March 2010 \ Features \ Artist Interview \ Interview: The Flaming Lips’ Steven Drozd on Crazy Guitar Sounds and Vintage Gear

Interview: The Flaming Lips’ Steven Drozd on Crazy Guitar Sounds and Vintage Gear

Chris Kies

The Flaming Lips' Steven Drozd is a man of many hats - keyboard, guitar and drums. Luckily for us, funky vintage gear nut is one of them.


Premier Guitar March 2010

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Everyone knows that guy. You know, that guy that learns anything pretty much on the fly. Whether it’s playing an instrument, painting a portrait or even riding a unicycle, that guy can do it all. And the killer is the fact that he does it with seemingly little exertion. It can be easy to resent the guy, but that’s not the case if the guy happens to be multi-instrumentalist Steven Drozd of the Flaming Lips. Not only does he act, teach and play several instruments in his zany, critically acclaimed band, but he’s also an all-around good guy—which makes it hard to hate him.

Drozd joined the Lips as a drummer, but shortly after he was called upon to record additional guitar tracks on Transmissions from the Satellite Heart and Clouds Taste Metallic in the early ’90s. Once long-time guitarist Ronald Jones left the band in the mid ’90s, Drozd became the guy that helped balance the spinning plates. After nearly 20 years of rocking with the Lips, he’s played live and recorded drums, guitars, keyboards and vocals. He even found time to be the lead character—Major Syrtis—in the Flaming Lips’ 2008 film Christmas on Mars. Most recently, the Lips released their 14th studio album, Embryonic, in late 2009 and are currently on tour with Stardeath and White White Dwarfs and playing Dark Side of the Moon in its entirety. All the while, Drozd and Lips frontman Wayne Coyne have been helping teach courses for music performance and production at the Academy of Contemporary Music at the University of Central Oklahoma.

Premier Guitar caught up with Drozd during some unheard-of downtime and we talked about transitioning from drums to guitar, collecting vintage stompboxes, and trolling eBay for quirky guitars.

What are your first memories when it comes to music?

Since my dad was a musician in both country-western and polka bands, the house always had some type of music being played. It was nice, because my dad gave me the country-western and polka stuff, my older brothers rocked to Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath and other stoner rock bands, and my sister was always buying the Top 40 albums. So I had a pretty healthy variety of music in my childhood. My first personal taste of music was probably finding out what the AM radio had to offer, like the song “Jackie Blue” by the Ozark Mountain Daredevils and other ’70s pop/rock hits.

While you’ve been the Lips’ full-time guitarist for nearly 15 years, you joined as a drummer. How did you get introduced to the drums?

When I was a bout 6 years old, my dad bought me this little toy drum kit because I was always watching him practice and play, so I wanted to join in on the fun. That following Christmas, my dad bought me a real bass drum, snare and cymbal and said to me, “Play these things and if you’re still doing this in six months and getting better, I’ll keep buying you pieces as you progress.” With these three pieces I’d just wail away for hours, and within two years I had a full drum kit. It was great, because even at, like, 11 or 12 years old, I had a pretty steady gig rotating around with all the garage bands in the neighborhood [laughs]. I guess it’s true, drummers always have a gig. I even jammed with my dad’s country-western band and learned the basics and 4/4 time. Drums were my first love and, in some basic ways, the easiest for me to sit down and play.

How did you make your way to the guitar?

After playing drums with my dad’s band, I started to hate it when I was about 13 years old because it seemed boring when I was listening to the Police and Rush—I just wanted to rock! We always had this old Gibson SG in the house. Dad didn’t play, it just sat there. And when I was about 16, I finally just picked it up and tried learning some basic chords. Drums were such a physical thing—you could just use and abuse the kit and sticks—but guitar just appealed to me because it seemed like you could really concentrate on things. And it was more of a cool sound thing. He also had an Ibanez AD9 Analog Delay and a Peavey combo lying around, and so it just clicked because I was into those spacey prog sounds. I remember the first solo I learned to play because of that AD9 was U2’s “New Year’s Day.”

What struck me about playing guitar was that you could really make it about the sounds and there were no boundaries. With drums, you have the kit and everything was pretty standard. It just depended on how fast and hard you’d play, whereas with the guitar and effects, you could just finagle with sounds and tones for hours. I just liked that freedom and still do.

