Everyone joined in, producing an exuberant, off-key version of the classic.
And then there's a sly, exuberant version by Rose Stone with the Venice Four and the Abbot Kinney Lighthouse Choir.
A few resemble exuberant versions of Giacometti's stick figures, with tiny knobbed heads and flowing limbs.
None of the exuberant versions of things Edison has not done could endure for a moment with the simple narrative of what he has really done as the world's new Purveyor of Pleasure.
And early on, she brought out Steve Earle, who sang a loose, exuberant version of his "Transcendental Blues."
In songs like "Until the Led," "Replenished" and an exuberant version of Elvis Costello's "Beyond Belief," Lambchop's rhythm section moved toward straightforward rock, while the guitars twanged and the horns pumped away.
By that I don't mean to equate "The Father" with George C. Wolfe's recent, memorably exuberant version of "The Tempest," with Mr. Stewart as Prospero.
The Ku Klux Klan is not merely a somewhat more exuberant version of the Republican Party.
Her voice was brassier than her seven-piece horn section and brawnier than the five-piece rhythm section, and she sang an exuberant version of "No Me Llores Más," even though the lyrics are about love and betrayal.
They are exuberant versions of Baroque popular during the 18th century.