Mercy Mercy Me

Songs about climate change are not so hot 20

Venn diagram of green songs and suckThe green sliver to your right represents songs that express environmental concern and don’t suck. It is populated by “Big Yellow Taxi” from Joni Mitchell. Oh, and “Mercy Mercy Me” by Marvin Gaye. “Earth Song,” by Michael Jackson, if you’re into that kind of thing. A couple of Neil Young songs. They call it a sliver for a reason.

With the recent explosion of “green” over the past few years, though, we’ve noticed a new wave of tunes that try to do better—to hip green so, you know,  the kids can dance to it. Unfortunately, few of these new efforts have found their way to the sliver.

Here’s a list of recent eco-minded tunes, ranked from most to least cringeworthy. Don’t say we didn’t warn you.

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10. Dave Stewart (the Other Guy in the Eurythmics) has been instrumental in starting a posse of green celebrities called “Greenpeace Works,” which he characterizes, God help us all, as a “think tank.” The brain trust’s inaugural production is “Go Green,” a forgettable piece of didacticism set to stale mid-‘90s pop beats. Imagine “We Are the World,” only with B-list celebs. And a corkscrew jammed in your temple.

The song is Greenpeace’s “Earth Day anthem,” which is as good an indicator as any that the human race is done for. When grumpy red staters imagine elitist liberal greens and their Gulfstream-flying Hollywood buddies, this is the soundtrack to their fuming.

 

9. Remember when Madonna didn’t give a f*ck what you thought? When she was just dancing around in ripped up clothes, all spunky and badass,  like you could take your rules and stick ‘em where the lucky star don’t shine?

We miss that Madonna. Nowadays, Madonna cares what you think. Really cares. In fact she’s tapping you on the shoulder so she can tell you what you think—thus “Hey You.” Converting Britney to Kabbalah? Fine. Making unwatchable movies? Fine. Collecting poor brown kids like tchotchkes? Hey, papa don’t preach. But this song? This is too much. Madonna must be stopped.

 

8. Did you know the Earth is, like,  hurting? With global warming and stuff? Totally. “I don’t know what all this means,” admits synergistic multi-platform Disney entertainment conglomerate Miley Cyrus. Luckily, “tomorrow becomes another day.” Some of us grumpy post-pubescents might point out that tomorrow, insofar as it’s not today, is already another day, but hell, we’re just old! The kidz can make a diff! Wake up, America! As if you could sleep through this.

 

7. If you are, ahem, of a certain age, you will remember Jared Leto as the TOTALLY DREAMY Jordan Catalano from short-lived teen drama “My So-Called Life.” If you are of Generation Z or whatever we’re on now, you know Leto as the lead singer for mopey emo rockers 30 Seconds to Mars, who have distinguished themselves from dozens of other similarly tight-jeaned mopey emo rockers by ... er ...  they went to the Arctic! To film a video, presumably in support of saving the Arctic.

Puzzlingly, the song isn’t about climate change.  Or the Arctic. It’s about how life is totally a big lie and you just have to, like, maintain.  “A quiet desperation’s building higher /   I’ve got to remember this is just a game.” Oh, Jordan, if only it were. Er, Jared! We meant Jared!

 

6. Painfully bad white-boy rapping—and you’ll see more before you’re done with this list—is a delicate business. It requires a certain ironic detachment;  painfully bad rappers have to be in on the goof. Ideally they deliver some good information, because if you gotta suck, you might as well suck informatively.

On all these scores, Darrick “D-Pain” Lee and Michael “Phat Mike” Darnel get a solid C. That’s C as in Canada, Land Where Laughing-At and Laughing-With Meet. These Vancouver hip-hoplings’ debut joint, “Hurtin’ Our Planet,”  loses points for hectoring but gains ‘em right back for the use of   autotune.

 

5. Middle of the list, middle of the road, possibly the middle of the known universe: “I Need to Wake Up (Inconvenient Truth),” from Melissa Ethridge. Yes, this slice of OprAmerican cheese is meant to tickle Boomer ‘60s nostalgia. (Wake up, hippies! Cast off those khakis!) And like most Boomer nostalgia it mistakes activism for therapy. But c’mon. Don’t you want the Boomers fired up? They’ll be retiring soon, with time on their hands. And they have all the money!

