Kate Bush’s Stranger Things Triumph Reminds Us of the Joy of Discovering Music Through Film and TV
A foreward.
In my late 40s and older, I’ve talked to people in their 20s while I’ve resumed taking college classes again, and some of them are totally unfamiliar with mainstream artists of the 1980s, such as Billy Idol and Duran Duran.
I have no idea how teens and 20 somethings today – with the incredibly easy access to music via You Tube and free sign ups to streaming services such as Spotify – can be so lazy and ignorant about music.
When I was a teen in the 1980s, I was not only interested in music I grew up listening to in the 1970s and 1980s, but also music from previous eras (my mother used to play me music from the 1950s – Elvis, The Platters, Buddy Holly and so on).
As a teen in the 1980s, I would’ve given my right arm to have had something like Spotify or You Tube back in the 1980s. I would’ve spent every waking moment just checking out different contemporary genres as well as pop, rock, country western, classical music – everything! – from previous decades and centuries.
All we had back then, though, were the radio and the occasional musical variety shows on the three main networks.
I am not saying it’s wrong to discover a great song that is decades old via a new movie or television show, but I don’t know why kids today are so ignorant about music, when they have such easy access to it – kids today do not have to wait for a great song to appear in a movie – they can go research music from the past in an instant, FOR FREE, on their cell phones and iPads.
Kate Bush’s Stranger Things Triumph Reminds Us of the Joy of Discovering Music Through Film and TV
Excerpts:
Liz Shannon Miller
June 3, 2022
This week, in the aftermath of Stranger Things Season 4 debuting, English singer/songwriter Kate Bush experienced a remarkable renaissance, as her iconic 1985 hit “Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)” became a chart-busting hit across multiple streaming services.
Over the course of Memorial Day weekend, the song reached the top 10 on Apple Music in 34 different countries, becoming one of the most-Shazamed songs of the week and getting permanently stuck in every viewer’s head — hopefully music supervisor Nora Felder is feeling pretty good about her accomplishment.


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