Times Colonist

Ontario candidates take care with songs

- ALLISON JONES

TORONTO — Head to an election campaign rally in Ontario and you’ll find the NDP leader Feeling Good, the Liberal premier Just Like Fire and the Tories’ top man For the People.

The carefully chosen songs are played before the politician­s address crowds of supporters — and they hint at the messages the parties want to send.

The songs politician­s pick are usually upbeat — intended to energize their supporters, said Henry Jacek, a political science professor at McMaster University.

“If you pack in a lot of your party workers and you want to motivate them, having a good song — even if they go to a number of rallies and they hear it over and over again — it does essentiall­y start to send psychologi­cal messages, that they ought to be working harder for the campaign,” he said. “For the people that are there it is very important.”

New Democrat Leader Andrea Horwath has chosen Feeling Good by the Sheepdogs to enter her campaign events and Young & Wild by The Strumbella­s sometimes to exit. She chose those two songs because they are by Canadian bands, a spokeswoma­n said. “She is proud to promote Canadian artists as she tours the province during the campaign.”

The Progressiv­e Conservati­ves have opted for an original song composed for Doug Ford’s campaign called For the People.

The title is one of Ford’s campaign slogans and his team commission­ed the tune from a Toronto composer, who the campaign said doesn’t want to be named because he doesn’t want any credit for it.

The 30-second song, with a stadium rock, anthem feel plays at rallies, in Ford’s ads, and some staffers have even made it their cellphone ringtone.

“For what’s best, for our lives, for the people,” the unnamed artist sings. “Gotta fight for what’s right for the people. Right now is the time, we gotta speak our minds. Bring us hope, bring us change for the people.”

Before the campaign, Ford had been using Eye of the Tiger by Survivor at his events, but he and his team wanted to go in a new direction, said spokeswoma­n Melissa Lantsman.

“We commission­ed a song because people wanted something different,” she said.

“They want change. They want a new kind of candidate with a new kind of campaign. This is an exciting time for Ontario and we wanted to tap into that feeling.”

Liberal Premier Kathleen Wynne is using Just Like Fire, a song by Pink for the movie Alice Through the Looking Glass.

Her team wanted a song performed by a strong, female artist “with a positive message about aiming high and working hard to achieve success,” said spokeswoma­n Drew Davidson.

“This has consistent­ly been her message to young women looking to enter politics and public life and something she hopes to push throughout this campaign. Plus, it’s catchy.”

The Liberals only settled on the song about a week into the campaign, trying out various options through the first days on the trail.

One of those songs was Brave by Sara Bareilles — a song that critics accused pop singer Katy Perry of copying for her song Roar, which Wynne used as her campaign song in 2014.

The campaigns tend to use short clips of the songs, usually just the chorus, but a copyright lawyer says that doesn’t actually negate the legal need to get consent from the artist or license the song. “The appropriat­e thing to do would be to respect the artist and at least ask for the use of it and ask for a moral rights waiver,” said Ken Thompson.

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