3×3: The Hot Sardines on Brown Butter, Cypress Hill, and an Obsession with Podcasts

Artist: Miz Elizabeth (from the Hot Sardines)
Hometown: Born outside Paris, currently living in Brooklyn.
Latest Album: French Fries & Champagne
Rejected Band Names: One band name contender was Brown Butter. When we were just a two-person outfit, Evan (Palazzo, who started the band with me) and I came up with all these names that were food-related. Other than music, that's probably what the band talks about most.

Your house is burning down and you can grab only one thing — what would you save?
As many pieces of artwork by my mother as I could carry.

If you weren't a musician, what would you be?
A dialect coach. You know Lake Bell’s character in In a World who’s obsessed with accents and is always recording snippets of conversation? I'm that kind of dialect nerd. I'd be one of those people prepping Jennifer Lawrence to play, say, the king's mistress in some French period piece. Spend a day getting her to roll her Rs just right.

Who is the most surprising artist in current rotation in your iTunes/Spotify?
People tend to be surprised that I listen to anything past 1960. Maybe Cypress Hill?

What is the one thing you can’t survive without on tour?
Podcasts — I'm a little obsessed with Alec Baldwin's Here's the Thing podcast.

If you were a car, what car would you be?
A Citroën Deux Chevaux

Who is your favorite superhero?
Amy Schumer

Vinyl or digital?
Digital for sheer portability (which is key on tour). I’m a digital woman with a turntable soul.

Dolly or Loretta?
Both, in two-part harmony.

Meat lover's or veggie?
Vinyl

3×3: Trailer Radio on Witches, Biscuits, and Having Lots of Underwear

Artist: Shannon Brown from Trailer Radio
Hometown: Man, WV
Latest Album: Country Girls Ain't Cheap
Personal Nicknames: Bebe, Downtown, Shoogs, Skeeter, Squirrel. One nickname for all my various personalities.

Who would play you in the Lifetime movie of your life?
Amy Schumer because she's hilarious and has guts!

If money were no object, where would you live and what would you do?
This answer changes on a regular basis, but today I'd choose an oceanfront property in the Caribbean and spend my time picking sand out of my toes.

If the After-Life exists, what song will be playing when you arrive?
Everyone is expecting me to say "Mama Tried," but it would be "Over the Rainbow." It's my favorite song … sweet, melancholy … the perfect way for a dreamer to enter the room.

 

Detritus on 16th Street #NYC #cigarettebutts #trash #litter

A photo posted by Shannon from Trailer Radio (@trailerradio) on

How often do you do laundry?
Once a month. I have a lot of underwear …

What was the last movie that you really loved?
The only movie I can say I love is The Wizard of Oz. I watch it at least once a year, and my kitchen is decorated in a Wicked Witch theme.

What's your favorite TV show?
I don't watch a lot of TV, but when I do it's HGTV, and Fixer Upper is my favorite. I love to decorate. (And I have a crush on Chip Gaines.)

Morning person or night owl?
Morning. A girl needs her beauty sleep.

Who is your favorite Sanders — Bernie or Colonel?
Last time I checked Bernie didn't come with a biscuit. So Colonel, please.

Coffee or tea?
Coffee! More specifically Vienna Roast from Zabar's. It makes me a better person.

The Brilliance of Courtney Barnett

If Courtney Barnett were a photographer, her subjects would be the most mundane people you could imagine doing unremarkable activities — mowing lawns, eating toast, moving to the suburbs. Her snapshots would capture an intense beauty and warm humor in what feels suddenly to the viewer like a universal human experience. Her photos would not be framed or enlarged; they would be mere Polaroids tacked on the wall, haphazard, like her casual, cynical, and deadpan vocal style. Yet, if you walked by one of these hypothetical photos, you wouldn’t be able to stop yourself from taking a long look, giggling, and being filled with a sudden giddy joy.

Here is Courtney Barnett’s portrait of one unremarkable “Oliver Paul” (from her song “Elevator Operator”):

"Oliver Paul, 20 years old
Thick head of hair, worries he's going bald
Wakes up at quarter past nine
Fare evades his way down the 96 tram line
Breakfast on the run again, he's well aware
He's dropping soy linseed Vegemite crumbs everywhere
Feeling sick at the sight of his computer
He dodges his way through the Swanston commuters
Rips off his tie, hands it to a homeless man
Sleeping in the corner of a metro bus stand and he screams
'I'm not going to work today
Going to count the minutes that the trains run late
Sit on the grass building pyramids out of Coke cans'"

It’s the specific details in each scene that make the songs so interesting. The day-to-day worries about going bald and toast getting everywhere which somehow add up to a feeling that one’s life might be passing by in a state of total insignificance. It’s an enormous idea wrapped in a deceptively humorous normality, not to mention Barnett’s sheer skill with effortless wordplay.

In addition to being simultaneously profound and hilarious, the 28-year-old Barnett, who makes her home in Melbourne, Australia, is a brave female voice in a world that doesn’t always want to hear the realities of a woman’s thoughts. Her lyrics are unflinching to the point of discomfort, yet remain completely relatable. In her song “Lance Jr.” from her Double EP: A Sea of Split Peas, she writes:

"I masturbated to the songs you wrote
Resuscitated all of my hopes
It felt wrong, but it didn’t take too long
Much appreciated are your songs
Doesn’t mean I like you, man
It just helps me get to sleep
And it’s cheaper than Temazepam
I underestimated your intelligence
A little bit of weed mixed with some sentiment
Over-rated films marked 'XXX'
Come on play it with some tenderness"

In an industry where females are often expected to be seen and barely heard, Courtney Barnett is the musician’s equivalent of Amy Schumer or Lena Dunham in that she talks openly about the good, the bad, and the ugly. Like a female comedian, the humor in her songs hits home in ways that feel refreshingly female. Barnett’s Grammy nomination for Best New Artist is something to celebrate. It is not only a big win for indie music, it’s a win for women who have a real voice … and not always a pretty one.


Guest columnist Rachel Baiman is a fiddle/banjo player, singer, and composer based out of Nashville, Tennessee. In addition to her solo project, Rachel is currently part of a duo project called 10 String Symphony (with Christian Sedelmyer).

Photo credit: Mia Mala McDonald