Comments & Discussion

Boston University moderates comments to facilitate an informed, substantive, civil conversation. Abusive, profane, self-promotional, misleading, incoherent or off-topic comments will be rejected. Moderators are staffed during regular business hours (EST) and can only accept comments written in English. Statistics or facts must include a citation or a link to the citation.

There are 14 comments on Running: Powered by a C Major Progression

  1. I totally agree. I would not be able to run without my music. Running is my favorite way of dancing. It keeps me sane every day. Unfortunately, most of my running songs sound the same (eurodance techno) so they get old pretty fast, leaving me constantly on the lookout for cheap replacements.
    Good luck with your training! (And I think you should wear your iPod for the race. You can always pause it to hear the cheering.)

  2. Just a quick correction – since the Boston Marathon is a USTAF certified course and one of the 5 courses in the World Marathon Majors, use of headphones is actually prohibited, a fact which the race packet will remind racers of. Of course given the large 30,000+ field, race monitors usually only monitor the elites, but as I ran the marathon last year, let me say that you don’t want to use an iPod or any other device that will interfere with experiencing how amazing the crowd support is in this race. Good Luck!

  3. Hi, Caleb.

    I think you really nailed the whole running-with-music thing on the head. A song that keeps finding its way onto my play list is The Flys “Got You Where I Want You.” After about 10 listens it wears a little thin, but it’s a good song to run to. Another guilty pleasure is Bad Company’s “Shooting Star.” Cheesy, but it’s working for me on my runs right now. Good luck!

  4. As a music therapist in a past life and having studied the effect of music on time estimation for my master’s thesis, I can attest to the fact that music can make time seem to go more quickly as well as have an effect on one’s physiology. During my running days (pre-iPod), I would sing to myself (“Rub Your Tummy” from “Sesame Street” was a mainstay!) to maintain my pace and ensure breath control.

  5. “Get ’em high” by Kanye gets me way jazzed.

    Something about “Live you life” by T.I. does it too.

    “Army” by Ben Folds

    All time favorite, “Lose yourself” by Eminem

    Just some thoughts

  6. I thought I was crazy when I started counting beats in the music and daydreaming about “Can I run to this song?” So, I’m not crazy, just a runner with an Ipod. Here a re a few of my favorites: Lust for Life (Iggy Pop), Runnin’ Down a Dream (Tom Petty), Vertigo (U2), Theme from Linus and Lucy (Vince Guaraldi Trio). I laugh and think of Snoopy and his dancing smile-it keeps me smiling until the next hill.
    Thanks Caleb for sharing and best of luck next month in Boston!

  7. Despite the size of Boston, they were quite effective last year in monitoring headphone usage. We had to show our bibs in order to gain entry to our corrals (and I was no where near the elite corral), and we weren’t allowed in if headphones were visible. Some people snuck headphones in and put them on immediately before the race, but as others have said, they missed out on what makes Boston such an amazing event.

  8. Thanks for the good thoughts. Actually, last December, the USATF amended its rule regarding headphones, leaving the policy in the hands of race directors. Click here.

    Caleb 

  9. i’ve run 7 marathons, including boston 5 times. brought the ipod along each time and suspect i’d lose my mind running a marathon without it. every marathon, boston included, has long, quiet stretches of road where music can really help push you along. that’s when the sound of music (no, not the corny flick about vermont’s trappe family) is your best friend.

    important caveat: don’t crank the volume! it’s both risky (you need to hear that over-zealous runner shooting the 18″ hole between you and the hot girl next to you) as well as an impediment to hearing the incredibly powerful cheers of the crowds along the route.

    as far as the usatf rules applying to those of us not in the elite field, really, who gives a crap? you’ve trained long and hard for the marathon and paid a hefty entry fee… as long as you act responsibly, there’s no reason to leave your music at home.

    rock on and run strong!
    -alain
    http://www.bostonrunner.com

  10. I can totally relate to this article.. As I am training for Boston, I too ran my last 21.5 mile run “naked” (no ipod). I ran the first 10 with another runner, and then went solo. I was surprised that I did fine without the music. Music has helped me in the past for sure… I ran most of my personal records last year while wearing an Ipod. In my last 2 marathons I carried the Ipod, but did not turn it on until I hit 16 miles. When I stopped to stretch in mile 24 of the VT City marathon last May- I started fussing with trying to find the right song–all but ignoring the crowd around me — and they were encouraging me to keep going!

    But I figure there is no way using music on a lonely run can compare with the excitement of the course and spectators at the Boston Marathon.

  11. When I was on the track team up at BC, I never had music for training runs. I was a sprinter anyway, so distance runs weren’t an everyday thing. But at meets, I usually had my walkman before races. Some of the better tunes I remember were on the Top Gun Soundtrack – especially the two Kenny Loggins songs: “Playing With the Boys” and “Danger Zone”.
    There’s also a song on there titled “Destination Unknown” that was upbeat and decent, I forget who recorded it. Anyway, those are good for their tempo, their cheesiness, their ability to make your head get
    lost in movie scenes, and the lyrics are actually reflective of roads and competition, etc.

  12. After 13 marathons my knees aren’t able to sustain the wear of marathon training. I never used music while running. I felt it safer to hear anything approaching that wasn’t immediately in sight. Things like dogs, cars, bikes, runners, preditors, anything that I should be aware of being present, I wanted to be aware of. Not trying to sound, sexist or parinoid, but women should be vigilant of their running habits, don’t be so routine that someone can set their watch to your location while you run, and I feel it best to run with a partner.

Post a comment.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *