Stu Mackenzie of King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard: A Lot More Considered

I entered the world of Australia’s King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard a few years back, via their Turkish psych-rock record, Flying Microtonal Banana. It struck me as so fun and fresh, touching on sounds of the Middle East and North Africa, but also with the power and fuzzy sludge of some of my favourite stoner rock records from Kyuss and Sleep. The band has released a staggering 20 albums in the past 12 years – in fact, at least three since we conducted this interview – and each of them offers a diverse look into the mind of KGLW’s principal songwriter, producer, engineer, and general mastermind, Stu Mackenzie. The touchpoints on the music map are as wide-ranging as thrashy metal, odd-time signature microtonal-folk, surf rock, and bluesy wizard-rock to name a few stops along the journey that is King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard.
The amount of material that you have put out over the last few years has been overwhelming in terms of trying to do research. Thatās a lot of records!
Thanks, man. I came from a bedroom recording, DIY, lo-fi vibe. Before King Gizzard, thatās what I was interested in. I was playing in bands as well, but what was really getting me was figuring out sounds, messing around with old broken gear, and listening to old records. When King Gizz started, it was as much a recording project as it was a live project. I love touring and playing shows. I love all of that, and getting something different out of that. But I also dig sitting in a room by myself with a laptop, a guitar, and a keyboard. I love being in a room with friends and making music with an 8-track in the corner. I love making recordings. Thatās why Iāve made so many. Itās fun for me.
King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard
Were you the guy in the band who gravitated towards buying a 4-track and learning how to use it?
That was always me, recording bands or friends or whatever. Some friends would say, āWe started a band!ā Iād ask, āCan I come record you? I have this shitty little Tascam machine and Iāll come around and set up a couple of mics. I just want to record music.ā I was motivated by that for some reason. That spirit is still there, but Iāve grown to love touring and the live element. Balancing that is the trick for me, and thatās the hardest thing.
These records are so interesting. Youāve gotInfest the Ratsā Nest, a metal record that reminds me of late-ā80s Metallica.Fishing for Fishiesis like T.Rex and ZZ Top meets Steve Marriott.Gumboot Soupis songs that didnāt fit on other records, but it hangs together as a nice collection. Whatās going on with all of this?
Some of those records are more considered than others. Some are jammy, but most are pretty thought out. A lot of artists work in an āalbum and tourā schedule, and weāve never operated like that. The thing that we donāt do is work intensely on a record, tour it, have some time off, and then repeat. Weāve always got at least three projects on the go at any one time. The way weāve been able to make our records feel considered is because theyāre usually still two years in the making. Thereās a long crossover in between records. Right now, we have a few different projects on the go, and they all have a different feel. I can wake up in the morning and say, āIām in the mood to work onthisrecord today.ā Last night I had a shower, and I had an idea about one of the projects Iām working on at the moment. Itās my way of coping with writerās block: To have quite a few projects on the go at once, and to feel my mind is full and active 24/7. But, in terms of the genre question, I definitely appreciate that people notice that, but itās definitely not the wayIthink of it. I wonder what the average personās Spotify play history looks like. It probably looks pretty varied. Theycanlisten to thrash metal and disco in one day, and thatās fine. I certainly do. But I donāt necessarily love records that are all over the place. I love records that have a feel and a vibe. Itās my way of trying to challenge myself and keep feeling artistically free, but still making records that have a mood and a feeling. They may end up feeling like genre pieces, but theyāre not intended to be. Thatās reflective of the music we listen to.
Many bands feel they have to make a similar record over and over again, because theyāve been boxed into a lane.
Right. I donāt have side projects. A lot of friends of mine have a project where they make a certain kind of music, and they have a side project that satisfies some other part of their musical identity. Idonāthave that. I only do this. Thatās why it feels okay to shape-shift with it a little bit.
I was checking out the video of making ...Microtonal Banana, and I was shocked to see the small room that you made the record in.
That was our studio for five years, and we made six records in that room. We moved out of it a while back. Iām very nostalgic about that room. A super low ceiling, and it sounds shit. Itās a bad-sounding room.
But the records sound cool and unique. What was the process of working with that room?
