I think that the discussion that we had on Wednesday was the best we’ve had in a while.  We were just into it, and some interesting points were thrown out there.  I was think about it after, and just wanted to add a thought of my own.  I agree with what Jackson was saying – how many (a majority of) people only want to hear what’s familiar, only want to hear the things that they already know, sampled over and over again.  The more widely circulated and more often heard the song, the bigger the cheer it gets in concert.  And yeah, I agree that being closed-minded and hostile to new music isn’t a good thing… But I was thinking about that very point while I was running, listening to a favorite song from years ago, and I found that there is another spin off of this point.  Although there may not that much debate about what I’m about to say, I just wanted to put it out there.  As I was running, I just had a playlist going, because who wants to be searching for songs to listen to while exercising, and it was on shuffle, so I didn’t know what song was coming up next… And as it switched, I knew right away what it was.  Despite the freezing cold I started to smile, and to run faster.  It was Shed a Little Light, by James Taylor, an uplifting tune that I’ve been hearing probably since before I was born.  It’s one of my Mom’s favorites.  As the song progressed, I fell completely into step with it, and it allowed me to run faster for longer, and by the way enjoy it.  So after the song ended, I was thinking about what caused my burst of energy, and here’s the conclusion that I came to: It’s about a relationship with the song. To me, music is not just a sonic experience. It can be, but generally I’m looking for some sort of emotional response, or some sort of story as well. Because of the versatility and wide scope of music, I don’t think that we can just write people off for never wanting to listen to new things – maybe they are hearing new things, in each story, and in each circumstance that they first hear a song.  And if all they want to hear is familiar music and familiar themes (which seems to be the case), it is perhaps not because they don’t want to hear new things, but just because they have already built a relationship with the songs that they already know and so things outside of strictly the sonic experience give them a greater experience on the whole – emotions, memories, vivid stories, etc.  I’m not saying that I don’t love hearing new things, but when an old favorite comes on, it carries a lot of baggage (usually not a bad thing), and it can get a bigger emotional response, regardless of the complexity of the music. Yeah.

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2 Comments

Comment by mgold | 2008-12-05 13:01:54 Subscribed to comments via email

totally. another interesting thing about records you’ve loved for a long time is that they pretty much get encoded into your DNA. There’s a long list of records that I’ve loved since before I could walk, and you get to a point where you don’t even need to sit down and listen to them because it’s just part of your body and you can think about it and experience it without even listening. These records are like parental figures to me – the beatles, coltrane, miles, dylan, bill evans…these are guys I grew up on and their records have always been transcendent for me. It’s like they’ve watched me grow up, and both the records and I go through changes together. Back to your point, you hear familiar things differently at different points in your life. Oh, music…

 
Comment by jmeredit | 2008-12-08 16:16:02

Erin + Matt,

I completely agree with you. Music like a smell can bring one back to a place in time in an instant. I can’t tell you how many times I’ll be shuffling my itunes and start to smile because I remembered a good fifth grade experience, or a beautiful summer from years ago. Music helps bring out those memories that were put in storage from a long time ago. In my hour of darkness I dont want some crazy new this or that. I dont want something intellectual that I have to sqwinch my face at and concentrate. I want something old that i know will cry with me. Something that I can rely on to make me happy, or make me remember the people who I love and who love me. Music more than any living being is 100% reliable to help me feel an emotion that I am craving to feel. It will always be there for me.

Furthermore….James Taylor…Really? just kidding, I actually saw him kayaking on his private lake in Martha’s Vineyard once.

 

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