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King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard

Murder of the Universe

Murder of the Universe

UPC: 880882299323

Format: CD

Release Date: Jun 23, 2017

Regular price $17.95 USD
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Personnel: Stu Mackenzie (vocals, electric 12-string guitar, flute, Mellotron); Joey Walker (guitar); Ambrose Kenny-Smith (harmonica); Michael Cavanagh (drum set).
Audio Mixer: Michael Badger.
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard's second album of 2017 is a rampaging, feverish blast of sci-fi prog punctuated by whizzing synths and robotic voice-overs. Murder of the Universe is broken into three chapters, each telling a tale of humanity being driven out of existence by AI-driven machines and cyborgs. Subtract the story and it's trademark King Gizzard, with pummeling guitar riffs pitched between garage punk and heavy metal, Stu MacKenzie's yowling yelps at the mike, and the rhythm section's unstoppable drive combining to make exhilarating music that flashes like lightning trapped in a bottle and hits harder than Thor's hammer. The first two chapters work the best. "The Tale of the Altered Beast" has electrical sparks shooting from the riffs, sticky hooks that slice through the gnarly guitar crunch, and pleasantly evil voice-over work by Leah Senior. "The Lord of Lightning vs Balrog" brings back large chunks of Nonagon Infinity's sound, even reprising some of the melodies and words, while housing the album's best song, "The Lord of Lightning." How much the listener enjoys the third chapter, "Han-Tyumi and the Murder of the Universe," might depend on their tolerance for graphic descriptions of a cyborg vomiting, and in the process, murdering the universe. Perhaps it's a little overdone; and not only that, this section is the least interesting musically and the story is slight, which is often the case on albums like this. There are still some fun snippets of doom psych in this chapter and on the whole, the album is a nice diversion for King Gizzard, though it's not very adventurous or experimental; it's mostly fun, but a little predictable -- more like something they should have given away free instead of calling it an album and selling it. Still, anytime King Gizzard hit the studio, the result is worth hearing, and even run-of-the-mill Gizzard leaves most neo-psych freaks swimming in their sizable wake. ~ Tim Sendra

Tracks:

1 - New World
2 - Altered Beast I
3 - Alter Me I
4 - Altered Beast II
5 - Alter Me II
6 - Altered Beast III
7 - Alter Me III
8 - Altered Beast IV
9 - Life/Death
10 - Some Context
11 - Reticent Raconteur
12 - Lord of Lightning
13 - Balrog
14 - Floating Fire
15 - Acrid Corpse
16 - Welcome to an Altered Future
17 - Digital Black
18 - Han-Tyumi, the Confused Cyborg
19 - Soy-Protein Munt Machine
20 - Vomit Coffin
21 - Murder of the Universe