Files
kfitz.info/content/blog/2010-12-26-soundtrack.md
Kathleen Fitzpatrick 655ad0ded8 upgrade to 3.0
2024-10-14 19:27:15 -04:00

17 lines
1.4 KiB
Markdown
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

---
title: Soundtrack
date: '2010-12-26T05:28:01-05:00'
permalink: /soundtrack/
tags:
- pondering
---
One of the things that I find fascinating just about every time I travel around Europe is the music playing in the background in restaurants, bars, hotels, stores, and so forth. Its not terribly surprising that a bunch of it is American pop music, of course, but Im frequently caught off-guard by *what* American pop music is playing.
I wouldnt pay it much attention at all, I think, if it were relentlessly current — the stuff thats being pressed on all of us, all the time — but what I hear here is often oddly dated, and yet not anything that would fall into the category of obvious “classics” that could simply fade into the background. There was one summer in Paris, for instance, when we heard George Bensons *Give Me the Night* everywhere we went. And not just one song off of the album, which might have rotated onto some weird retro playlist, but the entire album.
Here in Prague, its Tracy Chapmans 1988 eponymous album. In one bar, it played start to finish, but Ive also heard selections from it in at least three other places here, including our hotels lounge — and not just “Fast Car,” but several other singles as well.
Whats that all about? How is it that a 22 year old album rotates back into currency this far from its origins?