Whether you’re hosting a holiday shindig for your friends and family, picking background music for your workplace, or trying to brighten up the mood at the medical centre you work at, chances are you may have been tasked to create a “holiday playlist.”
In the age of digital streaming, it has never been easier to forsake the role of “DJ” and pass it over to an algorithm instead. Rather than hand-select your version of Silent Night and Jingle Bell Rock, and carefully arrange each song in the order you prefer, now with the swipe of a finger you can command a streaming app to play and endless mix of Christmas “favourites.” Spotify alone offers the choice of “Christmas Jazz,” “Christmas Pop,” “Easy Christmas,” “Classical Christmas,” “Country Christmas,” “Gospel Christmas,” “Rock Christmas,” “Christmas rap,” “Indie Christmas,” and “Christmas Crooners” - and the list goes on and on.
Just a decade ago, faced with the job of making seasonal playlists, we might have carefully thought through the mood and tone of the music we were choosing, deferring to our favourite albums or even hand-selecting CDs from the public library. We might have gone to extra lengths to customize the songs for the people who will listen, bring back certain memories and avoiding others. “My cousin Jim just loves ‘O Come Emmanuel’!” “’Carol of the Bells’ will get everyone singing!” “Let’s get the theme song from Home Alone – we loved that movie as kids!” “Better not put ‘Silent Night’ on there. It’ll make Joanie cry and she’s had such a rough year.” These types of considerations are lost when we choose to stream digital playlists.
If you’re going to use pre-made playlists for your holiday-themed background music, be it at work, in a care setting, or at home, here are a few considerations for adding a bit of the “music care approach” to your selection:
While the digital age of music has its enormous advantages for listeners, it also has its setbacks. Independent musicians are losing money through these streaming apps, which pay royalties to major labels but very little to individual artists, and it’s not a sustainable revenue model for independent musicians. Also, the more listeners turn to pre-made playlists, the less we connect with actual albums, which are crafted carefully by artists to create a flow, a story, and a musical arc. Albums are essentially pre-made playlists, with a consistency of tone and theme that can’t be beat with by a digital mixtape. This holiday season, whether you’re DJing your work party or gathering around with your family and friends over some nog, consider digging out an old Christmas album, or even purchasing a new one. Enjoy the story that the artist is sharing with you, their own sense of wonder and reflection about this season of the year, and how it invites you to create new memories that will live on for you in that album.
Sarah Pearson, MMT, MTA, RP, HonBA, is a music therapist working in oncology, palliative care, and mental health, and is the Program Development Lead for Room 217. She has a background in non-profit communications and copywriting, and performs regularly as a singer, choral artist, and songwriter.
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