Intentar ORO - Gratis

King Gizzard's Shape-Shifting Subversion

Mint Kolkata

|

July 12, 2025

To call King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard a rock band is like describing the Marvel Cinematic Universe as just a film franchise.

- Bhanuj Kappal

To call King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard a rock band is like describing the Marvel Cinematic Universe as just a film franchise. While that's technically true, they're also so much more—this generation's answer to Phish and the Grateful Dead; a band so prolific that Pitchfork once called them "a vinyl pressing plant in human form"; contemporary music's most mind-bending musical shape-shifters; and the architects of a thriving DIY economy based on free culture ideals. Wild-eyed and perpetually restless, the Australian experimental rock sextet delight in chaos and subversion. And, perhaps, in watching hapless music critics try to encapsulate their massive oeuvre without having a full-on breakdown.

Maybe I should just start from the beginning. King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard—we'll call them Gizz for short—started out in 2010 as a psychedelic garage-rock band, firmly in the tradition of Ty Segall and Down Under contemporaries Thee Oh Sees. But things quickly got weirder. And then weirder still. Over the course of the next decade-and-a-half, the band would travel far and wide from their garage-rock roots, experimenting with krautrock, dream-pop, heavy metal, modular-synth prog, acid-friend spoken word, and too many other genres to name.

Let me run you through just a four-album run to give you a sense of the whiplash their discography can induce. The Beatles-meets-Brubeck jazz-fusion of Quarters! leads somehow into the acoustic, bossa-nova-inflected freak-folk of Paper Mâché Dream Balloon. Follow-up Nonagon Infinity—their breakthrough record—returns to scuzzy, lo-fi garage-rock before

MÁS HISTORIAS DE Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

New SIF compliance reporting format

AMCs managing SIFs will now have to report additional compliance details.

time to read

1 min

January 09, 2026

Mint Kolkata

Stonepeak circles AM Green for mega deal

Investor eyes up to 15% stake in AM Green's holding co. in $1.4 bn deal

time to read

1 mins

January 09, 2026

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

Trump team works up sweeping plan to control Venezuelan crude oil for years to come

U.S. president believes the effort could lower oil prices to his target of $50 a barrel

time to read

5 mins

January 09, 2026

Mint Kolkata

Global bond sales hit record $245 bn at 2026's start

Global bond sales had their busiest ever start to a year as borrowers of every stripe seize on investors’ insatiable appetite for risk.

time to read

1 min

January 09, 2026

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

Why do human lives remain so undervalued in India?

At first glance, this may seem like a question for economists and statisticians, a matter of compensation data, actuarial logic and policy benchmarks.

time to read

3 mins

January 09, 2026

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

India’s economy likely grew 7.4% in 2025, UN report says

As per the report, tax reforms, monetary easing likely to provide near-term support to growth

time to read

2 mins

January 09, 2026

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

Budget may propose fix for flaws in debt recovery framework

borrower consent, the people said on condition of anonymity.

time to read

3 mins

January 09, 2026

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

THE DEPRECIATING RUPEE AND WHAT IT MEANS FOR YOUR INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO

Rupee’s slide to the ‘nervous nineties’ rattled investors, even as RBI stepped in to pull it back

time to read

3 mins

January 09, 2026

Mint Kolkata

China reviews Meta's Manus deal

Chinese officials are looking into whether Meta Platforms Inc.'s acquisition of artificial intelligence startup Manus violated regulations, an initial review that could hinder the deal down the road if officials determine wrongdoing.

time to read

1 min

January 09, 2026

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

Trump nod to tariff bill targeting India

US President Donald Trump has “greenlit” a sanctions bill that could impose 500% tariffs on countries buying Russian oil, giving him “tremendous leverage” against countries like China and India to stop them from purchasing cheap oil from Moscow.

time to read

2 mins

January 09, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size