Tag Archives | Can’t Stop the Muzak

Tunes Across Time

Tonight I’m looking forward to seeing and hearing Postmodern Jukebox play at Auburn’s new Performing Arts Center.

For those unfamiliar, Postmodern Jukebox’s schtick is to perform pop songs from one era in the style of some previous era and/or different genre – which is something I’m a sucker for.

Given the group’s vast rotating inventory of material and ensemble of performers, there’s no way to know ahead of time which specific songs or singers to expect tonight; but here are some samples of the kinds of thing they do:


SciFi SongFest, Songs 221-223

Three Kafkaesque nightmares:

221. Pink Floyd. “The Trial” (1979):

The visuals are from the 1982 movie The Wall:

222. Leslie Fish, “The Paper Sea” (1989):

223. Yes, “Owner of a Lonely Heart” (1983):

This one I chose not for its lyrics, but for the accompanying video, which looks like someone crossed Kafka’s The Trial with The Matrix, despite airing 16 years before the latter. (Indeed, I strongly suspect that this video influenced The Matrix.)


SciFi SongFest, Songs 217-218

Two songs about an apocalyptic future:

217. The Police, “Omega Man” (1981):

The title references the 1971 film The Omega Man, which in turn is one of several movies based on Richard Matheson’s 1954 novel I Am Legend (the most faithful adaptation being the 1964 Vincent Price version).

218. The Misfits, “Astro Zombies” (1982):


SciFi SongFest, Songs 213-214

Two songs of interplanetary travel:

213. Schoolhouse Rock, “Interplanet Janet” (1977):

214. Julia Ecklar and Leslie Fish, “Asteroid Named Rest Stop” (1983):

(Thanks to Moss Bliss for helping me track down this vaguely-remembered song from my 2006 visit to Revoluticon in Asheville.)

Another version, by Windbourne:


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