One Night Stand: Flight of the Conchords

Flight of the Conchords · 2005 · Max

One Night Stand: Flight of the Conchords

A quiet half-hour of acoustic musical parody and awkward stage banter.

January 01, 2005 TV Special

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Bret McKenzie and Jemaine Clement sit on two stools, holding acoustic guitars and speaking softly into microphones. They perform their musical comedy act as if they are nervous at an open mic. The banter between songs is halting and quiet, full of polite corrections and awkward pauses. When they actually start playing, the music is remarkably competent, serving as a straight-faced delivery system for absurd premises. The contrast between their low-energy stage presence and the tightly constructed songs makes the act work.

Recorded for HBO’s 2005 revival of the One Night Stand series, this half-hour set served as the American television introduction to the New Zealand duo. They had just won a Best Alternative Act award at the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival, catching the network’s attention. Two years later, they would turn their stage personas into a television show for the same channel.

The setlist functions as a tight compilation of the tracks that would eventually define their career. Clement drops rhymes as the Hiphopopotamus, warning the front row that his lyrics are potent enough to induce pregnancy. McKenzie outlines the unsexy realities of scheduled intimacy in “Business Time,” factoring recycling and baggy team-building shirts into the seduction. They also run through a folk song about a formerly racist dragon and a stilted dialogue sketch concerning a woman in a park named Jenny. They rarely raise their voices, letting a quiet commitment to the bit carry the entire thirty minutes.