The Flaming Lips – Transmissions From the Satellite Heart album cover

The Flaming Lips – Transmissions From the Satellite Heart

Album 1993

The music gear and equipment used by the artists, producers, engineers, and more involved in the making of the 1993 album Transmissions From the Satellite Heart.

Music from Transmissions From the Satellite Heart

Artists on Transmissions From the Satellite Heart

Gear Used On Transmissions From the Satellite Heart

Explore the instruments, equipment, software, and production tools used in the making of The Flaming Lips – Transmissions From the Satellite Heart (1993). Click more on each item to see exactly how it was used.

Guitars used by Wayne Coyne on Transmissions From the Satellite Heart

Semi-Hollowbody Electric Guitars

Harmony H59 Rocket Semi-Hollow Electric Guitar

Avg price: $1,900.00

Here's an image of Wayne Coyne playing a Harmony H59 Rocket during the recording of "Transmissions from the Satellite Heart"

Solid Body Electric Guitars

Fender Jazzmaster 1967

Avg price: $6,100.00

One of the key components of the Flaming Lips’ psych-pop sound is multi-instrumentalist Steven Drozd’s 1967 Jazzmaster.

But its most infamous modification probably wouldn’t have happened if not for the daring of frontman Wayne Coyne, who brazenly replaced the stock bridge pickup with a Seymour Duncan Hot Rails pickup.

As the story goes, Drozd was in Oklahoma around 1993, when the Flaming Lips had just broken through with the single “She Don’t Use Jelly” from the 1993 album Transmissions from the Satellite Heart. The multi-instrumentalist–who was actually the band’s drummer at the time–walked in to a local, Oklahoma City music store called Horn Trader, where the weathered Jazzmaster sang out to him from the wall.

As they were preparing to head out on tour in 1994, Drozd let Coyne borrow the guitar for a few days, but he didn’t get it back in the same shape, as Coyne made the switch unbeknownst to Drozd.

While he was initially pretty ticked off, Drozd eventually came around to the high-output single-coil, especially as the Flaming Lips’ sound evolved.

“He came over to the house and was like, ‘I hope you don’t mind, I put a (Seymour Duncan) Hot Rails in it,’” Drozd recalled in an interview with Ultimate Guitar. “I’m like, ‘What the f--k, man? What are you doing?"

But the switch turned out to be a saving grace as the Hot Rail could better handle the noise of his complicated setup. “A lot of the guitars, especially at the volumes we play, they just get so unwieldy to me. You have six different effects going; you’ve got a phase, you’ve got delay, you’ve got two different types of distortion, you’ve got wah, and the noise levels on those things get so bad. So he put that Hot Rail in, and I was mad for a couple of days.”

Semi-Hollowbody Electric Guitars

Harmony H54/1 Rocket Electric Guitar

Wayne used this guitar a lot during the mid 90s Flaming Lips era (Transmissions From The Satellite Heart and Clouds Taste Metallic era that is). most notably it was featured in the "She Don't Use Jelly" music video