The Great Gatsby Soundtrack Project
The Great Gatsby Soundtrack Project
The Great Gatsby Soundtrack Project
How do you tell a story with music? Music, much in the way that plot elements drive a story, weaves a narrative
itself. It is a vehicle for storytelling. It creates a mood. It guides emotion. It represents characters. It clues the
audience in to a theme.
As a conclusion to our unit on The Great Gatsby, you will create a soundtrack for the novel. As with any
soundtrack, the chosen music should represent the mood and the feeling of the text. This can be created through
relevant lyrics, genre, the repetition of certain notes, and all of the nuances of a musical piece. You will also
create artwork for a CD cover and creative liner notes to be enjoyed while listening to the soundtrack. You will
write five rationales for any of your ten song selections.
Choose your songs: You will select ten songs total and write rationales for five of them. The songs that you
choose should meet the following requirements:
1. Minimum of two songs that represent two characters (If youd like to do the same character twice,
showing two separate sides to them or two different moments in their lives in the novel, that would also
work. Use your characterization charts for information!)
2. Minimum of two songs that represent major plot points, or events, in the novel
3. One song that addresses a theme of the novel.
4. One song that addresses a motif of the novel.
5. One song that represents the setting of the novel (New York, Long Island, a party scene, a mansion, etc.)
6. The remaining three songs are your choice, but must be relevant to the novel. (Example: another motif,
another character, a jazz song, a party song that captures that Roaring 20s spirit)
As you select your songs, you can consider the lyrics of the song or simply the style and mood of the song. You
may select a piece without lyrics, but you still need to write an analysis for the song choice thats just as long as a
song with lyrics would be. Songs with profanity are acceptable if you have a strong rationale for selecting that
song that connects to the text. If youd like, you may write and perform a song for your soundtrack. You must
include proper MLA citation for each song. Tip: Think about some of your favorite songs that move you in some
way. Check out the lyrics or emotions they evoke and see if they can apply to some facet of The Great Gatsby.
Spend some time listening to music and create a corresponding musical story for the novel.
Create liner notes: The liner notes for this particular project will include
o 1) a list of the 10 songs you have chosen with the information for each song.
o 2) an explanation for why you chose each song (5 in total).
Your explanation should demonstrate clearly an understanding of the text and explain your rationale for
choosing each song. You should include at least one parenthetical citation referencing a specific
moment in the text that you are connecting with the song. Again, go back to your characterization charts
for direct supporting evidence!
It is not enough to simply say, This song expresses the moment where Gatsby and Daisy meet face to
face Therefore, an A explanation would cite specific quotes from the text and clearly describe the
connection to the song. Your liner notes (rationale) should also include the lyrics for each song, when
applicable. (Only five set of lyrics for the five liner notes- you dont need to include the lyrics for all 10
songs) ~350 words each, or about page-1 page in length- enough to sufficiently explicate your
song choice.
Design artwork (CD Cover): Design an original piece of artwork for your soundtrack. You can create
images by hand, take photos, or use your computer, but the work must be your own. Any images taken
from other artists must be cited in MLA format.
Create a Spotify playlist to share or burn an actual CD of your soundtrack: Either compile your song
choices in the desired order and burn them onto a CD OR create a Spotify playlist for this assignment.
The playlist must be shared the evening before the due date. Time stamp 9:00pm. Emailed to:
sarahmontgomery23@gmail.com
Example Lyrics:
# 1 The character of Judy Jones as a beautiful woman seeking love from many men in F. Scott
Fitzgeralds Winter Dreams.
Song: Del Rey, Lana. Young And Beautiful. Music From Baz Luhrmanns Film The Great Gatsby.
Interscope, 2013. Spotify.
I've seen the world
Done it all
Had my cake now
Diamonds, brilliant
And Bel Air now
Hot summer nights, mid July
When you and I were forever
wild
The crazy days, city lights
The way you'd play with me
like a child
Will you still love me
When I'm no longer young
and beautiful?
Will you still love me
When I got nothing but my
aching soul?
I know you will, I know you
will
I know that you will
Will you still love me when
I'm no longer beautiful?
I've seen the world, lit it up
As my stage now
Throughout the song, Lana Del Rey repeatedly asks her lover the question, Will you still love me when
Im no longer young and beautiful? The lyrics reflect a belief that her beauty and youth are much of the
reason why she is loved. Judy Jones shares this belief in the power and currency of her looks. Fitzgerald
describes how she controls men through her beauty: under the magic of her physical splendor the
strong as well as the brilliant played her game and not their own (Fitzgerald, 5). After reuniting with
Dexter after his engagement to Irene, she tells him, I suppose you think Im not worth having, but Ill
be so beautiful for you, Dexter, (Fitzgerald, 8). Like the song, Judy connects her worthiness to her
beauty and uses her beauty in order to gain love.
