July 12, 2002
YOSHIMI BATTLES THE PINK ROBOTS
By DARRYL STERDAN

YOSHIMI BATTLES THE PINK ROBOTS
The Flaming Lips
(Warner)

Every time Oklahoma neo-psychedelic pop freaks The Flaming Lips put out an album, we think it can't possibly be any weirder than their last one. And every time, we're wrong -- including this time.

Their 11th album Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots -- like that title isn't enough of a tipoff -- is yet another bizarre, intriguing and sublimely wondrous journey to the edge of the universe and the centre of your mind.

Partly inspired by the death of a Japanese fan, Yoshimi is part song cycle, part sound story, and part concept album about life, love, humanity, death, funerals, sunshine and, er, robots that fight humans in gladiator combat. (Hey, at least you can't say you've heard that one before.) Hippie-dippie embraces artsy-fartsy once again as the Lips dish up a series of strummy lysergic guitar-pop ballads (Fight Test, It's Summertime) and lush, expansive dreamscapes (In the Morning of the Magicians, All We Have is Now), while other tracks (One More Robot, Ego Tripping at the Gates of Hell) see the group expanding their horizons with trip-hop beatboxes and chillout room vibes.

All in all, Yoshimi's disjointed feel and cool presentation distance it from the listener, meaning it isn't the endearing home run that 1999's orch-pop masterpiece The Soft Bulletin was. But it's still a memorably original work from one of music's most artistically rewarding bands.

And hey, their next album can't possibly be any weirder than this, right? (More on The Flaming Lips)

Friday, July 12, 2002

Lips: Red hot and weird

By DARRYL STERDAN
Winnipeg Sun