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8 Reasons We Love Music On The Journey

Print This Post Print This Post    17 Mar 2008 in Life by Cedric Pieterse
Music reminds us of our travels, just as much as it inspires us to travel. It urges us to unfold the maps, pack the backpack and hit the road.

Photo by Cedric Pieterse

Every time I listen to Pink Floyd’s Shine on You Crazy Diamond, I think back to the Makgadi-kgadi Pans in Botswana. These pans cover 6 177.6 square miles, and from the middle, you can see the curvature of the Earth.

Once, I drove my Land Rover over the pans and decided to stop in the middle and sleep under the stars. Pink Floyd played on the CD player and it made the whole experience surreal.

When I listen to Joan Baez I’m taken back to a surfing trip and a remote beach down the East Coast of Africa. I can smell the freshly caught crayfish crackling over the coals and hear the waves whooshing in the dark.

Music reminds us of our travels, just as much as it inspires us to travel. It urges us to unfold the maps, pack the backpack and hit the road.

Here are 8 reasons we love music on the journey:

1. Music is a universal language

Local music breaks down the barriers of language and ethnicity. Music is a universal language, which uplifts the spirit and helps to make friends.

People all over the world identify with music. The essence of ancient cultures lies in music.

People all over the world identify with music. The essence of ancient cultures lies in music, and if we are lucky, we can experience a bit of it.

I was one of very few Westerners to have been invited to a traditional Ghule-whankulu dance in Malawi. These dancers belong to a secret society, their true identities are known only by themselves, and no one in the village knows who is behind the masks.

Their energetic dancing accompanied by awe-inspiring drum rhythms will always be a part of my memories.

2. Music reminds you of the people

Music reminds you of the people you met along the journey. Like a little romance I had with the girl from Holland captured perfectly by Natalie Imbruglia while we were waiting for the bus. It was a bittersweet farewell.

She promised to phone me, lying naked on the floor. (It never happened…)

3. Music can make the world yours

Music shortens those long hot and smelly journeys in the back of a crowded bus. Music can drown out the noise of a big city. Listening to your favorite tracks can enhance the experience of seeing a natural or man-made wonder for the first time.

Make that “touristy” spot, a piece of your own travel memories without the camera-toting holidaymakers. For me it was Moby at Victoria Falls in Zambia.

4. Music can ignite your imagination

Photo by Cedric Pieterse

Recently, I boarded a plane at the start of a new journey. As the plane hurtled down the runway on take-off, Lynyrd Skynyrd’s Free Bird was reminding me that I was free as a bird, and that I would never change.

Too many places to see. Music fueled the excitement. The promise of new adventure. It made the farewell to my family easier.

5. Music can enhance the present

Music makes the world a little more interesting. It helps your thoughts and imagination to be a little bit more creative.

I was sitting at the Stockholm train-station, and I was listening to Vaya Con Dios’s Don’t cry for Louie. I saw this shady guy with a trench coat and dark glasses, and he had two tarty looking women with him.

Pimp and prostitutes. I saw Louie. I had the urge to walk over to one of the women and ask her to sing for me, in that lovely low and sexy voice. The fear of a slap in the face, and possible arrest for public disturbance stopped me.

And Louie would have been pissed off.

6. Music can scar you

Music is a form of traveling on its own. Traveling without moving.

Sometimes, music can have a negative impact as well. Malawi has cured me of Peter Tosh and Bob Marley forever.

I was staying at a backpackers in Inkhatha Bayand, and couldn’t help but notice some other “beach boys” that spoke with overdone Jamaican accents. The local Rastas.

They were rolling joint after joint of “electric spinach” and listening to some shockingly bad, very loud distortions of Buffalo Soldier and Redemption Song. Over and fucking over.

7. Music can be a useful

I have once used music as a weapon. I arrived at this nice little campsite at the Drakensberg in South Africa, on the Lesotho border.

I set up camp away from the rest of the crowd when a noisy family decided to come and disturb my peace. They settled right next to me, and the kids proceeded to kick up a lot of noise.

I put Tom Wait’s Bone Machine on at top volume and took a few sips of Rum straight out the bottle while I gave the mother the evil eye.

Needless to say, they packed up and left me in peace. I always reserve old Tom for warding off witchdoctors and noisy kids.

8. Music is travel

Mostly, I have fond memories of my travels when I am listening to music at home and working towards the next trip. It is like a form of traveling on its own. Traveling without moving.

How has music enhanced your journeys? Share your stories in the comments!

Cedric Pieterse

Cedric Pieterse was born and raised in South Africa, and always had a passion for traveling. He eventually got fed-up with climbing the corporate ladder and decided to pack his bags and hit the road. After four years of criss-crossing Africa, Cedric is currently living in Sweden.

