8 great songs that make it easy to be green8 songs, 25 min 19 sec
Dear listeners,Happy St. Patrick’s Day! Even if you’re not Irish, or a Shamrock Shake enthusiast, there are still plenty of reasons right now to be feeling green. Though it might not feel like it here in New York today, spring is indeed just around the corner. And as our pal Kermit the Frog reminds us in his signature song, “Green’s the color of spring.” So regardless of what you’re celebrating, today is a great day for a green playlist. Though not a Green Day; I decided to limit myself to songs that mention that vividly verdant color in their titles. That still left me plenty of great ones to choose from, and you’ll hear some of my personal favorites from artists like Lorde, Tim Hardin and Booker T. & the M.G.’s. And if you’re looking for something more explicitly Irish, check out this Amplifier playlist I made last St. Patrick’s Day, featuring 11 artists who hail from the Emerald Isle. Who says it’s not easy being green? Just press play. Like the color when the spring is born, Lindsay
Listen along while you read.1. Booker T. & the M.G.’s: “Green Onions”One Sunday in the summer of 1962, the Stax Records house band Booker T. & the M.G.’s were supposed to be recording with the blues singer Billy Lee Riley, but for some reason Riley went home early. With the studio to themselves, they started jamming and eventually laid down what would become one of the most iconic instrumental tracks of the 1960s, this funky 12-bar blues led by Booker T. Jones’s Hammond organ. As he recalled in a 2019 interview, the song is “deceptively simple. There’s a magic in there that’s hard to capture. To get it right, I still have to practice.” ▶ Listen on Spotify, Apple Music or YouTube
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“8 Great Songs That Make It Easy to Be Green” track list
Track 1: Booker T. & the M.G.’s, “Green Onions”
Track 2: Lorde, “Green Light”
Track 3: The George Baker Selection, “Little Green Bag”
Track 4: Creedence Clearwater Revival, “Green River”
Track 5: Tim Hardin, “Green Rocky Road”
Track 6: Roger Miller, “Little Green Apples”
Track 7: Joni Mitchell, “Little Green”
Track 8: Ray Charles, “It Ain’t Easy Being Green”
I’ve been a fan of the Brooklyn indie-pop musician Grace Ives since hearing her catchy and magnificently odd 2022 album, “Janky Star.” A few weeks ago, I recommended a song from her lovely upcoming album “Girlfriend,” and I just published a new profile of Ives, who was gracious enough to open up to me about the personal journey that led to that record. She was also gracious enough to ask me to meet her at one of the few places in Brooklyn that still serves chocolate egg creams. Read the profile here, and check out “Girlfriend” when it comes out on Friday.
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Have feedback? Ideas for a playlist? We’d love to hear from you. Email us at theamplifier@nytimes.com.
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