Toe-Tapping Melody

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In most musicals, when someone plays a tune, people react by either singing along or listening in the background, without reacting to the content of the song itself.

Then you have a song that inspires people to join in, listen, make a few comments, or even clap. You can feel the joy in every gesture.

A Toe-Tapping Melody is one that inspires a nearby audience or individual to follow along, either by joining in to sing, clap, or acknowledge that it's a catchy melody. Sometimes the person may sing along, tap to the beat, or bob their head, or even join in wholeheartedly, belting at the top of their lungs. Whatever the extent, participation or commentary is the key to this trope, as well as spontaneity - this is what separates it from a Crowd Song or Audience Participation, where the crowd song or participation may not be spontaneous in-universe.

This may overlap with Ear Worm if the individual cannot get the song out of their head. The Music Meister may compel people to do this.

Examples of Toe-Tapping Melody include:

Advertising

  • In an award-winning anti-smoking ad, several teens go to confront tobacco executives about the hazards of nicotine. The business executive starts a musical number to "Just Focus on the Positive"; the teens can't help but join in with the number, and drag in the various background extras, including paramedics, nurses, and hospital patients. Yes, that includes the dead ones. Turns out it was an Imagine Spot as the executive calls security on the sole singing lead teen.

Anime and Manga

  • Played to horrifying effect in a Junji Ito one-shot where a musician plays a screaming melody asking someone to leave her alone. Anyone who hears it can't get it out of their head, and some may even hum along. A doctor reveals that the melody is a manifestation of the musician's stalker ex-boyfriend, who killed himself in front of her.
  • Sailor Moon:
    • One youma in Episode 6 invoked this while impersonating a popular idol, using a soundwave that compels anyone who hears into performing. It even snags the real idol's manager, who says this event wasn't on her schedule, and a security guard who says she's not allowed to stage an event on school grounds.
    • During the Maikaiju arc of Season 2, Rei organizes a music festival and writes a repertoire of songs to perform. While she claims it was no effort, flashbacks show she put in lots of effort when composing. Moonlight Knight says that he wants to hear her sing when providing backup support against the Cardian, and Usagi ends the episode saying that Rei is wonderful onstage.
  • Yuri!!! on Ice features this with some of the skater's choice of music:
    • Minami performs a loose-flowing jazz for his free skate program. The audience starts clapping along the minute he starts practically dancing on the ice. Yuri notes that it's hard to look away from Minami's technique.
    • Phitchit chooses a popular song, "Shall We Skate?" from the Thai adaptation of The King and I, which involved figure skating for some reason. The commentators note that while many figure skaters have chosen the song, it's the first time a Thai skater has used the arrangement. You can see the audience clapping as soon as it starts, and you can hear them singing as well.

Ballads

  • Ballads by design are supposed to be shared by singing them. They are meant to be passed on word-for-word, and being catchy certainly helps with being memorable.

Comic Books

  • In Raina Telgemier's Drama, the song that Maybelle sings with the leading role in Moon Over Mississippi is supposed to invoke this. It's the moment where she and the Union general have their first kiss, building up the dramatic tension. Callie is always entranced when Jesse sings it, partly because she has a crush on him. When Bonnie bails on playing Maybelle on the play's last night after West breaks up with her, Jesse puts on the dress and replaces her. When he sings Maybelle's part, the audience and stage crew are equally entranced. He gets a standing ovation at the curtain call.
  • Played for awesome drama in The Sandman whenever Orpheus sings. Anyone who hears the music is compelled to listen to it, whether they want to or not, and thus Orpheus can be dangerous if he has aggressive intentions. The French revolutionaries can attest to that when they attempt to destroy Orpheus's head, and he sings to save himself and Johanna Constantine.

Fan Works

  • Averted with filk - convention filk circle etiquette is to let the current singer finish before starting to sing yourself, even in "chaos" circles where there's no set order to who sings when.

