Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Happy Accidents

There are many things I love passionately in this life: yarn, films, chocolate, cupcakes, chocolate cupcakes. Of all the things I love, though, two have been foremost for nearly as long as I can remember: books & music. Both have been constant and reliable lifelines for me. Reading a book or listening to a song, I feel connected to someone else; I feel less like I am the only one in the world with a particular, and sometimes peculiar, thought or feeling. It should be no surprise then that in recent years as technology has become more portable, books and music are becoming hopelessly, and perhaps wonderfully, intertwined for me.

Like many New Yorkers, I have an iGadget for music, which is a necessary accessory on the subway, and like many New Yorkers, I always carry a book on the subway, another necessary accessory. There’s something about this great big city and about the subway in particular. It can make you crazy being surrounded all the time by the mass of humanity. You feel them pressing close to you always, jostling you and wanting your attention or just a little more space for themselves. Even in your home, you are never alone. There are the noises of the neighbors or just the noises of the street below your window. Sometimes that living breathing mass of humanity that you cannot escape can be comforting, can make you feel a part of some larger human community, but sometimes, you need to escape, and lacking friends who can lend you their cabin in the Adirondacks, you have to make your own escape here in the confines of the city, which is where your trusty iGadget and books come in handy.

Because the subway is the subway, though, and therefore crowded and full of people, it often is not enough to just read a book or just listen to music, especially during rush hours when the crush of people can overwhelm even the most seasoned New Yorker. As a result, I long ago developed the habit of listening to music as I read on the train. The music is there as background, as a buffer between me and the noise of everyone else. I’ve thought a lot about this, and I think it is simply that noise is not a distraction or an intrusion so long as it is predictable noise, in this case music, but the trouble with my fellow subway passengers is that they noise they make is unpredictable and unfamiliar to me. It’s noise I cannot choose or control, and as a result, it’s necessary for me to put up a wall of my own noise in order to create a space in which I can think, concentrate, and—in some small sense—be by myself.

Recently, though, I have become aware of an intriguing side effect of reading while listening to music. Early last summer, I read Moby Dick for the first time, and at the same time I was reading the book, I was listening obsessively to an album called Libraries by The Love Language. In point of fact, obsessively is generally how I listen to an album. I develop “crushes” on records or songs and listen to the same ones multiple times per day for days on end, sometimes for weeks. When the crush ends, I move onto another album or song.

It’s fair to say that while reading Moby Dick, I had a crush on Libraries, so while I read Melville on the train, I listened to songs like “Pedals,” with its slow instrumental beginning that gets louder and louder until all the instruments finally kick in and then words with their maritime talk of cannons and guns. I also listened to “Blue Angel” and its lyrics about sinking ships and learning to swim and to my personal favorite, “Heart to Tell,” where Stuart Mc Lamb sings, “I’m no sailor. I want to rock the boat.” In some ways, it came to seem like the album was made to accompany Moby Dick, like it was created as a soundtrack. It certainly became that to me. Over and over as I read, I felt the music punctuated the action of the novel, sometimes eerily so, and the music is now so intimately connected to the book that whenever songs from Libraries come up on my random shuffle, images and incidents from Moby Dick come into my mind and I’m invaded by an intense desire to read the novel again. I imagine that when I do read it again, I’ll have to listen to Libraries as I read.  If I don’t, I think the songs will play in my head anyway.

Since this happened, this total enmeshing of book and record, I’ve imagined it a freak, a one-off. I thought it was a lucky and happy coincidence never to be repeated, a special bit of serendipitous magic that I’d stumbled onto. Because it had never happened before that a novel and an album had resonated so fully, I imagined it would never happen again

Well, I recently developed a new crush on an album, Of Monsters and Men’s My Head is an Animal. At about the same time, I began reading Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse. I cannot say enough about either of them. The album is full of things I love—beautiful vocalists both male and female who sing beautiful harmonies, songs quiet and thoughtful and songs raucous and hellbent on living, lyrics lush and quotable. It has an energy and life pulsing through it, even in its quieter moments. This makes it a natural companion to Woolf, whose novel similarly shimmers and pulses with life like the sea that is nearly itself a character in the novel. As I read To the Lighthouse, I too felt full of life. More than once, I did a little happy dance to release what the beauty of the words had pent up inside of me. The language is of a kind that you can hold inside of yourself for twenty years, as Carole Maso notes in her preface to her book Aureole. To the Lighthouse is a book you absorb and carry inside of you just as My Head is an Animal is an album you wake up in the morning hearing in your head.

