Song Memory

That last post got me thinking about Song Memory, or an Aural History. These are songs which trigger very deep recollections of points in your life. For instance:

Cecilia Ann by the Pixies - driving in my grandpa’s SLK320 convertible through Carlsbad on my way to get a bagel early in the morning after I got laid off from Freedom.

Wilco - She’s a Jar - weekends spent at work, during Santa Ana conditions, programming Java during the tail end of the last dot-com bust/boom.

R.E.M. - The Lifting - Falling asleep with my head against the window of a Metrolink train while commuting to and from work.

The Verve - Lucky Man - Driving home from the Oceanside train station after work.

Oingo Boingo - When the Lights Go Out - setting up my computers at my first house when I moved out at 18

Richard Hell and the Voidoids - Love Comes in Spurts - Moving out of my parents house

Pearl Jam - Animal - My sophomore year of high school, walking around with my Walkman on so I didn’t have to talk to anyone.

Radiohead - Let Down - sitting on the beach late at night when I lived in Oceanside

Architecture In Helskinki - Its 5 - the chaotic time when I was graduating from my MFA program, moving and starting a job within the same week.

Badly Drawn Boy - Once Around the Block - sleeping between dives in Aruba during New Years, 2001

Brian Eno - Music for Airports 1/1 - wondering what to do when my heart was broken, 1998

The Pixies - Debaser - figuring it out, 1998/1999

The Eels - PS. You Rock My World - finding HER - 2002

Sia - Breathe Me - my great grandpa Jim dying

Sigur Ros - Vaka - late nights, ocean in the distance, talking on AIM

R.E.M. - Orange Crush - when I first heard this song, I was 9 years old. I at that point thought there was nothing more sublime on the planet than stipe/buck/mills/berry. I still believe this.

Metallica - The Unforgiven - summer camp when I was 12 or so

Red Hot Chili Peppers - Subway to Venus - Space Camp in Huntsville, Alabama when I was 13 with my friend Michael

Patti Smith - People Have the Power - November 12, 1994 - life changer.

Music is such an important part of my life. I have been privileged to meet a good majority of the artists above in person. Although I’ve talked with them, there is no way to express when the signifier of a portion of your material existence is tied to a piece of art/culture that they have created.

As Michael Stipe once said (in a book): words are stupid. Look into my eyes.

Please comment or trackback with your song/memory list

Comments 4

  1. Tim wrote:

    The nothing song on untitled has to be the most moving song sigur ros have ever written. Every time I hear it it brings back so many memories - not necessarily good but still. I understand what you mean though songs seem to capture the essence of a place and a time in your life more than words ever will. I’ve been reading your blog for a while now and I guess the point of this comment is just to say thanks and you know keep going and all that stuff people say….

    Tim

    Posted 21 Nov 2006 at 4:43 am
  2. PhiLL wrote:

    This is great! I’ve actually thought about doing a set of posts on this very topic, but since I never got around to it, I’ll share one here.

    Sonic Youth - “The Wonder”
    Blasting in my Dad’s 89 Dodge Dakota driving home from high school on highway 92 in Jefferson City, TN. I got a speeding ticket.

    Posted 21 Nov 2006 at 11:12 am
  3. Hope wrote:

    Lynrd Skynrd - Sweet Home Alabama

    A few summers ago this song was playing at a neighbor’s house. We could hear from nearly two miles away. Everyone was outside clearing the fallen trees in their yards; we’d just had a 3-mile-wide tornado come through.

    Posted 22 Nov 2006 at 8:31 am
  4. David Burn wrote:

    Nice little meme going here…

    I remember listening to “Saint Steven” on vinyl in my dorm room in 1984. When I say my first Dead show a year later, I kept calling for the song, not realizing the band rarely, if ever, played it live.

    Posted 22 Nov 2006 at 9:25 am

Trackbacks & Pingbacks 1

  1. From » Song Memory | monkinetic blog archive on 21 Nov 2006 at 8:18 am

    [...] In response to Ethan: [...]

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