Film

  • In Aladdin, this happens a few times:
    • When the genie sings "Friend Like Me," Carpet wastes no time in dancing along, complete with a top hat and cane! He and Genie have a history, given their handshake, so he's well-acclimated.
    • During "Prince Ali," Jafar is unamused that yet another chump prince entourage interrupted his plan to hypnotize the sultan to marry Princess Jasmine. Iago, however, likes the music and starts dancing. He stops when Jafar glares at him. Jasmine at first watches with mild interest, but she does a Face Palm when "Ali" shows off his muscles for women ogling him from a balcony. While Razoul doesn't like this prince, his guards happily join in for the last few verses.
  • This also comes up during the three-quel Aladdin and the King of Thieves:
    • In "There's A Party here in Agrabah", Genie hypes up the city crowds and guests as he goes around putting the final touches to his friend's wedding, while he is the best man and wedding planner. While some guests are less than amused, given he turns their hairstyles into giant afros, some of the locals are belting loudly. The Forty Thieves also join in for a verse, and shout, "They're finally getting married!" to a disguised Kaseem's confusion.
    • Iago gets into "Welcome to the Forty Thieves" when he sees how much loot they store. They quickly rip him away when seeing he's getting too attached to the money.
  • The live-action Aladdin has this happen as well:
    • Genie invites Aladdin to dance with him during "Friend Like Me". While at first he puppeteers Aladdin along, Aladdin starts getting into the dancing for real without needing cues.
    • The crowds of Agrabah, the Sultan, and Dahlia get into "Prince Ali" when the Genie ushers in a disguised Aladdin, complete with an entourage. Dahlia nods in approval as Genie starts the first verse, and starts bopping along as Jasmine stares with amused confusion.
    • The movie has a Dance Party Ending with a Triumphant Reprise of "Friend Like Me" at the double-wedding for Aladdin and Jasmine, as well as the Genie and Dahlia. Carpet does the Carlton while Aladdin plays flute, and all the major cast members do one last dance line.
  • Parodied in Enchanted. When Giselle starts a Crowd Song in Central Park, lawyer Robert is bewildered that people keep joining in randomly. He asks how a bunch of musicians know the song that just started. The sign that Giselle is starting to acclimate to New York life is when her fiancé finds her, and she doesn't know the lyrics to the song he sings, "I've Been Dreaming."
  • In The Great Mouse Detective, there are two moments from the Villain Songs, to boot:
    • Most of Ratigan's mooks sing out of fear what he will do if they step out of line or show their discontent. When poor drunk Bartholomew calls Ratigan a "rat" while hiccupping, Ratigan sentences him to death by Felicia. Bartholomew keeps singing as he is swallowed alive. Before his coworkers can mourn him, Ratigan orders them to resume singing, threatening to summon Felicia again with his bell.
    • A stripper in the Bad Guy Bar where Ratigan's hideout is located manages to quiet the angry mob just by singing. They put down their chairs that they were going to toss at the stage, and become emotional as she belts to the "Dearest gentleman". When she strips to a blue slip, they really get into it. Dawson, who gets drugged, somehow hops onstage and joins her backup dances for the can-can line. Even Fidget sings along as he navigates through the tunnels to Ratigan's lair.
  • Subverted hilariously during Hoodwinked. When the Wolf, Granny, Twitchy and the Woodcutter witness the real Big Bad Bongo singing to a captive Little Red about his plans to addict customers to his fattening sweets and go corporate, and to blow her up so she can't live to tell the tale, Granny comments, "We gotta do something!" Wolf agrees because the rhythm and dancing were way off for the musical number though the song was good.
  • Happens during Lilo & Stitch. During the fight with Stitch in the Pelekai household, Jumbaa turns the record-player on by accident. He starts swaying to the rhythm of "Hound Dog," giving Lilo and Stitch an opportunity to convene in the kitchen.
  • The Little Mermaid shows that this is Sebastian's bread and butter. He is a talented, hard-working conductor that can inspire a musical number anywhere. At first, he conducts "Under the Sea" to convince Ariel to not long for the human world and appreciate what she has in her home. When he decides to help her win Eric's heart, and Scuttle's attempt at moonlight music is terrible during a rowboat date between Ariel and Eric, Sebastian sighs, "Jeez, man I'm surrounded by amateurs!". He grabs a reed, gathers the marsh animals, and starts a rendition of "Kiss the Girl". It is much more effective, especially once he whispers Ariel's name to Eric.
  • Tangled shows a contrast of this during "I've Got A Dream"; as Flynn watches with bemusement while Rapunzel defuses the bar patrons. She asks them about their dreams, and dances to the resulting song. While Flynn needs to be threatened at knifepoint to sing as well, several rats are bobbing along to the music, as a confused Pascal observes.
