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‘The Bear' season 4 soundtrack: the full tracklist for the acclaimed FX restaurant drama
‘The Bear' season 4 soundtrack: the full tracklist for the acclaimed FX restaurant drama

Time Out

time7 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Time Out

‘The Bear' season 4 soundtrack: the full tracklist for the acclaimed FX restaurant drama

TV's favourite tragicomedy is back with kitchen shouting matches, tear-jerking drama, and some unexpected needle drops. Much like its previous outings, The Bear season 4 has been cooking up some eclectic mixes with tinges of sad dad rock, film soundtracks, and even some Beethoven. Attentive fans will also be glad to see some returning sounds from previous seasons. We are talking Taylor Swift, R.E.M, and the guitar riffs of Refused's New Noise, a track that has become synonymous with The Bear. The Emmy-winning series continues the journey of talented but tragic chef Carmy Berzatto (Jeremy Allen White) as he and his staff chaotically manage to keep their Chicago restaurant running in business. While the fancy food presented in The Bear might be hard to prepare at home, you can still sit back and listen to the show's diverse playlists. What kind of music does The Bear season 4 use? Season 4 continues The Bear's classic rock tendencies with Led Zeppelin's That's The Way underscoring the opening episode, a bittersweet interaction between Carmy and his late brother Mikey. The rest of the season is peppered with tracks by The Who, Lou Reed, Paul Simon, Eddie Vedder. Just in time around the much-awaited Oasis reunion tour this July, the Manchester band's B-side single Stay Young also plays over the closing credits of episode 6. A recurring theme in multiple episodes is I've Got You, the Sonny and Cher duet that features prominently in the Bill Murray time travel comedy Groundhog Day. From the start of this season, Carmy looks up at the film's time loop as a metaphor for his own clockwork monotony. Nine Inch Nails' haunting piano melody Together doesn't feature again like that silent season 3 opener but the band's composer duo Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross return with the misleadingly-titled The Chill Mix. This is the instrumental that plays over a not-so-chill existential fantasy in Syd's (Ayo Edibiri) mind. Syd's mixed reactions while meeting a potential new business partner are also underscored by Ludwig van Beethoven's classic composition Für Elise. Yes, even if Beethoven or classical music isn't your jam, this is that one classic melody you're bound to have heard in a film, show, or even a phone ringtone. The musical highlight this season though is the star-studded eighth episode The Bears, that brings back most of Carmy's family including Jamie Lee Curtis, John Mulaney, and some new faces like Josh Hartnett. Set around the wedding of Richie's (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) ex-wife Tiffany (Gillian Jacobs), the episode boasts a 13-song mix that changes moods from Taylor Swift and Ed Sheeran to Tom Petty and Weezer. As is common with the show's soundtracks, alt-rockers R.E.M. return with their universal themes of loss and recovery. Out of the two R.E.M. songs that play, Strange Currencies marks an encore as it was last featured in season 3's penultimate episode. But all its moody rock and breezy pop sensibilities aside, the most-featured artist in The Bear season 4 is surprisingly the '60s girl group The Ronettes. The group's vocal harmonies are sprinkled over three episodes, featuring their quintessential hits Baby, I Love You and (The Best Part of) Breakin' Up and Walking in the Rain. What's on The Bear season 4 soundtrack? Episode 1 That's the Way - Remaster - Led Zeppelin I've Got You Babe - Sonny & Cher Getting in Tune - The Who Diamond Diary - Tangerine Dream Episode 2 Glow Up - Dina Renee Rocco And His Brothers - Mi Loco Tango Life's What You Make It - Talk Talk The Chosen One - Bryan Ferry Most of the Time - Bob Dylan Mystery Achievement - Pretenders Episode 3 - Scallop Slow Disco (Piano Version) - St Vincent (The Best Part of) Breakin' Up - The Ronettes Slim Slow Slider/I Start Breaking Down - Van Morrison Only You Know - Dion Haunted When the Minutes Drag - Love and Rockets Finest Worksong - R.E.M. Episode 4 Ante Up - M.O.P Fur Elise - Ludwig von Beethoven STUCK - Durand Bernarr Wood - Duval Timothy feat. Yu Su Wings of Love - Tsvia Abarbanel You Will Rise - Sweetback So In Love - Curtis Mayfield Episode 5 Let Me Live in Your City - Paul Simon Slip Away - Lou Reed & John Cale It's Magic - Doris Day Hope the High Road - Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit Looking Into You - Jackson Browne Pull the Cup - Shellac Episode 6 Walking in the Rain - The Ronettes Remember Me - Otis Redding I'm Always in Love - Wilco Stay Young - Oasis Episode 7 Walls (Circus) - Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers Suzanne - Weezer Tenderness - General Public Nothing But Love - James Still the Night - BoDeans Style - Taylor Swift Apron Strings - Everything But the Girl My Sad Lonely Eyes - Them Why Not Me - The Judds A Beginning Song - The Decemberists Shelter - Lone Justice Throw Your Arms Around Me - Ed Sheeran Tougher Than the Rest - Emmylou Harris Episode 8 Barefoot Contessa (Theme Song) - Gary Johnson The Chill Mix - Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross I've Got You Babe - Sonny & Cher Baby I Love You - The Ronettes Square One - Tom Petty Long Ride Home - Patty Griffin Strange Currencies - R.E.M. Western Ford Gateway - Elton John Episode 9 Save It for Later - Eddie Vedder The Show Goes On - Bruce Hornsby & The Range New Noise - Refused Episode 10 Fast Slow Disco - St. Vincent Where can I watch The Bear season 4? All 10 episodes are available to watch on Hulu in the US and Disney+ in the UK.

