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But for many restaurants, integrating their menus, motifs and music is not a specific effort to drive sales or influence customer behavior, but to help create a larger brand identity. The Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf, a California-based specialty coffee and tea retailer, began using custom playlists last year as way to differentiate itself in a national expansion. Its music
-- which speeds up for the morning rush, and slows down for afternoon dawdlers
-- features a calculated jumble of everything from classic Talking Heads to jazz-blues artist Dr. John and the slightly groovy sound of up-and-coming singer-songwriter Mayer Hawthorne. "It's always been part of our strategy to make the brand unique," says Diane Kuyoomjian, the company's vice president of marketing. "As we are expanding nationally it makes sense to be as distinct as possible. It's a combination of product and environment that our customers are responding to, so it enhances that." Converging social and marketing forces also have driven the trend. People formerly used to buying and listening to albums in their entirety now purchase unrelated, individual songs digitally, says Jeremy Abrams, whose New York-based company Audiostiles works with clients including chef and restaurateur Thomas Keller. Easy access to more varied music online has also opened people's minds, he says, and made them more willing to experiment. Combine these forces with the casualization of fine dining, and restaurant patrons are more open to hearing eclectic music while debating the virtues of pinot versus cabernet grapes. "The boundaries of fine dining are expanding and the music is expanding with it," Abrams says. "Just because you're an Italian restaurant doesn't mean you have to play opera." But if music can make the experience, it also can break it. Acid guitar or an anvil-shattering volume will certainly interfere with dinner. In reviewing a restaurant a few months ago, Washington Post food critic Tom Sietsema took time from an overall favorable review to note that "the gawdawful music summons bad
'80s porn." "It's like anything else, you want to infuse your restaurant with your personality as an owner," Sietsema said in a telephone interview. "I like it when it works and I hate it when it doesn't."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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