  • How to Train Your Dragon 2 has Stoick invoke this to convince Valka that her leaving him and Hiccup is water under the bridge, and he forgives her. She's hesitant about returning to Berk, leaving behind the King Bewilderbeast and feral life for the island she left twenty years before. He sings their song, "For the Dancing and the Dreaming" softly though Gobber nearly kills the moment by joining in, much to Hiccup's annoyance. After a few beats, Valka joins in the lyrics and starts dancing with him; Hiccup practically becomes teary-eyed with delight, and Gobber becomes so excited that he grabs Hiccup to spin him around and joins for the last verse.
  • In Bajrangi Bhaijaan, the song "Chicken Kuk-Doo-Koo" is allegedly improvised by Pawan and Rasika to make Munni in a good enough mood to eat, but somehow everyone around joins into doing chorus and choreography.
  • The 2005 film of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory features Willy Wonka enjoying the Oompa-Loompa songs every time a naughty child breaks the rules. Expect a cut to him bobbing along, while the humans on the tour look incredibly uncomfortable and distressed, since the child always ends up in danger -- sucked up a pipe, turned into a giant blueberry, tossed down a garbage chute by squirrels, or lost in TV Land while a few inches tall. Charlie, who doesn't break any rules in this version, lampshades that the Oompa Loompas seemed oddly prepared with a song and dance number as if they knew that Augustus Gloop was going to end up in the chocolate river. Mr. Wonka waves it off as the Oompa-Loompas love to improvise, and anyone can improvise a rhyme if given a few phrases.
  • A horrifying example in Beetlejuice. When Adam and Barbara conspire to haunt the Deetzes and scare off their investors during an already-awkward dinner, they start by possessing Delia Deetz and making Harry Belafonte's "Banana Boat Song" come out of her mouth. As the dinner guests and her husband stare in confusion, the same things happen to them, and they start dancing to boot. Only one of the ladies actually enjoys it, while Otho who was formerly a paranormal investigator gets into impromptu drumming of the champagne bucket. Lydia in the meantime watches with amused fascination, since she tried warning the adults, and ducks out of the room to laugh off-camera. A jumpscare with severed hands kills the mood. Hilariously enough, when the Broadway musical adapts this scene, Lydia rubs it in her father's face that I Warned You when Charles realizes that she isn't being forced to sing or dance as she watches him mime the song since it was her idea to ruin the dinner.
  • The film adaptation of tick, tick...Boom! uses this to highlight that Jonathan Larson was an amazing composer:
    • At a party to celebrate his girlfriend Susan's dance recital, Jon starts an a capella song called "Boho Days," getting everyone to clap and join in, including a newcomer named Scott who came to get drugs from an artist party. Despite Susan getting miffed about Jon saying "I thought by now I'd have a dog, a kid and wife!" she participates in the last verse before going to think on the roof.
    • During rehearsals of the Superbia workshop, Roger and Karessa are helping out Jon with his potential big break by playing the show leads Josh and Elizabeth, as a favor to a friend. We see them and the other singers getting into it, with Roger acting out the lyrics for "Sextet". Note that some of the singers were confused about the story but they are enthusiastic to perform. (Bonus points that they're all established Broadway performers in real life.) After one rehearsal goes well, Jon flails happily and says, "Ahh!"
    • "Come to Your Senses" has a variation, in that everyone listens with emotional solemnity during Superbia's climactic song and showstopper at the workshop. As Jon imagines Susan singing it to him and calling him out for how his dreams don't feature her and leave her behind, Stephen Sondheim has a thoughtful expression since he recommended to John that the fictional Elizabeth needed a showstopper to help Josh make the right decision in Superbia, workshop host and sponsor Ira Weisman grins with So Proud of You enthusiasm, Michael looks like he's on the verge of cathartic tears, while Rosa has a bittersweet This Is Gonna Suck expression since she knows that the song isn't good enough to justify to investors to take a chance on a science-fiction musical. When the song concludes, it gets a room full of loud applause. Michael says it was amazing, and Stephen Sondheim (the real Stephen Sondheim, not his actor Bradley Whitford), leaves a voicemail telling Jon how proud he is of his protege for rising to the challenge to provide Elizabeth the song she needed to complete her character arc.
    • In the movie's finale proper, Jon plays "Louder Than Words" at his show about the questions he had regarding Michael's diagnosis, losing Susan, and his career prospects. While most of the cast in the movie attends with some Broadway cameos like Chris Jackson having Manly Tears, Scott from the artist party is there a year later, happily bobbing along.

