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For airports, background music no longer is an afterthought

Airport Music
December 19, 2024

SEATAC, Washington (AP) โ€” Background music is no longer an afterthought at many airports, which are hiring local musicians and carefully curating playlists to help lighten travelersโ€™ moods.

Londonโ€™s Heathrow Airport built a stage to showcase emerging British performers for the first time this summer. The program was so successful the airport hopes to bring it back in 2025. Nashville International Airport has five stages that host more than 800 performances per year, from country musicians to jazz combos. In the Dominican Republic, Punta Cana International Airport greets passengers with live merengue music.

Tiffany Idiart and her two nieces were delighted to hear musicians during a recent layover at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport.

For airports, background music no longer is an afterthought
Airport Music

โ€œI like it. Thereโ€™s a lot of people here and they can all hear it,โ€ said Grace Idiart, 9. โ€œIf their flight got delayed or something like that, they could have had a hard day. And so the music could have made them feel better.โ€

Airports are also carefully curating their recorded playlists. Detroit Metro Airport plays Motown hits in a tunnel connecting its terminals. Austin-Bergstrom International Airport in Texas has a playlist of local artists compiled by an area radio station. Singaporeโ€™s Changi Airport commissioned a special piano accompaniment for its giant digital waterfall.

Music isnโ€™t a new phenomenon in airport terminals. Brian Enoโ€™s โ€œMusic for Airports,โ€ an album released in 1978, helped define the ambient music genre. Itโ€™s minimalist and designed to calm.

But Barry McPhillips, the head of international creative for Mood Media, which provides music for airports and other public spaces, said technology is enabling background music to be less generic and more tailored to specific places or times of day.

For airports, background music no longer is an afterthought
CORRECTION Airport Music

Mood Media โ€“ formerly known as Muzak โ€“ develops playlists to appeal to business travelers or families depending on whoโ€™s in the airport at any given time. It might program calmer music in the security line but something more energizing in the duty-free store.

โ€œWe see it as a soundscape,โ€ McPhillips said. โ€œWe design for all of these moments.โ€

Thereโ€™s a science to Mood Musicโ€™s decisions on volume, tempo, even whether to play a song in a major key versus a minor one, he added.

โ€œHow do we want to affect their mood at that moment?โ€ McPhillips said. โ€œItโ€™s not just like, โ€˜Hereโ€™s a load of songs.โ€™ Itโ€™s a load of songs for that 10-minute segment, and then we move to the next 10 minutes.โ€

For airports, background music no longer is an afterthought
Airport Music

At the same time, many airports are going low-tech, hiring local musicians to serenade travelers and give them a sense of the place theyโ€™re passing through.

Chicagoโ€™s Oโ€™Hare and Midway airports have more than 100 live performances each year. Phoenixโ€™s Sky Harbor International Airport began a live music program five years ago and now has two stages featuring local artists.

Tami Kuiken, the manager of airport music in Seattle, said the Seattle-Tacoma airport launched its live music program about a decade ago after a city commissioner heard live music at the airport in Austin, Texas.

โ€œThe idea was like, โ€™Man, why doesnโ€™t Seattle have music? Weโ€™re a music city too,โ€ Kuiken said.

For airports, background music no longer is an afterthought
CORRECTION Airport Music

At first, the airport created a playlist featuring emerging artists along with famous ones like Pearl Jam. Then it decided to try live musicians for a 12-week trial. It was so successful that the airport now features live musicians daily and is building new performance spaces.

โ€œPeopleโ€™s anxiety levels are very high when theyโ€™re traveling,โ€ Kuiken said. โ€œThe feedback that we started getting was that once they got through the checkpoint and they were greeted with music, all of a sudden their anxiety and stress levels dropped.โ€

The programs also benefit musicians, who get paid to perform and gain wider exposure. When Colorado Springs Airport announced a live music program in March, more than 150 musicians applied. It now hosts two two-hour performances each week.

David James, a singer and guitarist who plays at Seattleโ€™s airport about once a week, said waking up in time for a daytime gig took some adjustment. But heโ€™s gained new fans from all over the world.

For airports, background music no longer is an afterthought
Airport Music

โ€œI get really sweet responses from people all the time, saying, โ€˜That was so soothing to be able to just sit and listen to music in between flights,โ€™โ€ James said. โ€œSo it feels like itโ€™s especially therapeutic for people.โ€

Country stars like Blake Shelton and Keith Urban have come through Nashville's airport and interacted with local musicians, said Stacey Nickens, the airport's vice president of corporate communications and marketing. Shelton even gave one his guitar.

Otto Stuparitz, a musicologist and lecturer at the University of Amsterdam who has studied airport music, said airports should think carefully about their selections. Music thatโ€™s meant to be actively listened to โ€“ like live music or catchy pop songs โ€“ can be very distracting in an already chaotic environment, he said. He has noticed some airports โ€“ especially in Europe -- turning off piped melodies altogether.

But McPhillips said big spaces like airports can feel cold and unwelcoming without background music.

For airports, background music no longer is an afterthought
Airport Music

โ€œA well-crafted audio strategy is one that people arenโ€™t particularly cognizant of,โ€ he said. โ€œThey just know theyโ€™re having a good time and that itโ€™s appropriate.โ€

___

Durbin reported from Detroit.

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