You joined the Flaming Lips in 1991 as a drummer, but you transitioned to guitar in the mid ’90s. How did that unfold?

When we were recording both Transmissions from the Satellite Heart and Clouds Taste Metallic, I was drumming but I also laid down as much guitar as Wayne and Ronald. The only thing with those records is you can pretty much name Ronald’s parts because of his out-of-this-world guitar playing and crazy tones. I ended up playing a lot of rhythm stuff, but for the songs I wrote and created with Wayne I’d lay down the track as we came up with it, and then Ronald would come along and sprinkle his magical guitar tones and insanity on it. So by the time he left the band, I was drumming and also recording guitar parts as the band’s unofficial second guitarist. It was more of a question on a performance level. We had to decide if I was going to stay drumming or move over to guitars and keyboards and get a new drummer.

For a couple years, as a conscious decision, we shifted our musical persuasion in a new direction. We started using backing tracks, noise and other stuff we could create in the studio, and synched it up with these movies that Wayne was making for our live shows. During those three years, we weren’t really playing as a rock band so we all evolved with our musical direction. We never really sat down and pondered how we would fill Ronald’s spot on guitar or my seat on drums—we just kept our creative juices flowing and worked with what we had. We got away from our rock mentality and created some totally different stuff. If we tried that now, we might fall flat on our faces, but back then, in the mid to late ’90s, it seemed really exciting and bold, considering the trends of the time. So for us to be up there with no live drummer and playing with backing tracks, orchestral stuff and movies seemed like a crazy thing and it just worked out for us. And since then we’ve slowly come back full circle to being a full-on, intense rock band again.

As a guitarist, what did you take away from collaborating with a guy who was so deep into crazy sounds and effects?

What people don’t know about Ron is that, technically speaking, he could sit down and plug straight into an amp and just blow your mind as a straight-ahead guitarist. It just so happened he was a master of effects as well. People looked down on him for using Eventide Harmonizers, but the fact of the matter is Ronald could simply play. In addition, he built his own effects, constructed his own pedalboard and tweaked the effects he bought.

What I pulled from him mainly boiled down to two areas: focusing on becoming a technically sound guitarist and using and manipulating effects in a manner to create sounds only the Flaming Lips could use [laughs]. Obviously, since I first picked up the guitar, I was really into making sounds, so the latter was something that really struck me. But after playing and being around Ronald all those years, I figured out that to effectively use and complement those tones completely, you still had to be a solid guitarist. Many players tend to use effects to cloak holes in their abilities, whereas Ron used them to take his playing abilities into another universe. The only person I can remember during that time that played like that was Kevin Shields [from My Bloody Valentine and Primal Scream]. But even so, Ronald was using ring modulators in a way that nobody else was coming close to at the time. Besides the actual composition of guitar parts, you always have to focus on the outgoing sound of it. And to this day, I think of Ronald when I’m crafting songs.

Were you also influenced by Ronald’s DIY mentality with effects, or do you just stick to playing them?

I’m definitely just a collector and player. While my touring board is quite pathetic—a Line 6 DL4 Delay Modeler, Line 6 FM4 Filter Modeler and a Boss GT-8—I’ve been buying up vintage stompboxes like mad in the last two years. I’ve started to get quite a collection—about 120. As for the coolest or rare stuff, I’ve gotten my hands on some Systech stuff, including the Harmonic Energizer, Overdrive and Phase Shifter. I’d love to get my hands on a Ludwig Phase II Synthesizer or a Binson Echorec—the ones Pink Floyd used in the ’60s and ’70s—but that stuff has just gotten too expensive.

Who are some of the other guitarists that have influenced you?

[Laughs] Oh man, I’m sure you hear it all the time—it’s got to be Jimmy Page. For me it’s different, though, because I’m not really into the hard-rock Page. I’m more into the Houses of the Holy Page stuff, particularly “The Song Remains the Same.” It wasn’t heavy or rocking at all—it’s almost like country or bluegrass, just through an electric guitar. Also, I’m really into his weird tunings and overall guitar sounds on stuff like “The Rain Song.” That kind of stuff has really influenced me in my playing and dabbling in alternative tunings. Another one is Steve Howe, because he was such a technically proficient player, but he’s got tone. It’s just amazing and completely Steve, by way of his big ol’ ES-175. And more recent guys would be Duane Denison of The Jesus Lizard and J Mascis of Dinosaur Jr.