Literature

  • In the Discworld novel Soul Music, that this happens is a plot point. Music with Rocks In turns Imp into Buddy, a spoiled diva musician that forgets his harp background when he plays a magical guitar from a mysterious shop. Susan notes that the music itself kept him alive past when his hourglass was supposed to shatter. Because of Imp's promise to his father that people will say he "was" the greatest musician in the world, the music heard that literally and uses him as a vessel to spread its influence. Per his words, however, he also has to die at the pinnacle of his fame for that to happen.
  • When Ron is made the new Gryffindor keeper in Harry Potter/And the Order of the Phoenix, he struggles due to nerves and Performance Anxiety. The Slytherins proceed to make up a mocking, catchy song about how he hasn't saved a goal at all during the year's first Quidditch match. Hermione comments that it's super-annoying; Luna, being Luna, hums the tune. Later, however, the Gryffindors sing it in triumph when Ron finally succeeds in blocking goals and wins the Quidditch Cup for their House.

Live-Action TV

  • Brooklyn Nine-Nine has a Cold Open where Jake has a witness evaluate a criminal lineup. She didn't see the criminal, but heard him singing "I Want It That Way" while hiding from him. Jake has each of the suspects sing a line from the song, but they all turn out to be great singers. He gets into it, shouting, "TELL ME WHY!" and getting excited when they all join in harmony. It was suspect number five. And he killed the witness's brother.
  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer has an episode where Giles requests a night off from watching the Scoobies for adult time. He asks them not to bother him, bar any threatening emergency. Sure enough, an emergency happens so the Scoobies go and find him playing guitar at a café. While Xander is horrified, and Buffy is later after she hears about it, Willow smiles and says she remembers why she had a crush on him when he was the school librarian.
  • Drake and Josh:
    • "Blues Brothers" features Josh suffering from stage fright, just as Drake's band prepares to play for a talent show. Drake is displeased to find out that a rival a Capella group stole his song to perform. Josh gains the courage to perform "Soul Man" with Drake's band, and his performance wows the crowd, as well as the judges. Even Jerkass Megan sings along and is visibly proud of her brothers.
    • The series finale "Really Big Shrimp" centered around a music company buying one of Drake's songs. During the A plot, a producer remixed it for the Super Bowl so terribly that Drake in revenge filled his car with fruit flies and Josh quickly switched the recording with the original. When the producer's boss heard about this breach of contract, he let the boys off the hook because the original song when viral, and he agrees that the remix was terrible. Helen asks Drake to perform it at her wedding after Eric and Craig accidentally burn down the movie theater.
  • Scrubs:
    • Turk sings "I'm gonna cut you open" when he learns he's been assigned to do J.D.'s appendectomy. He enters the room dancing, and Carla joins in with him. Naturally, this doesn't ease J.D.'s fears about his best friend being a goof about a life-threatening surgery.
    • Ted's a Capella group practices at the hospital from time to time, going from theme song to pop music covers. While J.D. tries to avoid them on the night shift, Carla enjoys seeing them and dances along. A season 7 episode has Ted woo a woman named Stephanie Gooch by inviting her to jam on ukulele with his group, and they do a beautiful rendition of "Carry On, My Wayward Son". J.D. and the Janitor, who have called truce to help Ted talk to Gooch, stop to admire the group jam.
    • "My Way Home" opens with J.D. taking a bath in Elliott's new place, where he's rooming with her, and singing along to "Rains of Africa" while tentatively tasting her mango body butter.
    • "My Way Home" also has Dr. Cox, as part of a prank on J.D. involving the new intern Keith, has Keith call him to the hospital on one of his days off while Laverne's church choir sings "Payback is a bitch!" Keith starts bobbing along to the song, until J.D. levels a Death Glare at him.
    • "My Musical" reveals that all the song and dance numbers that Ms. Miller was seeing was induced by a potentially fatal aneurysm in her frontal lob. She's terrified about what this means for her future, but she pulls through the surgery, and the singing stops. The episode ends with her singing the melody of "Welcome to Sacred Heart," grateful to be alive and wistful about that magical moment.
  • Hawkeye has a hilarious example: for some reason, there is a stage musical about Captain America titled Rogers: The Musical. Hawkeye doesn't think much of it, but in a clip where the real Adam Pascal plays a stand-in for Agent Phil Coulson, the audience is really into the song "I Could Do This All Day". You can see several people bobbing their heads, and applauding Stage Cap's beautiful overly long note.