 

4. Slightly better white-boy rapping, from Vermont’s X-10, wins for being packed with an almost scholarly level of detail on peer-review, methane capture, efficiency, and voting margins. The song pleads with Vermont’s congress to override Gov. Jim Douglas’ veto of clean energy bill H. 520. That is keeping it real with wonk appeal. Word to the 350 in 802. Out.

 

3. will.i.am is making a play to be the new Bono, a performer taken seriously on matters of world import. Though he lacks Bono’s, er, understanding of matters of world import, he does have a huge Rolodex, the ability to project himself as a hologram, and an almost uncanny instinct for tickling the millennial American id, as demonstrated by his now-famous “Yes We Can” video. (Not to mention “My Humps.”)

Slightly less impactful, and with fewer lovely lady lumps, was “Take Our Planet Back,” a song Mr. i.am did for Mr. Gore. It’s a little sappy, but it does contain this immortal passage:

Nicola Tesla turned the Niagara Falls into energy way back when
and we still burnin’ coal when you can make electricity with solar and wind
now who’s gettin’ played?
and who’s getting paid?

 

2. In “Melting Ice,” 10-year-old Lil Peppi, the “king of eco-rap,” gets quite a bit of mileage out of a synthy old-school beat and being frakking adorable. My favorite is the outfit with the “Science Team” badge. Go Science Team!

Peppi also says “we gotta find a solution, no matter the cost,” which I take as comment on this matter.

 

1. Now we’re getting somewhere. “I pull up behind and you never heard a sound.” This is from comedy troupe Casual Mafia and it’s obviously supposed to be funny, but it’s kind of awesome too. They’re not making fun of my people are they?

(You might also enjoy “Douchebag Anthem.”)

Take it all the way to 11—click to the next page to see the best eco-song out there.

 

Winner!

Take one of the best pop songs of the last decade, add a cute girl, a goofy pink hat, and impossibly nerdy lyrics about home energy efficiency audits, and you have, quite simply, perfection. “Yeah, this record’s going LEED Platinum /   If you got those skinny windows, better fatten’ em.” If this video were a man I’d gay marry it.

 

David Roberts is staff writer for Grist. You can follow his Twitter feed at twitter.com/drgrist.

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  1. Global Changes Posted 4:09 am
    06 Aug 2009

    It is very hard to take songs on climate change seriously, the lyrics are usually so forced it often sounds stupid and pretencious
  2. biscuits Posted 9:33 am
    06 Aug 2009

    There are dozens of amazing songs about coal and strip mining and environmental impacts -- generally the good songs are from the perspective of a person personally impacted by the issue instead of a person of privilege trying to guilt someone in to taking action. There is a hilarious Earth First! song that has the line "must we sacrifice our water earth and air, just to cook a piece of toast or blow dry our hair"Jean Ritchie has some amazing songs about not destroying the earthBlack watershttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kFVdp1KJiqM
  3. Brian Fisher Posted 11:52 am
    06 Aug 2009

    If you want a green song that really works & has made a difference why not check out Escarpment Blues by Sarah Harmer. It's on the Tube.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=52vXPZAkDug Granted it's not diectly about global heatingTake care,
  4. Planetwize Posted 12:05 pm
    06 Aug 2009

    We know of only one 'environmental/global warming' song that actually grooves, Ska de La Tierra by Spanish artist Bebe. Sadly, you are right that most 'green' music sucks. That's why Planetwize built the Actiontrax platform, to take good music and tie it to good causes!
  5. Thund3r Dave Posted 6:40 am
    07 Aug 2009

    If you like metal, I suggest Gojira. Their past two albums dealt a lot with the environment and human nature. Obvious songs like are named "Global Warming" and "Toxic Garbage Island" but they have a bunch of other good ones.
  6. Baby Boomer Posted 12:02 pm
    07 Aug 2009

    That video and song made me shudder. Give me back the cone bra.
  7. Baby Boomer Posted 12:21 pm
    07 Aug 2009

    OK, I looked at most of these.  Dave looks like the guy in the white multi-pane glasses in the #1 video.  I liked will.i.am for coolness, but Casual Mafia and the nerds at the end win the day.  And Dave don't go raggin' on Baby Boomers.
  8. whirlygig Posted 4:45 pm
    07 Aug 2009

    Cute, eh?  But seriously, props to David Roberts!  The move was a blast to film.  We made it for a class we were assistant teaching for at Stanford about energy efficient buildings, and showed it during the last class.  We uploaded it to Youtube and the next thing we knew we were on our way to nerd-dom.  It's really cool that now even more people are going to see it.  Thanks!!
  9. Ken Ward's avatar

