ljwrites: A woman in traditional Korean dress with earbuds in. (deokman)
L.J. Lee ([personal profile] ljwrites) wrote in [community profile] go_write2016-05-18 01:13 am

[PUBLIC POST] Song or verse for atmosphere?

Edit: I think the original question was too difficult (it was hard enough for me, that should have been a sign) so let me broaden the question: What kind of music, and possibly poetry, do you feel suits the overall mood of your project or setting? Or what kind of music do you like for writing to in general? The original post is also below so feel free to answer that one if you can think of something.

This one's inspired by a conversation from the previous week's post where [personal profile] inkdust mentioned a couple of lines that expressed her main character really well. That got me thinking about a quote that fit my character or story. So I cast about a little and found this from the Dao De Jing:

For only he that pities is truly able to be brave;
Only he that is frugal is able to be profuse.
Only he that refuse to be foremost of all things
Is truly able to become chief of all Ministers.
 
To me this expresses her arc fairly well, although it can also sound like boring moralizing and could be problematic for a female character. Not that my heroine is a self-effacing saint, but she does find herself achieving things she never imagined by laying down some of her desires and ambitions for compassion and decency. Let's see if I can manage that process without being moralizing or misogynistic. The whole Dao De Jing is interesting in this way, extolling the seemingly passive and traditionally feminine virtues in a society that prizes the direct and masculine.

What about you? Is there a line, or verse, or song that would express some aspect of your character or story?
dhampyresa: (Default)

[personal profile] dhampyresa 2016-05-17 10:35 pm (UTC)(link)
I know there is, but right now I'm coming up blank, oops.
lizbee: (Music: PJ Harvey (b&w))

[personal profile] lizbee 2016-05-18 09:05 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, wow, this is so hard! I create playlists for stuff I'm writing, but they're more about setting and mood than characters. And the poetry I read isn't really a fit for the characters I write.

[personal profile] jazzyjj 2016-05-19 02:16 am (UTC)(link)
Jumping in here just a bit late. Hmmm let's see...I recently started using iTunes a lot for listening to music, and often times I'll be listening to some music while working on my MacBook or even while doing other stuff such as dishes. I don't really have a favorite right now, but when working in other apps and listening to iTunes I prefer something rather quiet because then I can still hear my screen reader talking. Even when a jazz or rock song is turned down a bit, it can get a bit much at times for that reason. Fortunately though I can control the volume of iTunes separately from the volume of the screen-reading software on my MacBook. But some artists I like to hear while writing are Enya, the Chieftains, and jazz such as The Dave Brubeck Quartet. The set of external speakers I got a little while back have come in very handy too though.
inkdust: (Default)

[personal profile] inkdust 2016-05-24 10:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Hah, now that I finally get to this post, I have many answers - if anyone feels like having a listen:

My theme for the story as a whole is We're On Our Way, sound-wise and lyric-wise and everything-wise.
And Snake Skin Heart is my song for the ending and my main character at the end. I haven't found a good one for her earlier on.

Wild Country is my song for the teenage boy ghost from 1865.
Always Gold is my song for him and his family as a whole, who built and lost the house the story takes place in.
I Of the Storm is my song for little girl ghost from 1914, also the one described in the Longfellow poem.
And my song for those two together is King and Lionheart. Most of the time they don't act like it, though.

Honestly it's a little unnerving but basically Of Monsters and Men could provide the entire movie soundtrack. Not even because all of their songs talk about ghosts. They just HAPPEN to talk about ghosts. I'm very glad their music has been around while I've been working on this book. Of Monsters and Men and Radical Face.

Now, the number of songs I associate with my side story...that's excessive.