NPR Tiny Desk Concert: A Funny, Smart Set From Courtney Barnett

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Courtney Barnett can tell you a story like she’s your best friend — provided your best friend is a funny poet with an Australian accent. Listen to “Avant Gardener,” an autobiographical account of trying to turn a life around through gardening, only to be foiled by a severe allergic reaction. The tale that follows at this Tiny Desk Concert, “History Eraser,” is a ramble in an alcohol-fueled dream state; it features some of the best lyric-writing in music today. Here’s a sample from that song:

“I found an Ezra Pound and made a bet that if I found a cigarette I’d drop it all and marry you. Just then a song comes on: “You can’t always get what you want” — The Rolling Stones, oh, woe is we, the irony! The Stones became the moss and once all inhibitions lost, the hipsters made a mission to the farm. We drove by tractor there, the yellow straw replaced our hair, we laced the dairy river with the cream of sweet vermouth.”

The only downside for a fan like me is that these songs have been kicking around my head for more than a year. As she played them, I found myself hoping for something new, too. And so it was that Barnett graced the Tiny Desk with a brand-new tune, not yet on a record, about a suburb near Melbourne known as Preston; it’s a song about house-hunting that she appropriately calls “Depreston.” The song is thoughtful, acerbic and funny, just like the woman who sings it. —BOB BOILEN

Set List
“Avant Gardener”
“History Eraser”
“Depreston”

Credits
Producers: Bob Boilen, Denise DeBelius; Audio Engineer: Kevin Wait; Videographers: Denise DeBelius, Gabriella Garcia-Pardo, Olivia Merrion; photo by Jim Tuttle/NPR

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11 comments
1 SpaceJesus  Apr 15, 2014 6:15:26pm

I’m probably the last person to hear about this, but I found it pretty interesting:

huffingtonpost.com

2 SteveMcGazi  Apr 15, 2014 6:20:56pm

re: #1 SpaceJesus

I was expecting that to have a dateline of April 1.

3 SpaceJesus  Apr 15, 2014 6:22:58pm

So I guess all you need to do is get a bunch of water, use a nuclear reactor to power the process to convert the water into fuel, and uh, you have a zero-emissions source of jet fuel?

4 SteveMcGazi  Apr 15, 2014 6:24:36pm

If only you could feed yourself while your out at sea, you never need to go home.

5 Dark_Falcon  Apr 15, 2014 6:26:28pm

I had to pause tonight’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., but it looks like another doozy. Unsurprisingly, the revelation of SHIELD being massively compromised by HYDRA (see Captain America: The Winter Soldier, if you haven’t already) has left those surviving loyal agents to face some sharks circling. SHIELD is seeing in action the dictum that you can defend against external enemies, but may the Lord protect you when your agency is targeted by other agencies within the government.

I actually hope the show uses that angle a bit, because I think it would be good to see how heroes respond to antagonists who aren’t evil or enemies, but are rivals who honestly think their agency can do the job better than yours.

6 SpaceJesus  Apr 15, 2014 6:27:28pm

re: #4 SteveMcGazi

en.wikipedia.org

7 FemNaziBitch  Apr 15, 2014 6:32:04pm

re: #1 SpaceJesus

I’m probably the last person to hear about this, but I found it pretty interesting:

huffingtonpost.com

Big Oil isn’t going to like that.

8 SpaceJesus  Apr 15, 2014 6:34:47pm

re: #7 FemNaziBitch

Big Boat don’t care.

9 abolitionist  Apr 15, 2014 6:42:02pm

re: #5 Dark_Falcon

Will the assguardians come to the rescue?
/misspelling intentional

10 William Barnett-Lewis  Apr 15, 2014 6:46:05pm

re: #8 SpaceJesus

Big Boat don’t care.

Yep. The Navy didn’t go to oil till the Standard Oil Trust was busted up.

This is only good for jet fuel at the moment. But if the carrier’s reactors can crack enough H2 to run the conventional fueled escorts? That’s when it’ll get interesting.

11 FemNaziBitch  Apr 16, 2014 3:55:00am
Timon

PRONUNCIATION:
(TY-muhn)

MEANING:
noun: One who hates or distrusts humankind.

ETYMOLOGY:
After Timon, the misanthropic hero of Shakespeare’s play Timon of Athens. Earliest documented use: 1598.

USAGE:
“My soul was swallowed up in bitterness and hate … I saw nothing to do but live apart like a Timon.” Upton Sinclair; Prince Hagen; Heinemann; 1903.


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