Lots of writers use music to set mood and evoke emotion while writing, and I’m no exception — I love using music to create a tone for a scene or even just to get creative juices flowing.
Some authors have gone so far as to release playlists, identifying songs for each scene. I don’t generally do that, for several reasons:
I don’t work that way
That’s just not how my brain works; I don’t often have a specific piece of music tied to a specific scene. There are very rare exceptions.
I don’t have permission
When I do actually have a specific soundtrack for a scene, I generally don’t have the artist’s permission to use it publicly. Most don’t mind the mention, but occasionally their label’s lawyers feel differently. I know of several incidents where an artist was fine with or even flattered by a non-commercial use of a song (including one in which the user was personal friends with the artist), but the label issued a C&D letter.
And referencing a song in relation to my own work for sale might be considered commercial use. Still fuzzy on how a court would view a writer specifically tying a work for sale to someone else’s work for sale, and I’ll let someone else go first, thanks.
So while I may know that the first time Morgan sees Rae dance (in a work called Kingcraft, not available at this time or any time soon), she’s dancing to “Marco Polo” by Loreena McKennitt, I don’t always want to share that. But legal concerns aren’t the only reason, either.
Readers don’t always work that way, either
Now that I’ve mentioned “Marco Polo,” give it a listen.
Some readers thought that was a lovely song. Others were wholly unmoved. Still others were distracted by a visual and forgot to listen to the music.
If I specify a piece of music for a certain scene, but that music doesn’t work for the reader, I may have actually hurt their reading experience by replacing their own imagined soundtrack.
(By the way, there’s a really interesting article/podcast on music and emotion over at How Stuff Works.)
Scenes & Soundtracks
Now obviously films get around this end-user issue all the time — but they have talented composers writing specifically for that medium. It’s created for the scene itself and it’s timed perfectly. Books don’t have those advantages.
Still, if Howard Shore ever scores one of my books — squeeeeeeeeeeee! — I would be totally okay with that.
Mood & Music
So how do I use music while writing?
I have a playlist called, accurately enough, Angsty & Epic Writing Music. It’s several dozen hours of mostly instrumental music, chosen for sweeping emotions, driving rhythms, and general awesomeness. I use it to ease my brain — which both responds to music and now recognizes it as a cue — into epic writing mode. It’s as close as I get to having Howard Shore scoring my work.
So what’s on it? Lots of things, but here are a few staples:
- Epicon, by Globus
- Trailerhead, and just about anything else by The Immediate Music Company (Globus by another name)
- The Extended Lord of the Rings Recordings, by Howard Shore
- Invincible, by Two Steps from Hell
- Loreena McKennitt
- Tron: Legacy soundtrack, by Daft Punk
- Smile?, by The Crystal Method
- Taku Iwasaki’s soundtrack to the Rurouni Kenshin OVA, released in the US with the unfortunate title of Samurai X
- the Myst and Riven soundtracks, by Robyn Miller
A few with vocals:
And there are some sprinkled in which might help my brain out of a rut, but also which I just like:
- Smooth Criminal by David Garrett
- Egao no Wake by Kaori Hikita
- Håll om Mig, by Nanne Grönvall
And rarely, I do pick a track to start with that I think will go well with what I’ll be writing.
Tonight's action sequence brought to you by the Yoshida Brothers. (I often write with a soundtrack.) http://t.co/xhjztKyt
— Laura VanArendonk Baugh (@Laura_VAB) October 18, 2012
What music powers you?
Recommended:
The Book of Secrets was the first Loreena McKennitt album I owned and still one of my favorites. Celtic and multi-national influences blend to create an excellent background music or sound theme.affiliate link |
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Cheers!
Craig Schmidt
I’m so glad I found this! Somehow your comment was filtered as spam — I can’t see why — and I actually caught your relevant post via checking traffic referrers. Then I knew to look for your comment and approve it. :) Thank you, and my response will post in the morning!
Of the ones you mention, I only know McKennitt, but I really dig her. Ihave three of her CDs, including the one you mention. It is my favorite too. I sometimes listen to Pandora when writing/working. Every now and then it’s ‘random’ selection finds a way to influence what I’m working on…
-Jay
Yes! A lyric slips in, sneaks through my subconscious, and suddenly a character is facing a different, more complex challenge. I love (and hate) that.
I usually listen to soundtracks or other instrumental music while writing, or occasionally songs in foreign languages, as English-language lyrics distract me from what I’m writing. I used to maintain my own playlists, but after a while my collections started feeling repetitive. Now I lean more toward online streaming services such as StreamingSoundtracks or Pandora, since the music is much more randomized.
Pandora, yes. StreamingSoundtracks has great music and I do use it, but it’s just a bit too random; somehow they always manage to deliver a dance number right in the middle of my epic battle sequence.
This is a great post! I like the way you think – and I agree. I have a playlist on my iTunes called “Kitty and the Midnight Hour” that Carrie Vaughn released in that novel…and I didn’t really care for it. I have no idea why I still have the playlist.
As for the albums you mention, a lot of those are my go-to for writing as well. I often actually prefer the Trailerhead pieces and those like them, because I don’t have a scene from a movie that I’m imagining in my head when I hear it. Some of the Howard Shore pieces are almost too evocative for me. I have “Hunt for Gollum” and “Born of Hope” scores as well (two scores for fan-made Tolkien movies), which have similar motifs but aren’t quite as…um…visceral, maybe? Another composer I like is Taro Iwashiro. Good stuff.
Taro Iwashiro sounds really familiar — ah, Google tells me he also worked on a Kenshin project. And FMA. Yep, he can stay. :)
I resisted watching Last of the Mohicans for a long while because I used the soundtrack for writing and I didn’t want it influenced! But usually I can keep them separate, plot-wise at least.