I have a BA in music with distinction in Music Cognition. I’ve been
playing violin since third grade and viola since high school. I’m
employed at a conservatory, play with Festival City Symphony, and
founded my own string quartet that was awarded ‘best in weddings’ for
our region by the magazine The Knot two years in a row.
I am not
bragging because I know how much practice I sorely need to become the
musician I aspire to be, and in the music world pecking order I rank
very very very low. Yeah, now think even lower. No, I mention all of
this just to stack some weight on my side in order to salvage a bit of
my ego when I say–with all seriousness–that the greatest musical
influence on my children has been my husband. Ian. The guy with the
engineering and economic geography degrees. It’s ridiculous.
Not that you have to have degrees in music to have your opinions or
preferences on it be meaningful. That’s insane. Musicians strive to
make music that is appreciated by a world primarily populated by
non-musicians. Without an audience the final step of what we are trying
to do is obliterated. I spend a lot of time telling non-musicians that
their opinions count and not to be intimidated by snobs.
What I am trying to say, is that music is such an important component
of my life that I made the (apparently crazy) assumption that when I
had children, I would be the one to introduce them to the wonders of
it. I would have an impact on their preferences and could lead them
down a musical path that I was familiar with. Ha.
Turns out I can’t compete with my husband. Ian could have been a
jingle writer. He comes up with catchy/annoying little tunes that stick
in your head he and used them for reminding the kids to do things. He
made up one for telling the kids to brush their teeth, and one for
washing hands, and one for eating corn…. He used to organize little
dance-a-thons before bedtime to wear the kids out so they would sleep
better, and he would drag out his Art of Noise records and play them
songs by the Cranberries on his computer. They knew all sorts of music
he liked by heart. During his stinits as stay-at-home dad the kids were
introduced to all sorts of songs I didn’t even know. It was silly to
let it bug me, but there where days it did. You can’t always control
what rubs you the wrong way, even when you know better.
I’ve been thinking about this more than usual lately while we prepare
for my husband to return home. I will admit I have taken advantage of
his absence to commandeer the CD and record players. I can’t be accused
of forcing too much of the stuff I like on my kids, especially since in
the car I try to let them pick the music, and more often than not we
find a middle ground between what they will enjoy and what I don’t mind
listening to again and again and again. We listen to a lot of They
Might Be Giants, particularly ‘No’ and ‘Here Comes Science,’ but they
can also sing along to quite a few Barenaked Ladies tunes now. My kids
know a lot more music from the 1980’s than is probably normal, but
that’s because they like to run the record player themselves and that
was the last time I bought any records. (When Aden has friends over the
‘Ghostbusters’ soundtrack often ends up on the turntable.)
It’s been so long since Ian was a part of any routine here that all
the little tunes he sang have faded from the kids’ memories. Aden might
remember a few of them if she heard them, but I don’t think Mona or
Quinn would. (It’s amazing what kids forget. Mona used to have all of
Mary Poppins memorized–every bit of dialogue, every song, every
gesture–and when we ran across it in the video store recently it was
completely new to her just a few years later.) It will be good to have
all the little songs back, and probably new annoying ones to get stuck
in our heads when Ian is a real live present member of our family again
and not just some kind of ghost who calls us on a satellite phone from
time to time.
Between choir and TV, school and their friends, I don’t kid myself
that I will have much influence on my kids’ musical lives in the grand
scheme of things, but I’m trying to decide if there are a few more tunes
I can worm into their little heads before their dad comes home and his
influence becomes dominant in that area again. I may be able to play
along with them as they practice Bach and occasionally sneak some old
Paul Simon tune onto the CD player on the ride to school, but I know
where their true source of musical inspiration usually lies. I can’t
fight the tooth brushing song. And at this point, I don’t even want to
try.
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