The Flaming Lips were 14 years, eight albums and one solitary hit into their career by the time they began to pull The Soft Bulletin together. Their previous album, Zaireeka, had been virtually unplayable – thanks to the band’s decision to spread it across four CDs designed to be listened to simultaneously – and yet, seemingly against the odds, the group came out with a heart-on-sleeve masterpiece that quickly became tagged “the Pet Sounds of the 90s”.
Here’s how it all happened, and why The Soft Bulletin remains a landmark album for The Flaming Lips.
Listen to ‘The Soft Bulletin’ here.
The backstory: “I wanted to be normal”
Speaking to this author, for an interview published in Record Collector magazine in 2020, Flaming Lips frontman Wayne Coyne admitted that The Soft Bulletin marked a watershed moment for the group. “Previous to that, I think I would have believed myself to be a weirdo: ‘No one’s like me. I’m a champion of the freaks. Fuck normal.’ And I think I was just immature,” he said. “By time we started to do The Soft Bulletin, I wanted to be normal.”
Improbably, The Flaming Lips’ most accessible album to date came out of a project that almost defied attempts to hear it: Zaireeka, whose songs were constructed in such a way that a listener needed four stereos to be able to sync each of its discs together if they hoped to hear the record as the group intended. Yet from the experimental recording process that spawned that album there also came another batch of tunes standing in “absolutely simple and beautiful” contrast to the “insanely wacky” material that was being constructed for Zaireeka.