Talkin Bout Pop Music
By: Lenn Millbower

Article Word Count Appx. : 1371


“Songs go far beyond words in their ability to insert emotion into
communication.”
Robert Sylwester, A Celebration of Neurons

Filmmakers, if they knew who brain researcher Robert Sylwester was, would agree
with him. They often integrate familiar songs into their movies. Pop songs are so
successful that movie producers will pay exorbitant sums, in some cases as much as
$100,000, to acquire the rights for the song.

Sylwester, in his book A Celebration of Neurons, went on to explain:

“The songs of our adolescent years often become the beacons of our adult life
because they can help us to recall the important developments of our adolescence.
We often listen to this music to relive the memories in the extended reverie of song.
The song slows the simple message so that we can savor all the emotions of the
experience.”

In a film composer’s hands, pop songs are chosen and linked to those memories in
a way that adds emotional texture to the film. Films with pop music scores function
on two distinct levels. The first level is the application of the song in the film. Every
song lyric tells a story and a well placed song’s story will dovetail with the film’s
visual.

The second, and deeper, level is the emotional meaning the use of specific songs
brings forth within the listener. The songs become metaphors, placing the subject
to be taught in the context of the learners prior experiences. When people hear
songs they know, and have personal memories of, they immediately are drawn back
into those memories, and the experience is enhanced. In essence, pop music helps
us relate to the story being told in a deeply personal, highly emotional way.

Three famous films used this technique to achieve success.

American Graffiti (1973), telling the story of a group of early 1960s high
schoolers enjoying a last summer before adulthood, was intentionally designed as a
series of pop music vignettes. George Lucas, the film’s director, developed the
storyline, and selected the songs to almost simultaneously.

Each scene matched the length of the song accompanying it. For example, Bill
Haley’s “Rock Around The Clock,” played during the opening credits, set up the
film’s innocence of summer theme. The Crests’ “Sixteen Candles” accompanied a
young girls sixteenth birthday. “Teen Angel” by Mark Dinning was played when a
character dies in a drag race. The film ends with the Spaniels’ “Goodnight, Well It’s
Time To Go.”

The Big Chill tells the story of a group of former 1960s radicals turned
1980s yuppies who gather to mourn the passing of an old friend. Like American
Graffiti, The Big Chill uses pop songs, although in this case, to add commentary to
the on-screen occurrences.

Marvin Gaye’s “I Heard It Through The Grapevine” accompanied the actors as they
hear about their friend’s passing. “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” by the
Rolling Stones is played as an ironic commentary on the friend’s death. As the
friends discuss relationships, The Young Rascals “Good Lovin’” is performed. Finally,
“Bad Moon Rising’” by Credence Clearwater Revival is played immediately after a
former lover proposes that she and her old flame reunite for an evening.

The best subconscious music placement occurs in a supermarket between the two
former lovers who contemplate rekindling their relationship. Although their desire
for each other is palpable, both hold back, only conversing about the shopping task
at hand as the store’s Muzak system plays Frank Sinatra’s “Strangers In The Night.”

Forest Gump tells the story of a dimwitted man who experiences a series of
life adventures over several decades. Because the film’s extended time frame, the
music serves to establish the time and place.

Credence Clearwater Revival’s “Fortunate Son” sets up Gump’s Vietnam tour. To
state that Forest’s girlfriend has moved to California, California Dreaming” by the
Mamas and Papas is used. “San Francisco” by Scott Mackenzie frames Forest’s 1960s
visit to San Francisco. When Forest returns home to Alabama, Lynyrd Skynyrd’s
“Sweet Home Alabama” is played. These music placements help the films listeners
comprehend the different locations and eras represented in the film.

American Graffiti, The Big Chill, and Forest Gump were all highly successful films,
and their pop song application played a huge part in creating that success. All three
films appealed to people at a deeply personal level.

Pop Songs in Learning
In Training With A Beat, I discussed at length the application of pop songs in the
learning environment. In part, I said:

“Concert halls, ballrooms, parties, and yes, the class room, can be uncomfortable
environments. When people hear a song they’ve listened to in the privacy of their
home, they relax. Comfortable music emotionally warms the training room, placing
learners in a receptive frame of mind for learning. Songs with lyrics, especially
popular hits of the last 50 years, are extremely useful for this reason. They are old,
well worn, welcome friends.”

Songs with lyrics also engage learner brains in multiple ways. The words and rhythm
of a song are largely processed in the brain’s left hemisphere, where the melody is
largely processed by the right hemisphere. By using songs with lyrics, you help your
learners engage both hemispheres. In the process, they gain a deeper meaning than
is possible with one hemisphere alone.

Song lyrics can, as was the case in The Big Chill, speak directly to the learning topic.
The many applications are too numerous to state in this one article, but a few
examples should prove the point:

Career planning - “All Star” by Smash Mouth

Change management - “Bad Day” by Daniel Powter

Communication - “Hello, Goodbye” by the Beatles

Conflict management - “Shut Up” by the Black Eye Peas

Customer service - “Lean On Me” by Bill Withers

Diversity - “Short People” by Randy Newman

Finance - “Takin’ Care of Business” by Bachman-Turner Overdrive

Project Management - “One Little Slip” by the Bare Naked Ladies

Sexual harassment - “Respect” by Aretha Franklin

Time management - “Right Place, Wrong Time” by Dr. John

Once you’ve decided on an appropriate song, placement is simple Considering the
Randy Newman song “Short People” for example:

Introduction - Play the song as the learners enter. Once the song is over call
attention to the songs lyrics and ask for comments about the meaning conveyed by
those lyrics. Use those comments as a transition to your presentation.

Filler - Play the song during breaks to add a subliminal message to your content.

Activity - Divide your learners into groups and instruct them to read and discuss the
lyrics. Then lead a general discussion to share each group’s observations.

Conclusion - Conclude your session by stating, “We are all short people in
someone’s eyes.” Then ask the rhetorical question, “If none of us were welcome
around here, who would be left to complete our work?” Start the song and thank
everyone for attending. Your learners will walk out of the classroom with the song
and its lyrics firmly implanted in their brains, and you will have closed with a visually
powerful learning point.

Given the large number of pop songs available, the options are limited only by your
imagination and the musical preferences of your learners. You too can have your
learners, in the words of the old song by “M”, “talkin’ ‘bout pop music.”

Please respect song owner rights. Consult your organization before you use another
person’s musical composition.

Visit Lenn on line at www.offbeattraining.com.
Blog with Lenn at http://offbeat-online.blogspot.com.


Lenn Millbower, BM, MA, the Learnertainment® Trainer is an expert in applying
show biz techniques to learning. He is the author of the ASTD Info-Line, Music as a
Training Tool, focused on the practical application of music to learning; Show Biz
Training, the definitive book on the application of entertainment industry
techniques to training; Cartoons for Trainers, a popular collection of 75 cartoons for
learning; Game Show Themes for Trainers, a best-selling CD of original learning
game music; and Training with a Beat: The Teaching Power of Music, the foremost
book on the application of music to learning. Lenn is an in-demand speaker, with
successful presentations at ASTD 1999-2005 and SHRM 2006; a creative and
dynamic instructional designer and facilitator formally with the Disney University
and Disney Institute; an accomplished arranger-composer skilled in the
psychological application of music to learning; a popular comedian, magician and
musician; and the president of Offbeat Training®, infusing entertainment-based
techniques into learning to keep ‘em awake!



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