Sung songs

All of my writing has been inspired by music. This is one of those facts that I knew but didn’t know; I knew that it was easiest to write while listening to music, but I didn’t consider it not possible to write when not listening to music. And that was a correct consideration; I still am able to produce words. But my best ideas have not spun lucidly out of instances or experiences; they’ve been mitigated by and, in many cases, produced from interactions with music.

So, in that spirit, I am starting a project. Over the next few weeks, I am going to be producing short stories that are inspired by songs. The title of the song will be the title of the short story. Some may be very short. Some may be longer. Some may directly deal with the song’s subject matter. Some may be birthed out of a line, a chorus, or even a general feel of the song.

I’m not giving myself a hard-and-fast timeline on these; short stories are not like skulls to be cranked out. Not that he makes less or greater art. But it takes more time on the average to craft a short story (even a really short short story) than it does to make a mini art project like those. I’m totally down with admitting his project could end up being way, way cooler than this one, even if it takes “less time” on the whole. Nevertheless, I persist with this project. I’m calling it “Sung songs.”

I don’t know when the first one is coming, but it’s coming soon.

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Became and becoming, the engine humming.

And all we are, endearing, succumbing

to all we will be, as we keep our tongues running.

Pray for the morning to come in the right way.

Pray for the morning to come at the right time.

I reposted this from Independent Clauses.

In Internet terms, today I am celebrating the BEST. DAY. EVER. For my Savior did not stay dead; he rose to give the world life. I live because he wanted to give me life through his sacrifice.

As such, it’s time for an Easter playlist, IC-style.

1. Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing – Sufjan Stevens. I know it’s a rule in baseball and mixtapes to not put your home-run hitter as your lead-off man. But this song so perfectly sums up everything I believe about Jesus Christ that it has to be played first. Musically gorgeous, lyrically foundational; this track is amazing. Thank you, Sufjan.

2. Good News! (For Everyone.) – Aaron Hale. Technically a Christmas song, but Easter is good news for everyone.

3. Really Something – Aaron Sprinkle. “Sometimes I actually forget that this is really something.” And I do. And it’s a tragedy.

4. Heaven – Brett Dennen. I don’t agree with his theology, but he asks the right questions. “Is there a home for the homeless? Is there hope for the hopeless?” Yes, yes there is.

5. Oh Christmas Tree! or Happy Birthday by Elijah Wyman. In the midst of intense pain and grief, there is mercy and grace. It is hard to find sometimes, but Wyman captures that spirit and puts it to song.

6. Never Enuff – Mansions.  The narrator of this song is trying to break up with God. God does not break up with us. That’s pretty much the Easter story.

7. More than Ever – Holy Fiction. “I need you more than ever.”

8. Against Pollution – The Mountain Goats. One of the most misunderstood songs I’ve ever tried to give people on mixtapes. This song, although it does include a store clerk killing a would-be robber by shooting him “in the face, and I would do it again,” is not an endorsement of violence. It is a passionate endorsement that life is so important to the narrator that if he has to kill to stay alive he will do it. While I don’t fully agree with the degree to which the narrator goes, I deeply understand the sentiment. I want life, and to quote the Postal Service, I want life “in every word, to the extent that it’s absurd.” I don’t want to go down now. I want to keep kicking. And Jesus Christ offers that in spades.  Even then, the chorus: “When the last days come/we shall see visions/more vivid than sunsets/brighter than stars. We will recognize each other/and see ourselves for the first time/the way we really are.” Please. Amen.

9. Revelation – Hands. “Hear, oh Earth; the Lord our God is one.” Probably the only time the time-honored Jewish prayer has been sung by a man-choir in a epic nine-minute hardcore song. God is a big God.

1o. We’re Nothing Without You – The Juliana Theory. Self-explanatory.

11. Sufficient/Knocked Out – Bleach. Half the song proclaims how God is all-sufficient; the other half pleas for God to be all-sufficient in the midst of deep, deep struggle and pain. This is the Christian fight in ten minutes.

12. Fishing the Sky – Appleseed Cast. This is not even a remotely religious song. But when I hear it, it’s the closest thing to heaven I’ve ever heard.

