But, instead of wallowing in those omnipresent feelings of existential dread we’ve all been sharing for the last, oh, seven years, maybe a look to the future will help. How? Teach your kids about voting rights, of course! And not in a boring, social studies textbook sort of way, but the way people of a certain generation (X) learned about voting rights…and pretty much everything else. With Schoolhouse Rock, duh! In 1998, the gang at Schoolhouse Rock outdid themselves with an album recorded to benefit MTV’s Rock the Vote initiative. Filled with icons like The Roots and Etta James along with 90s icons like Joan Osborne and John Popper, this album is just what the doctor ordered to not only bring back some much-needed optimism but also to show your kids that a Bill isn’t just a Bill and that The Preamble to the Constitution is actually pretty amazing. Everyone over the age of 40 learned almost everything they needed to know in life from Schoolhouse Rock, and this 90s-fied version of all of our faves is, I’m not gonna lie, pretty damned awesome. From John Popper singing The Preamble to The Sugarhill Gang covering Schoolhouse Rock classic Fireworks, this album will a) make you want to be 18 and voting for the first time again, b) teach your kids a thing or two about the history of voting (and maybe think you’re kinda weird for dancing around your kitchen singing about bills), and c) relieve your angst for a few minutes. Unless you’re Gen X. Our angst is never going anywhere.