"IN THE AIR TONIGHT" PHIL COLLINS (1981)

This month, I’m looking back at movies and tv shows to rediscover songs that graced the screen. The scenes and the music are inseparable. They’re engrained in our heads and our hearts. And they’re proof that the best music we have doesn’t exist in isolation. It attaches itself to a moment or an experience. #SceneSongs

Show: Miami Vice

Before the mainstream pop tendencies of No Jacket Required came this Phil Collins anthem that became larger than life without crushing the charts. It was a dark period in his personal life, and the musical explorations in the song reflected the prog DNA of Peter Gabriel and early Genesis that we don’t typically associate w/Collins’ solo career. The song became larger than life in one of the greatest scenes in television history, occurring in the pilot episode of Miami Vice. Nearly a full minute goes by with no dialogue. The scene almost entirely takes place in a car. Crockett and Tubbs, barely saying a word. Phil Collins saying everything that needs to be said.

The power of “In The Air Tonight” can be boiled down to two moments, both revolving around the percussion. First, the creepy, ominous drum machine in the opening, a peculiar instrument of choice for a drummer. And second, the explosive drum barrage at the 3:40 mark, which is arguably the most famous drum break in music history. One showed Collins’ reclusive, detached persona, the other revealing an outburst of emotion. Deeply personal, but something music fans could feel on their own. Absolutely brilliant.

“I'VE BEEN WAITING FOR THIS MOMENT FOR ALL MY LIFE, OH LORD, OH LORD.”