.The Wild Ones

Can the Black Lips keep up with their rep as professional punk fuck-ups?

Rock ‘n’ roll is a mess of contradictions, a central one being that
a rock band, in order to live a life of zero responsibility, must
sacrifice, practice, display determination, and maintain a spartan work
ethic in order to succeed. It’s surprising to talk to a band of yahoos
and find out just how much focus and dedication goes into such mindless
mayhem. Case in point: Atlanta’s Black Lips. Formed as a band of
high-school delinquents, these prolific garage-rocking lunatics have
broken countless on-stage taboos in pursuit of precious punk oblivion
— but they’ve done it all with a steely resolve that has enabled
them not only to preach the good word the world over but also to
outlast their early-2000s garage-revival contemporaries.

“Basically, our job is to be fuck-ups,” says laconic Lips frontman
Cole Alexander. “We work hard, but we’ve had this kind of professional
amateur vibe our whole careers. We’re professional at being fuck-ups,
and it’s an easy job for us because it’s not an act.”

Cole isn’t kidding. Chances are, if you’ve heard of the band, it’s
because of their extreme behavior, whether it’s their crazy live shows
(which have included vomiting, pyromania, water sports, and onstage
make-out sessions) or maybe their recent ouster from the Indian
subcontinent. “When we first started, we weren’t a very good band,
technically, so we’d do all these antics to make up for it, just to
entertain people. And then touring all the time, we’d learn all these
punk gimmicks. Of course, touring also taught us a lot about having a
work ethic, and how to actually play.”

If indeed the band’s reputation has begun to overshadow their music,
their new 200 Million Thousand (Vice) — their sixth
long-player in as many years — might be their best chance of
evening out the experience. From the searingly lysergic lead guitar of
rumbling opener “Take My Heart” to the psychedelic hip-hop of “The Drop
I Hold” to the art-damaged sound collage of closer “I Saw God,” they’re
at the peak of their powers, and the album bursts from the constraints
of what’s expected of garage rock.

“When we were kids,” says Alexander, “we grew up listening to
oldies, and we always loved those tough oldies like, you know, ‘Wild
Thing’ by the Troggs and ‘Satisfaction’ by the Stones. Then we got
super into punk music getting out of high school, and we realized that
a lot of times the oldies, the really tough ones, sounded more punk
than the punk songs that were coming out in the Eighties and Nineties.
We were trying to tap the roots of early punk, when it was really dirty
and stuff, trying to find the earliest form of punk. You know,
researching old music, like old gospel music from the Forties and
Fifties with preachers screaming their asses off. We’ve gotten more
experimental in recent years too — we never wanted to be purists
by any means.”

Their experimental streak isn’t just musical but geographical
— the Lips attempt to walk (or stumble) outside the lines of
where rock bands are supposed to play. Their reputation for a good time
spread faster than the Internet could carry it, and before long, show
offers from far-flung fan bases in Brazil and Indonesia started rolling
in.

“If big corporations can globalize pop music,” Alexander continues,
“why can’t some poor kids from the suburbs globalize punk? Rock shows
feel pretty universal in most ‘Westernized’ countries, but when we
played Palestine and India, we noticed a difference — this kind
of curiosity in the audience that was endearing. In Palestine we played
in front of a mosque, and kids started coming out, and then their dads
would come out and try to push them away. It was strange to play a
place where the people are really at odds with the United States, but
the politics didn’t really matter; all of that kind of melts away once
you start playing music. We all got along.”

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