Earth Sciences is the solo debut by
Laura Barrett, who is probably best known as indie rock's foremost player of the kalimba, a handheld African percussion instrument consisting of a carved wooden block with a row of tuned metal tabs, also known as a thumb piano. Yes, that sounds terribly hipper-than-thou, but the kalimba is a deceptively complex and interesting instrument (its traditional predecessor, the mbira, is as important to the music of Zimbabwe as the guitar is to rock & roll), and
Barrett is a genuinely talented player of same. The complex rhythmic patterns and countermelodies of the instrumental "Stop Giving Your Children Standardized Tests, Part 1" will certainly capture the fancy of anyone who enjoyed the watered-down Africanisms of the
Vampire Weekend album, even if devoted fans of the Nonesuch Explorer series might find it entirely inauthentic. Also sure to be intrigued: fans of acid folk harpist
Joanna Newsom.
Barrett is a much less mannered singer than
Newsom, but she has a similarly free-spirited approach to her childlike vocal melodies, and she's an even more playful lyricist. The tongue in cheek opener "Robot Ponies" is a science fiction view of future improvements in pet care similar in tone to quirky psych-era experimentalists like the
United States of America, and "Senior and the Blob" is even more surreal.
Barrett goes full-on into bizarro land with a completely straight-faced solo kalimba reinterpretation not of
Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit" but
Weird Al Yankovic's parody "Smells Like Nirvana." Actually, the most freakish aspect of that song is how unexpectedly pretty
Barrett makes it. (She also nails that breakdown riff that comes after the chorus, most impressively.) One's enjoyment for a solo album performed almost entirely on an instrument most folks don't know the name of -- the album-closing "Stop Giving Your Children Standardized Tests, Part 2" is a synthed-out dub mix of the original instrumental -- is likely based on one's feelings for the plinky, oddly-tuned sound of the instrument itself, but unlike many similar albums of deliberately quirky art-folk experimentation,
Earth Sciences features several well-written songs, including the genuinely mournful lost-love song "Deception Island Optimists Club," as well as clear evidence of a functional sense of humor. It's fun, interesting, tuneful, and it could easily have been much, much worse. ~ Stewart Mason