Here Comes Science They Might Be Giants

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CD - Bonus DVD

  • Release Date: 09/22/2009
  • 2 Disc Set
  • Sales Rank: 44
  • Label: WALT DISNEY RECORDS
  • UPC: 050087148997
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Listener Rating: (9 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Lyrics" See All

 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
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Here Comes Science

Disc 1
1LISTENScience Is Real 1:54
2LISTENMeet the Elements 3:19
3LISTENI Am a Paleontologist 2:32
4LISTENThe Bloodmobile 2:21
5LISTENElectric Car 3:22
6LISTENMy Brother the Ape 3:06
7LISTENWhat Is a Shooting Star? / Louis Singer 1:38
8LISTENHow Many Planets? 1:56
9LISTENWhy Does the Sun Shine? / Louis Singer 2:36
10LISTENWhy Does the Sun Really Shine? 1:51
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Disc 2
1Science Is Real DVD
2Meet the Elements DVD
3I Am a Paleontologist DVD
4The Bloodmobile DVD
5Electric Car DVD
6My Brother the Ape DVD
7What Is a Shooting Star? / Louis Singer DVD
8How Many Planets? DVD
9Why Does the Sun Shine? / Louis Singer DVD
10Why Does the Sun Really Shine? DVD
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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Any inkling that They Might Be Giants had a future in crafting educational kids' songs came with 1994's "Why Does the Sun Shine?," so it's only fitting that after Here Come the ABC's and Here Come the 123's' success, John Linnell and John Flansburgh return to the subject that started it all: science. Here Comes Science covers everything from astronomy to evolution, mixing time-tested facts like the color spectrum with newer frontiers like electric cars. These songs are aimed at a slightly older audience than They Might Be Giants' previous Here Come... albums, since concepts like DNA are considerably more complicated than letters or numbers. At times, this complexity feels like it hinders the band's musical creativity a bit. Though the band sticks mostly to charging rock, a few songs are more expressive: "Cells" uses layering and repetition to wittily depict cellular reproduction; "Solid Liquid Gas" communicates different states of matter with its tempo, moving from lumbering to swinging to frenetic; and "Speed and Velocity" breezes through basic physics with aerodynamic new wave. Here Comes Science also spends nearly as much time with the thought process behind scientific developments as it does with facts, and puts importance on teaching kids how to think: "Put It to the Test" is as much about thinking for yourself as it is about the scientific method. A punk-poppy reprise of "Why Does the Sun Shine?" is followed by the jazzy "Why Does the Sun Really Shine?," which introduces plasma as the fourth state of matter and refutes the previous song's science cleverly: "Not gas, not liquid, not solid/That thesis has been rendered invalid!" The album also finds fun in science-related jobs; few things appeal to kids as much as dirt, digging, and dinosaurs, and "I Am a Paleontologist" has all three. The DVD portion is charming, with standout videos by Feel Good Anyway ("Meet the Elements"), Divya Srinivasan ("The Bloodmobile"), and Pascal Campion ("What Is a Shooting Star?"). Here Comes Science closes with "The Ballad of Davy Crockett (In Outer Space)," a space age update of Fess Parker's classic theme song that adds a little science fiction to these playfully presented facts. Here Comes Science is another fun, educational triumph. Heather Phares, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

Another great album by TMBGby Xitlali

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November 21, 2009: My just-turned-2-year-old loves this album! She sings along with it constantly (mostly in the car), and she has memorized most of the songs already, as well as the planets! (I didn't have those memorized until 9th grade!). She has learned a lot of science for a toddler (for example, the other day she said "Juice is a liquid!" because of the solid/liquid/gas song. I do have to mention, however, that my husband (a chemistry teacher) was a bit annoyed that the song states "Steam is a gas." So he always explains to our daughter that steam is actually microscopic bits of water suspended in a gas..." <sigh>

Great disc.by Anonymous

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November 15, 2009: My kids, and my husband and I, are huge TMBG fans. It is great to find "kids" music that the parents can love too. Wonderful music and the kids have been applying the science lessons to everything they can find. I love the update to the sun song.


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