ABOUT TEST PATTERN

Don't touch that dial: Test Pattern tunes into television, movie, music and pop culture links, as well as gossip and idle chat from around the Web.

Every week, msnbc.com entertainment producers Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, Denise Hazlick, Paige Newman, Kurt Schlosser and Anna Chan weigh in on topics ranging from TV commercials to movie hype to the latest celebrity blunder. We're not ashamed to admit our love for bad TV or reveal what's on our iPods, and invite you to join the conversation via your comments.



Music in ads: Ain't it good, ain't it right?

Posted: Monday, July 07, 2008 6:00 AM by Gael Fashingbauer Cooper
Filed Under:

Don't worry, Multi-link Monday fans. That feature isn't gone, but I want to get back to the TV commercial contest this Monday. We'll offer up five more time-wasting links next week.

For now, let's talk about music in commercials. Not jingles or songs written just for the ads ("five...five dollar...five dollar footloooooong"), but commercials that use well-known songs in the hopes that if we like the song, we'll transfer that feeling to their products.

I've written in the past about the hilarity that ensues when someone at the ad agency doesn't listen to all the lyrics of their chosen song. (I call this the "Here comes Johnny Yen again" rule.) That kind of inattention still cracks me up -- feel free to mention new examples of it in the comments.

Maybe it's because my musical tastes are stuck in the past (like Anna's!),  but I am especially drawn to ads that resurrect old tunes that I didn't even realize I was missing until I started hearing them again. (I also loved the use of  "Shambala" in "Lost.") Here are a few favorites.

I LOVE EGYPTIAN KINGS
At the risk of overdiscussing it, one great use of music in commercials is the much-praised Discovery Channel "boom di ada" ad, which uses a great old children's song ("I love the mountains...") and fills it in with words relating to Discovery Channel shows. From our discussions here, it's definitely a contender for best ad of the year. The song and concept are irresistible even if you didn't sing the song as a kid.

MAC AIRBOOK IS A NEW SOUL
When the beautifully thin Mac Airbook was introduced, Apple put out a commercial displaying how tiny the computer is. Yael Naim's "New Soul" plays in the background ("I'm a new soul...I came to this strange world...") Personally I found the song charming and perfect for a new product introduction, but some of you commented that you found it as annoying as a computer virus. You might appreciate this parody.

VIVA VIAGRA
We've already sliced and diced this commercial, but I can't let it go without comment. Apparently impotence inspires otherwise normal men to sit around and jam while ruining perfectly good Elvis songs, making the lyrics all about their, uh, issues. (Fans of "The Warriors," the drummer in this ad is Dorsey Wright, who played Cleon in that movie. "WAARRIORS! Come out to PLAAAAAY!")

ROCK ME GENTLY
Andy Kim's 1974 hit "Rock Me Gently" is the centerpiece of one of my favorite current ads. It features a man driving his Jeep through the woods, singing, as various animals drop in through his open window and sunroof. A squirrel and two birds join him and sing along, and then a wolf sails in, swallows one of the birds, and sheepishly spits it out while the singalong continues. I think this ad hits for numerous reasons -- the animals are cute, the song is a catchy tune that was ripe for a revival, and the overall ad is a sweet little vignette. Even the swallowed bird resurfaces uninjured. One problem: Although I've seen this ad a dozen times, I had no idea what it was for until I Googled it (Jeep Liberty).

Share your favorite (and least favorite) uses of music in commercials in the comments.

MAIN PAGE

Email this EMAIL THIS

Comments

Speaking of programmers not listening to lyrics, I loved NBC playing The Clash's "London Calling" at the end of their Wimbledon coverage. The men's tennis final may have been the best ever, but the song was a change of pace, being about London during an apocalyptic disaster, with zombies and food shortages.
I LOVE the Discovery Channel Commercial, is all the right song, the pople the idea is perfect! also i like the Jeep liberty and the boy band of Free credit report.com i love the song and i know the tunes
the song Hold On Tight To Your Dream sung by Electric Light Orchestra playing to advertise the Honda car is really catchy!
What about that Honda minivan commercial, playing Heart's Baracuda. Awesome song...too bad I can't stand minivans :)
Again, I have to say that the Meat Loaf commercial for "Go Phone" where they re-do the lyrics to "Paradise by the Dashboard Light" makes me ill.
I liked the cue used for Tylenol's "Holes" campaign last year. Apparently it was an original, but it sounded an awful lot like the score from "A Beautiful Mind."
Why can't commercials list the song/singer on their commercials?
While I love the "New Soul" song used for the Mac Airbook, what makes me laugh is that the lines following the lyric cutoff in the commercial include "Finding myself making every possible mistake". Which I find appropos for just about any new product.
I hate the new Lowe's one with the squeaky door. It gets on my nerves.
I love the new iPod commercials with Coldplay & the Ting Tings.
One of the most thrilling things for me was hearing The Fall's "Blindness" to hock Nissans.  It was kind of weird but neat in the same way and the song really did fit (well, until you get to the lyrics, at least).
The commerical that I would freeze to was the ad for Verizon's 'Chocolate' phone when it was first coming out.  The song on there, which I wish I knew who it was by, was awesome.  I heard the song before, but something about that commerical made me really like the song more, and it really made me want to buy the 'Chocolate' phone too.......
I'm pretty old and don't know the names of any of the more modern pieces but I do like the smooth, soft melodies sung by girls usually unaccompanied.  The melodies are nice as is the harmony.  For me, melody, harmony, and beat (with no instruments) is fabulous music.
Although it's not a commercial, I really think "deadliest catch's" use of bon jovi's "wanted dead or alive" is fitting for the show.

