Your favourite garage-psych group King Lizard and the Lizard Wizard know a thing or two when it comes to pioneering in the world of production. They recorded and distributed their first EP entirely off their own backs, went on to release 8 albums in about four years, have five more projects lined up for 2017, they’ve just won an ARIA, and have also managed to gift Australia with its very own psychedelic festival, Gizzfest.

After debuting last year, Gizzfest’s sophomore undertaking has seen a bunch of national and international acts hopping around our shores, including the legendary White Fence, PONDStonefield, Los Angelenos Mild High Club, ORB, The Murlocs, and funk master Boulevards. We blissed out to all of these and more at Sydney’s Luna Park.

Check out Gizzfest Part II featuring Body Type, White Fence, Greta Now, Dinner, POND, Boulevards & King Gizzard.

ORB

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Jaala

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Stonefield

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GUM

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Mild High Club

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The Dandelion

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The Murlocs

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Photos: Dani Hansen/Howl & Echoes

Continued from Volumes 2016: Day 1

The second day of Volumes not only began four hours earlier than Day 1, but it opened up three new rooms across two venues. We began back in the Gallery with Solid Effort and Orb.

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Orb

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Meanwhile, the OAF main stage was also kicking off, with Good Boy and Rolling Blackouts CF getting the crowd in the mood for a big night ahead.

Good Boy

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Rolling Blackouts CF

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Brighton Up Bar hosted an outstanding demonstration of the very best that Australian garage and indie has to offer, including Darts, Summer Flake, You Beauty and Scott & Charlene’s Wedding, pictured below. 

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Wax Witches

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Nicholas Allbrook was the highlight of my weekend. It was the first time I’ve finally managed to catch his solo act, and it was everything I could’ve hoped for. Weird as hell, enhanced by wild eyes, distorted facial expressions and spindly jerks of limbs, Allbrook’s one-man show is a performance to behold. He looks a bit like his mind is in a different room, but his guitar is completely on point and his voice is unarmed and brilliant. And let’s be real – anyone who can use a flute both as an instrument as a cane to point and dance with, is doing a good job at live performance.

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Mossy

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Slum Sociable

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Volumes is a really wonderful addition to Sydney’s nightlife, which has been dwindling for so long now. Between the buzzing, bustling audience and the huge variety of artists on display, there was a wonderful atmosphere throughout.

Despite being held across a number of venues, the weekend felt so easy to navigate. On the first night punters were given stamps, and the access was upgraded to plastic wristbands from Saturday afternoon. Each venue had its own feel, from the tropical vibes and minuscule dance floor in Cliff Dive, to the crooked cosiness of the tiny Brighton Up Bar from the sweaty rooms of Oxford Art Factory to the beat-centric Burdekin. The audience were in great spirits and the whole process seemed to run really smoothly. Multi-venue events aren’t easy to pull off, but when they’re done well, they’re done really well. Volumes 2016 was a wonderful weekend event, we can only hope for plenty more like it.

Photos: Danielle Hansen / Howl & Echoes

Having just played the holy heck out of this year’s Splendour In The Grass, pyschedelic shred lords King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard were back onstage in no time at all, going from the madness of thousands upon thousands of punters flocking the enormous amphitheatre and creating one of the biggest circle pits Splendour has ever witnessed to the much more intimate, 400-capacity Oxford Art Factory in Sydney.

Playing material from their energetic whirlwind of a latest record in Nonagon Infinity along with plenty of old cuts thrown in, King Gizzard worked the Sydney crowd into an absolute frenzy. They were supported by Geelong psych-rockers ORB, who are about to embark on a tour of their own in August journeying their new album Birth.

We were about as close to the maelstrom as you can possibly get to take some candid shots of two of the best names in psychedelic music in Australia today. Read our review of the spectacle as you go.

ORB

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King Gizzard And The Lizard Wizard

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Photos: Dani Hansen/Howl & Echoes

 

 

Not many bands on the planet can match the creative intensity, work ethic and sheer energy that is Melbourne pyschedelic force King Gizzard And The Lizard Wizard.