Music

  • The song "Baby Shark" is meant to be performed in a group. Kids are encouraged to clap along at summer camp, especially for the more morbid verses.
  • Amanda Palmer encourages this from her audience. Many YouTube videos show her cheering on the audience to sing along if they know the words, and even if they don't. When they memorized her "New Zealand" song from YouTube, she apologized to them for changing the lyrics over a year.

New Media

  • Many Let's Players have sung or danced along to songs in video-games:
    • Jacksepticeye has bobbed along to the Cuphead and Undertale boss music. There's a video of him singing "A shimmy shammy" while playing different versions of Super Mario Bros.
    • Markiplier has sung along to Mettaton's song in his Undertale stream with Tyler, breaking down laughing at some of the later lyrics. He's also made up lyrics to go along with the Purple Man's walking cycle in Five Nights at Freddy's: Sister Location.
  • The Fine Bros. Entertainment "Try Not To Sing Along" challenge features this for its participants. FBE employees, old and young, need to listen to popular songs and are not allowed to sing along, hum, move their lips, clap, or even so much as tap in rhythm to the music. One deleted video showed that the theme to Spongebob Squarepants is super-catchy and hard to resist.
  • One 2021 TikTok trend involved singers sharing sea shanties, mainly "Till the Wellerman Come." It went so viral that one of the TikTok creators got a record deal!

Newspaper Comics

  • Calvin and Hobbes often has Calvin think that he's invoking this; instead, his parents usually kick him out of the house. This can happen more often during the winter holidays, when he's singing along to Christmas carols on the radio. There was a Sunday strip, though, where he and Hobbes danced to classical music sped up at RPM, late at night.
  • Mentioned in a one-off gag in Pearls Before Swine. Zebra says that his herd on the savannah has been using musical alarm bells for warnings about predators. When they go off, the herd sings along.

Oral Tradition, Myth, Legend and Folklore

  • Hindu Mythology:
    • As a cowherd boy, Krishna could induce the local gopis and cows to dance when playing his flute. When he had to leave his village home to face Kamsa, a village girl named Radha asked him to leave behind his flute, so she could always remember him.
    • Meerabai or Saint Mirabai was a Krishna devotee who declared the avatar was her husband, even though she lived hundreds of years after his time. She wrote many hymns and poetry dedicated to Krishna. The Amar Chitra Katha comic depicting her life shows her leading entire groups of devotees into songs.

