stranzl: Best of 1999 (number: 25) (order: 25) Jaguaro: One Hundred Albums You Should Remove from Your Collection Immediately (number: 32) (order: 32) Sarah Zupko: Best of 1999 (number: 35) (order: 35) Exclaim! 1999 Shocks & Surprises (number: Surprises (Chuck Molgat)) (order: 78) Exclaim! 1999 Shocks & Surprises (number: Surprises (Michael Edwards)) (order: 160) Exclaim! 1999 Shocks & Surprises (number: Surprises (Rob Bolton)) (order: 179)ĬritiqueBrainz ReviewsThere’s 1 review on CritiqueBrainz.
The Colorado Symphony & André de RidderĬlouds Taste Metallic / Hit to Death in the Future Head / The Soft Bulletin Heady Nuggs: The First 5 Warner Bros. The Soft Bulletin: Live at Red Rocks by The Flaming Lips feat. Race for the Prize Waitin' for a Superman Warner Records ( 2019–present circle imprint with “Warner Records” next to it)