"i'm a cowboy-on a steel horse i ride"
"i drive all night just to get that gold"
Way cool combo !
"I don't know how many times Natasha Bedingford (or whatever her name is) has farmed out that "Unwritten" song but it is on Pantene commercials, the theme for "The Hills" at least one other product that I can't think of right now.  It is tired...let's move on!"

I know a drag queen (who when in drag bears more than a passing resemblance to pre-crazy Britney Spears) who performs that song and I can't hear it without picturing drag queens in general.
Personally I don't think ANY product having to do with sexual performance needs to be on TV...that goes for Viagra, or KY or anything like that.  It's not entertaining, it ruins my appetite when it's on during the dinner hour, and that's just a subject that belongs in the bedroom or the doctor's office!
Is nothing private anymore?
F-R-E-E that spells FREE, creditreport.com baby!
The Honda commercials that use the "Hold On Tight" song by E.L.O. are really good.
I love the artists that use the commercial medium rather than the other way around.  Like John Mellencamp's "This is Our Country".  He said that radio was not playing his song so he took it to Chevy and the rest is history.  Moby and Sting have done the same thing with the same results.  Way to use the system!    
The best one was Bob Dylan and Victoria Secret.  What in the heck do those two have in common!
The WORST song being used in an ad in my opinion is All You Need is Love being used to sell Luv's diapers. Yeah, I'm sure John Lennon was thinking about baby poop when he wrote that song....Honestly, I could go on and on about the sudden over-use of The Beatles in commercials right now. With a Little Help From My Friends being used for some hotel, (I think its Hampton Inn...) Any Time At All being used by Chase, and of course the horrible Hello, "Good Buy" campaign that Target has going right now. I know Michael Jackson needs to make some his money back, but can't he do it by selling his OWN songs to ad agencies?!?!
I never hear most of the music everyone is talking about. Unfortunately, whenever a commercial with music comes on, my dog "Dork" howls until we shut it off. What a critic.
We are lead to believe that the men in the Viva Viagra commercial no longer have a problem with their bedroom performance, but something tells me that the advertising guy who came up with THAT idea still might.
Maybe he can find a pill for lameness as well as limpness.
Using music like that is just one more way companies trying to sell their product,show us just how cheap they really are. Spend some more money and give us a commercial that we will remember because it was a good commercial. Remember the Bud Frogs? That was a great ad campaign.
Liberty Mutual
Hem...Half Acre
The absolute best hands down :)
The intro of a Honda Civic commercial was the awesome intro to a Postal Service song. It totally worked (instumental) and was a pretty commercial...as pretty as it can get for a car...it's sort of dreamy. It all worked.

For the inappropriate...I can't beleive nobody has mentioned Iggy Pop's lust for life selling family cruises. That's just jacked up.

(Maybe somebody mentioned it; I'm too lazy to go beyond page one here)
Best use of music was United Airlines ads that used Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue."  Perfect music for a set of great ads. Here's a link to one here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FDZAgBDf3Qo&feature=related
I thought that this ad was really stupid!!
That Andy Kim song says "rock me gently, rock me slow, take it easy but don't you know that I've aint' never been loved like this before" or something like that. Well, my question is how ARE you being loved that you ain't never been loved like this before?
I about wanted to DIE when I heard "I Just Can't Get Enough" by Depeche Mode being used in a Payless Shoe Source commercial! I mean, how low can you go? That, and Modern English's "I Melt With You" being used to advertise Ritz crackers, is the absolute bottom of the barrel. Depeche Mode, I am ashamed of you! No emo cookies for you anymore, no-siree-bob...
Anytime there's a post about good commercials, I have to mention the Hallmark one where it plays "Can't Touch This" and the dad imagines himself in an MC Hammer video - I still love that ad!
i'm getting pretty burnt out on the i tunes coldplay commercial.  its an awesome song and video, but do i have to hear it twice every commercial break?
Loved The Kooks' "Shine On" in a Michelob Ultra commercial so much that I bought the song.  Forget the beer!
While the Go Phone commercial parodying Meatloaf's song, "Let Me Sleep On It," isn't a great commercial and doesn't quite fit the subject matter, the spot and the song took on a whole new meaning once I realized that Meatloaf was the dad in the commercial.
I love the AT&T commercial that uses "Daydreamin'" by Lupe Fiasco and the iTunes commercial that plays "Viva la Vida" by Coldplay. Both commercials are visually stunning and I ended up becoming a Coldplay fan because of the iTunes ad.
A few years ago Mercedes actually used Janis Joplin's "Mercedes Benz" for their ads. I often wonder if the companies or the ad agencies have any idea what the original artist was actually saying at the time. Would it even matter to them?
Royksopp's Remind Me (Geico Caveman commercial) is great - it's the theme song on my Myspace page!  I also love the recent Heinekin commercial set to the tune of a song (possibly) titled "It's Love".  It's a very happy song and my husband plays it all the time for our kids - they love it too!  
I loved the Office Max commercial that played "Rubberband Man"  with the guy pushing the cart through the office.  

