![]() The story as reported by Jukee is that the idea came to Wayne Coyne around the time the band was starting to get big: Leaving one night after a show, he was struck by the sound of the band's music being broadcast by an entire parking lot full of cars. Instructions even encouraged omitting discs to further tailor the listening experience.īut the prelude to "Zaireeka" was even more interesting. What interested the band, apart from forced communal listening, was the fact that each play-through would be somewhat out of sync, and therefore wholly unique. And though his instrument was reportedly unplugged for the performance, Timberlake was still committed enough to not only spend the week studying his part but also give himself blood-blisters during the actual taping.Ī precursor to the band's later surround sound releases, "Zaireeka" came on four CDs to be played by four stereo systems (for a total of eight output channels - more than what most films utilize) synchronized by four friends pressing play at the same time (as reviewed by CNET). For Timberlake however, hot off his first foray into being a serious solo artist (via BBC music), the move was a first step in showing listeners he also had a hip and fun side. Marking The Flaming Lips' first brush with music royalty (though they'd previously also been joined by Ted Dansen), audiences on both sides of the Atlantic were stunned when an anonymous plush dolphin removed its head to reveal an actual pop-star inside.įor Lips fans, the stunt simply added a new dimension to the band's care-free persona. The two got to talking, as Timberlake is a big fan, so naturally Coyne invited him to join them for a live tape performance later that week. In the aftermath, Donahue amicably split with Coyne and company, but his short stint with them left an impression lasting well into the present.Īccording to Rolling Stone, Justin Timberlake and Coyne met while waiting for separate interviews at the same London radio station. During those sessions, while The Flaming Lips took the day shift (except on "There You Are," allegedly recorded in the middle of the night on an empty freeway), Donahue took the night shift to record Mercury Rev's debut, "Yerself is Steam."īetween "In a Priest Driven Ambulance" and its follow up (also featuring Donahue, as per AllMusic), Mercury Rev blew-up overnight, initiating a bidding war that ultimately ended in a short contract with Columbia Records. That meant first running sound for them before becoming their second guitarist, then engineering the demos for what would eventually become "In a Priest Driven Ambulance." That album would later be recorded at SUNY Fredonia in upstate New York, made possible through a friendship between Donahue and Dave Fridmann who worked for the university. Like George Salisbury, Donahue was a fan of the band who wanted to help out.
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