Boy, that’s an awkward title, ain’t it? The Clown Music thread got me thinking about this. Whatever the composer of Gladiators intended people to imagine he wrote the music has been totally supplanted by the image of cartwheeling clowns. In my mind, whenever I hear Shout Away by The Rolling Stones, all I can think of now is that episode of The Simpsons with the Roofi concert. That Herman’s Hermit song they play while Leslie Nielsen and Priscilla Presley walk down the beach in the Naked Gun movie, always brings back the image of that movie whenever I hear the song. I know everybody else must have something similar happen to them. What are some songs you now associate with things other than what the original composer intended?
I remember several years ago Burger King used Modern English’s “I melt with you”…one of my all-time favorite 80’s songs to advertise hamburgers. What blasphemy! Now that song always makes me think of fast food burgers.
Oh…and I think the Stone’s song you’re talking about is called Gimme Shelter…the lyrics are, in part “War Children! It’s just a shot away !”
Quite a few years ago, I had a case of Titanic mania (This was before the movie, mind you.) I knew every little useless piece of trivia you can possibly imagine about the damned vessel. At one point me and my old man spent a couple of weekends putting together one of those model thingamabobs.
It just so happened that at the same time, my older sister discovered the not so hidden gems of said old mans record collection. During those few weeks, the greatest hits of “the Doors” were on endless repeat.
“This is the end” indeed. It makes me think of icebergs, ships…suchlike. I smell the paint whenever I hear that and a couple of other of their tunes.
Well, I would think that most people probably associate the overture from Strauss’ “Also Sprach Zarathustra” as just “that music from 2001”.
Similar with Barber’s “Adagio For Strings” (a piece which I knew and loved long before I ever saw “Platoon”).
As for me… if I ever hear “Everybody Wants Some” (Van Halen), it will always bring up images of the little claymation hamburger in “Better Off Dead”.
After watching the show Get a Life (I must be the only person on this planet that remembers that show from the early 90’s and actually liked it) repeatedly, I can never hear the song Stand by REM without thinking of Chris Elliott crashing into his neighbor’s car on his bike and falling across the hood and off the other side.
After seeing Back to the Future, I cannot hear the song The Power of Love by Huey Lewis and the News without thinking of Marty skateboarding.
After seeing Grosse Pointe Blank, I cannot hear the song I Can See Clearly Now by Aretha Franklin (I think), without thinking of John Cusack firing on people in the streets below while casually talking to his secretary.
Ashokan Farewell better known as the theme song of Ken Burns Civil War is not an American Civil War tune, actually it was written in 1982. The tune was originally written to illustrate the bittersweet feelings of the folk music and dance camps in the Northeast.
http://www.jayandmolly.com/ashokanfaq.shtml
We found out that Bob marley rally calmed our daughter down when she was about a month old. When we were moving from NY to VA and when we were driving from VA to TX for a family visit, Legend was in heavy rotation, and I can’t hear most of the songs now without thinking of them as Emma’s bedtime music. In fact, the CD now has an almost permanent place in a CD player in her room and is played every night.
rally=really
I always associate the song Don’t You (forget about me) by Simple Minds with the ending of the Futurama episode Luck of the Fryrish.