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KING GIZZARD & THE LIZARD WIZARD announce full details of new album ‘The Silver Cord’

Today, following their recent storming headline set closing this year’s End Of The Road Festival, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard announce their new album, The Silver Cord, out October 27th on KGLW, and present its lead singles/videos, “Theia / The Silver Cord / Set,” the track trio that opens the record.

As King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard’s 25th album hovers into view, where next for the world’s most restless, most inventive, most gleefully insatiable group? The answer is suggested by the sleeve of The Silver Cord, which depicts the six members of King Gizz surrounded by synthesizers of all shapes and eras. This is the album where perhaps the most thrilling rock group on the planet turned their hand to Electronic Music.

“Theia / The Silver Cord / Set” introduces this captivating turn and offers a glimpse at what is still to come. The Silver Cord does something no King Gizzard album has ever attempted before — becoming an album with a split personality and divergent possibilities. The Silver Cord will be available in two incarnations, the first paring its seven tracks back to their hooks, their choruses, their innate pop essence, and respecting the furniture of traditional song form. The second version of the album, however, bulldozes the rules of the three-minute pop hit and lets these robotic tunes run free. “The Silver Cord – Extended Mix” stretches the connecting tissue between each track as far as it can, with Gizz operating as their own disco remixers and exploring the infinite possibilities contained within these extended futurist anthems, building them into astonishing epics unlike anything else in the group’s voluminous catalogue.

“The first version’s really condensed, trimming all the fat,” explains Mackenzie. “And on the second version, that first song, ‘Theia’, is 20 minutes long. It’s the ‘everything’ version – those seven songs you’ve already heard on the first version, but with a whole lot of other shit we record while making it. It’s for the Gizz-heads. I love Donna Summer’s records with Giorgio Moroder, and I’d never listen to the short versions now – I’m one of those people who wants to hear the whole thing. We’re testing the boundaries of people’s attention spans when it comes to listening to music, perhaps – but I’m heavily interested in destroying such concepts.”

Watch the ‘Theia / The Silver Cord / Set’ – BELOW:

For King Gizzard And The Lizard Wizard, there is no final frontier. Over a decade into their quixotic musical journey, this twelve-legged Antipodean noise machine has taken genres as diverse as Turkish psychedelia, motorik prog, conceptual thrash-metal, bucolic folk-rock, liminal funk, haywire garage noise and even gonzoid hip-hop and bent each one to their will. Longtime Gizz-aficionados will know that The Silver Cord is not the group’s first excursion into the world of wires oscillators and gadgetry – their 2021 album Butterfly 3000 (their 18th, for all the numerologists in the room) was centred around vintage modular synthesisers and arpeggiators they’d liberated from the world’s junk shops along their travels. But that album’s bugged-out progressive pop suite was an offshoot of necessity, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard using this tech as a means to create an album while they were isolated from each other during the COVID-19 lockdown.

The Silver Cord, by contrast, is a full-hearted and purposeful embrace of electronic equipment and, indeed, electronic music in its own right. It all began with an ancient electronic drum kit, purchased on impulse by Gizz’s hirsute rhythm master, Michael “Cavs” Cavanagh. The Simmons drum set is an iconic relic of 1980s futurism, its octagonal drum-pads instantly recognisable from music videos of that era. “The Simmons kit is really sick, actually,” grins Stu Mackenzie, Gizzard’s singer/guitarist. “It has this little ‘electronic’ brain all the drum-pads plug into, and while the sounds it can make are pretty rudimentary, we soon decided we wanted to commit to it as the drum sound for this next record. We set Cavs’ Simmons kit up in the centre of the room, and then dragged every synth we had in the practice space or lying about our houses into the studio, and plugged everything in. It was chaotic. It was probably the coolest our studio has ever looked, to be honest.”

The group approached the songwriting for The Silver Cord with the same improv impulse that guided its sister album, the thrash epic PetroDragonic Apocalypse, and the preceding Ice, Death, Planets, Lungs, Mushrooms And Lava. Each day, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard entered the studio and improvised these songs into existence from the ground up, shaping them from their moments of collaborative, on-the-fly inspiration. The difference from those earlier albums, of course, was the equipment they were using and the influences they were honoring. “We come at electronic music from an amateur angle,” acknowledges Mackenzie. “I play the Juno synthesizer like a guitar, I don’t really know how to play it. But I wanted to be at peace with being the rock band pretending to know how to use modular synthesizers. “We’re in uncharted waters, we’re further out to sea, but leaning into it, and we got to a spot where we were really happy with what came out.”

While the futuristic machine music of The Silver Cord is composed and performed on man-made technology, its lyrical themes lean towards that which is beyond human knowledge: the mystic, the infinite and the magical. “It’s metaphysical,” says Mackenzie, “about the spirit, and about life and death, about ancient myths and gods, meditation and astral traveling. I wanted to make lots of disparate connections.”

The fusion of such weighty themes (with music that sees King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard boldly go where they’ve never gone before) is exactly the kind of risky business that is the group’s métier. Their cavalier disregard for safety nets and comfort zones is a defining characteristic and one that is yielding the best music of their career. And they wouldn’t have it any other way. “It’s liberating to terrify yourself,” Mackenzie grins. “I really believe in that as a philosophy. It’s always been part of our DNA. It’s something we’ve always done, putting ourselves in a position where the cortisol kicks in, pushing ourselves off the bridge and forcing ourselves to swim. Maybe we’ve got the thrill-seeker gene in us or something. It’s definitely my idea of fun.”

Next year, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard return for another headline slot at a major U.K. festival – they appear at 2024’s edition of the Wide Awake Festival in London’s Brockwell Park on 25th May.

Additionally, they take their acclaimed 3-hour marathon sets back to North America, including stops in New York, Chicago, Austin, TX and Quincy, WA, at the legendary Gorge Amphitheatre (which, at a capacity of 21,600 tickets, will be the band’s largest headline show to date). A full list of dates is below. Tickets are available at kinggizzardandthelizardwizard.com

THE SILVER CORD TRACKLIST

1 LP VERSION
1. Theia
2. The Silver Cord
3. Set
4. Chang’e
5. Gilgamesh
6. Swan Song
7. Extinction

2 LP VERSION
1. Theia – Extended Mix
2. The Silver Cord – Extended Mix
3. Set – Extended Mix
4. Chang’e – Extended Mix
5. Gilgamesh – Extended Mix
6. Swan Song – Extended Mix
7. Extinction – Extended Mix

Album artwork

KING GIZZARD & THE LIZARD WIZARD MARATHON SHOW DATES

Wed. May 22, 2024 – Hamburg, Germany @ Stadtpark Open Air
Sat. May 25, 2024 – London, UK @ Wide Awake Festival
Fri. Aug. 16, 2024 – Forest Hills, NY @ Forest Hills Stadium
Sat. Aug. 17, 2024 – Forest Hills, NY @ Forest Hills Stadium
Sun. Sept. 1, 2024 – Chicago, IL @ Huntington Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island – SOLD OUT
Sat. Sept. 14, 2024 – Quincy, WA @ The Gorge Amphitheatre
Fri. Nov. 15, 2024 – Austin, TX @ Germania Insurance Amphitheater

 

XS Noize

Mark Millar is the founder of XS Noize and looks after the daily running of the website as well as hosting interviews for the weekly XS Noize Podcast. Mark's favourite album is Achtung Baby by U2.