Puppet Shows

  • The Muppet Show:
    • Statler and Waldorf occasionally admit this. One time, Statler actually applauded for Kermit performing "Lydia the Tattooed Lady".
    • When Harry Belafonte performed "Turn The World Around," the entire Muppet show cast and crew joins him onstage for the last round of verses. Kermit lampshades that they don't want this perfect moment to end. Statler and Waldorf, who normally snark about how terrible the show is, also sing along!
  • Muppet Treasure Island references this twice:
    • While locked up in the brig, Clueless Morgan overhears the rendition of "Cabin Fever" playing out on the deck and asks his cellmates what that song was. Polly Lobster thinks that Clueless is going "crackers".
    • Gonzo chants along with the pig island natives when they prepare a dramatic entrance for their queen. And Gonzo being Gonzo, he does this while tied to a stake and eagerly anticipating being sacrificed.
  • Sesame Street:
    • While Ernie usually annoys Bert with his spontaneous songs, since they involve chaos, Bert will join in with some verses if the tune is catchy. One sweet example is when they sing about all the things they like about each other.
    • If Luis brings out his guitar, expect any nearby Sesame Street cast member to either listen to his song or join in on the tune. One sweet episode has Rosita becoming so inspired by his music that she asks for guitar lessons.
    • A musical guest will often perform and attract everyone's attention on Sesame Street. Highlights include Stevie Wonder, Denyse Graves, Little Richard, and Queen Latifah.
    • At the Emmys where Sesame Street received the Lifetime Achievement Award in Television, the audience gave a standing ovation and started clapping along when the Sesame Street cast did a medley of their most famous songs, Muppets and humans alike. They also invited everyone to sing a modified version of "Sing" with lyrics projected. Everyone joined in, from Mindy Kaling to Bindi Irwin.

Recorded and Stand Up Comedy

  • John Mulaney describes that you can take this trope too far in his infamous "Salt and Pepper Diner" monologue. He and his friend John, another John he quickly clarifies, thought it would be funny to put in 21 requests for "What's New Pussycat," with one "It's Not Unusual" tossed into the jukebox at the diner. While the patrons at first didn't notice, they realized the song was going on, and not ending. One person even screamed, "Goddammit!" after it started up for the fifth time.

Theatre

  • Hatchetfield has this happen a few times in its various shows:
    • In The Guy Who Didn't Like Musicals, Beanie's manager Zoey makes her employees do a new tip song. Emma is not into it, having to sing and dance for fifty cents, but doesn't want to get fired. While she's unenthusiastic, the coffeeshop patrons sans a very terrified and confused Paul enjoy the music. That is, until the patrons take a sip of their fresh coffee, choke, and collapse to the ground as the music becomes menacing when Emma threatens to quit. Turns out the singing zombies got to Nora and Zoey, and they poisoned the coffee with "blue shit" that turns everyone who drank it into a singing zombie.
      • Later in the same show, Professor Hidgens plays his demo songs of Workin' Boys to a tied-up Emma and Ted. While Emma is practically crying with frustration because the singing will lure in the Hive zombies to murder them, Ted bobs along and asks Professor Hidgens to hit them with another song.
    • "Honey Queen" has Linda and Gerald Monroe use a few hundred dollars and the Homeless Guy to get Zoey to belt at her coffeeshop job, by stuffing her "Tip For A Song" jar. Apparently Zoey fires up the whole coffeeshop in her attempts to impress who she thinks is a Broadway producer. Only problem is she blows out her voice and can only croak the next day, just as the talent show is starting.
  • The stage adaptation of Disney's The Little Mermaid features this as a plot point. Eric can't get the melody of "Part of Your World" out of his head because it's the only lead he has on the mysterious girl who rescued him. She sang it while he was reviving from drowning. Grimsby, rather than let Eric lose himself in obsession, has an idea: why not have a singing contest where the princesses interested in marrying him sing the melody? If one of them has the voice, then Eric will know for certain and Grimsby can rest assured that his foster son will have a wife. Of course, this contest happens on the third day of Ariel's transformation, and she can't sing after giving her voice to Ursula as payment for becoming human. Ariel comes up with another idea, though, since she has nothing to lose at this point: dance for Eric the way he taught her to waltz on that first night, because he sang to her that a dance is like a conversation. While the other princesses laugh at her, Eric looks at Ariel in awe, and says that he understood everything she said with her dance, proposing to her on the spot. But the sun has gone down, and Ursula arrives with water to flood the palace...
  • The Rocky Horror Picture Show
    • The Time Warp is supposed to invoke this from visitors to the Frankenstein place aka Dr. Frank N. Furter's mansion. Instead, Janet and Brad become scared and confused from it; they only join in during the curtain call. Some versions play with this staging as shown in this official clip from the 2021 West End version, Brad and Janet realize they're locked in and can't leave while the dance is doing on, so they're forced to participate. Often, however, the audience will join in and happily follow the dance moves.
    • Dr. Frank N. Furter kills Eddie for invoking this. Eddie barges in and starts "Hot Patootie," energizing everyone in the room, even Brad and Janet, to dance along and vibe. But Rocky is too into Eddie, so Dr. Frank N. Furter delivers on the murder.

