Follow

Friday, April 27, 2018

The Muse of Music

I recently read a piece at Literary Hub about the influence Van Morrison's album Astral Weeks has had on writers. It's a tremendous record. Morrison's best, in my opinion. Songs on that album make me cry, make me think. The classic from 1968 is hard to pin down, however. It's an album with a lot of themes running through it. But all together, it's a masterpiece.


Certainly music plays a part in writing. Writers will often name great songwriters as inspiration. Dylan, for one. Even before the Nobel Prize for Literature. Springsteen, John Lennon, Joni Mitchell, Kurt Cobain—to name just a few. Jason Isbell is a tremendous lyricist. Listening to the music of Iron and Wine is guaranteed to trigger a bout of writing. But there are also the songs without lyrics that can spark creativity.

It may be a bit of a cliche, but Mile Davis' Kind of Blue has always been magic for me. It has for others, too. The album is over 50 years old and it still sinks into my soul every single time I play it. There is something new to hear; something new that resonates. It's cool, melodic, romantic, and 
revolutionary. Any one of those emotions could fit the bill. 

                                                                                                      Other Music without lyrics known to do the trick: Beethoven, Mozart, Debussy, and even meditative music like Indian flute.

Writers use music to get in the mood to write, but others have been known to create a "soundtrack" for their work, a song list that helps to maintain a theme or a mood. I read in a Write Life post that writer Chandi Gilbert was developing a personal essay that centered around her early teenage years, so she created a musical list of songs from the year 1994 to help put her in the right frame of mind.



My novel, Night Radio, actually prompted a musical playlist. The story revolves around a period of time when radio had strong musical relevance, and so I created a Spotify playlist for the novel. It was fun and it helped promote the book.

How does music relate to your writing? Do you play it when you write? Do you use it to create mood? When you hear a certain song, does it inspire you to sit down at the keyboard?

Share your thoughts on how music connects to your writing, because. . .you know it does.


8 comments:

  1. I LOVE all kinds of music, but for me, I NEED to dance to the rhythm. Sitting still is not an option. Music is in my soul.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I get that! Some people like or need silence when they write.

      Delete
  2. I can't write while music is playing--I sing along.
    However, I can't NOT have music in my writing. I have so much in my upcoming book The Fourteenth of September (She Writes 9/18 ritadragonette.com) that I have a play list.
    I'm a child of the Beatles. The attribution on my book is "There will be an answer. Let it Be."

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Certainly, I get the “silence” thing. For more, I don’t akways listen to music while writing — but — before, it gets me in right frame of mind or after, because the writing has evoked a certain emotional state.

      Delete
  3. Enjoyed your blog very much. I believe an appreciation of music, and maybe some understanding of how music works, can directly influence an author's style. Writing, like music, is very much about cadence, rhythm, and both linear and vertical structure. It helps me very much if I can feel the beat, if you will, of my sentences and paragraphs. Thanks!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I get the cadence thing. I have to read my work out loud. If it doesn't flow in some musical way, I rewrite.

      Delete
  4. I sometimes don’t see sitting down to write and turning on music to supplement the experience like I once did. When I feel compelled to put pen to paper, what is needed is to find the right dance partner. The music is not utilized, but invited to join me in an act of expression. It is engaged. The song, album is already manifest, at least as much as it can be without the background experiences of the listener to complete it. It shares itself as an example, an impetus for my own creativity to get off the wall and bust a move. It flavors the writing, pulling this way and that, like a confident lead guiding our steps together: Samba, lindy, waltz, electric slide. So many possibilities. At the end of any writing session of which music has been a partner, I attribute at least half of the piece’s completion to the notes and rhythm along for the ride.

    ReplyDelete
  5. That’s so well said! The music, for many, is its own art and like any art can only influence as much as you want it to, let it to.

    ReplyDelete