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    "html": "<p>It's all about sex, isn’t it? Every story of star-crossed lovers, every romantic song ever written, underneath them all lies that primal urge. “That’s why birds do it, bees do it, even educated fleas do it”: Cole Porter knew his biological science.</p><p>At Village Underground Joshua Tillman put his stamp on the theme. Under his stage name Father John Misty, the singer enacted a sultry display of courtship, twirling the microphone stand and swirling his hips in a way that we haven’t seen in the indie community since Jarvis Cocker seduced us all in Pulp.</p><p>The track from the new Father John Misty album, I Love You, Honeybear , which is about his alter ego, is a satirical version of Tillman himself, trying to find a wife. You could hear echoes of his label-mate John Grant in the music, a dream of 1970s Californian soft-rock. But Tillman’s version is louder and more uninhibited, evident tonight in the way “Nothing Good Ever Happens at the Goddamn Thirsty Crow” went from gentle piano and steel guitar to a huge of wall of sound, the singer agitating the microphone so much it flew off its lead.<br />Even in heavily ironised form, the male display could be tiring: a version of Leonard Cohen’s “I’m Your Man” added nothing to the song but a smirk. But mostly the high wire act was magnificent, a self-deprecatory kind of showing off. The slacker’s lament “Bored in the USA” summed it up, the singer crooning verses as witty as Randy Newman while narcissistically filming himself with a mobile phone. But at the same time a touching piano and string melody freighted the humour with genuine feeling. “Every man needs a companion,” he sang in the last song: the exhibitionism had a purpose.</p>"
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  "description": "It's all about sex, isn’t it? Every story of star-crossed lovers, every romantic song ever written, underneath them all lies that primal urge. “That’s why birds do it, bees do it, even educated fleas do it”: Cole Porter knew his biological science.At Village Underground Joshua Tillman put his stamp ...",
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  "publishedAt": "2015-03-21T09:19:00+00:00",
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  "textContent": "It's all about sex, isn’t it? Every story of star-crossed lovers, every romantic song ever written, underneath them all lies that primal urge. “That’s why birds do it, bees do it, even educated fleas do it”: Cole Porter knew his biological science.At Village Underground Joshua Tillman put his stamp on the theme. Under his stage name Father John Misty, the singer enacted a sultry display of courtship, twirling the microphone stand and swirling his hips in a way that we haven’t seen in the indie community since Jarvis Cocker seduced us all in Pulp.The track from the new Father John Misty album, I Love You, Honeybear , which is about his alter ego, is a satirical version of Tillman himself, trying to find a wife. You could hear echoes of his label-mate John Grant in the music, a dream of 1970s Californian soft-rock. But Tillman’s version is louder and more uninhibited, evident tonight in the way “Nothing Good Ever Happens at the Goddamn Thirsty Crow” went from gentle piano and steel guitar to a huge of wall of sound, the singer agitating the microphone so much it flew off its lead.Even in heavily ironised form, the male display could be tiring: a version of Leonard Cohen’s “I’m Your Man” added nothing to the song but a smirk. But mostly the high wire act was magnificent, a self-deprecatory kind of showing off. The slacker’s lament “Bored in the USA” summed it up, the singer crooning verses as witty as Randy Newman while narcissistically filming himself with a mobile phone. But at the same time a touching piano and string melody freighted the humour with genuine feeling. “Every man needs a companion,” he sang in the last song: the exhibitionism had a purpose.",
  "title": "Father John Misty",
  "updatedAt": "2025-07-17T09:11:58+01:00"
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