Disastrous Playlist (Redux)
August 3, 2010 Edited by Geo Hot Topics Editorial
Filed under Geology, Physical Geography
Pursuant to my posting from last week concerning My Disastrous Playlist, I am posting the whole list of songs that I have put together for use during the breaks in my Natural Hazards class. I have added a couple of the suggestions provided by commentators, too – thanks!
James, I’m saving your suggestions for my Environmental Science playlist – stay tuned for that, or maybe you can post yours…? But I also like the idea of using songs to introduce specific lecture topics. How about this one for your insolation lecture: Why Does the Sun Shine? (The Sun is a Mass of Incandescent Gas) by They Might Be Giants, which I discovered while researching one of the other suggestions. I haven’t actually listened to it yet, but the lyrics start out:
The sun is a mass of incandescent gas
A gigantic nuclear furnace
Where hydrogen is built into helium
At a temperature of millions of degrees
Yo ho, it’s hot, the sun is not
A place where we could live
But here on earth there’d be no life
Without the light it gives
Again my disclaimer for using the playlist – you need to actually LISTEN to all of these before you play any of them in your classroom. I have vetted them fairly thoroughly for overtly objectionable language, but everyone has different levels of tolerance. The range of musical styles represented here is very broad – everything from punk to alternative, hip-hop, reggae, inspirational, jazz, and traditional music. You have to decide what to play based on your own level of comfort and your students’ sensibilities.
But they’re all fun! So here’s my complete Disastrous Playlist – so far – along with the name of the album in parentheses; it’s in some kind of semi-alphabetical order, as per iTunes. By the way, so far Bob Dylan and Sufjan Stevens are tied for the most songs on the list:
- Volcano by The Akkademiks (The Akkademiks….ROCK! And by the way, this is an entire album of geologically-themed songs. They have other-themed science albums, too, hence the band’s nerdy name.)
- Neighborhood #3 (Power Out) by The Arcade Fire (Funeral)
- Los Angeles Is Burning by Bad Religion (The Empire Strikes First)
- Volcano by Blues Machine (The Blues Tribute to Jimmy Buffett)
- Shelter From The Storm by Bob Dylan (The Essential Bob Dylan – Disc 2)
- Hurricane by Bob Dylan (The Essential Bob Dylan – Disc 2)
- The Levee’s Gonna Break by Bob Dylan (Modern Times)
- Black Diamond Bay by Bob Dylan (Bob Dylan: The Collection)
- I Feel The Earth Move by Carole King (Tapestry)
- 20 Year Flood by Chris Velan (Twitter, Buzz, Howl)
- Upon This Tidal Wave Of Young Blood by Clap Your Hands Say Yeah (Clap Your Hands Say Yeah)
- London Calling by The Clash (London Calling)
- Volcano by Count Basie & His Orchestra (The Classic Swing Collection)
- Landslide by The Dixie Chicks (Home)
- Riders on the Storm by The Doors (L.A. Woman)
- Flood by Eleven Fingered Charlie (Owl Hollow Acoustic Sessions)
- Landslide by Fleetwood Mac (The Very Best Of Fleetwood Mac)
- The Lightning Storm by Flogging Molly (Float)
- End Of The World by Great Big Sea (Rant And Roar)
- Warning by Green Day International Superhits)
- Storm by Gregory Isaacs (One Man Against the World: The Best of Gregory Issacs)
- Volcano by Jamaican Steel Band (Steel Drums of the Caribbean, Vol. 2)
- Fire And Rain by James Taylor (Sweet Baby James)
- Flood by Jars of Clay (Jars of Clay)
- Willow by Joan Armatrading (Love and Affection: Joan Armatrading Classics 1975-1983)
- Electrical Storm by Joseph Arthur (Nuclear Daydream)
- Down In the Flood by Mark Selby (Mark Otis Selby…And the Horse He Rode In On)
- Red River Flood by Murray McLauchlan (Songs from the Street: The Best of Murray McLauchlan)
- Volcanoes by Povi (Life In Volcanoes)
- End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine) by R.E.M. (Document)
- Riders On the Storm by Snoop Dogg featuring The Doors (Riders On the Storm – Fredwreck Remix)
- Decatur, or, Round of Applause for Your Step-Mother! by Sufjan Stevens (Illinoise – and yes, I know that’s not how it is spelled – you’ll have to talk to Sujan Stevens about it…)
- Prairie Fire That Wanders About by Sufjan Stevens (Illinoise)
- The Predatory Wasp of the Palisades Is Out to Get Us by Sufjan Stevens (Illinoise)
- The Avalanche by Sufjan Stevens (Illinoise – who would have guessed that Sufjan Stevens would have so many disaster-themed songs…?)
- Galveston Flood by Tom Rush (Take a Little Walk With Me)
- Wasn’t That a Might Storm by Tom Rush (New Year)
- New Orleans Is Sinking by The Tragically Hip (Yer Favourites – Disc 1)
- Electrical Storm (William Orbit Mix) by U2 (The Best of 1990-2000)
- Volcano Girls by Veruca Salt (Eight Arms to Hold You)
- Deluge by Wayne Shorter (Juju)
Barbara Murck is a Geologist and Senior Lecturer in Environmental Science at the University of Toronto, Mississauga as well as a Wiley author.
