The
Soundtrack to My Life
Growing
up, I was never one of those people that was very comfortable
with myself. I think it's because I've always had pretty
good empathy and a decent understanding of others -- and
how different I was from so many of them. Rather than
let myself be myself, I'd try to be what the people around
me would find cool, or at least acceptable. So for much
of my life, when someone would ask what kind of music
I liked, I'd be more likely to tell them what I figured
they wanted to hear (usually what they would think was
"cool") than the truth.
In
fact, even writing this article, I'm fighting all my natural
inclinations to simply write about what I think most of
the people reading this will think was cool. There's a
real desire, I think, on the part of many writers not
only to give their readers something good, but to appear
to be a cool person as well. I've certainly been to a
lot of conventions (both gaming and sci-fi) where the
author guests'real desire seemed to be that everyone there
came away saying, "Wow, not only does he write great
stories, but he's really cool in person."
To
bring this back toward the topic at hand, I always think
of this when I read an introduction to a book in which
the author takes the time to tell me what music he was
listening to when he wrote. My personal response is, "Who
cares?" Whenever I say that, my wife assures me that
lots of people care. She says that some people have a
need to get to know a writer (or an actor they like, or
what have you) and that they (and she) find that sort
of information interesting. Okay. Fine. But I always said
that I'd never write such an intro. I'd rather people
judged me only by my work. Or, if I go to a convention,
that they'd come away saying, "Wow, not only do I
like his work, but he's a nice guy." But that's a
topic for another time.
So,
then, how do I write a column about music (something that's
important to me) without being one of those "look,
aren't I cool?" guys? Well, first off, I'm not attaching
this to an actual piece of my work. By all means, use
some spells from The Book
of Eldritch Might because they're interesting or will
be a fun addition to your game, not because you like the
same music I do, or because I'm cool (because, quite frankly,
I'm not). Second, I'm going into this, as I said earlier,
with an eye toward reality rather than some vain attempt
to impress -- although I suppose you'll just have to take
my word for that.
I've
always been very music oriented. I never played an instrument
(I took organ lessons for a month really best forgotten),
and I sang in various choirs, including an embarrassing
stint in a swing choir where I had to "dance."
And when I say "dance," I really need to stress
those quote marks. In fact, if it were grammatically correct,
I'd say ""dance"" just to let you
know how far what I did was from actual dancing. Mostly,
I just stood in place and wove back and forth as awkwardly
as you can imagine. And when I say "wove," I
mean that not in the sense of a expert weaver at a loom
but in the sense of a blind, distracted, drunk driver
whose car has left the road and is now in a field menacing
cows. Except I did my weaving in place, right next to
the girl I had a big crush on. But I was 15 or 16 at the
time, and all our culture's institutionalized mechanisms
for dealing with 15- or 16-year-olds is built around humiliation,
so I suppose I'm not any more scarred than anyone else.
Except maybe for some of the people who actually had to
watch me "dance."
So
as far as music went, I was firmly in the ranks of the
listeners. And what I listened to was important to me.
When I was very young, growing up in a small town in South
Dakota, my radio choices were limited to Country music,
Easy Listening, Oldies, and Country music. And if you
don't know the difference between Easy Listening and Oldies,
well -- you probably didn't grow up in a small town, and
I'm not going to be the one to point out the subtle nuances.
Find someone else. Or, better yet -- don't.
Despite what the stations played, I still listened. A
lot. I know the words to every Barry
Manilow song. Need to know an Al
Jarreau tune? Gotcha covered. Carpenters?
Yep. Kool
and the Gang? Done. Neil
Sedaka... well, you get the idea.
So,
perhaps needless to say, by the time I had the option,
I rejected the radio. This was the early Eighties, which
meant that the obvious direction for me to turn was to
New Wave and Alternative music (which was pretty different
than music labeled "Alternative" today, although
they both eventually evolved into the Pop music of their
time). I dove in with a passion: Adam
Ant, the
Police, New
Order, Depeche
Mode, David
Bowie, Thomson
Twins, Psychedelic
Furs, and even some of the
Cure, the Clash,
and more. To name just a few. I could go on. And on. And
on. And I could get more obscure than those bands as well.
A near encyclopedic knowledge of Eighties Alternative
and Pop, you might say.
A
lot of good that does me today. In fact, I'm sure on some
level it works against me. I've found that, perhaps more
than other decades, if you didn't grow up in the Eighties,
its music is about as universally enjoyed as a junior
high swing choir. Some people even look back and think
those guys in A
Flock of Seagulls looked silly. Hard to imagine. (Yes,
that's a joke.)
But
around this same time, as I talked with my friends about
Prince,
the
Fixx, Madness,
and, oh, I dunno, maybe Dexy's
Midnight Runners, I had a friend that introduced me
to an entirely different kind of music that was to consign
me to the ranks of geekdom forevermore. I'm pretty sure
it started with Rush.
The album? A
Farewell to Kings. See, that has a song on it
called "Cygnus X-1," and it's about a spaceship
going into a black hole. A song that's not about love?
