Flamings Lips frontman Wayne Coyne and bassist Michael Ivins told The Bob magazine the story behind this experimental, Pink Floyd-like tune. Said Wayne: "On tape you can't tell how long it is, but you get the record and it's long! Nine and a half minutes. And we like that. We listen to songs and it doesn't matter if they're ten minutes if it's a good song. We had this concept - it's like you sit there, when you did acid and stuff, and you can look at something and get so carried away in it that time just goes on." Michael added: "Because then you 'wake up' and no time's gone by at all and you think, I've been sitting here for two days or something!" Wayne continued: "And that's why that length of it is put in there. It's a really long song but we're talking about a miniscule part of time and taking it for all it's worth."
Richard English, the band's drummer, said this is the quintessential Flaming Lips song because "it's all about this huge universe in this tiny pinhead." (source: Staring At Sound: The True Story of Oklahoma's Fabulous Flaming Lips by Jim DeRogatis.)
In the compilation A Collection Of Songs Representing An Enthusiasm For Recording... By Amateurs: The Flaming Lips 1984-1990, Wayne explained that he and Michael were conducting some unorthodox sleep-deprivation experiments on themselves while writing the tune, "comparing the hallucinations to our (very limited) acid experiences."
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