I will labor incredibly
over the right mix of music for certain situations. Like I used to do in high
school, I enjoy making music mixes – using my iTunes library, though, not
cassette tapes - for birthday parties, casual friends-over hangouts, family
dinners, and, what I plan to do tomorrow, the Hartford Marathon.
I am running only the 5k, though to test myself more
strenuously, I’m planning to run it twice. (Shhhhh. Don’t tell anyone.) But, as
many runners will tell you, at least those listening to music – the Hartford
Marathon people discourages, but doesn’t ban, the use of headphones – the right
mix is important, critically important. The right mix, having songs with fast
beats, uplifting, motivating lyrics, and positive associations, can put you in a
“zone”, and is one of the tricks of the trade for runners. Well, that, and good
sneakers, the right breakfast, and, of course, some training (or a fearless
attitude) helps.
But the music is what echoes in your head while struggling to
get up hills; music is what encourages you to push yourself during a race when
you are running out of steam. When there isn’t an encouraging person – sometimes
a police officer – standing on the sidewalk, a runner’s choice of music can give
them a little edge.
Yesterday, I put the finishing touches on my mix – different
from mixes of other races I’ve done, complete with a few new songs. I told
myself: No slow songs this year. No thoughtful ballads that might seem
inspirational, but are too slow on the course. There’s nothing worse than that,
or a goof-up, like an inadvertent shuffle to the Beatles’ “Yellow Submarine.”
So, I will lay bare, my top 10 picks from my iTunes 2013
Hartford Marathon mix, for all to see and scrutinize.
- “Some Nights” by Fun.. This
year’s number one song. The drums and the choral chanting in the background
bring the energy to this song. Memorable line: “This is it, boys, This is war.
What are we waiting for? Why don’t we break the rules already?”
- “Hearts on Fire” by John
Cafferty. Who could forget this one from Rocky IV? USA vs. Soviet Union. Rocky
doing situps hanging upside down in a barn. Memorable line: “Hearts on fire.
Strong desire… rages deep within.”
- “Party Rock Anthem” by
LMFAO. Cool synthesizer music and drum machine gets the adrenaline flowing.
Memorable line: “Party rock is in the house tonight. Everybody just have a good
time. And we gonna make you lose your mind.”
- “Crazytrain” by Ozzy
Osborne. Just a psycho song, from beginning to end. Makes you mad, gets you
hyped. Memorable line: “I’m going off the rails on a Crazy train.”
- “Centerfold” by J. Geils
Band. Going old-school again, I know, but this one is upbeat and fun. Memorable
line: “My blood runs cold. My memory has just been sold. My Angel is the
centerfold.”
- “Home” by Philip Phillips.
This one got me this past summer as I watched the Olympics when they showed the
athletes’ highlights after winning medals. Memorable line “Don’t pay not mind to
the demons. They fill you with fear.”
- “Empire State of Mind” by
Jay-Z. You just feel tough listening to this song, almost as tough as Rocky.
“New York. Concrete jungle where dreams are made of. There’s nothing you can’t
do. These streets will make you feel brand new, the lights will inspire
you.”
- “Last Friday Night” by Katy
Perry. The only female featured on my mix. Memorable line: None appropriate for
a family newspaper. But the “TGIF” “TGIF” chant toward the end is pretty
cool.
- “Panama” by Van Halen. When
David Lee Roth was the band’s lead singer, the first time, this band rocked.
Eddie Van Halen’s guitar pulses. Memorable word: “Pa-na-ma!
Pa-na-ma-uh-ah-uh-ah-uh!”
- “No Easy Way Out” by Robert Tepper. Another Rocky IV song. When Rocky takes a drive in his Lamborghini, reflecting on the purpose for his next fight, who cannot get inspired? Memorable line: “There’s no easy way out. There’s no shortcut home.”
It may sound strange to say, but I am psyched to come into
Hartford early on a Saturday morning, as I know thousands of others are. Like
them, I will have the right shirt, pair of shorts (even though they’re calling
for an overnight frost!), and, of course, a fully charged iPod with my carefully
selected mix of songs.
Will my music make me run faster? Perhaps. Perhaps not. But
as long as I think it does, that’s all that matters.
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