Note to Generation X workers: the workplace is always changing
Note to Generation X workers: the workplace is always changing

RTÉ News​

time19-05-2025

  • Business
  • RTÉ News​

Note to Generation X workers: the workplace is always changing

Analysis: Historical analysis provides a harsh truth that people who bank on the world of work never changing are likely to lose out The world of work is always changing and rarely for the better. The career woes of Generation X workers, those born between 1965 and 1980, have been widely discussed, and there are some genuinely worrying trends. A recent New York Times article channels R.E.M to start with the ominous claim that "it's the end of work as we knew it". This article details how whole industries, especially those involving creativity such as magazine publishing, writing for TV and movies and graphic design, are in free fall. Rapid developments in technology, especially artificial intelligence are swiftly making once lucrative jobs obsolete. As a result, many Gen X workers who invested in building careers in these fields are finding it impossible to make a living. From RTÉ Brainstorm, why do we work? There have been numerous such news stories, opinion pieces and reports dealing with the changing nature of work over the last 25 to 30 years. Some deal with the role of technology, others with where we work, especially the swift rise and the apparently swift decline in remote work as the pandemic waxed and waned. There are also pieces which cover who we work for (the rise of the gig economy) and changes in workforce personnel (such as the increasing presence of women, immigrants and older workers in many workplaces). As an organisational psychologist, I have been reading books about the changing nature of work since the 1990s. The theme of all these books, articles and reports is that things are not the same as they used to be and that workplace, careers, co-workers and the like are often worse than they used to be. The complaint that things are not the same as they used to be, and usually worse than they once were, has a long pedigree. The sentiment that "Times are bad. Children no longer obey their parents, and everyone is writing a book" has been attributed variously to Cicero, Socrates and ancient Mesopotamian cuneiform fragments. From RTÉ Radio 1's Brendan O'Connor Show, what is the workplace like for Gen Z? While its exact provenance is very much in doubt, there is no doubt that the idea that things are not the same and not as good as they used to has been with us for a very long time. The idea that the world of work is rapidly changing (usually for the worse) is part of a much longer set of complaints about how the world is getting worse each day, but much of what has been written about the changing nature of work in the last 30 years assumes that this is a recent change. It isn't. In a chapter written with Warren Tierney in The Cambridge Handbook of the Changing Nature of Work, I have argued that the belief that the world of work is changing is in large part the result of making the wrong comparisons. Particularly in the US, the period from 1945 to 1980 represented an unusual period of growth and stability when it was possible for a single breadwinner to develop a career that would support him (at this time, breadwinners were almost always male) and his family in relative comfort, often working for the same company for decades. This deeply unusual time led many people to expect that a steady career in the same field, and often in the same company, was the norm and that the workplace would not change in meaningful ways. But if you take a longer perspective, massive changes in the world of work have been common and often jolting. Two examples stand out as particularly important and illustrative. First, the proportion of the workforce engaged in agriculture has changed massively over the last 75 years and has undergone almost a complete transformation over the last 150 years. From FutureNow, the truth about Generation X Across the world, there has been a decisive shift from an economy where most families worked on a small farm to economies where industry and or knowledge work have become the dominant form of work. The change from agricultural economies to industrial economies changed where people lived, who they interacted with and when and how they worked - and these changes dwarf the changes we are witnessing in the current economy. Much of what has been written in the last 30 years about the changing world of work has focused on the role of technology, and the implication is that we are going through an unprecedented technological revolution. Technology is changing, but we have gone much through bigger technological revolutions in the past, particularly the introduction of the automobile. In 1900, there were over 20 million horses in the United States. The business or raising horses, feeding and stabling them and cleaning up after them (many of the beautiful brownstone houses in New York City are set six to eight feet above the street in part because the streets were often filled with horse manure at the time they were built,) represented a major part of the economy. The woes faced by Gen X workers in creative fields are nothing compared to the problems of saddle makers, blacksmiths or those involved in the manufacture of horse-drawn vehicles in the US in the early 1900s. From TED, social psychologist Leah Georges on how generational stereotypes hold us back at work The world of work is changing, and often in scary and unpredictable ways, but this is the historical norm, not the exception. We have been lulled into a nostalgia for that deeply unusual period in the 1950s to 1970s when the world of work seemed stable and predictable. This historical analysis may be cold comfort to Gen X workers who careers are collapsing, but it is a harsh truth that people who bank on the world of work never changing are likely to lose out. The best you can do is continue to build skills that are valuable and transferable and to realise that other generations have successfully weathered these changes. In 1900, prospects looked grim for saddle makers and horse feed lots, but most of the people engaged in these businesses moved on and adapted to the new world of automobiles. The current cry that AI will change everything is just a variation on the cry over the years that other technologies will change everything, and it is probably only partially true. More than 2,500 years ago, a Greek philosopher reminded us that the only constant is change. The world of work is changing, just like it always has.

R.E.M, King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, Chelsea Wolfe to appear on 90-song album to benefit victims of the Californian wildfires
R.E.M, King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, Chelsea Wolfe to appear on 90-song album to benefit victims of the Californian wildfires

Yahoo

time06-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

R.E.M, King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, Chelsea Wolfe to appear on 90-song album to benefit victims of the Californian wildfires

