The year was 1987. Musician Todd Lockwood decided that what the world really needed was a Bernie Sanders folk album. And the rest, as they say, is history.
I heard Bernie Sanders sing a cheap-drum-machine-reggae version of “This Land is Your Land,” and nothing was the same http://t.co/8sFzH6Yf8d
— Tyler Machado (@tylermachado) September 17, 2014
More from Seven Days:
“As talented of a guy as he is, he has absolutely not one musical bone in his body, and that became painfully obvious from the get-go,” Lockwood said. “This is a guy who couldn’t even tap his foot to music coming over the radio. No sense of melody. No sense of rhythm — the rhythm part surprised me, because he has good rhythm when he’s delivering a speech in public.”
So they had to come up with a plan B. Lockwood decided to turn the event into a “We Are The World”-style recording session: He called in a couple dozen Vermont musicians to serve as backup singers, while Bernie more or less read/preached the key lyrics with as much rhythm as he could muster.
…
The resulting album was among the more popular ones that the label produced that year. They sold a few hundred cassette tapes at record stores throughout Vermont, Lockwood said — many to conservatives who bought them as gag gifts.
Well, duh. What else could you possibly do with such a sonic abomination?
Recommended
Senator Bernie Sanders talking his way through famous folk songs is the new soundtrack to my life.
— Casey Graham (@cgrahamophone) September 17, 2014
Yikes. That’s depressing.
oh my god this Bernie Sanders album OH MY GOD. http://t.co/vYbWM6Boiu
— ? Yes All Cops ? (@zeroanaphora) September 17, 2014
https://twitter.com/publicroad/status/512303503600271361
Excuse me, I'll just be at my desk, weeping tears of laughter. Thanks for the chuckle, @Davis7D. http://t.co/V86m93BiTw
— Katie Flagg (@k_flagg) September 17, 2014
We’re weeping, too.
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