Lots of links to dump today. Here's a preliminary batch...
* There's a new Springsteen album out today, which all right-thinking people have undoubtedly already purchased on iTunes. Slate and Salon both have Boss-centric coverage in celebration.
* The banking crisis has brought down the government of Iceland. More here.
* At one point, The Simpsons was funny. Eye on Springfield has proof. Via Kottke.
* Regional pizza styles of the U.S.
* LEGO Vipers. Oh, BSG, I can't stay mad at you.
* Favorite photos of George W. Bush. My favorite is probably this one, which I've linked to before, but they all have their charms.
You're doing it wrong...
Showing posts with label Working on a Dream. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Working on a Dream. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
4:06 PM
|
Labels: banking, Battlestar Galactica, Bush, fast food, Iceland, LEGO, liquidity crisis, music, pizza, Springsteen, The Simpsons, Working on a Dream, you're doing it wrong
Monday, December 01, 2008
Kyle Smith in the New York Post has some fun with the new Springsteen single, "Working on a Dream," which he feels augurs a frightful new era of songs in which Bruce is happy with the world as it is.
There is a bracing consistency in Springsteenian gloom, from the Ford years ("The street's on fire, a real death waltz") to Carter's ("Lately there ain't been much work on account of the economy") to Reagan's ("This old world is rough, it's just getting rougher") to the first Bush's ("Ain't no mercy on the streets of this town, ain't no bread from heavenly skies") to Clinton's ("Oh brother are you gonna leave me wastin' away on the streets of Philadelphia?") to the second Bush's ("Woke up Election Day, skies gunpowder and shades of gray"). If the Boss has a motto, it has always been this: No hope, no change, no way.The song's now available on iTunes. Here's the live debut from an Obama event last month, which frankly I think sounds significantly better than the single. (I love him, but the Boss tends to overproduce the studio albums. It's true.)
What's his next song going to be called - "Goodlands"? Will universal pre-K childcare give us "Junglegymland?" I for one am not looking forward to "Tenth Avenue Love-In," "Happy Heart" or "57 Channels (and a Lot of It Is Really Interesting Interviews with Cabinet Members About How They're Going to Improve Everyone's Job, School, and Personal Dignity)." Instead of looking for inspiration to John Steinbeck to make "Ghost of Tom Joad" or to Pete Seeger for covers of one of the old let's-make-a-union-that'll-one-day-destroy-the-car-industry songs, could Bruce take a Lauperian turn and surmise that we're all just "Born to Have Fun"?
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
9:03 AM
|
Labels: Barack Obama, hope, music, politics, Springsteen, Springsteenian gloom, Working on a Dream