Video Games

  • Some hilarious examples in Undertale:
    • You can put on some ghost tunes at Napstablook's house - while Napsta loves the rhythms and vocalizations, if you leave afterward and encounter Aaron and Woshua, they won't bother fighting because the music leaves them too freaked-out, and the pair eventually flee. As a Brick Joke, Aaron will become a ghost inspector in the Pacifist Ending credits.
    • If you want to give Shyren lots of love, you can keep singing with her during her battle - by doing so, you start a band with her that gets popular, while Sans sells tickets and tosses toilet paper and socks at you. She's so catchy that the Golden Ending features her getting over her stage fright and performing with Napstablook and Mettaton. The hitch is that it's easy to die to her, because the more confident she gets, the more "musical note" bullets she will send your way. The scene is also much less funny if you killed Papyrus during that run.
  • In Night in the Woods, Mae rejoins Gregg and Angus's band when she returns home. Germ, a local teen, is their only fan, but he adores their rehearsals. Mae enjoys performing even if you mess up badly during the rhythm games.

Web Animation

  • Discussed in the Homestar Runner "Strong Bad Emails" section. The "Rampage" video has Strong Bad attempting to do a musical rampage with Coach Z. Strong Sad politely interrupts to ask how Strong Bad reciting, "I'm on a rampage" on loop is musically inspiring. He says there's no rhythm or variety to it. Strong Bad challenges him, saying Let's See You Do Better. As the Cheat lays out a beat, Strong Sad recites a poem: "The quill, the page, lyric rampage. Word up?" This causes Coach Z and Strong Bad to giggle because they don't see anything catchy about it; Strong Sad reveals that it was a hit at his slam poetry group.

Web Comics

  • Check, Please! often showcases Bitty's love for Beyoncé as a Running Gag. His roommates often hear him singing and dancing along to Beyoncé in the shower. Insulting Beyoncé is a good way to get on Bitty's bad side.

Web Original

  • How It Should Have Ended acknowledged in their Frozen parody that "Let It Go" is super-catchy. In their iteration, the trolls advise that Elsa's parents send her to Professor Xavier's school for mutants, so as to control her ice powers. The video ends with Wolverine walking in on present-day Elsa, Anna and the students singing "Let It Go", before joining in with an operatic belt and encouraging Iceman to recite the last line.
  • Likewise, The Nostalgia Critic had a parody of "Let It Go" that talked about how there are so many covers and parodies of the song on YouTube. While at first he's into the abundance, and Tamara dresses up as Elsa to get into the spirit, he gets annoyed and asks the Internet to choose another song, any song - just not "Everything Is Awesome".