However, the commercial that got me was the one for the car (can't remember which one but it was a small car) and it played Ice Cube's "Roll All Day."  They only played the part that said "I got a full tank of unleaded" over and over but I thought it was hilarious as it is one of my favorite songs.  It is quite a risque song and was surprised they chose it for a car.
Who would've thought - The Clash's excellent version of "Pressure Drop" belted out for a Nissan commercial.  Oi!
I will admit that I found the Da da da song from the VW add that I went out and got the single:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=faaD-XfBehY&feature=related

I also think the song makes the Liberty Mutual ad. I get goosebumps:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e26RARbqarQ
I really like the Discovery Channel's commercial, but I can't stand the Target Commercials that use the Beatles songs, they change the lyrics turning great music in commercial BS, EX - "you say hello, I say good BUY."
To Gigi:
I work in advertising -- print not TV -- and it is illegal to use an artist's work without permission. In fact, many companies have been sued for using music, even sound-alike. Tom Waits turned down Dentyne and when they used a sound-alike, he sued and won. Believe me, these songs are paid for, and paid for in spades. Remember, people, the Beatles don't own most of their own songs (thanks to Wacko Jacko) and so you see the ones that do own those songs, I believe it's Sony now, selling them to whoever wants them.

A lot of artists now are indeed using advertising as a means to get their work known, after Moby's success taking that route. Wilco can't get played on the radio (except maybe in Chicago) but got a lot of exposure when three of their songs from "Sky Blue Sky" were used in Volkswagon ads.

My agency has paid megabucks for "Everyday People" by Sly and the Family Stone (Smarties ads in Canada) and "Goin' to the Country" by Canned Heat for Polysporin (also in Canada). It can actually be a very expensive prospect
I loved the song "It's Love" (chris Knox) in the Heineken Light commercial so much, I went out and bought it.  The CD, not the beer"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hScEAauZgZg
The use of great, classic songs in commercials almost always turns my stomach.  The very idea of the great rock classics being requisitioned by corporations to sell us stuff that we don't need strikes me as manipulative, and I loathe being manipulated.
It's sad, but I sometimes think that any artists that allow their music to be used to shill are ultimately selling out.  They all do it; can't really blame them when there are some really good ideas out there.  Some of the music is even written with future commercial use in mind, but what ever happened to the higher purpose, the aesthetic purity of the lyrics and melody as a medium of sharing the human experience and creativity of the soul?  If the association with the product really makes an imprint, it'll be that much harder to separate the music from it later.  The image I create in my mind when hearing the song on its own becomes overwritten with the image from the ad.  
The Jeep ad is a work of genius.  It is catchy and feel good all the way through.  I sing along every time I watch it.  And the Discovery Channel ad is great too.  The timing of the clips from the shows is great and I love how the stars are all singing along.  Those ads have my vote for best commercial for the year.  
i love the coke ad with the politicians that played during the super bowl (and i saw it again before Indy 4).  I did a google to find out the artist is Latch Key Kid and the song is "good times"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iZIHSn1ILxs
I used to like 'Unwritten' by Natasha Bedingfield...until I started thinking about how clean and shiny my hair could be if I used Pantene.
I like the iTunes one for Coldplay and the one Bob Dylan did a year or so ago.  But honestly, do they really need the money? I would've bought their albums anyway.
I absolutely love the mountain dew commerical for the competition of the three new flavors that uses Jimi Hendrix's electric guitar verison of the Star Spangled Banner!! OMG!!! Its awesome!!1


SEND A COMMENT

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

TRACKBACKS

Trackbacks are links to weblogs that reference this post. Like comments, trackbacks do not appear until approved by us. The trackback URL for this post is: http://testpattern.msnbc.msn.com/trackback.aspx?PostID=1183041

Syndicate This Site

Add Test Pattern to your news reader:
live.com xml
myyahoo msn
bloglines newsgator
google