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Little tickles intellectual
narcissism like a well-placed literary reference in a song.
Little tickles intellectual
narcissism like a well-placed literary reference in a song. It is just the sort
of acknowledging wink that can make you forgot those long hours deconstructing
favorite works of literature into political and cultural bait. We’ve left
behind the lands of Mordor, the tales of the Cthulhu, and Tori Amos’ constant
name-checking of Neil Gaiman, and found a handful of songs for a literary
sing-along.
1. Killing
an Arab | The Cure
The song title Robert Smith wishes he
could live without, and the existential lyrical anxieties that are pure Camus.
2. Le
Pastie De La Bourgeoisie | Belle and Sebastian
From Judy Blume to the allure of Catcher in the Rye, bookish romanticism
beckons.
3. Time’s
Arrow | The Weakerthans
Someday the world will wakeup to poetic
richness of J.K. Samson’s lyrics. Until that time, enjoy this Martin Amis–inspired
tune, or one of the group’s other songs referencing everything from Derrida to
P.G. Wodehouse.
4. Don’t
Stand So Close to Me | The Police
As Diane Keaton’s character says in
Woody Allen’s Manhattan: “Somewhere
Nabokov is smiling.”
5. Farrar,
Straus and Giroux (Sea of Tears) | Destroyer
Dan Bejar said he once had an idea to
name each song on an album after a major publishing house, and we’re pleased he
chose to keep this one—after all, it could have been (Jann) Wenner Books. Bonus
points to Bejar for having a song on the same album referencing the work of
Werner Herzog in this line: “Was it the movie or the making of Fitzcarraldo.”
6. Dead
Souls | Joy Division
Fitting that Ian Curtis would find a
muse in Russian satirist Nikolai Gogol, the man who listed his country’s two
problems as “fools and roads.”
7. I
Should Be Allowed to Think | They Might Be Giants
The canonical Beat masterpiece “Howl” is
given an irony-laced send-up by the two Johns, who capture the woes of an
adolescent scorned by his powerlessness to glue posters and “leave paper stains
on the grey utility pole.”
8. Ghost
World | Aimee Mann
With his comic, Daniel Clowes
brilliantly captured the feeling of being lost in inertia, a sentiment Mann
infuses into this tune.
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