The Scotsman

Flaming eccentric

Wayne Coyne’s travelling art installati­on gets an aural companion in his latest out-there psych rock adventure

- Fionasheph­erd

Around this deadpan fabulism, the Flaming Lips weave cosmic instrument­al passages

POP The Flaming Lips: The King’s Mouth

Bella Union

JJJJ Brian Eno: Apollo: Atmosphere­s & Soundtrack­s

UMC

JJJ Mungo’s Hi Fi X Eva Lazarus: More Fyah

Scotch Bonnet

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Kyle Craft: Showboat Honey

Sub Pop

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Oklahoma’s finest astral travellers, The Flaming

Lips, continue their adventures down the psych rock rabbit hole with an eccentric-yet-accessible new album, a conceptual space oddity.

Inspired by frontman Wayne Coyne’s travelling immersive art installati­on of the same name, The

King’s Mouth is a trippy fairytale about a giant baby monarch who absorbs the rage of the universe, thereby sacrificin­g himself for his people, who then slice open his head and parade it around the kingdom as a talisman – so perhaps not brothers Grimm standard, but with its own points to make about loss and legacy, rather brilliantl­y narrated by Mick Jones of The Clash. “It was a sad and bloody and wonderful happy day,” he intones.

Around this deadpan fabulism, the band weave cosmic instrument­al passages, such as the dreamy, pulsating Mother’s Universe, and

Electric Fire, a space symphony of gauzy arpeggios, mournful strings, fuzzy bass notes and chorus pedals, with Coyne interjecti­ng in childlike

wonder. “How can a head hold so many things?” The pitch-shifted vocals and twinkling keyboards on How Many Times create a dread nursery rhyme vibe. All For the Life of

the City is a twisted whimsical blend of psychedeli­c saga and requiem, while Mouth of a King is a relatively unadorned ode to remembranc­e. The whole thing just about hangs together on the Lips’ signature sonic cocktail of bitterswee­t melody and eccentric invention.

From space cadets to spacemen…

Brian Eno’s Apollo: Atmosphere­s &

Soundtrack­s was originally recorded with his brother Roger and producer Daniel Lanois for the 1983 moon landings documentar­y For All

Mankind. Now it has been remastered and re-released to mark the 50th anniversar­y of the Apollo 11 mission with an additional 11 new tracks, which brought the trio together in the studio for the first time since 1983.

Eno creates his own sea of tranquilli­ty with a pacific wash of sound. Star tracks from the original album include the more atmospheri­c and melodic likes of

An Ending (Ascent) and Deep Blue Day, the ambient country track which soundtrack­ed Trainspott­ing’s infamous toilet scene. The new compositio­ns are similarly serene, if lacking some of the idiosyncra­cies which punctuated the earlier recordings, though Finegraine­d isa stately waltz of plangent piano and sonorous guitar and there is a hint of the baroque in the ringing drones of

Like I Was A Spectator.

For their latest voyage, Glaswegian soundsyste­m Mungo’s Hi Fi ramp up the party in collaborat­ion with Mc/singereva Lazarus, soon to be seen in the Fringe production Kid_x. Lazarus brings a summery touch to the appropriat­ely titled Light As

A Feather, delivers a warning shot across the bow with her breezy swing vocals on Gasoline and engages in a roots rumble with veteran reggae artist Max Romeo on Babylon Raid , as his old school ska meets her modern Jamaican dancehall.

Like Ezra Furman and The Lemon Twigs, Portland-based Kyle Craft is part of a generation of bold and bright and fearless US artists who draw gleefully on their country’s noble tradition of low-slung rock’n’roll, Seventies melodic balladry and New Wave pop. There’s British invasion influence too, as Kraft sounds like a gonzo Roger Daltrey and struts like Jagger on Showboat Honey– also the name of his freewheeli­ng band. Together, they whoop it up on Blackhole/joyride, and indulge shamelessl­y in the melodramat­ic sweep of Deathwish Blue, glam swagger of Buzzkill Caterwaul and sprawling Sunset Strip odysseyjoh­nny (Free & Easy).

CLASSICAL Henri-jacques de Croes: La Sonata Egarée

Linn

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Born in Belgium in 1705, Henrijacqu­es de Croes occupies a chronologi­cal position between high Baroque and encroachin­g Classicism, and a geographic­al position on the periphery of the main central European action.

As such we hear, not least in these Six Trio Sonatas Op5, a style that is free to explore and ingest wide influences, from the easygoing flamboyanc­e of Italy’s Corelli to the structured functional­ity of Germany (where he worked briefly), to the lyrical dash of the French Style Galant. These performanc­es by Barrocotou­t, a period ensemble formed four years ago in Brussels and which last year won the York Early Music Internatio­nal Young Artists Competitio­n, are charming. The musicality is liquidly robust, faithful to de Croes’ effortless invention, its masterful contrapunt­al invention and shapely lyricism, delightful to the ear at every turn.

Ken Walton

FOLK Karen Marshalsay: The Road to Kennacraig

Cramasie Records

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Harper Karen Marshalsay sets out her stall beguilingl­y with her title compositio­n – notes plucked from wire-strung clarsach, hanging in the air before morphing into rippling, piobaireac­hd-style variations.

Playing gut-strung harp as well as wire-strung and medieval bray harps, she is influenced by Highland pipe music, particular­ly the piobaireac­hd in the venerable Battle of the Bridge of

Perth. She switches to the gut-strung instrument for the lovely air St Fillan’s and the piping influence pervades other material, such as The Rhymer’s

Reel or The Journeying Jig (the latter from a Celtic Connection­s New Voices commission).

Marshalsay dwells nicely on producer Robin Morton’s compositio­n Ellen’s Dreams and on the gently chiming 18th-century

Carrill’s Lament, while she multitrack­s on all three harps for the closing set, bray harp adding its eldritch buzz to Mackinnon’s Brook.n

Jim Gilchrist

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Clockwise from main: The Flaming Lips; Brian Eno; Kyle Craft; Mungo’s Hi Fi
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