Reviews

Various Artists – Muppets: The Green Album

Various Artists
Muppets: The Green Album
(Disney)
[Rating: 1 star]

Music has always been a major part of the Muppetโ€™s charm, and much like the puppets themselves, songs like โ€œBeinโ€™ Greenโ€ and โ€œIโ€™m Going to Go Back There Some Dayโ€ manage to tap into kidsโ€™ innate melancholy and joy. Whether from the anarchic television series or from their early movies, their best songs convey such a pure sense of whimsy that itโ€™s easy to forget that they were sung by fuzzy pieces of felt with ping-pong-ball eyes, but manage to cut through all the marketing nonsense and speak directly to childrenโ€”and to the children inside adults.

In this and almost every other regard, the Muppets franchise has been looking backwards ever since Jim Hensonโ€™s tragic death in 1990, trading on fansโ€™ goodwill while shoveling out lackluster movies and emphasizing the annoying Elmo. But recent YouTube clips of the Muppets performing โ€œRinging of the Bellsโ€ and โ€œBohemian Rhapsodyโ€ nearly captured some of that old creative zeal, and the clever trailers for the new movie suggests star and co-writer Jason Segel might actually get it.

But then thereโ€™s Muppets: The Green Album, a tribute album that ought to build on all that new good will but instead only proves what a disaster the franchise can be in the wrong hands. Of course, tribute albums are by definition hit-or-miss affairs, and a bad track or two might be permissible. But The Green Album reverses the proportions, with only one or two tracks getting anything right and the best sounding so egregiously wrong that you want Lew Zealand to pelt the artists with fish.

Spared the seafood assault: Alkaline Trio turn โ€œMovinโ€™ Right Alongโ€ into a hapless touring anthem, with the band trading off dialogue and making you wonder what the Replacements ca. 1987 could have done with the song (see their excellent โ€œCruella DeVilleโ€ for the the gold standard of adult covers of kidsโ€™ songs). Sondre Lerche and Andrew Bird both sound like fuzzy Muppets themselves on โ€œMr. Bassmanโ€ and โ€œBeinโ€™ Green,โ€ respectively, and My Morning Jacketโ€™s Jim James captures Hensonโ€™s melancholy perfectly on โ€œOur World.โ€

These are some of the least cynical songs ever played for children, so any trace of irony (Weezer & Hayley Williamsโ€™ smirky โ€œRainbow Connectionโ€) or calculation (Amy Leeโ€™s tickle-me-emo โ€œHalfway Down the Stairsโ€) bombs worse than Crazy Harry. The Fray do โ€œMahna Mahnaโ€ note for note, and while it sounds like it was probably fun to record, itโ€™s just tedious to hear. Worst of all, is โ€œNight Life,โ€ on which Atreyuโ€™s Brandon Saller and Good Charlotteโ€™s Billy Martin attempt to rock as hard and as raunchy as Dr. Teeth and Electric Mayhem. Even as dumb trash rock, it just sounds sleazily jadedโ€”inappropriate for children and other living things.

The Green Album ends not with that bang, but with the whimper of Matt Nathansonโ€™s โ€œI Hope That Something Better Comes Alongโ€ and Rachel Yamagataโ€™s โ€œIโ€™m Going to Go Back There Someday.โ€ They sound only half awake, which is inexcusable given the songs they chose to sing. That pair of closers reinforces this project as an sadly missed opportunityโ€”the sound of makinโ€™ green instead of beinโ€™ green.