Rolling Stone

Cosmic Dancers

First, Greta Van Fleet became classic rock’s new hope. Now, they’re thinking even bigger

- BY BRENNA EHRLICH

First, Greta Van Fleet became classic rock’s new hope. Now, they’re thinking even bigger.

Josh KIszKa was watching an ice cube rise and fall in his drink at 2 a.m. at Hollywood’s Sunset Marquis hotel last year when he came up with the lyrics for a new Greta Van Fleet song. The movements of the ice made him think of a favorite philosophe­r, the late theologist Alan Watts, who described human existence as an ebb and flow. “That’s what I saw in the ice cube,” says Kiszka, 24.

“That’s what ‘Ah Sri Rama Jayam Ram’ is about,” he continues, quoting the mantra in “Trip the Light Fantastic,” from the band’s second album, The Battle at Garden’s Gate, due out April 16th. “Self-liberation, or this idea of letting go, or transcendi­ng. Is there an afterlife? I think I would rather cease to exist. Your body goes back to Earth, and there grows a tree, and the tree gives off oxygen. We’re tripping the light fantastic. We’re cosmic.”

Growing up in a small town in Michigan, Kiszka delved into spirituali­sm while almost everyone else in town attended the local Catholic church. The singer formed Greta Van Fleet in 2012 with his twin, Jake, on guitar and their little brother, Sam, on bass, adding drummer Danny Wagner the following year; by 2017, they’d topped rock-radio charts with their single “Highway Tune,” whose rollicking riffs and wild shrieks put them on course to become one of the biggest new rock bands in recent memory. They’ve since headlined Red Rocks, taken home a Grammy Award (for their 2017 EP From the Fires), and weathered countless comparison­s to Led Zeppelin.

The twin brothers’ joyful one-upmanship shines through over the phone from their Nashville home, making it easy to imagine them holed up in their old shared room in Frankenmut­h (population roughly 5,000), “throwing shit at each other,” as Jake says. When Josh mentions that he carries around a notebook full of song lyrics and recollec

tions from the road, Jake counters that its contents resemble the ravings of “someone who escaped from a mental institutio­n.”

Books, from Rudyard Kipling to Aldous Huxley, litter the floor of their living room. Thematical­ly, those authors are a good indication of The Battle at Garden’s Gate, which picks up where 2018’s Anthem of the Peaceful Army left off with its grand mythology and dire warnings. “This is a world with the ancient civilizati­ons in it, just like our own parallel universe, really,” Josh says. “A magnificat­ion of different cultures and civilizati­ons inside of this world searching for some kind of salvation or enlightenm­ent.”

On “Tears of Rain,” he sings of a burning Earth waiting for relief; on “The Heat Above,” the drums of an oncoming war grow closer. “There’s reoccurrin­g themes in my work . . . constantly, there’s war,” the singer adds. “Sometimes there’s this idea that it’s for religious reasons, but then there’s industry — the war industry. What will become of humanity?”

The band started working on the album in the summer of 2019, meeting with producer Greg Kurstin in Los Angeles’ Silver Lake to record a rare GVF love song, “Light My Love.” Over the rest of the sessions, they ended up with a new sound that takes Greta Van Fleet’s classic-rock worship and turns it up even higher, with scant radio-length songs and one track that stretches out to more than eight minutes of jamming.

“We wanted to do something on the scale of a film score,” Josh says. “We wanted to do that for a long time, but we didn’t think people would be ready.”

He and Jake talk over each other for a moment before Josh concludes: “But being in music long enough, there’s more of a relationsh­ip that we have with people. I think that will help them understand this particular album — because it is a very sophistica­ted album. There is no doubt about it.”

“Is there an afterlife? I think I would rather cease to exist. Your body goes back to Earth, and there grows a tree. We’re cosmic.”

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