SOUNDTRACK: AGES AND AGES-“Divisionary (Do the Right Thing)” (Field Recordings, August 28, 2014).

I really like this song. I’ve heard several recordings of it. The studio version, the Tiny Desk Concert, the one with the Northwest Children’s Choir and now this one.
Once again, done during the Newport Folk Festival, this Field Recording [Ages And Ages, Singing An Anthem For (And With) Everyone] corrals a band into a small, unused space. In this case, that space seems to be an unused room. And in that small room, the band is joined by The Berklee Gospel and Roots Choir.
Bob Boilen says:
I’ve seen many magical collaborations at the Newport Folk Festival over the years, as artists band together and create in the Newport spirit. This particular venture was epic, featuring the strongest anthem of the year — by the Portland band Ages and Ages — and the voices of the Berklee Gospel and Roots Choir.
This song always sounds better with a big chorus of singers. There’s not much to it, but the full body of voices can lift anyone;s spirits. Especially when they start singing various different melodies on top of each other. It’s quite lovely.
Ages and Ages played near me recently and I thought about seeing them and then I realized that this is the only song I know by them!
[READ: January 2, 2017] “How Can I Help?”
This is a story about a woman and her sister. But the way the story is revealed is really wonderful.
It begins: “Consider Hayley, our hire of two months, a relative endurance run.”
The narrator bemoans Hayley’s decisions, like spending $4.25 (roughly 31 minutes of work at her salary) each day on a skim latte coffee from an unnamed retailer even though their office offers the same coffee in-house for free.
In the second paragraph, she says “I like and admire Hayley, she is a team player. I don’t judge. But I have of late been tempted to judge.”
And that’s when she reveals that perhaps her objectivity is clouded because Hayley is her sister.
They work in a call-center helping people. The narrator has moved quickly up the ranks (at a job where most people last ten days). She explains that she is naturally empathetic.
Then we learn that Hayley is also pregnant with twins. And the things she finds most revolting about kids is that a minivan has a sliding passenger door: “you have to get out of the driver’s seat and go all the way around to the other side to open the kids’ door.”
It was then that she offered her sister a job–against her better judgment.
The narrator believes that Hayley is trying to hit on their boss. She arrived at work the first day in a crop top and explained that a woman carrying a child was beautiful and holy thing.
What future is there for the two of them? One sister full of herself and the other full of nonsense.
I loved the way these fragments developed and revealed the story.

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