13. Always – Switchfoot. “And I am always, always/I am always yours.”

14. Hope to Carry On – Caedmon’s Call. Don’t be scared off by the name; it’s Derek Webb singing. The title is self-explanatory. The track is glorious, upbeat, yearning acoustic folk.

15. That Where I Am That You May Also Be – Rich Mullins. One of my heroes, musically and in the way he lived his life, this was one of his final songs before he went to where He was. It is about as optimistic as a song gets while still grounded in non-sappiness.

16. Jesus – Page France. “Jesus came up through the ground so dirty, with worms in his hair and a hand so sturdy, we call him his magic, he calls us worthy, Jesus came up through the ground so dirty.” The gospel in indie terms.

May God find you where you are, comforting those that need comfort and shaking those who need shaking. Amen.

X-a-day

I very often fear that I will not leave any art behind when I go. The idea of legacy is important to me in all aspects of life, but it has become especially important to me in the field of art. Authors leave behind books, musicians leave behind albums, visual artists leave behind works.

Tied into this recent topic of thought is my longtime obsession with ongoing projects. I love song-a-day projects (like Chris Hickey‘s, or my friend Adam Howard‘s) and art-a-day projects (like Skull a Day or Make Something Cool Every Day).

I remember other x-a-day projects; my first big blog kick led me to wedding/photography/craft designer blogs. I had a whole mess of them that I read, but when my computer went down I lost a great many of them. There were projects of that nature in those blogs, most memorably a woman who chronicled every day what she wore. It was fascinating in an aesthetic way, and not creepy until right this moment. Yikes. But hey, she put it online.

I’m thinking really hard about an x-a-day project I can do. I really would like to undertake one, as I am floundering a bit in my creative life. I think the discipline of having one task in a creative way, each and every day, would cause me to be more creative. So, I’m thinking hard. It’s not going to be song-a-day, though. I don’t write songs fast enough for that.

I took a trip to the bustling metropolis of Bolivar, MO, this weekend. I saw more green grass and rolling hills than I have seen in months. I felt my soul attempting to strip off the layers of dust that have built up over the last few months of urban living. It felt much like breaking a shell.

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My new iPod’s name is Onomatopoeia. The birthday gift ended up with that name because I like the idea that an onomatopoeia is its own name. Boink means the sound boink. Ka-blam means the sound ka-blam. I like that concept. The words have integrity.

Because I’ve never had all of my music on one MP3 player before, I’m going through all my music on random. It interests me to see what my music tastes are actually like. So here’s a random playlist, generated as I type.

1. “Weird” by Clem Snide. I played this for a friend who promptly asked, “You like country?” Somehow, I don’t see this as country. But it definitely is. I love the lyrics in this song.

2. “What Can Separate Us (Whitebread)” by New Life Ranch. A summer camp theme song. Incredibly appropriate for second track, as NLR is a huge part of my life and these songs are part of my underlying consciousness. I know these songs so well that it feels like I never learned them.

3. “Christmas in July” by Sufjan Stevens. I love Sufjan, and I love the easy yet energetic groove of this song.

4. “Psalms 40:2” by the Mountain Goats. Thank you iPod. You are making this list awesome. The easy groove of Sufjan melts into the subdued strumming of this track, which eventually explodes into an all-out rock track. Tight.

5. “Sweet Talkin’ Woman” by Five Iron Frenzy. First weird transition of this list. We go from the intense cries of John Darnielle straight to the easy-listening ska cover of ELO’s biggest hit. There are definitely no sha-la-la’s in the previous track.

6. “Bittersweet Symphony” by the Verve. Hearing my cry, my iPod returns to darker fare. This is the track that destroyed the Verve’s career. Wikipedia it if you don’t know the story. Good tune for driving, though.

7. “It’s Oh So Quiet” by Bjork. I definitely would have put this neo-show tune between tracks five and six. It would have been a nice transition. Oh well. Can’t win ‘em all.

8. “You’ll Always Remember” by Courage Riley. This is an incredibly sad song. The whole of Courage Riley’s output was uber-dramatic and prone to outbursts of distortion amid the pensive, sweeping indie-rock, but this is one of the biggest tracks they ever put out, emotionally and time-wise (yeah, it’s seven minutes long).

