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Guest post: "Pop music will lift you - and your child - up"

78 replies

MumsnetGuestPosts · 03/02/2016 14:37

Just before tea most days, you'll find me back in the 1980s, feeling like I'm twirling in a pink puffball dress, my T-bars clomping to shiny synthesisers and big, doofy drums. My hands stretch down to two chubby little paws, and a little boy in dungarees smiles daftly at his mum.

This is my favourite time of day. I connect my iPad up to the speakers, and turn Spotify on. A few bursts of Wheels On The Bus and the theme tune to Postman Pat's Special Delivery Service later, and 21-month-old Evan is subjected to his daily pop disco.

The best thing about having kids, in my opinion? Being able to act like a kid again.

It was while I was pregnant, watching all my friend enjoying music with their little ones, and while Evan was tiny, that I got thinking about how we want to share music with our children. While every other hour seemed dedicated to bum-wiping, burping and bibs, listening to pop songs on the radio became a comfort and a tonic that reminded me of the wider world.

In my brightly-coloured book for pre-school children, Pop!, I write about how pop music is a liberating, life-giving thing. It's also incredible to sing, dance and dress up - to identify with songs that teach us about the world, and to explore our identities through interesting, flamboyant pop stars, such as David Bowie, Madonna, the Pet Shop Boys and Kylie.

We begin this sharing of music at baby singing classes, of course. I've done them all and could happily never hear Wind The Bobbin Up again. But sharing our own favourite songs is a very different thing. As someone who writes about music for broadsheets and women's magazines, and has DJ'd several times at the brilliant Big Fish Little Fish mini-raves, I'm a pop geek, that's true – but I also know when us parents have to give our kids room. So here are my tips for introducing your little people to pop.

  • Don't worry about curating highbrow choices. Yes, we live in a world where Bach to Baby concerts and the like introduce our kids to high culture, and we grew up making uber-cool mixtapes or playlists for our friends. Children work rather differently. I found this out in my late teens, after making my much younger brother a tape that had Joy Division and Leonard Cohen on it (the poor boy returned his Smurfs' album tout-suite). There's just as much nourishment to be found in the sound of a man singing "awopbopaloobop awopbamboom!", so start with bouncy pop hits full of silly lyrics, noises and voices. There's Little Richard's Tutti Frutti, Millie's My Boy Lollipop ("you make my soul go...GIDDYUP!"), Hot Butter's Popcorn (lots of funny bleeps), and Trio's Da Da Da (the gobbledygook title speaks for itself). Serious nerd parents, take note: this also introduces them to rock and roll, reggae, '70s electronica, and '80s German pop.
  • If your children are into specific things, play songs you like that share their subjects. For instance, my friend's son Sam was obsessed with trains as a toddler. He quickly got similarly obsessed with Kraftwerk's Trans-Europe Express quickly, and later enjoyed Kraftwerk's The Robots – he found the band's robotic voices funny, and the melody perky. Ta-da! He spent all his downtime wanting to watch their videos on YouTube. A nice break from Thomas for his parents, certainly.
  • Don't limit what you play. Evan's dad likes weirder, electronic music, which he still played while on dad duty when Evan was little – some of it not unlike the white noise that used to blare over our son's cot. That's a sound Evan still likes, so your kids' tastes might surprise you. His latest favourite to cheekily stick his tongue out to? Lazarus by David Bowie. Me neither.
  • Remember that being a good parent is about being happy yourself, too. If you've had a rubbish day at work, and playing Neneh Cherry's Buffalo Stance out loud would make things better after the nursery run – it always makes things better – then do. (Evan responded to this one with a twirl.)
  • But also don't be sad if your children don't like everything you play. They'll like what they like, whether that be the Postman Pat theme (God forbid) or whatever's high in the charts (I've already heard myself shouting "That's not music!" at the telly like my mother did). My playlist (which you can find here) contains a selection of songs that inspired Pop!, as well as tracks from the stars nodded to in it, and it's full of songs I've enjoyed alone, as well as with little ones. Let it inspire your own. Then grab a moment in the day, pump up the volume, grab those paws. Whatever happens, I guarantee pop will lift you up.
OP posts:
NewLife4Me · 05/02/2016 19:17

There is no genre of music that is more superior, they all do different things.
There is a snobbery that goes with all genres too, I used to hear it everyday, but now only a few times a week. Grin
I was reading an interesting article published in a book that related all times in history to it's popular music.
All the great classical composers were popular in their time and there was none of this waiting to clap malarky, you shouted out and clapped after solo's just like they do in Jazz, folk, blues, do they in Rock?
Does the music/ music and lyrics do anything for you? If so, it doesn't matter what genre it is.

ThreeBecomeFour · 05/02/2016 22:47

We love a boogie in our house, especially morning ones. Absolute radio often plays "Footloose" in the mornings and the children love seeing me dance around the kitchen Kevin Bacon Stylee. I joke now that my 3 year old knows more Taylor Swift songs than nursery rhymes. I subjected myself to endless ELC CDs with my eldest and I swore "never again". The children are embracing the Barenaked Ladies and are also fed a diet of classical as well. I can show off my ability to remember the lyrics to nearly every song I've ever heard (I can't remember anything else though). I tell them so much of my history listening to music which enriches their knowledge of their bonkers mother. I also embrace music from every era, including current and will always strive to listen to their music too.... As long as it's not drum and bass. Even I have my limits.....

HopefulHamster · 05/02/2016 23:07

Maestro you're wrong about comic format. There's loads of great titles coming through in comics/graphic novels at the moment. Really well-written, award-winning, memorable stuff. Going back a few decades, Neil Gaimain's Sandman series is a literary comic book with lasting power.

It is snobbery to assume that pop and comics can't offer something with depth and beauty just because they are not what you are looking for.

I do think, going back to the OP, that pop is great for kids. Left to my own devices, I don't exactly have the best musical tastes, I'm normally listening to either rock or indie groups/men, or singer-songwriter women. Kids showed no interest in either. From teeny tiny babies (and they are four years apart) they have absolutely loved dancing to pop from The Beatles to Bruno Mars. Daughter crying in the car? Whack on the pop music and bam, she's bopping up and down (as much as her car seat allows, naturally).

Nowadays, when the TV's been on too long but just toys aren't cutting it, I'll stick some music on really loud and we all dance around the living room. Love it.

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