Maybe it wasnāt something I thought about until a little bit later, but I certainly learned techniques to record in a bad-sounding room. Close-micāing everything and working out how to get atmosphere later. Trying to get the room soundoutof the recording as much as possible. With drum recordings, my biggest trick that I had was a large diaphragm dynamic mono overhead main drum mic. I placed it really close and low over the right shoulder, pointing at the snare. That microphone is super blown out. Then [Iād use] a few other close mics if I needed them to boost some drums. I might want a snare under mic, or the one I call the ābutt mic,ā under the butt, which complements that close overhead. Always a kick mic, as well. This is a micāing technique which takes away the room as much as possible. We were using baffles, getting good bass DI sounds rather than using cabinets, and almost always overdubbing vocals (even if there was some live in the room). In the last couple of years of being in that room, we built a small control room next door and we didnāt love being in there. It was barely big enough for a desk and a little bit of gear. We punched in a hole [in the wall] for the cables. But I realized I didnāt want to be in there; I wanted to be in the main room with everyone. I ended up setting up all my gear in the main room. I ended up using the control room as a listening room, and occasionally as a drum booth. Now, because we moved into a new, much larger space with a high ceiling, I feel Iām going to have to learn how to record again!
Did you acquire new equipment for the new space?
No, weāre still on the same gear. Iām often buying and selling, but Iām not massively into nice equipment. I still use either cheap or standard gear for pretty much everything, because I break shit. Iām not that good at looking after it, so I feel too precious with expensive gear. We have a pretty basic setup, to be honest. I donāt like using a lot of microphones. I believe in keeping it simple and focusing on the music. I think itās partially because Iām the engineer, the mixer, and the songwriter. I have to prioritize my workload, and the more time I spend on gear will make the job harder in the long run. I try to prioritize the songwriting as much as I can. It depends on the record, of course. I havenāt mixed every record, but I do mix most of them. Some of the other guys in the band write songs, as well. Itās always a juggling thing. But with this next space, weāre still working off the same gear. We finally moved in and havenāt recorded anything in there yet, so itās going to be interesting. I did buy this old Soundcraft 16-channel desk, maybe late-ā70s or ā80s. Iām pretty excited to fire that up. But, generally, itās pretty basic shit.
Are you still using your 8-track tape deck?
Iām using that one ā that, Iām pretty sure, is in that video you watched ā a lot. Itās a Tascam 38. Iām not always using that, but I do use that a lot. I bought it maybe six years ago. I had some cassette machines, and I had a 2-track reel-to-reel, but before that ā in terms of using tape ā it was always a cassette; Iād borrow someone elseās deck, or rent a machine and print master tracks to it.
Which records did you guys make to cassette?
Most ofOddmentsandEyes Like the Sky.Quarters!we did to VHS, which sounds absurd, but VHS is a great recording format.Fishing for Fishieswe did to cassette. Iād gotten this 8-track Tascam, which I didnāt love but it worked for that record. Iāve already sold it. I donāt really have a system, and I donāt like to have a system. Every time we start a record, I like to feel Iām learning how to make music again. I feel most inspired when Iām doing that. For every record, the āprocessā has been part of the creation.
Once youāre up and running, what are typical days like?
It depends. Iām usually in one of two modes: Iām either in a finishing mode, where Iām working intensely on a record which has already been in the works for a couple of years. I usually do spend a few months intensively to finish albums. Or, my favorite is being in the writing stage, where Iām writing heaps of music. I try to catalog it. Usually everythingās super varied and confusing. This would be typical of many songwriters I guess, but sometimes itās just riffs, sometimes only words, and sometimes a full song. Maybe itās a jam. I usually catalog them, and I pair pieces up. āThis riff works with this other riff,ā or, āThese words feel right for this,ā and Iām going to jam them together and make a song. Or, āThis song idea and this song idea feel like they should be from the same record.ā Then I have these āahaā moments where Iāll have four or five ideas that feel like they should be on the same record. But I tend to spend a lot of time stabbing in the dark or fishing, looking for that spark or idea or thing that makes it feel like a full record, and not just a track.
āAutomationā from K.G. has some of that microtonal music happening again. Who were you listening to that influenced that?
