Vinyl Me Please Essentials

So who’s going to question Wayne Coyne?

“As part of your Vinyl Me, Please Essentials subscription, you have exclusive access to a livestream AMA with Wayne Coyne of The Flaming Lips. RSVP below for the livestream on Tuesday, October 8th at 12pm PT. Don’t forget to submit your questions for Wayne in advance using the “Ask A Question” button!”
 
So who’s going to question Wayne Coyne?

“As part of your Vinyl Me, Please Essentials subscription, you have exclusive access to a livestream AMA with Wayne Coyne of The Flaming Lips. RSVP below for the livestream on Tuesday, October 8th at 12pm PT. Don’t forget to submit your questions for Wayne in advance using the “Ask A Question” button!”
They're just jealous of all the AMAs we've had and decided to ape us.

Someone please ask him about Erykah.
 
Very well could be. They were definitely giving the impression that they knew and didn't want to say though. I think somebody at the label screwed up and VMP was scared that if they said anything before the records left the warehouse the whole thing might get canned or something.
I guess that whole Blue Note debacle convinced me more or less that they are just a bunch of plebes surrounded my money hungry labels. You had so-called jazz experts on hand that didn't catch this. An expert to me is someone that is anal about the details. VMP only becomes anal about details when it impacts their bottom line.
 
“How did it feel when Miley Cyrus made your band famous?”
That seems intentionally obtuse considering the self directed trajectory of the band to date was to operate in obscurity and with a predilection for having freedom to experiment. They were plenty famous despite themselves in multiple decades but especially after Yoshimi. One might consider that the collaboration with Cyrus was about rediscovering relevance rather than fame. I would argue that the action worked equally well for both parties, though. Your question appears to presume it was somehow anything less than a brilliant career move for everyone involved and that the outcome wasn’t exactly what was planned. Or maybe you are actually interested to know how it feels to be successful in everything you do primarily because your mindset and resulting attitude propagates it?
 
That seems intentionally obtuse considering the self directed trajectory of the band to date was to operate in obscurity and with a predilection for having freedom to experiment. They were plenty famous despite themselves in multiple decades but especially after Yoshimi. One might consider that the collaboration with Cyrus was about rediscovering relevance rather than fame. I would argue that the action worked equally well for both parties, though. Your question appears to presume it was somehow anything less than a brilliant career move for everyone involved and that the outcome wasn’t exactly what was planned. Or maybe you are actually interested to know how it feels to be successful in everything you do primarily because your mindset and resulting attitude propagates it?

I believe the point was to be intentionally obtuse.

Besides, everyone knows it was Beverly Hills 90210 that made them famous.


 
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