Review
Flight of the Conchords
Flight of the Conchords

Sub Pop (2008) Matt T.

Flight of the Conchords – Flight of the Conchords cover artwork
Flight of the Conchords – Flight of the Conchords — Sub Pop, 2008

When a friend sent me a YouTube link for some live Flight of the Conchords footage a couple of years ago, I was very skeptical. "I don't like comedy music!" I screeched, flapping my arms up and down. Which I don't. It's very rarely as funny as it believes itself to be, which is always made worse when it inexplicably becomes popular and your co-workers quote it to each other while chortling as if they've just eaten the biggest fucking pie in the world.

So when I watched it and giggled madly the whole way through, I was somewhat surprised. I devoured all YouTube had to offer and thought that was that. Good offbeat comedy rarely travels much beyond it's native country, and I figured that since the duo are from New Zealand I wouldn't be seeing much more. Until the BBC caught on and made a radio series with them. And then the HBO TV series aired, leaving me perturbed. "It won't be as good though!" I howled, kicking small animals into the bushes. "It'll be diluted down for the mainstream American audience!" No offense, like.

Once again surprise reared its quizzical head when the show turned out to be even better. Dry as hell, dark and ever-so-slightly surreal with quality songs. A bizarre tale of a Kiwi novelty folk duo trying to make their way in New York accompanied only by an incompetently self-important manager, a deranged groupie and a deluded, sex-obsessed pawn shop owner. If you have seen it I'm sure I'm preaching to the converted. Unless you are an idiot, in which case I hate you. Go away.

What we have here is the first full release by Flight of the Conchords on Sub Pop, an interesting label choice for something which will inevitably be viewed as the soundtrack to the series despite the material predating it by some way. Stripping their other media formats away from it, what do we have? A collection of songs delivered in a general acoustic style but from a wide variety of different sources, usually lampooning those influences along the way. Oh, and it's funny. Really, really funny. Whether it's the ragga-spearing "Boom" or the bang-on Pet Shop Boys rip of "Inner City Pressure," these boys know their material enough to make it sound like an original single of the genre gone very, very wrong. I'd say that it feels almost a shame that the songwriting skill on display here is 'wasted' on comedy songs, but for once the humor delivers so consistently and precisely that it doesn't feel that way at all.

It's not going to win any prizes for stunning musical innovation, and longtime fans may be puzzled by the exclusion of songs such as "If You're Into It," "Albi The Racist Dragon," and "I'm Not Crying". And I'm certainly not claiming that you'll get as much out of this if you're not a fan of the band already or the show. But it's the only comedy music I've ever heard that can be enjoyed for what it is rather than the general sense of irreverence surrounding it, and the only comedy music I've ever heard that works as well on record as it does in the live setting. At the end of the day, I sincerely doubt that anything I write here will make people pick up the album if they haven't already. But if it makes you curiously search YouTube like the Matt T of two years ago, my job is done.

8.8 / 10Matt T. • January 8, 2009

See also

Pillow Talk, Goldie Looking Chain

Flight of the Conchords – Flight of the Conchords cover artwork
Flight of the Conchords – Flight of the Conchords — Sub Pop, 2008

Related news

Flight of The Conchords Call It Quits

Posted in Splits on December 15, 2009

Flight Of The Conchords Prep New Album

Posted in Records on July 22, 2009

Recently-posted album reviews

Tony Molina

On This Day
Slumberland Records (2025)

I went to a birthday party for my wife and six or seven other friends and acquaintances last night. I guess people liked having sex in January in the late 70s-early 80s? In Canada at least, that’s how we keep warm in the winter! Anyway, I was foraging at the smorgasbord with a couple former co-workers talking about my recent … Read more

Often Wrong

The Figs Are Starting to Rot
Far From Home Records (2025)

Often Wrong is an emo/grunge/screamo hybrid born out of the DIY scene. It was built through the kind of friendships that start in basements, not boardrooms. The band formed in 2024 and quickly started carving out their own lane. They are blending fragile, journal-entry emo with blown-out guitars and throat-shredding catharsis. They’re signed to Far From Home Records, a label … Read more

Armor for Sleep

There Is No Memory
Equal Vision (2025)

Armor For Sleep return with an album that treats memory like a weapon. It’s delicate, devastating, and impossible to disarm. For those who may not be as old as me and missed their emergence into the emo/indie scene, the Teaneck, New Jersey band started in 2001. Led by frontman Ben Jorgensen, they dropped gems like Dream to Make Believe (2003) … Read more