Western Animation

  • In the Avatar: The Last Airbender episode "The Cave of Two Lovers," several wandering nomads treat the Gaang to Sacred Hospitality as they encounter each other, braiding Katara's hair and adorning Aang with flowers. They also sing about a Secret Tunnel nearby that they plan to navigate. Aang and Katara get into the song and bob along, while Sokka is frustrated and wants to move on with their journey. Quite ironically, he learns that the nomads' music leads to the safest way to navigate the tunnels: badger-moles use earthbending to change the tunnels and singing to them convinces them to lead a path outward.
  • Comes up in Justice League Unlimited during the episode "This Little Piggy". Circe turns Wonder Woman into a pig out of spite, and while the League goes to find Wonder-Piggy, Batman and Zatanna confront Circe. They convince her to give them an audience when Zatanna smashes her with a piano. For Circe to change Diana back, Batman has to bare his soul in front of an audience, singing "Am I Blue?" to Circe's nightclub patrons. Zatanna admits he has a lovely voice, and Circe reverses the spell just as Wonder-Piggy is about to end up sliced in a slaughterhouse. Diana thanks Batman for saving her; when he claims to not know what she's talking about, Diana walks off humming "Am I Blue?" cheerfully. Batman can't help but smirk.
  • Over the Garden Wall has a moment of this save the main characters. They hopped on a frog ferry without paying the fee, because Greg tossed the pennies away impulsively, so they have to disguise themselves as band members to hide from security. When Greg and Wirt accidentally knock out the bassoon player, Greg encourages Wirt to play. Beatrice the bluebird does as well, because she suddenly doesn't want them to go see Adelaide. Wirt picks up the bassoon and plays...and Greg's new frog suddenly belts a beautiful melody. The frogs sing along, and they allow the humans to stay on the boat as long as Wirt keeps playing. They even offer Greg's frog a musical contract, but he chooses to stay with the trio.
  • Batman Beyond has Terry enjoy the Batman musical he watches with Bruce for the latter's birthday. Bruce is less than amused at the cheesy visuals and lyrics, asking if his protege hates him since Terry bought the tickets and insisted his mentor come. Later Terry's singing "criminals are a superstitious and cowardly lot" while entering the Batcave.
  • The Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers cartoon had the Rangers use this trope during "Adventures in Squirrelsitting". When their squirrel charges end up in Fat Cat's Casino, Monterrey Jack puts on a suit, presents himself as the piano man and announces that a disguised Chip and Dale will serve as the entertainment. He explains in a whisper that Gadget needs cover to find the children. Cue a rendition of "The Fat Cat Stomp" where Chip and Dale hype up Fat Cat's reputation. He starts bopping along and even joins in for the last verse, along with his henchmen in the casino. Unfortunately he already figured out that since he didn't order the entertainment, it must have been a distraction, and busts the Rangers just as they're about to leave during the finale, singing the melody to himself while setting them up in a Death Trap.
  • Batman: The Brave and the Bold: Some examples occur in the show:
    • "Mayhem of the Music Meister": Parodied when the other heroes are still singing after Batman gives Canary and the Justice Society filtered earplugs to resist the titular villain's hypnosis. Canary continues Music Meister's song "Death Trap" until she and Batman bust out: Batman then asks, "Was the singing really necessary?" Later, however, he uses an AutoTune to weaponize Black Canary's microphone, so as to take out Meister's amplifying microphone. Black Canary compliments Batman's singing.
    • "Birds of Prey": When infiltrating a Bad Guy Bar to rescue a brainwashed Batman, who believes he is the crook Matches Malone, Catwoman, Huntress and Black Canary end up onstage. Catwoman asks the band to "hit it" and starts a song about how the Birds of Prey are better than all the male heroes. Soon all the gangsters are watching and bobbing along, with two of their bodyguards joining in for the board chorus.

Real Life

  • This is why it is always a pleasure to see random flash mobs, musical buskers, and dance-offs in public. People will always be tapping to a beat and willing to sing.
  • You never know when two Broadway troupes will appear at the same time in an airport, and have a sing-off. Such as when the Broadway casts of Aladdin and The Lion King happen to be waiting for flights.
  • At BigFest Con in 2016, a band performed the Gravity Falls theme song for Alex Hirsch. He was so overjoyed, he joined their square and started dancing along.
  • At some sports games, football fans may have a song that inspires the crowd to chant. For the Miami Hurricanes, as one example, they sing a riff from the White Stripes song "Seven Nation Army" as a game is starting.
    • Similarly, soccer fans in Europe have for some reason seized on the theme song to the 1969 Pippi Longstocking TV series as a crowd chant.