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Flight Of The Conchords – I Told You I Was Freaky

Flight Of The Conchords I Told You I Was Freaky Flight Of The Conchords   I Told You I Was Freaky
Flight Of The Conchords are a musical comedy duo from New Zealand that are best known for their two-season series on HBO.  The premise behind both the band and their TV show is that they’re a folk group trying to pull themselves from relative obscurity in NZ to world conquest with a base in NYC.  While their debut release featured songs that had been road-tested for nearly 10 years, I Told You I Was Freaky comes directly from writing for the TV show, both musical and episodic.  As you might imagine, the concepts are not as solidly developed on Freaky, yet the bits are still hilarious.  What should be of interest to readers of ClassicRockMusicBlog.com is that comedians Jemaine Clement and Bret McKenzie are not merely passing themselves off as musicians.  The songs on Freaky and its predecessor, Flight Of The Conchords, are written and performed by the duo themselves with only occasional appearances by other musicians and comedians.  The songs are not only ridiculous and blasphemous on several levels; they also exhibit an understanding and love of many styles of music, from hip hop to reggae to folk, and yes, to classic rock as well.

If you weren’t familiar with Flight Of The Conchords before reading this and you’re now imagining that they’re sort of like Spinal Tap for the cultural mash of the 21st Century, then you’re starting to get the drift.  Just as Spinal Tap focused on a washed up, never was band of metal heads that began (like many classic rock and metal bands) as a hard hitting bunch of R&B rockers that morphed through flower power before settling into their role as obliviously sexist failures, Flight Of The Conchords are similarly washed up before they could get started and experimental with types of music that will command an audience of new followers.  As artists trying to create a believable yet totally false history of a non-existent group, they’ve got to be able to write, play and sing the material.  Spinal Tap “existed” for one movie, a handful of records, and only a few live performances.  Flight Of The Conchords are currently touring Europe, even though their TV show will not return and future Conchords projects are left somewhat in limbo.  And just as the actors participating in Spinal Tap are seen in many, many TV shows and films outside of that project, Clement and McKenzie have also been seen separately in numerous movies and TV commercials.  The biggest difference between Tap and The Conchords is that the kiwi outfit puts infinitely more into their music than Tap ever did.  The songs are funny, yes, but the project is absolutely serious.  Here are some examples:

Take a song titled “Sugalumps”, which is about, well, how sexy a guy’s testicles are, and set it to an early ’80s electro rap backing.  If you get the sound exactly right, the music fans hearing the song are laughing at something else besides “the ladies” that “hustle to ruffle my truffles.” Bret and Jemaine and producer Mickey Petralia obviously labored over the synthesizer programming to get it to sound perfectly stinging and primitive.  The sing-song rap style of both The Conchords and guest Arj Barker (the TV show’s scummy and delusional pawn shop worker/advice lending buddy) and the urban sweetness of the singing on the chorus, “All the ladies checkin’ out my sugalumps” and you’ve set the stage for not only great comedy, but also dead-on homage.

The Conchords also take a poke at Outkast on the cut “We’re Both In Love With A Sexy Lady.”  In a rambling, nearly combative discussion involving confusion over a woman that both Conchords think is hot for them, they’ve perfectly nailed Outkast’s combination of Paisley Park cheese-funk and dirty South hip hop.  Never mind that the woman’s lazy eye makes it impossible to know which Conchord is being given the eye, Bret and Jemaine have succeeded in paying tribute by first paying attention to the details of track production and vocal delivery.  The Rogers Nelson love shows up in a big way on the disc’s title track.  Now that I think of it, they’re throwing all sorts of light funk winks our way with their perfect falsettos, minimal guitar licks and sighing whispers; all that to describe several instances of freakiness that aren’t actually freaky, but more demented.

“Too Many Dicks (On The Dance Floor)” is all about the dilemma one faces when trying to hustle chicks at the disco, but there are only boys shaking their money makers that night.  This is The Conchords’ send up of modern party rap dance music, complete with electronically altered voices and faux Latin cowbell.  The song is not as fully developed as it could be, but the joke is no less amusing.

Paul Simon told us of 50 ways to leave your lover, but The Conchords sing of 50 ways they’ve been dumped on the tune “Carol Brown” (who took the bus out of town).  This song is not so much a stylistic tribute, but rather one that serves as a nod to the time-honored pop tradition of the broken heart.  Singers Alison Sudol (of A Fine Frenzy), Inara George (of The Bird and The Bee) and Sia serve as three of the voices of the girlfriends of the past, now organized into a choir that Jemaine is trying to get to shut up.

I don’t know what the future holds for Flight Of The Conchords, with them ruling out the idea of continuing their HBO series.  I completely understand that their creativity has been constrained by the production schedule for a show that’s filmed half a world away from their homes.  The concept would actually work better in a series of films and with the ongoing recording and touring projects, but only time will tell what they’ve got in mind.  I can tell you with certainty that I Told You I Was Freaky demonstrates intelligence and comprehensive knowledge of pop music history, while remaining laugh-your-ass-off funny.  This isn’t the record you’ll want to start with when introducing yourself to the band, however.  You should buy their debut first when attempting to get down with their sound.  As for future freakiness, I’m anxiously awaiting any other new ideas that Flight Of The Conchords plan to record.  If you’re a music buff like me, you’ll also feel that a fair amount of their jokes are leveled straight at you.