With your ever-growing collection of stompboxes, do you craft songs for specific boxes or do you just get spontaneous ideas while jamming on a random pedal?

On Embryonic, I would just get a signal chain brewed up on a whim or because it would create one hell of a commotion. At the beginning of the album, you hear these squawks from a Roland Funny Cat and then something that sounds like Godzilla. All that noise is my ’66 Fender XII through the Ampeg Scrambler and MuTron digital delay, which gives this crazy feedback-noise effect. We just had stuff out waiting to be toyed with.


Drozd (right) and Coyne put on one of their always animated stage shows. Photo: J. Michelle Martin-Coyne

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Comments

(16 comments) display by
UsernameComment
@melodicaste r
on 10/25/2010
Haha you i dont think they tuned their guitars back then either like it said in the interview pink floyd was a psych band back then and listen to jimi hendrix with his fx even though he was limited at the time I can't imagine what he would be able to do with today's technology. In order for music to progress and get better we have to experiment as musicians or else everyone would just be a pop singer like bieber or gaga. At least these guys are making music they love to make and being happy playing it.
James
on 08/17/2010
Every person that has told me they don't like the Flaming Lips has only heard one or two of their albums, usually just Yoshimi. Transmissions and Clouds Taste Metallic are from a different universe compared to Yoshimi. A band that evolves and changes. Nobody wants that?!?!?
LISTEN TO THE SOFT BULLETIN! If you can't appreciate The Lips after listening to that...then go back to jamming AC/DC. If you like one AC/DC song you like them all.
Funk man
on 06/14/2010
"The Flaming Lips are geniuses"- God Jokes aside, they really are a good band. The intricacies of their studio albums and the pin point execution of they're live shows make them one of my favorite.
Really?
on 03/30/2010
Melodicaster, this might come as a shocking news to you but not everyone has the same taste in music. If it's so clear to you that what they do is so simple, instead of spending your time criticizing them on internet message boards why don't you do the same thing and make yourself a lot of money? There is nothing like a music elitist who is angry about the success of others. Write something that people care about rather than slam those who've already done so.
Keith Adams
on 03/24/2010
Flaming Lips have progressed a lot since "jelly" that was the 90's. What were you doing in the 90's...trying to learn Clapton songs wow!!!!now 20 years later after many awards and genre bending albums the lips are still awesome. way above "recycled" blues licks...and you? whining even more and still trying to play clapton licks...hint if you actually turn your T.V off!! you might finally learn all of crossroads...ok everything but the solo...that will be another 20 years....the lips will be in the hall of fame by then cry baby...wah wah wah i have no talent.
melodicaster
on 03/15/2010
I didn't read the article, only the gushing, adolescent raving in the comments. This is really all about fashion isn't it? I mean, you're not really supposed to listen to any of it, are you? Heard them before, though. Maybe better than the Bay City Rollers, even if not that memorable.
Really?
on 03/09/2010
If they suck so much why did you take the time to read the article and then comment? It's probably because insulting things that other's like is the only thing you are capable of that get's any one to notice you. Use some of that same energy for creative and positive things and you might begin to understand why the Flaming Lips are so loved.
holly p.
on 03/08/2010
too many people speak what they don't know. just because you do not like something, doesn't mean it has to suck. i don't like steve vai, never have, never will, still a kick-ass guitar player. credit where credit is due, and the Lips deserve some.
melodicaster
on 03/08/2010
Yeah, these guys are a perfect example of today's garbage music. The only time we hear anything new that's good is because it's essentially derivative, recycled stuff from the '60s and '70s. Forget all the lazy drop tunings and overdone effects and, please, will you slackers learn how to tune your guitars and THEN learn how to play?
pjs
on 03/06/2010
i'm from chicago (not oklahoma), been a psych-genre fan for as long as i can remember. i would argue that the lips have been one of the top if not THE top psych rock bands around for the past 15 years. and they have enough gigs and one of the biggest cult followings of any band.



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