Intentar ORO - Gratis
King Gizzard's Shape-Shifting Subversion
Mint New Delhi
|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.
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
Esta historia es de la edición July 12, 2025 de Mint New Delhi.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE Mint New Delhi
Mint New Delhi
Splendid stability
With a shaky global economy posing headwinds, it's a matter of comfort that the cost of living in India is going through a phase of splendid stability.
1 min
October 14, 2025
Mint New Delhi
Inflation hits 8-year low on cheap greens, higher base
India's retail inflation cooled to 1.54% in September from 2.07% the previous month, marking the lowest reading since June 2017, due to the statistical effect of a favourable base and driven by lower prices of vegetables and pulses.
2 mins
October 14, 2025
Mint New Delhi
Emirates NBD eyes RBL Bank majority
If deal closes, the Dubai govt entity may hold 51% in the lender
4 mins
October 14, 2025
Mint New Delhi
Why tariffs have not crippled the global economy
In April, after US President Donald Trump unveiled the 'liberation day' tariffs, global trade was expected to collapse, pushing the world economy into a recession. Six months on, these fears have proved to be unfounded. Mint explains why Trump's tariffs have not hurt the global economy, as feared.
2 mins
October 14, 2025

Mint New Delhi
HCLTech has best Q2 growth in 5 yrs, reports AI revenue
Defying market uncertainties, HCL Technologies Ltd recorded its strongest second-quarter performance in July-September 2025 in five years. The Noida-headquartered company also became the first of India's Big Five IT firms to spell out revenue from artificial intelligence (AI).
2 mins
October 14, 2025
Mint New Delhi
CARD DEBT RISE DIMS, BUT DEFAULTS WORRY
Credit cards account for just 5% of the total loans outstanding to individuals in India. Yet, they serve as a bellwether for household debt.
3 mins
October 14, 2025

Mint New Delhi
TRANSFORMATI MAHARASHTRA CAN
#1 IN 2024, MAHARASHTRA IS AGAIN WITHIN
4 mins
October 14, 2025
Mint New Delhi
As Russian aggression turns West, Poland says it's ready
Warsaw has doubled the size of its military since 2014 and boosted military spending to nearly 5% as Russia grows more assertive
5 mins
October 14, 2025
Mint New Delhi
Livspace revenue rises 23% in FY25
Home interiors and renovation platform Livspace has posted a 23% increase in revenue to ₹1,460 crore during the last fiscal, helping the company trim losses to ₹131 crore.
1 min
October 14, 2025
Mint New Delhi
AI frenzy: Don’t be caught off-guard if the bubble bursts
It is said that history doesn't repeat itself but it often rhymes. If the Bank of England (BoE), IMF, Jamie Dimon and Lloyd Blankfein are to be believed, the US market is composing a verse that sounds eerily like the late 1990s—with AI playing the part once filled by Pets.com and sock puppets.
3 mins
October 14, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size