9. “Mercy Me” by What Made Milwaukee Famous. Feeds nicely out of the mood of “You’ll Always Remember” with a less abrasive, dreamier take on rock. But it’s definitely an upbeat track, as evidenced by the goofy keys track and snare-heavy drums.

10. “Back from Kathmandu” by OK Go. The bouncy but not over-enthusiastic mood of the acoustic-led track fits perfectly as an upper after the WMMF track. I hope a super-energetic track is next. That would be tight.

11. “You’ve Been Flirting” by Bjork. Party foul, iPod! Party foul! You killed the mood with a mellow track and you repeated an artist from the same album! Yeesh.

12. “Sky is Falling” by Lifehouse. Standard pop song to get the mix back on track? Hopefully so. Angsty, but still singable.

13. “Letters and Drawings” by Damien Jurado. Okay, this is spectacularly interesting. Jurado only has about five fast songs, and this is one of them. It’s  got harmonica and background vocals. It’s even in a major key! Perfect move to get the mood back up. Keep it up, iPod!

14. “Maggots, Liars” by Inner Surge. I have approximately 50 metal songs on this iPod out of 4333 songs. One of them is right here. Mood killer for sure.

15. “Nothing is Beyond You” by Rich Mullins. Okay, that’s just mean, iPod. Follow up a brutal metal track with a lo-fi song on piano about Jesus? We’ve devolved from any semblance of mood into true randomness. Oh, well.

16. “Bring Back July” by Holland. Back to pop/rock. I don’t really listen to this band any more, which makes it interesting to hear them pop up on a random list like this. I like this song.

17. “7th Fret Closer” by Old Canes. A song vacillating between optimism and dark gloom, it’s the perfect way to end up this list. The trumpet solo is awesome.

I guess my listening tastes are not as cohesive as I thought. Interesting.

They’ve been on a hot streak over at Icanhascheezburger.com. I think I’ve smiled at every one of the last four days’ posts, and laughed out loud at about half of them (which is a higher percentage than usual). I have changed my background twice in two days with especially fantastic lolz (this one and this one). I hope this trend continues.

Yes, I did bump it. I felt strangely at one with the interwebz.

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Pillowhead’s snarky pop-rock take on “The District Sleeps Alone Tonight” (Originally by the Postal Service) is currently my favorite cover. I highly recommend it to you. You can access it here.

As for the way of project updates, not much is happening. I’ve been in a lull since my creative blowout in December, where I finished a degree, a book and an album. I’ve released the album, I need to start editing the book, and I still haven’t received my diploma in the mail (this is somewhat confusing). I have lots of ideas, but I haven’t adjusted to the non-college groove enough yet to get into being creative. Creativity is a fickle thing sometimes.

So, if my creative skills are on vacation, I’m gonna exercise my critical ones. Right now, Independent Clauses has posts stacked up until March 24th. That’s a lot of scheduled posts. Because I still have words; I just don’t have them for my own condition yet (which is what most of my creative output is, only sometimes with other names and settings. what? I’m not gonna lie.)

So, until I strike a groove, I’m just gonna be keeping pace. But I’m really caught up on the IC to-do list! And that’s cool.

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The USA vs. Canada hockey game was easily the most entertaining hockey event I’ve ever seen. Second place goes to last Sunday’s match-up of the same two teams. It made a hockey fan out of this non-hockey fan. High five, Team USA. You did awesome. Maybe some more people will watch the NHL now.

But probably not. See you in four years!!

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Neglect

I have neglected this blog. I didn’t even stop to check the date of my last post, because I’m sure it would be embarrassing to me. I have been not writing here because I’ve been writing like a maniac to catch up on Independent Clauses work. And it’s working! As of today, I have no albatross albums hanging around; I finally reviewed Inner Surge’s An Offering, a year and a half after it came out and a year after the band broke up. But I reviewed it, because it was haunting me. Distressingly, it was an awesome album. Why did I not get to it sooner?! There are no good answers.

While I have no releases clouding my mental happiness, I do have four more releases that came in the door before February started. Once I finish those four reviews, I’ll be working on current stuff. And that will be a really good feeling. I can just feel it.

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