A song about spaceships and black holes? Gimme,
I said. And thus, like a junkie, I was drawn into the
world of what some people call Progressive music, a few
call Art Rock, and everyone else calls "overblown,
pretentious crap."
I'm
talking about Yes,
Genesis,
and even, for a while, Pink
Floyd. (And to be clear, by "Genesis," I'm
not talking about Phil-Collins-"Misunderstanding"-"Illegal
Alien"-Genesis. I'm talking about Peter-Gabriel-dressed-like-a-flower-Genesis.
If you don't know what I'm talking about, never mind,
and if you do -- well, hang in there, brother.)
Now,
if you're a purist, you're going to object to me lumping
in Pink Floyd and Rush with Yes and Genesis, and you're
going to wonder why I'm not also mentioning ELP,
the Seventies albums of the Moody
Blues, King
Crimson, or maybe even Jethro
Tull. My response to you would be: Hey, Mr. Purist
-- chill out. There's so few of us left who like this
music that we really shouldn't argue. And, no, I don't
want to see your collection of Lamb bootlegs. (There are
like three people in the world who will get that joke.)
What
listening to Genesis and Yes did for me was teach me to
appreciate musicianship rather than just catchy tunes
or snappy lyrics. These guys were taking music in new
directions and could really play the heck out of their
instruments. They weren't writing songs, they were composing
music -- complex music at that. At least, that's what
they were doing when they were at the top of their game.
I didn't give up on simpler, popular music, but I learned
to distinguish the differences.
But
saying you like Yes is kinda like saying you like Star
Trek, or roleplaying games. Most people who even know
what you're talking about quickly label you as a geek.
I mean, some of these songs are 15, 20, even 30 minutes
long, for Pete's sake. And there's rarely a catchy tune
to be found.
So
that's what I grew up with. (I'm skipping over my obligatory
Beatles
phase and my brief flirtation with Sixties and Seventies
music in general, which I blame mostly on the Columbia
House music club that encouraged me to buy 12 different
"best of" albums -- Simon
and Garfunkel, Supertramp,
America,
Steely
Dan, the
Eagles, et. al. -- for a penny.) I learned early on
that playing Tales From Topographic Oceans was
not the way to impress a girl, but I had my affection
for Berlin
and Duran
Duran to help me there (I could even pretend to be
into U2,
if I thought that would help). Until, of course, the Nineties
came along.
Then,
I was dead in the water. Like the rest of the world, I
left Eighties music behind, but I had a lot of trouble
with Eighties music (and, truth be told, late Eighties
music). A few artists came into the Nineties with me,
like Sting
and Peter
Gabriel, but I had little desire to get on board with
Hootie
and the Blowfish or anything you'd want to label as
"grunge." So I focused even more on old favorites
and played my Yes and Genesis -- even more out of style
than ever -- to death. At one point, I even said that
I'd probably bought all the music that I'd ever need.
But
that's a terrible trap. I see people falling into that
trap all the time. You can't let yourself stagnate. So
I explored a lot of different kinds of music (once again,
turning off the radio), including jazz, classical, and
weirder stuff.
Today,
probably because of all that, I guess I'd describe my
musical tastes as extremely eclectic. In the five-disc
CD player in my writing room right now I've got Evanescence,
a Virgin Records ambient collection, Stan
Getz, Tori
Amos, and Tortoise.
My most recent obsession was ambient music and various
electronica, including the somewhat narrow genre of space
music, but that's fading somewhat because the category
is so hit-and-miss, and frankly I'm tired of bringing
home CDs that miss. I like some Future
Sound of London, Brian
Eno, Propellerheads,
William
Orbit, Harold Budd, Robert
Fripp, Orb,
Fluke,
Photek
and David Bowie's forays into this kind of music as well
(his Some
Are [The Low Symphony] is one of my favorite pieces
of music).
Now
the music I listen to most falls into the strange category
some people are calling post rock. This music is almost
all instrumental, sometimes interspersed with verbal samples.
Groups in this genre include Do
Make Say Think, mum,
Labradford,
the aforementioned Tortoise, a silver
mt. zion, and probably my favorites, Godspeed
You! Black Emperor and Explosions
in the Sky.
But
that still leaves plenty of room for Koop,
Miles
Davis, Delerium,
and the Flaming
Lips. (A friend -- James Bell of Fiery
Dragon Productions -- gave me their latest album,
Yoshimi
Battles the Pink Robots. Can an album with more
than one song about robots actually be insightful, philosophical,
and thought-provoking? Turns out: yes.) There's even some
new progressive music out there that's okay -- Camel,
the Flower
Kings, and Spock's
Beard (among others). Oh, and I've already told you
about my love
of soundtracks, mostly used during gaming but sometimes
good as general background music -- it's nice to write
to sometimes.
So
music is a big part of my life. Always has been, always
will be. I'm reminded of a girl in high school who wore
headphones all the time. If you ever said anything to
indicate that you thought that was rude, she'd tell you
very matter-of-factly that she could hear everything you
said. She kept the volume down. The music wasn't there
to cover anything up, it was background music. It enhanced
the mood, punctuated the high points, and filled in the
empty spots. The soundtrack to her life, she called it.
I've always liked that.