Ultimately, though the song is playful at many moments about beauty and money, the repetition of the
question of whether the speaker will still be loved when her beauty fades suggests a deep underlying
doubt in the answer. The raw, aching lyrics are full of longing, uncertainty, and hope. Lana Del Rey
repeats, I know you will in answer to the question, but the sadness of the melody hints that she might
be trying to convince herself of the truth in that answer. Judy Jones might as well be singing the track,
for she is also sad and longing for love in Winter Dreams. As she tells Dexter with tears streaming down
her face, Im more beautiful than anybody elsewhy cant I be happy? (Fitzgerald, 8). When we
hear how her beauty faded and she married a drunk who cheats on her, it reinforces the idea that she
wont be loved when shes no longer beautiful. Young and Beautiful is a theme song for Judys
character, as it hauntingly expresses Judys attachment to her looks with her ability to be loved.
Liner Notes for Song 1 due: 3/27
Be sure to include lyrics with corresponding liner notes
Song list and artwork due: 4/10
The song list is the list of ten songs that you have chosen.
Be sure to use MLA citations for each song. Include Spotify link or physical CD.
Ex: Artist. Song Title. Album name. Record Label, Year. Type of track (mp3, Spotify, CD).
Liner Notes for Songs 2 & 3 due: 4/14
Be sure to include lyrics with corresponding liner notes
Liner Notes for Songs 4 & 5 due: 4/27
Be sure to include lyrics with corresponding liner notes
Final Project Due: 5/14 or 5/22?
Rubric:
1
SONGLIST
(50 pts)
ARTWORK
(25 pts)
ENTRY (175 pts)
LYRICS (w/MLA citation)
LINER NOTES
TOTAL (250 pts)
/10
/10
/10
/10
/10
/5
/5
/5
/5
/5
/30
/30
/30
/30
/30
For
an
A
project:
Liner
notes:
The
writing
is
strong,
formal,
free
of
errors
and
shows
an
excellent
understanding
of
the
mechanics
of
writing.
The
analysis
shows
strong
evidence
of
thought
and
care
in
tying
the
elements
of
the
novel
to
the
songs.
The
analysis
is
also
thorough,
considering
many
aspects
of
both
the
song
and
the
character,
theme,
motif,
or
event
being
represented.
Quotes are used from the song and/or the book, and all quotes are introduced, cited, and analyzed properly.
Lyrics
are
provided
for
all
songs,
and
they
are
properly
referenced.
CD:
There is a functional CD or Spotify playlist with the ten songs meeting the specifications.
The
CD
cover
shows
excellent
care
and
consideration
to
both
the
contents
of
the
CD
as
well
as
the
book
that
it
is
representing.
The
CD
cover
is
highly
reflective
of
the
time
and
consideration
put
into
its
creation.
For
a
B
project:
Liner
notes:
The writing is generally free of errors and shows good understanding of the mechanics of writing.
The analysis shows evidence of thought in tying the chapters to the songs.
The
analysis
is
also
thorough,
considering
several
aspects
of
both
the
song
and
the
chapter
being
represented.
Quotes
are
used
from
the
song
and/or
the
book,
and
all
quotes
are
generally
introduced,
cited,
and
analyzed
properly.
Lyrics
are
provided
for
all
songs,
and
they
are
referenced.
CD:
There is a functional CD or Spotify playlist with the ten songs meeting the specifications.
The
CD
cover
shows
good
care
and
consideration
to
both
the
contents
of
the
CD
as
well
as
the
book
that
it
is
representing.
The
CD
cover
is
reflective
of
the
time
and
consideration
put
into
its
creation.
For
a
C
project:
Liner
notes:
The writing has some errors and shows general understanding of the mechanics of writing.
The
analysis
shows
some
evidence
of
thought
and
care
in
tying
the
songs
to
the
novel.
There
is
some
evidence
of
analysis
and
consideration
of
several
aspects
of
both
the
song
and
the
novel.
There
is
evidence
of
some
thought
in
song
selection.
Some
quotes
are
used
from
the
song
and/or
the
book,
and
quotes
may
or
may
not
be
introduced,
cited,
and
analyzed
properly.
Lyrics
are
provided
for
all
songs,
but
some
may
not
have
been
properly
referenced.
CD:
There is a functional CD or Spotify playlist with the ten songs meeting the specifications.
The
CD
cover
shows
minimal
care
and
consideration
to
both
the
contents
of
the
CD
as
well
as
the
novel
that
it
is
representing.
The
CD
cover
evidences
minimal
time
and
consideration
put
into
its
creation.
For
a
D
project:
Liner
notes:
The writing has many errors and shows little understanding of the mechanics of writing.
The
analysis
shows
little
evidence
of
thought
and
care
in
tying
the
chapters
to
the
songs.
There
is
minimal
evidence
of
analysis
and
consideration
of
either
the
song
or
the
element
of
the
novel
being
represented.
Lyrics
may
or
may
not
be
provided
for
all
songs,
but
have
not
been
properly
referenced.
CD:
The CD cover shows no care or consideration to the contents of the CD or the book that it is representing.