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10 Comments »

  1. Comment by Mike — March 17, 2008

    We stumbled across an aging hippie at a VW festival in the UK, sitting in the open doors of his tatty Samba bus and playing his songs… we were transfixed… it was perfect in time and place, when he had completed his “gig” we bought a CD off him… and then played it to death whilst we travelled top to bootm and coast to coast in our own VW campervan… the music was perfect for the trip, and listening to the songs now revives memories of that great holiday….

    Druids Brew is the name of the artist… and the Song 34 horses is perfect if you are coaxing an underpowered VW up a long hill…

    http://www.druidsbrew.com/

    Take it easy…

  2. Comment by Tim Patterson — March 17, 2008

    I’ve never traveled with music before - never owned an ipod - but I do have wonderful memories associated with music on the road - Pink Floyd has a special place in my heart.

  3. Comment by Cedric Pieterse — March 17, 2008

    Do you sing to yourself Tim? I have the entire Pink Floyd collection as well as Rodger Waters and Dave Gilmor albums. I actually like the early stuff as well. Piper At The Gates of Dawn and Saucer Full of Secrets, with Syd Barret when he was still sort of sane….

  4. Comment by Eva — March 17, 2008

    Couldn’t agree more, Cedric. Two days ago I drove highway 61 through the Mississippi Delta, accompanied by Robert Johnson, Charlie Patton, and the other old Delta bluesmen. Perfect. I’m certainly never going to hear the music the same way again.

  5. Comment by Kim — March 17, 2008

    Peter Gabrielle’s “In Your Eyes” brings back great memories of Cape Town (my home away from home!) and Mandela’s first 46664 Concert in November 2003. The Qantas version of “I still call Australia home” pulls at my heart strings and draws out my patriotic side - especially when I am travelling. But, I get the exact same feeling from Johnny Clegg’s “The Crossing - Osiyeza” – it brings back memories of G&Ts, watching the sunset over the veld and the smell of braai coals. It also reminds me how much I miss and love South Africa (luckily I’m returning shortly!). Now, though, I can’t seem to get Mika’s “No Happy Ending” out of my head – it reminds me of a recent planned trip to Cambodia that never eventuated (naturally that had to do with a date and a guy).

  6. Comment by shakester — March 17, 2008

    I havent travelld with music either. I’m somehow wary of switching off from the sounds of the place I am in; they’re a part of my experience.
    I did use to travel a lot for work once, lots of on the road trips,with tape decks in the car (yes, tapes). There are some very fond memories in music from then, for sure.

    In ‘06 I was sitting at lunch on Had Rin beach in Ko Phangan, Thailand eating some brilliantly spicy yellow curry with rice. A calming-happy melody played, which I couldnt place, and neither could me wife. I checked with them, went through their CDs, but they were all unmarked mp3 collections.

    Many months later I figured out which song it was. Today, almost everytime I listen to Jack Johnson’s ‘Good People’ , i think of the cold beer, hot sun, steaming curry and crystal clear water.
    sigh…

  7. Comment by Claire — March 26, 2008

    Only yesterday I did a 14 hour bus journey from Shikonville Cambodia through Phnom Penh to Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam. Thanks to the mp3 invention I managed to listen to my entire teen years (the 80’s) in music on full battery, from Dead Kennedys, early Ultravox, Clash, Depeche Mode (then and now and covers!) This time spent on the road is precious to me and is the only quality music time I have, it also gives me my best ideas. By the time I arrived I had re-lived my entire adolescent life, listening again to all these great bands which has now formed brand new memories of my time travelling. I compare this freedom to 1996 when I went travelling last, I had one chunky walkman that ran out of battery every 3rd tape of six 90 minute tapes which was all I could carry at the time

    And how is it the ipod plays the right tune, fitting moods and lyrics at the right moment? It is meant to be random.

  8. Comment by Grace — March 28, 2008

    Whenever I hear American Woman, the Guess Who version, I think of this guy in Florence. I was the last one in line for a Botticelli exhibit and the guy began to sing American Woman. In between “American woman, get away from me. American woman, mama let me be” he would make small talk. I was utterly confused by his behavior (it took a good 5 minutes for him to hand me my ticket) and the lyrics. Being young I took the lyrics quite literally. I can’t help but smile when I hear the song now.

  9. Comment by kath — April 7, 2008

    Dick Clark once referred to this (songs that remind you of experiences) as the “soundtrack of our lives.” Maybe you could make an audio scrapbook of your travels!

  10. Comment by Cedric Pieterse — April 10, 2008

    Kath, I already have a audio scrapbook of my travels! That is what made me write the article in the first place. As I write this, I am listening to The Knack- My Sharona! and it reminds me of a wild party in Kampala, Uganda….
    I am so glad I am not sitting with the resultant hangover :)

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