Many years ago, I became enamored with Turkish psychedelic music. Thereās so much good music from the late-ā60s and early-ā70s. It was a crazy musical period over there. Some of those people, like Selda Bagcan and Erkin Koray, are insanely famous in Turkey. Theyāre pop stars, even today, and their music is psychedelic as fuck. I was listening to that a lot, even before Gizz started. I had this lightbulb moment when I visited Turkey as a tourist, and I started thinking about all this music a lot again in 2014. The music of their culture is so interesting in many different ways. I bought a baglama, a Turkish stringed instrument which is fretted microtonally. This music is dealing with notes in between the notes. There are so many more colors to paint with. I took home this baglama and I wrote quite a few songs on it. I had a jam with a few of the guys with a baglama, and it wasnāt working. Iām not Turkish. Iām not a baglamaplayer. The idea was to get some electric guitars re-fretted so that they could hit some of these notes weāre hearing from the baglama. It was a serendipitous moment, because a friend of mine whoās a guitar maker had offered to build a guitar. I said, āIāve got an idea! Itās going to be microtonal.ā He replied, āWhat the fuck is microtonal?ā We worked out a fretting system that is a simplified version of the baglama. Weāre working with 50 cent steps, which is exactly halfway between a guitar fret or piano note. Turkish music is much more complex than that, but I wanted to keep it simple so we could all be in tune. We got a bass guitar and some electrics re-fretted, and we worked out how to microtonally tune a couple of keyboards. Ambrose [Kenny-Smith] got one harmonica retuned, so a few of the reeds on his harp were in tune with all of us. We worked out how to play a handful of new scales together. It was probably the most inspired Iāve ever felt in my entire life, this moment when I realized, āWhoa, Iāve been writing songs within this box, and this box is limiting.ā I threw away all of the songs Iād written on the baglama, and I started on this electric guitar which was called āthe flying microtonal banana.ā It was this guitar that was purpose-built for this. I thought maybe weād write one song, and it would end up on a record. But we wrote that wholeK.G.record pretty quickly, for us. It felt inspired. We can do the simplest thing, and it feels exotic, interesting, and crazy. We wrote and recorded at the same time in the same room, which weāve only done once or twice. That classic thing of putting microphones on everything and jamming. Weād spend an entire day on a jam that would start off as nothing, and by the end of the day it would be a song. At 6 or 7 oāclock weād hit record and that was the take that was on the album. We did 15 of those and there are nine on the record. I wish that we made records like that more, but itās easier said than done for some reason. Weāve got to be pretty inspired to put something down every day onto tape.
A key element to your band is Jason Galea. Even though heās not playing music, he has created so much visual companionship to your music. Iād assume that he hears the tunes and then creates the art, but I was curious if it ever happens the other way and youāre inspired by the visuals?
It definitely happens both ways. In the studio we were talking about before, where we worked for five years, he worked out of there as well. Often, we were only separated by two or three layers of plasterboard. He was always there, and he was always working simultaneously on what we were working on. Heās named a couple of our records. For example,Gumboot Soupis a Jason name, because we were trying to come up with a name that felt like a collection of random songs. He said, āOh, itāsGumboot Soup.ā I asked, āWhat the fuck isGumboot Soup?ā He said, āThatās what it is to me.ā But he is always there, and it does often go both ways. He tours with us and does a live visual performance. Heās a super inspiring creative human. Heās always got so many ideas, and he puts in so much effort and time into everything he does. Heās such a perfectionist, much more of a perfectionist than I am!
People get so precious about what theyāre working on, and the end result is that projects never get finished. You must have a pretty good sense that āperfectā is the enemy of done.
I can fall into that trap as well. There have definitely been records that Iāve been more of a perfectionist with. When I look back on them, I donāt necessarily think theyāre better. I believe that 90 percent of the time the first idea is the best idea. That may mean that some of our records are a bit bizarre, or feel like they are the first idea, because often they are. But not all of our records are like that. Some of them have been a lot more considered. Itās definitely a daily struggle. The longer I spend on a project, the more I doubt it and the more I get self-conscious about it, and thatās when I start to lose my conviction. Iām the most daring and the most free with our records early on in the process, and Iād like to try to keep that spirit because itās a personal battle for me. I know this is probably true of creators in general. Weāre always battling our ego, self-doubt, and fear. Thatās part of the reason I try to work quickly, because Iām trying to fight that. Iām trying to be ego-free. Giving to the world rather than being fearful of it.
Itās always hard when making your own music not to get in your head. It is less common to be free with output. Let it be what it is and let it lie where it lies.
I certainly donāt feel like that all the time. Thatās the pinnacle. Thatās the mental place Iām trying to go to as much as I can; that feeling of actual freedom and confidence. But easier said than done to be in that headspace. I love releasing a record, because it means itāsdone. It means I can stop whining about it and it belongs to everyone else. People make up their own opinions on it and their own stories with it. They have different connections to it, which are different than mine. I like that because it helps me move on mentally and move to the next thing. Itās also part of the reason I release a lot of music. It feels good!
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