Flying Wig is an album of recurrent dualities; a can of paradoxes, a box
of worms. The redwood and pine-surrounded cabin studio where Banhart
was “constantly listening to The Grateful Dead” somehow birthed
something slick, modernist, city pop-adjacent and Eno-esque.
Banhart's eleventh record, it's the actualisation of a “precious
friendship” with the acclaimed solo artist, multi-instrumentalist,
producer and Mexican Summer stable-mate Cate Le Bon — a coming together
prophesied by the mirror-image titles of their early solo albums
(Banhart’s 2002 Oh Me Oh My to Le Bon’s 2009 Me Oh My) and a tenderness
built on crude haircuts (“we finally met, soon after she was cutting my
hair with a fork and that was that”) and home-made tattoos — but never
previously translated into the recording studio.
“It’s about transmuting despair into gratitude, wounds into forgiveness,
and grief into praise,” - the product of a ritualistic creative
practice that melts down and re-casts as it mulls, the stuff of sadness
beautified as it changes shape — culminating in a record that “sounds
like getting a very melancholic massage, or weeping, but in a really
nice outfit… if I’m going to cry, I wanna do it in my best dress.”