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. R.E.M, King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, Chelsea Wolfe, Mudhoney and Tenacious D are among dozens of artists who have contributed songs to Good Music To Lift Los Angeles, a new fundraising album to benefit those who've suffered loss as a result of the Californian wildfires. All proceeds from the album, which will be available for one day only, February 7 on Bandcamp, will be donated to the LA Regional Food Bank and California Community Foundation's Wildfire full track-listing for the album is:Alycia Lang feat. Lauren O'Connell - No Place to FallAnimal Collective - Tikwid (Demo)Annie DiRusso - Hudson LineThe Armed - No Perfect SunriseBEL - Nylon (Unreleased Demo)Blondshell - Roller Skate (T&A Demo)brotherkenzie - Dear MomCassandra Jenkins - Aurora, IL (Live at Zebulon)Centro-matic feat. Jason Isbell, Sadler Vaden - My Best Friend's Girl (Mexico City, January 18, 2025)Chelsea Wolfe - Woodstock (Live)Chris Cohen - Heavy Weather Sailing (Live at Face Festival)Cold War Kids - Run Away With Me (for LA)Courtney Barnett - Oh The Night (Demo)cumgirl8 - goblinCunningham Bird - Don't Let Me Down Again (Live)Dawes - Without the WordsDeath Cab For Cutie / The Postal Service -Enjoy the Silence (Live)The Dip - First Thing SmokingDirty Projectors & s t a r g a z e - More Mania Dr. Dog - So DeepEggy - A Moment's Noticed – Live from ChicagoFaye Webster - Underwater Boi – Turnstile cover (Demo)FIDLAR - New TattooFlock of Dimes - Someday We'll Lose It AllFriko - For Ella – Live at Thalia Hall)George Alice - TurbulenceGustaf - Mine demo remix (runoff concerto No. 1)The Heavy Heavy - One of a Kind – October Live SessionHippo Campus - EasyThe Hold Steady - 40 Bucks (Live at Brooklyn Bowl)Hotline TNT - Break RightHurray For The Riff Raff - Green, Green Rocky RoadI'm With Her - See You Around – Live from RaleighInterpol - Length of Love (Live)iRo - The DanceJames Henry Jr. - I Travel the AtmosphereJason Isbell and The 400 Unit - The One I Love (Live)Jeff Tweedy - Just Say Goodbye (Acoustic)Josh Ritter - Wildfires (Live from The KCD Theater, Louisville, KY – 2011) - Being For The Benefit of Mr. Kite!King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard - Exploding Suns (Demo 1)LA LOM - East CalaverasLala Lala - Fair (bside)Little Dragon - Don't Cry (Local Natives Version)Local Natives - Nova (Alternative Unvierse Spiral Choir Extended Version)Lucius - Mad LoveMac DeMarco's - Piece of the Fuck - Bobbing for ApplesMadi Diaz - Good (worktape)Manchester Orchestra - The Gold (Live from Union Chapel)The Midnight - Los Angeles (Live)Miki Ratsula - if i blame myself (acoustic)Militarie Gun - My Friends are Having a Hard Time (Demo)Miya Folick - Fist (Demo version)MJ Lenderman - 37 Push-Ups (Live)Modest Mouse -Kingdom of Could'aMomma - I Want You (Fever) – Live at The George TavernMudhoney - Light Your WayMy Morning Jacket - Together AgainNeal Francis - Aprés SkiNeko Case - In California (Live from KCRW)The New Pornographers - Continue as a Guest (Live from KCMP)Nick Thune - Alone by MyselfPachyman - InventadoPerfume Genius - Fade Into YouPool Kids - Glitch (Demo)Porches - PorcelainPUP - Boring! (Demo)Real Estate - Talking Backwards (Demo)R.E.M. - Electrolite (Live)Richy Mitch & the Coal Miners - Blue LightsRicky Montgomery - SalvadorRY X - The RoseShannon Lay - Rare to Wake (Demo)Silversun Pickups - FeralSoccer Mommy - The Biggest Lie (Elliot Smith Cover)Soul Asylum - Stand Up and Be StrongSpiritual Cramp - Low and SlowSycco - Bad WorldSYML - WakeTenacious D - Keep on Loving YouTheo Katzman - Desperate Times (Solo)This Is Lorelei - Church Street BluesToro Y Moi - Tuesday (Wavedash Remix)Tunde Adebimpe - ILYTV on the Radio - Trouble (Live)Ty Segall - Big Hands Version 2The War on Drugs - Lost in the Dream (Live)Water From Your Eye - DownWatkins Family Hour (feat. Gaby Moreno) - Sabotage (Live)'We only had a few weeks to put this compilation together and are absolutely humbled by the contributions,' says Good Music co-founder Jordan Kurland in a press release. 'Music is a healing force and we hope this collection of songs, in addition to raising much needed recovery funds, provides some solace.'

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