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Rebecca Pronsky: A Lament Becomes A Rallying Cry

In "Hard Times," singer-songwriter Rebecca Pronsky addresses the curse of a generation attempting to get by.
Courtesy of the artist
In "Hard Times," singer-songwriter Rebecca Pronsky addresses the curse of a generation attempting to get by.

In "Hard Times," the opening track from her fine new album Viewfinder, Brooklyn-based singer-songwriter Rebecca Pronsky addresses the struggles of a generation attempting to get by. Over a propulsive beat and a wash of noirishly twangy guitars, Pronsky echoes sentiments familiar to many: "Numbers used to be so small: pennies, nickels, dimes / Now, the same collectors call, fallen on hard times."

As is frequently the case with the best topical music, "Hard Times" feels personal, anecdotal and emotional rather than devolving into a didactic indictment of the institutions at fault. A commanding, low-register warble, Pronsky's voice conveys the wisdom of experience without crossing the line into defeatist world-weariness. To the contrary, Pronsky's song is more rallying cry than lament: "Get yourself together," she implores, "'cause it's hard times."

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Elizabeth Nelson