SOUNDTRACK: “WEIRD AL” YANKOVIC-“The Hamilton Polka” (2016).

Lin-Manuel Miranda has declared his love and respect for “Weird Al” on many occasions. So it makes perfect sense that he would ask Al to contribute to the online Hamilton project known as HamilDrops. The Decemberists’ “Ben Franklin’s Song” is amazing too.
But seriously, how could Al parody a more or less biographical story of a historical figure (that’s two hours long)?. By not parodying it at all.
Rather, he makes one of his polka mashups which he’s been doing hilariously since his second album. They are often a highlight of each new album. This song compresses (almost) the entire musical into 5 minutes.
“The Hamilton Polka,” provides what’s essentially a CliffsNotes-style run-through of the musical’s hooks and highlights — just enough to get the entire musical stuck in your head all over again.
I love the way in the original, the third sister, poor Peggy, is sort of musically dissed whereas Al is just explicit about it. And of course, how could he refuse to include some actual gun shots for “Not Throwing Away My Shot?”
So they cram in
Alexander HamiltonWait For ItThe Schuyler SistersYorktownYou’ll Be BackThe Room Where It HappensGuns and ShipsWashington On Your SideNon-StopHistory Has Its Eyes On YouMy Shot
And Al can really sing and rap some of those lyrics quickly. It’s a really fun mashup.
[READ: January 11, 2018] Alexander Hamilton: The Graphic History of an American Founding Father
Before the musical, most people’s familiarity with Alexander Hamilton probably came from this (awesome) commercial (even if none of us could remember what it was ultimately for).
Actually, my father worked for (and owned for a time) Alexander Hamilton Printing in Paterson, NJ, so Alexander Hamilton has always been a part of my life. Although I had no idea why. Not really.
There’s a new reason why people know about Alexander Hamilton (can you even say his name without singing it?).
And I’m sure that reason has something to do with the creation and publication of this book. But Hennessey is not just jumping on the Hamilton bandwagon. Well, maybe he is, but he has two other historical graphic novels out already: The United States Constitution: A Graphic Adaptation (2008) and The Gettysburg Address: A Graphic Adaptation (2012). He also has books called The Comic Book Story of Beer, and The Comic Book Story of Video Games so he’s not all stuffy.
The musical is far more catchy than this book–far more steamy. But this book is really chock full of details that the musical skips (for various reasons, obviously). The book is a lot less interested in the romantic dalliances of the founding father, although it certainly does acknowledge them.
Indeed, the book is 176 fully illustrated pages jam-packed with information. It reads a little, if not dull, then certainly more academic. That’s because there’s a lot of text and a lot of history. (more…)