In just six years the band have released a staggering 8 albums, with their 2016 release Nonagon Infinity cementing their place as one of the worlds most exciting up and comers and a further three albums to come in the next year alone.

It was a no-brainer therefore to sacrifice one’s personal comfort and brave the wet, cold Sydney weather to catch the band for the intimate installment of the Sydney leg of their national tour, taking place at the Oxford Art Factory.

Having sold out the entire tour, the chance to see the band play a 400 cap room with no barrier, as opposed to the 1,000 person Metro Theatre the following night, promised to be absolute pandemonium for a working night.

Thankfully the crowd themselves hadn’t kicked into gear when I arrived, instead opting to stand and sway to the tight, fuzzy melodies courtesy of Geelong outfit ORB. Playing a classic take on heavy psych, the trio gave those unfamiliar with the genre the perfect taste of classic sounds and structures from the vast history of the style. Long, elongated jams along with buckets of reverb and technicolor lighting dousing the stage well and truly set the vibe in the room for what was to come.

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With drum kits (two of them!), harmonicas, synths and flutes at the ready,  Stu Mackenzie and co. squeezed onto the compact OAF stage to the delight of the overflowing room. Before launching into their set, Mackenzie took the time to thank the crew working the sound-desk, visuals and backstage logistics, before stepping up to the mic and uttering the lyrics “Nonagon Infinity opens the door.” 

A single drum-roll later and the band exploded into album opener Robot Stop, with the capacity crowd snapping out of their mid-week trance and losing their collective poop in the process.

The band tore through their opening song and transitioned straight into follow-up Big Fig Wasp in the same flowing manner as heard on the record. It seemed like the band were set to play the album the same way it was presented on record, with each song tying into one another in a continuous loop of noise.

But alas, as the climax of the song arrived, Mackenzie turned around and motioned to his drummers to stop playing, indicating to the side of stage that there were some technical issues with the microphones. As anti-climactic as the moment was, it gave the audience a moment to collectively catch their breath and brace for the assault of Gamma Knife and People Vultures which followed in succession once everything was working again.

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The most notable thing about King Gizzard in the live arena is that whilst the sounds they produce are chaotic and at times even violent, onstage the band themselves manage to compose themselves and allow the music itself to whir the crowd into a frenzy.

This was most evident when the band took a break from Nonagon Infinity material and unveiled past cuts I’m In Your Mind and I’m Not In Your Mind, with the group sitting back on their instruments and relying on their own sense of self-control to create the most enjoyable music possible.

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One only noticed the calmness emanating from the band (bar front-man Mackenzie) though if they took a few steps back from the whirlwind of limbs and bodies throwing themselves against and from the stage and allowed themselves to appreciate the incredible professionalism on display.

The tightness of the two drummers was particularly impressive, with the sound never feeling cluttered or messy, but rather compact and powerful, adding the extra energy needed for newer cuts Evil Death Roll and Invisible Face to have full impact onstage.

The one-two punch of Wah Wah and Road Train brought things up yet another level, with the former seeing the crowd ride a fresh wave of energy in response to the huge distortion of the chorus. Just as the show was reaching seemingly intolerable levels of chaos (I myself had to move to the back after having the left side of my face pummeled by a stage-diver), the band gifted the crowd with Hot Water and a reprise of Robot Stop, cementing the theme of continuity found in Nonagon Infinity, before promptly departing.

It felt like it was over all too quickly, with the thrashing crowd stopping abruptly and gazing around in a stunned, sweaty stupor as the venue returned to a normal level of sound. As punters registered that it was indeed all over and there was no encore, they slowly began making their way to the venue’s exits trying to process the sheer intensity that had just occurred.

King Gizzard are selling out tours both nationally and internationally for a reason. They are a unique breath of fresh air and refuse to play by the rules of the industry, constantly evolving and challenging their audience to open their minds.

This energy and creativity has translated to their live show, and last Thursday night at OAF, for 90 minutes I and 400 other people felt a million miles from reality.

Image: Music Feeds