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LISTEN: Correspondent Don Gonyea's New Hampshire Playlist

Time for the second installment in my playlists for the 2016 election. This time: New Hampshire.

We've already brought you tunes to keep a roving political reporter sane while logging miles in a rental car in Iowa.

Now, it's onto the Granite State and the first-in-the-nation primary contest, which happens Tuesday, February 9.

First a reminder of how this works. The rules are pretty loose, but every time I arrive in a new state I build a short Spotify playlist for myself just to get my head into the right geographic frame of mind. It's always short, just six or seven songs. Each has to have someconnection to the state I'm in. Either the artist was born or lived there, or maybe the song itself mentions the state, a city, or some iconic landmark. Any connection at all works. No reed too thin. And the list isn't meant to be definitive — just a mix of genres, styles, eras, and artists to make for a fun listen.

So, here's my list for for the New Hampshire primary.

1. "Grovers Corners" // Aaron Copland

We set the scene with a beautiful piece of American classical music from one of our greatest composers.

Here Copland writes about the mythical New Hampshire town of Grover's Corners, where playwright Thorton Wilder's timeless drama Our Town is set.

2. "Live Free or Die" // Bill Morrissey

The late Bill Morrissey is one of New England's most talented singer/songwriters of the past few decades. His albums are full of songs about life in New Hampshire. Some are poignant and sad, some wickedly funny ... like this tale of an inmate doing time in a New Hampshire state prison, stamping out license plates with the state's motto: Live Free or Die.

3. "The Old Man of the Mountain" // Cab Calloway (performed here by Big Bad Voodoo Daddy)

Cab Calloway and his big band, known for such hits as "Minnie the Moocher," wrote this song in 1933. The Old Man in the Mountain is New Hampshire's most famous natural landmark, a rock formation atop a mountain in Franconia that looks just like the profile of an old man. It isn't quite what it once was, since a large chunk of it fell off in 2003 (Hey, it happens to all of us).

This song swings. Big Bad Voodoo Daddy included this on the 2009 CD "How Big Can You Get?: The Music of Cab Calloway." Listen to the whole thing. And to the Cab Calloway 1933 original.

4. "Merrimack River" // Mandy Moore

Some pure pop music from this New Hampshire native who's carved out a career in music and movies. The Merrimack River flows south through Concord, Manchester and Nashua.

5. "Okay Alright" // moe.

This one came to me from some crowdsourcing on Twitter. Moe. is an alt-rock outfit big on the Bonnaroo festival circuit. This one is plenty catchy. That's why it's here — in addition to the line in the first verse: "Goodbye Suzie, goodbye UNH" (the University of New Hampshire).

6. "Supernova" // Ray LaMontagne

Another New Hampshire native who's made it big on the alternative rock/country/folk circuit. LaMontagne was born in 1973 in Nashua. I kind of love the opening line of Rolling Stone's review of LaMontagne's Supernova CD: "With his impeccably weathered tenor croon and mastery of Seventies singer-songwriterisms, Ray LaMontagne can often seem in danger of disappearing into his beard." It is a serious beard. The music is pretty retro too.

7. "High Hopes" // Frank Sinatra

So what has Sinatra got to do with New Hampshire? This song takes two paths to earn its spot on the playlist. Remember the old prime-time soap opera Peyton Place from the Sixties? It was set in a fictional New Hampshire town. It starred a young Mia Farrow, who would become Mrs. Frank Sinatra. So he makes the list.

Plus, John Kennedy won the 1960 New Hampshire primary. His campaign theme song that year was Sinatra singing a version of "High Hopes," with lyrics telling voters to "back Jack."

Everyone wants to back — Jack
Jack is on the right track.
'Cause he's got high hopes
He's got high hopes
Nineteen Sixty's the year for his high hopes.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

You're most likely to find NPR's Don Gonyea on the road, in some battleground state looking for voters to sit with him at the local lunch spot, the VFW or union hall, at a campaign rally, or at their kitchen tables to tell him what's on their minds. Through countless such conversations over the course of the year, he gets a ground-level view of American elections. Gonyea is NPR's National Political Correspondent, a position he has held since 2010. His reports can be heard on all NPR News programs and at NPR.org. To hear his sound-rich stories is akin to riding in the passenger seat of his rental car, traveling through Iowa or South Carolina or Michigan or wherever, right along with him.