I work forty hours a week in a
call center for a health insurance company. I’m chained to my desk with a tangled phone
headset for eight hours a day, listening to people whine about benefits I
didn’t choose and claims that I didn’t process. Most of the time, I am not in
the best of moods by the time I get home. Thank God for Youtube. I can spend so
much time on that website, pulling up songs and music videos that can
completely transform my mood. There are
a lot of songs I could include on this list, but the following five are ones
that consistently put me in a good mood; I can’t listen to them without feeling
a little better by the chorus.
1.
“Happy” by
NeverShoutNever
The lyrics aren’t especially brilliant. They range from cute but
clichéd to kind of stupid: for example, in the chorus, Christopher Drew sings “The
grass is greener on the other side”- isn’t that kind of a negative line? Wouldn’t
that mean the singer thinks that, now that he’s with the “girl he adores,” life
without her seems better (“greener”)? That’s basically what the phrase means:
what you don’t have seems better than what you do. I mean, I get what he’s
saying- being with this girl is “being
on the other side”- but …ugh, sorry. I promise I won’t analyze the crap out of
this, because I really do like this song. The title is completely appropriate; it’s
two minutes and forty-seven seconds of auditory happiness.
The thing about this song that makes me smile is how genuine it
sounds. In text, lines like “Why, oh, why did I not see this before?/The girl I
adore is right in front of me” sound like something from either a bad romantic
comedy script or a high school student’s Facebook status, but the delivery
makes me believe them; when they’re sung, I can’t help but go “AWWWW.” It’s beyond the bubbly melody, the bouncy
rhythm, and Drew’s saccharine voice (although they’re all contributing factors).
He just sounds so sincere. There are so
many other generic love songs that seem written to cater to easily-infatuated
teenagers, and while I guess this one does too, I actually believe that, at
least when he recorded it, he was head over heels for whoever it was he wrote
this about.
2.
“Walk” East
Village Opera Company (Semele)
It’s funny that this song is on this list, because while it’s very
sweet out of context, the larger piece that it comes from isn’t exactly a
Disney fairy tale. It’s an adaptation of a piece from Handel’s Semele, which is based off a story in
Greek mythology. Like most Greek myths, this one doesn’t have a happy ending.
The cliff notes: Zeus has an affair with a mortal woman named Semele. Zeus’s
wife Hera gets jealous and tricks Semele into asking Zeus to prove his love to
her by revealing himself as a god. He does so by appearing to her in all of his
divine, lightening-y glory. Unfortunately for Semele, no mortal can witness
this without being incinerated on the spot. Whoops.
But yeah, before Semele met her untimely, extra-crispy demise, she
and Zeus had a pretty good relationship- or at least Handel thought so, because
one of the songs in the opera is about how Zeus loves Semele so much that he
will control nature for her: trees will
crowd around her to shade her, flowers will grow wherever she walks or even
looks.
The version of this song that I positively adore is an adaptation
by the East Village Opera Company. Anyone who has talked about music with me
for more than ten minutes has probably heard me nerd out about these guys. I
won’t go into too much detail right now, because I think I’ll eventually do a
separate piece just focusing on them. Anyway, EVOC takes classical songs and
arias and puts a modern twist on them. The first time I heard their version of
this song was that it sounded kind of boy-band-ish, but in a good way; sunny,
upbeat, the kind of song. After listening to it a few more times, it sounded
more like a mix between gospel and pop. The bright, exuberant tone of Tyley
Ross’s voice combined with the spirited instrumentals perfectly reflects the in elation in the lyrics.
3.
“I Will”
Beatles (Roma di Luna cover)
I feel like I’m committing blasphemy by choosing a Beatles cover
over the original song. Don’t get me wrong-I love the original version, and
there are so many Beatles songs that I could put on this list, but there’s
something special about this interpretation. It was arranged as part of the
Minnesota Beatles Project (volume three) and Roma di Luna did such a good job
making it their own without losing the sweetness of the original. It almost
sounds like they improvised it, like they just threw the arrangement together
one day.
The one criticism I have is that the intro sounds a little clunky.
I understand that’s part of their spin on it, and once the vocals start are
added to the mix it works, giving it a casual, carefree feeling, but before
that it just sounds like the musicians weren’t sure when they were supposed to
start playing. It’s not awful, but it lasts just long enough to leave a less
than stellar first impression. Fortunately, Channy Moon Casselle’s voice makes
up for this. It’s not that she has a stunningly beautiful voice or an
incredible range or anything-although it is pretty, especially in the chorus-but
it makes the whole spontaneous feel of the song seem more cheerful than
unrehearsed, like she’s so happy that she can’t help but sing.
4.
“Emmylou”
First Aid Kit
Oh, God. I don’t know what it is about this song, but I get choked
up every damn time I listen to it. As soon as the chorus hit my eyes just start
welling up with tears. It’s just the combination of how pure and strong sisters
Johanna and Klara’s voices are, how sweet their harmonies are, and how simple
but poignant the lyrics in the chorus are: “I’ll be your Emmylou and I’ll be
your June/If you’ll be my Graham and my Johnny too/No, I’m not asking much of
you/Just sing, little darling, sing with me.” It’s just such a straightforward of
expressing love, and it always gives me the warm fuzzies.
5.
“Cameo
Lover” Kimbra
Unlike most of the songs on this list, “Cameo Lover” didn’t make
the cut because the lyrics make me happy (with the exception of a few lines).
Most of the lyrics are directed toward Kimbra’s “cameo lover,” who, honestly,
kind of sounds like a douche. He’s noncommittal, “only here for a moment or
two”; he’s a player (“You’ve got two arms, baby/They’re all tangled up in
ladies”); and he’s a downer (“I’ve got high hopes, baby/But all you do is take
me down to depths that I never knew”). Kimbra is determined to change all that,
though. Apparently, all the guy needs to do to become less of a jerk is “open
up [his] heart,” a plea Kimbra repeats throughout the chorus. It’s just one simple
line, but it’s so effective when combined with the jubilant, almost celebratory
instrumentals; near the end, it almost sounds like parade music, with all its glorious
brass and strong rhythm.