    Ken Ward Posted 1:31 pm
    08 Aug 2009

    Fred Small's 350 ought to be on the list, a stunner which manages to be truthful, uplifting, singable and – most extraordinarily – fit "350" into a chorus.I haven't the termerity to attempt such a feat, but do have a song about the 1938 hurricane which devasted New England and Long Island, hitting my own state of Rhode Island very hard. The Hurricane That Had No Name is based on eyewitness accounts.
  10. Storm Dragon Posted 10:50 pm
    08 Aug 2009

    Any list of good songs with ecological themes should include "Black Waters" by Jean Ritchie, "Paradise" by John Prine, and "The Turtle And The Asp" by Martin Simpson. 
  11. jnadeau Posted 11:08 am
    10 Aug 2009

    what about John Butler?
  12. dstoning Posted 12:45 pm
    10 Aug 2009

    OK, I have to shamelessly take this opportunity to pitch my own band here: check out "Don't Kilowatt" by Million Dollar Nile. In my completely objective opinion, this reggae/klezmer tune about climate change (well, energy efficiency) totally rocks! http://www.myspace.com/milliondollarnile 
  13. Mike Wendling Posted 5:30 am
    11 Aug 2009

    How about Radiohead - Idioteque?
  14. halli620 Posted 6:22 am
    11 Aug 2009

    A really good one that's been around a while is Alabama's "Pass It on Down," with the chorus:So let's leave some blue up above us
    Let's leave some green on the ground
    It's only ours to borrow, let's save some for tomorrow
    Leave it and pass it on down
  15. Oxford Posted 8:39 am
    11 Aug 2009

    "Seminole Wind" by John Anderson is not just a great eco song, it's great song period. It's been covered by James Taylor and Donna The Buffalo among others.
  16. kyleduba Posted 11:36 am
    11 Aug 2009

    I like "Windowsill" by Arcade Fire.  It addresses a lot of different issues in a very poetic way, but the chorus sums up the environmental angle of it best.Because the tide is highAnd it's rising stillAnd I don't wanna see it at my windowsill
    Not to mention it is a completely "not sucky" song from a "not sucky" band.
  17. tater tot Posted 8:07 am
    12 Aug 2009

    On a more serious note, I believe "Never Turn Your Back on Mother Earth" by Sparks (1974) should qualify as a real ANTHEM for change.  An oldie but a goodie, there may even be a video out there for it.  The vocals are very similar in style to Freddie Mercury's operatic voice and a bit challenging to understand at first, so here's the lyrics:When she's on her best behaviour
    Don't be tempted by her favours
    Never turn your back on mother earth
    Towns are hurled from A to B
    By hands that looked so smooth to me
    Never turn your back on mother earth
    Grasp at straws that don't want grasping
    Gaze at clouds that come down crashing
    Never turn your back on mother earth
    Three days and two nights away from my friends
    Amen to anything that brings a quick return to my friends
    To my friends
    Never turn your back on mother earth
    I'll admit I was unfaithful
    But from now I'll be more faithful
    Never turn your back on mother
    Never turn your back on mother
    Never turn your back on mother earth
  18. Storm Dragon Posted 10:59 am
    12 Aug 2009

    The list of good songs with an ecological theme should also include "The Last Leviathan" by Andy Barnes, and "Requiem for the Giant Trees" by Eileen Mcgann.
  19. Dark Optimism Posted 1:58 pm
    16 Aug 2009

    "Zero-Sum" - Nine Inch Nails
  20. scratchtasia Posted 3:27 pm
    25 Aug 2009

    Check out "January" by St. Louis indie band the Blind Eyes. It's on their MySpace page. I thought it was a cheery pop number until I began to catch the lyrics.

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Series Intro
Four years after my pleading essay, climate art is hot 12
Portrait of an artist as a climate activist 1
Audio slideshow: Facing climate change -- and wildfire 1
Audio slideshow: Chris Jordan on America's coal consumption 0
Songs about climate change are not so hot 20
North American bands playing to greener tune 0
Slideshow: Climate activism as performance art 0
Slideshow: Preview the Royal Academy of Arts exhibit 'Earth: Art of a Changing World' 0
Slideshow: A tour of green-leaning museums 0
Resources and links for the art-hungry 0
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