I am big fan of what I call the "all alone at the end of the bar at closing time" songs. These may be called "tear-jerkers". Many of those are country music songs of the old style country. Back when the lyric was more important than the beat. I guess some could be called "torch songs". I think the greatest torch song was At Last by Etta James. If this song doesn't tug at the strings of your heart, go see your doctor to get restrung! Some people associate a specific song with a particular event or events. Don't Stop by Fleetwood Mack was the theme song of William Jefferson Clinton's quest for the White House. Many couples have "their" song. How many times have you seen it in a movie? She looks at him with dreamy eyes and says, "They're playing our song". Once I was the part of one such couple. The song was Gentle On My Mind by Bobby Goldsboro. (I know Glen Campbell covered it too.) The song defined the relationship. When I lived in the Northeast a local radio station had a call in segment og Fridays for dedications. You could call in and dedicate the Johnny Paycheck song,Take this Job and Shove It, to the boss of your choosing. I never did, But should have. Songs often remind us of personal loss. When I hear Bishop F.C. Barne's Rough Side of the Mountain, I'm reminded of Vincent, a fellow artist I sold art with on the streets of Charleston. It was sung at his funeral.
Other songs bring back other memories too. Every time I hear Need You Now by Lady Antebellum I think of hot croissants and night time on the Champs de Elysees. When we were driving around France several years ago it seemed that every other song played on the radio was I Need You Now. And in English!
And of course there are the commercial jingles. Is there a physiological reason why they can get stuck in our minds? I've had some commercial jingles play for hours in my head. I think it was those cats advertising fat litter!
We are all touched by music...I think.
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