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This Will Be Our Year, Pray Sam Stone, Tippecanoe, and Tyler Too
Future Soundtrack for America
Barsuk
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Motorvated by He Is a Giant John Flansburgh and acquirable retail for
$12 list, all profits to MoveOn and Music for America. Also as an
add-on to McSweeney's' equally nonprofit Future Dictionary of
America, and the recommended method, as a bonus to anyone who
contributes $25 at moveonpac.org/future. Heftier spiritually than the
McSweeney's project, in which gaggles of decorated and connected
literati concoct neologisms for a nation made safe for whimsy and
greensward, yet still painfully indie--who could imagine most
Americans would choose a world so sensitive, grooveless, and devoid of
glitz? Nevertheless, with half these songs said Americans are missing
something, as they so often do. Wonderful covers include OK Go
exhuming the Zombies' supremely hopeful 1968 "This Will Be Our Year,"
the Old 97's claiming an Opal song with the words "old 97" in it,
Laura Cantrell wondering who will be Iraq's equivalents of John
Prine's "Sam Stone," and They Might Be Giants themselves reviving the
original campaign ditty, William Henry Harrison's 1840 "Tippecanoe and
Tyler Too." Clem Snide, Ben Kweller, R.E.M., and the Long Winters
provide the strongest new originals, save two: Black Eyed Pea
will.i.am's self-explanatorily entitled "Money," and best of all, Mike
Doughty's "Move On." There was a time when Doughty's corrosive irony
was an up. This is not that time. He's gentle, sad, admonitory,
impatient, impassioned. "By example, not coercion, force, or fear," he
advises--and he is the example.
Village Voice, Sept. 7, 2004
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