Mental Soundtracks
Apr. 4th, 2010 07:17 pm Made an incursion into enemy territory (Ohio) this weekend to attend a concert by the Best Band You've Never Heard Of, Shearwater. Excellent show, especially when the lead singer joined opening act Wye Oak for an unexpected and wonderful cover of "Strangers" by the Kinks, which happens to be one of my all-time favorite songs and the overall "theme song" for my 'fic "No Saint to Follow."
Shearwater also provide a favorable soundtrack for my writing; they have an "epic" quality even though many of their songs are under three minutes long-- dynamic and violent soundscapes that evoke storm-tossed seas and howling night winds. (I think "Rooks" is the PERFECT song for FE9/10 'fic, if I could ever be bothered.) They have quieter songs, as well, like the title track from Palo Santo, but it's the harsher stuff like "Red Sea, Black Sea," "Century Eyes," and the magnificent (if ill-named) "Johnny Viola" that sends my spirits up and my mental gears turning. Wye Oak seem promising as well, and I picked up their first album at the show last night to give it a try.
My "writing music" has evolved over the years, though I recently brushed off a CD mix my most excellent spouse burned for me back in 2001-- containing acts from The Posies to Toto to 8Stops7-- and found it remarkably relevant to my current moods. I actually made use of it while writing up "Brave Ascent" last month. But somewhere around 2007, my tolerance for the grotesque moved up sharply, and I began to get heavily into artists like Elvis Costello and Leonard Cohen, both of whom had previously been too "edgy" for me (unfettered sexuality + toxic emotions + a ton of Holocaust references = PAIN). Surprisingly, my interest in Cohen's back catalogue coincided exactly with deep interest in Fire Emblem, and listening to one reinforces writing the other in ways I don't entirely understand. War, violence, and general conflict are certainly all abiding interests of Cohen's, along with pervasive (if elusive) spirituality and that prickly topic known as the Human Condition, all of which are relevant to exploration of the FE worlds. But Cohen is also very much of the twentieth century, making him an odd accompaniment for stories about little girls who ride winged horses in a fantasy land. I keep going back to that particular well, though... maybe one day I'll understand.
If any of you have insight into your own musical soundtracks re: writing, I'd be interested to hear it. Though if any of you cite any acts related to either Disney shows or American Idol, I will be looking askance at you for a while.
Shearwater also provide a favorable soundtrack for my writing; they have an "epic" quality even though many of their songs are under three minutes long-- dynamic and violent soundscapes that evoke storm-tossed seas and howling night winds. (I think "Rooks" is the PERFECT song for FE9/10 'fic, if I could ever be bothered.) They have quieter songs, as well, like the title track from Palo Santo, but it's the harsher stuff like "Red Sea, Black Sea," "Century Eyes," and the magnificent (if ill-named) "Johnny Viola" that sends my spirits up and my mental gears turning. Wye Oak seem promising as well, and I picked up their first album at the show last night to give it a try.
My "writing music" has evolved over the years, though I recently brushed off a CD mix my most excellent spouse burned for me back in 2001-- containing acts from The Posies to Toto to 8Stops7-- and found it remarkably relevant to my current moods. I actually made use of it while writing up "Brave Ascent" last month. But somewhere around 2007, my tolerance for the grotesque moved up sharply, and I began to get heavily into artists like Elvis Costello and Leonard Cohen, both of whom had previously been too "edgy" for me (unfettered sexuality + toxic emotions + a ton of Holocaust references = PAIN). Surprisingly, my interest in Cohen's back catalogue coincided exactly with deep interest in Fire Emblem, and listening to one reinforces writing the other in ways I don't entirely understand. War, violence, and general conflict are certainly all abiding interests of Cohen's, along with pervasive (if elusive) spirituality and that prickly topic known as the Human Condition, all of which are relevant to exploration of the FE worlds. But Cohen is also very much of the twentieth century, making him an odd accompaniment for stories about little girls who ride winged horses in a fantasy land. I keep going back to that particular well, though... maybe one day I'll understand.
If any of you have insight into your own musical soundtracks re: writing, I'd be interested to hear it. Though if any of you cite any acts related to either Disney shows or American Idol, I will be looking askance at you for a while.
no subject
Date: 2010-04-05 04:11 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-04-05 03:45 pm (UTC)I'm not even a Michigan native anyway, so the Ohio-bashing is purely tongue-in-cheek. I could not care less about the UMich/Mich State/OSU rivalries. But the Toledo War remains a source of amusement.