As I read on the train listening to my new favorite album, the same thing that happened with Moby Dick and Libraries began to happen. There was a resonance between the novel and the album that became inescapable so much so that every time I played My Head is an Animal, I felt compelled to open To the Lighthouse and read. It was nearly Pavlovian, like a dog that salivates at the ring of the bell but my bell was a song like “Lakehouse” and my salivation was for a book, not a bone. 

Now that I’ve read the final words, I do not know what I’ll do when I play the album. I cannot help wishing the novel had a sequel or wondering if it would be strange to read the book again from the beginning after just having finished. To the Lighthouse and My Head is an Animal seem oddly made for one another right down the boat-creaking sounds that end “Little Talks,” one of my favorite cuts from the album. I’m not done with my crush on the record, and I don’t want to let go of the refreshing solace that diving into Woolf’s words brought. Reading the novel was like “standing up to the lips in some substance, to move and float and sink in it, yes, for these waters were unfathomably deep. Into them had spilled so many lives.” That’s how Lily’s consciousness expresses the vividness of life at certain moments like returning from a journey or just at the end an illness or like the final morning described in To the Lighthouse.

Tonight I feel, as I did at the end of Moby Dick, that some beautiful and life-changing love affair has, against my will, come to an end which I’m not yet prepared for, an end which I may never be prepared for. I feel marked and changed, and I believe fully that the albums I listened to as I read are as much a part of this feeling as the novels. I have no way of knowing if the songwriters of these albums even read the books I’ve so passionately adored, much less if they had them in mind at all as they wrote their songs, but honestly, it doesn’t matter if they did. All that matters in this moment, on this evening is that I have been given these gifts of accidental juxtaposition and that I have hope, thanks to the little bits of technology I carry with me in my pocket, of experiencing more such happy accidents.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Why a girl can't marry a CD is beyond me

I'm not going to be the first one to say this. In fact, what I'm going to say is nothing revolutionary. It's practically pedestrian, but I'm going to say it anyway. You need the new Grizzly Bear CD, Veckatimest. Really. You need it.

I resisted Grizzly Bear for forever. I'm a resister. It's part of what I do. Take Facebook, for example. I don't have an account. I'm the girl at the concert who will not clap or wave her hands or shout just because some people on stage tell me to; they have to make me want to. I can be a bit of a contrarian. It is childish, yes, and it has made me miss out on good stuff. Then again, I'm never the girl asking herself why she wasted those hours reading that crappy book or seeing that crappy movie that had all the hype. Sadly, though, the second everyone starts buzzing about something is the second I'm going to start pretending it doesn't exist. That happened with Grizzly Bear. Back when Yellow House came out, it was buzz, buzz, buzz, and I ignored it.

What made me decide to give Grizzly Bear a serious try was NPR. Yeah, NPR. I love that stuff. I've got the All Songs Considered podcast, among others, and I check out it every once in a while. I tend to store up a lot of them and then knock out 3 or 4 episodes in a Saturday afternoon. Well, on a semi-recent broadcast, which I've since deleted so don't ask me which one, they played a live Grizzly Bear track recorded at SXSW. It was stunningly gorgeous. I may even have cried a little. After that, I resolved to download the entire album from iTunes (because I only rock the legal stuff or what my friends give me from their own collections) once it became available. Unfortunately, my iTunes was acting up and wouldn't let me download anything until just last week, so I didn't get the album till then despite it's being out for nearly a month.

No exaggeration, I have listened to it multiple times everyday since I got it. I am madly in love with this CD, the entire thing. I keep finding new favorite tracks. It is simply gorgeous. Now, I'm not a music critic; I just know what I like. I cannot talk about chord progressions or production values, but I can say that this album gets inside of you. I wake up hearing it in my brain. The lyrics are simple and bare, often seeming to be sketches of lyrics more than fully formed stories or even ideas, but the way the lyrics are sung imbues them with meanings that the words on the page don't have all by themselves.

The point is that I'm having an intense and madly passionate love affair with this CD, but since it is a CD, I don't mind sharing the object of my love with anyone and everyone. If you are looking to buy just one new CD, get this one. As was the case with Arcade Fire, my stubbornness nearly caused me to miss the bandwagon on one of those too rare occasions where it is actually worth jumping on.