“WHY IS THE MUSIC SO LOUD?” my friend yelled on the phone
from his tour in Japan. “I WRITE BETTER WITH THE MUSIC… WITHOUT THE
HEADPHONES!” I screamed back. “I CAN’T WRITE MUSIC WITH MUSIC AT ALL!” he said.
Music is the soundtrack of my life. I can’t seem to
get away from it. There is always a tune or lyric banging around in my
head. It’s been that way for me since I was a child. Even when playing sports,
I always hear the music. I've got a friend who recites the poetry of Robert
Service when he’s mountain climbing. The themes from “Chariots of Fire” and
“Star Wars” have kept me going more than once. I remember when “Astral Tunes” hit
the ski slopes…a Walkman in a fanny pack, with good marketing. Simple but It
brought the tunes to life on the mountain.

The rationale is that by 4pm on Friday, most people are
ready for the weekend, if they’re even still at their desks. That last hour and
half is “tension suspension” and winding down is the objective. 90 minutes
seemed like a good set and I started to create the playlists on Thursday nights
It began with vinyl to tape; then vinyl and tape to cd, digital to cd and
ultimately, iTunes playlists to the player. My 5000 vinyl albums are gone and
so are most of my 3000 cd’s. I do have close to 40,000 songs in the cloud,though, and I
have even transferred my most treasured vinyl to digital files.
Eventually the entire agency got behind “Friday Tunes” and I
would get email and text critiques as the songs would play. Only one
artist got a complete “thumbs down” and a “never play again”. I know there are
names jumping into your heads but the answer is Britney Spears. Oops…the
reaction was actually violent.
Requests poured in during the week and I even received playlists that I founds ways to use. The key to Friday Tunes is the mix. I really do like
all kinds of music. There is a wealth of great Acid Rock and Grunge,
though an acquired taste, is really good, thanks to the insight of my close friend Susan and her stint as a deejay on KCMU (pre-KEXP). But my travels
around the world have yielded some of the most fantastic finds. In Sydney on
Australia Day, I sat in a luncheon meeting with Yothu Yindi winding through the
crowd playing the didgeridoo. I still get goose bumps. Johnny Klegg in South
Africa; Carlos Vives in Colombia; Mary Black in Ireland; Dougie MacLean in Scotland,
just scratch the surface of what’s out there.


Unless I’m alone in a sound-proof room, the headphones are
back on for Friday Tunes at the office…and I miss them. The mix is still there every week but
that raw bass and treble from the woofers and tweeters is something special
that helps finish that draft or launches you into the weekend. Regardless, as
the song says, “The music is in me”, especially on Friday’s at 4pm.
So where do I get this play list?
ReplyDeleteDan, I remember those days well. Just one of the many positive contributions you made to our agency!
ReplyDelete