-Mark Polzin

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Between The Buried And Me – The Great Misdirect

Between The Buried And Me The Great Misdirect Between The Buried And Me   The Great Misdirect

So many bands these days are challenged to present a sound that encompasses their diverse influences yet sets them far apart from all that has gone before.  Raleigh, North Carolina’s, Between The Buried And Me are a band that has been able to move forward by discarding labels and paying absolute attention to their muses.  Their 2009 release The Great Misdirect demonstrates their love for not only progressive metal, but also death metal (a genre long avoided by many European pro- metal bands).  They’ve gained wider exposure through touring as the opening act for Dream Theater, but it’s their technical proficiency and urge to push boundaries that’s brought them the most recognition.  The Great Misdirect is easily one of my favorite releases of 2009, and I’d like to share with you some of the elements that set this record far above so many other products in the marketplace at present.

It first must be stated that if the listener can’t get past harshly screamed vocals, they need not investigate the nuances of The Great Misdirect any further.  Death and thrash metal groups have often relied on a different vocal delivery to set their music apart from metal sounds that gain wider acceptance.  In truth, I’ve not always appreciated this sort of “singing” and have only learned to love it more through the decades.  While BTBAM’s vocalist Tommy Rogers is an excellent singer by traditional standards, and does deliver in a more melodic style quite often, he has no reservations about breaking into full scream as the song warrants.  Further, his use of keyboards to set mood and tone contribute greatly to the band’s distinctive sound.  The primitive Korg machines brought to bear are never meant to be the focal sonic texture, but more an addition to round out the performances of the other outstanding musicians in the band.  The CD’s opener, “Mirrors,” is no indication of the heaviness waiting to be unfurled by BTBAM.  At less than 4 minutes in length, it is rather a precursor to the sprawling, 9-minute-plus “Obfuscation.”  “Mirrors” is pure melody and lurking musical discipline.  Guitarists Paul Waggoner and Dusty Waring never move into shred mode, but instead serve to convey the importance of proficiency when working to deliver a message through music.  Bassist Dan Briggs and drummer Blake Richardson fall back on a pseudo jazz rhythm beneath the melody lines and are also well practiced at the art of restraint.  There’s more than an hour of music coming in only six songs.  Paving a path for the listener to follow is crucial and easily mastered by the group.

“Obfuscation” then explodes as Richardson’s drum fills blast loose and the rhythm guitar distortion is unleashed.  Rogers is now screaming the lyrics as if his life depends on it.  The lyrics tell of the need to obscure the greater mysteries of the universe in order for us to survive day to day existence.  Although there are things far greater than us and our trivial concerns in the omnireality, those cosmic complexities cannot be influenced by we tiny humans and they themselves seem small versus matters of hand to mouth existence.  Is it starting to sound like a prog-metal theme to you yet?  If not, the Classical feel as the music divides into movements across the piece will definitely tip you off.  Waggoner’s solos are especially impressive as they siphon their energy from some Middle Eastern/Zappa-fied/Iron Maiden dimension.

The 11-minute “Disease, Injury, Madness” begins as pure death metal; its lyrics presenting death as an embodiment of an encompassing force wiping clean the blot of humanity from all existence.  The music drifts back and forth between brutal thrash and Steve Howe-influenced art rock, never allowing the listener to remain complacent.  The unexpected mid-song breakdown into an inexplicable groove complete with fretless bass soloing and twin guitar harmonies is worth the price of admission alone.  Richardson’s blast beats defy both physics and logic.  Before we can sit comfortably with any of this, “Fossil Genera: A Feed From Cloud Mountain” begins its 12-minute excursion with an old-time piano more akin to something by The Dresden Dolls than a metal outfit.  The walking bassline, guitar power chords and skulking, raspy vocals tell us that uncharted territory is being explored here.  The lyrics this time sing of a conglomerate of heavenly beings that monitor the failures of mankind as they wait to usurp our misused power.  These “night owls” have intervened each time we were about to destroy ourselves and they have then cast spells of pacifism that lull us back into unquestioning comfort.  About nine minutes in, acoustic guitars, pizzicato strings, chiming percussion, plaintive piano, and lovely, distant vocals emerge to help describe the watchers.

The only thing even close to a radio single on the CD is “Desert Of Song.”  The pace is slower, guitars quieter, and vocals sweeter than elsewhere.  Rogers sings of a time when music has vanished from the Earth.  Unlike the disastrous results of trying to reinstate the art in Rush’s “2112”, music is positively restored by BTBAM and the overprotective overlords are overthrown on a song that’s actually rather (gasp!) pretty.

The Great Misdirect closes with the magnum opus “Swim To The Moon.”  At just shy of 18 minutes, BTBAM pull out all the stops and show us everything they’re capable of.  Bell percussion, Robert Fripp-style repetitive guitar lines, guitar effects simulating violins, ridiculous time signatures, complex melody lines duplicating those of Kansas, lightning drum riffs, crushing bass and some of the harshest vocals on the record are all here and popping up only to disappear from measure to measure.  The lyrics are as thought-provoking as those elsewhere, this time dealing with an escape from self-imposed shackles, whether through altering one’s life patterns or slipping into death, symbolized as a “swim to the moon.”

To say that I was blown away by this record is a gross understatement.  I even went so far as to purchase the Deluxe Edition containing a DVD of the making of the record and an on-stage “gear guide” introducing all of the equipment used by the band in their live show.  You may not go nuts like I did, but if any of my descriptions whet your appetite at all; you have to give The Great Misdirect a listen.  The record will be unfairly categorized as a metal release, but that pigeonhole only draws attention to a corner of the masterpiece this band’s created.  Best of 2009?  Perhaps.  Off the top of my head, I can’t think of one that’s better.

- Mark Polzin

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