Erotica author, aka Elspeth Potter, on Writing from the Inside

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

Friday, August 20, 2010

Music Linkgasm

And now for something completely different!

I thought I'd share a few of my favorite MP3 music blogs. It was hard, but I limited myself to five.

1. The Hype Machine is a blog aggregator - it's a great place to find links to a huge range of music blogs.

2. Motel de Moka has long been one of my favorite music blogs. Posts are organized into playlists, usually by mood or theme. The bloggers choose from a huge range of genres, including rhythm and blues, jazz, pop, ambient, indie, world music, and classical. I love that you're never sure what you're going to get in the next post.

3. The Hood Internet is a lot of fun. It's a blog of mashups, and sometimes of mixes. Amusing mashup photos of the two artists illustrate the posts.

4. I like Said the Gramophone for the stream-of-consciousness narratives that accompany the downloads.

5. Cover Lay Down is one of my favorite blogs ever. It features folk musicians covering, usually, pop or rock songs. I love hearing different interpretations of songs, and since the blogger often groups covers by original artist, it can be a really interesting experience to listen to all the different ways one artist's songs can sound. (Sometimes, the covers are all performed by a single artist, which is also fun.) I find a lot of interesting new-to-me folk artists here.

Let me know if you enjoyed these links, and I can do another post later on.

Monday, December 28, 2009

Did You Know Bach Had a Father?

I post this section from Patrick O'Brian's The Ionian Mission because I love it for what is says about Bach (Johann Sebastian) as well as about Jack Aubrey and Stephen Maturin.

O'Brian was an incredible writer, and I think this passage shows it.

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'[London Bach] wrote some pieces for my uncle Fisher, and his young man copied them out fair. But they were lost years and years ago, so last time I was in town I went to see whether I could find the originals: the young man has set up on his own, having inherited his master's music-library. We searched through the papers - such a disorder you would hardly credit, and I had always supposed publishers were as neat as bees - we searched for hours, and no uncle's pieces did we find. But the whole point is this: Bach had a father.'

'Heavens, Jack, what things you tell me. Yet upon recollection I seem to have known other men in much the same case.'

'And this father, this old Bach, you understand me, had written piles and piles of musical scores in the pantry.'

'A whimsical place to compose in, perhaps; but then birds sing in trees, do they not? Why not antediluvian Germans in a pantry?'

'I mean the piles were kept in the pantry. Mice and blackbeetles and cook-maids had played Old Harry with some cantatas and a vast great Passion according to St Mark, in High Dutch; but lower down all was well, and I brought away several pieces, 'cello for you, fiddle for me, and some for both together. It is strange stuff, fugues and suites of the last age, crabbed and knotted sometimes and not at all in the modern taste, but I do assure you, Stephen, there is meat in it. I have tried this partita in C a good many times, and the argument goes so deep, so close and deep, that I scarcely follow it yet, let alone make it sing. How I should love to hear it played really well - to hear Viotti dashing away.'

Stephen studied the 'cello suite in his hand, booming and humming sotto voce. 'Tweedly-tweedly, tweedly tweedly, deedly deedly pom pompom. Oh, this would call for the delicate hand of the world,' he said. 'Otherwise it would sound like boors dancing. Oh, the double-stopping . . . and how to bow it?'

'Shall we make an attempt upon the D minor double sonata?' said Jack, 'and knit up the ravelled sleeve of care with sore labour's bath?'

'By all means,' said Stephen. 'A better way of dealing with a sleeve cannot be imagined.'

...

Now when the fiddle sang at all it sang alone: but since Stephen's departure he had rarely been in a mood for music and in any case the partita that he was now engaged upon, one of the manuscript works that he had bought in London, grew more and more strange the deeper he went into it. The opening movements were full of technical difficulties and he doubted he would ever be able to do them anything like justice, but it was the great chaconne which followed that really disturbed him. On the face of it the statements made in the beginning were clear enough: their closely-argued variations, though complex, could certainly be followed with full acceptation, and they were not particularly hard to play; yet at one point, after a curiously insistent repetition of the second theme, the rhythm changed and with it the whole logic of the discourse. There was something dangerous about what followed, something not unlike the edge of madness or at least of a nightmare; and although Jack recognized that the whole sonata and particularly the chaconne was a most impressive composition he felt that if he were to go on playing it with all his heart it might lead him to very strange regions indeed.

During a pause in his evening letter Jack thought of telling Sophie of a notion that had come to him, a figure that might make the nature of the chaconne more understandable: it was as though he were fox-hunting, mounted on a powerful, spirited horse, and as though on leaping a bank, perfectly in hand, the animal changed foot. And with the change of foot came a change in its being so that it was no longer a horse he was sitting on but a great rough beast, far more powerful, that was swarming along at great speed over an unknown countryside in pursuit of a quarry - what quarry he could not tell, but it was no longer the simple fox. But it would be a difficult notion to express, he decided; and in any case Sophie did not really care much for music, while she positively disliked horses. On the other hand she dearly loved a play, so he told her about....

[from pp.47-48, 154-155 of The Ionian Mission, Patrick O'Brian].

Monday, December 7, 2009

Victoria Janssen Interviews Herself

I thought it would be fun to interview myself, using the questions from Inside the Actors Studio.

1. What is your favorite word?

Song.

2. What is your least favorite word?

Moist.

3. What turns you on?

Beautiful voices and kindness and intelligence.

4. What turns you off?

Arrogance, especially when there's no real strength behind it.

5. What sound or noise do you love?

Renaissance polyphony, sung by a few clear voices.

6. What sound or noise do you hate?

The crinkling of chip bags in a quiet room.

7. What profession other than yours would you like to attempt?

Writing as a full-time profession.

8. What profession would you not want to participate in?

Corporate...well, anything, really.

9. What is your favorite curse word?

Damn!

10. If Heaven exists, what would you like to hear God say when you arrive at the pearly gates?

"The choir's rehearsing over there, and they need another alto."

Friday, September 18, 2009

Short Fiction Questions & Inspirations Playlist

While I'm at it with the Short Fiction FAQs, does anyone have any additional questions I should include? I'm going to make a compiled file and post it on my website.

And, since it's Friday and I should have some content, this is a version of my most recent playlist, all songs I find inspirational in one way or another. Well, except for the first one, which is the lead-in, and has a different mood.

Down at the bottom of the post is an Amazon.com MP3 widget I'm trying out, that has links to the songs. If you've got experience with MP3 widgets, please share!

1. "Crawling in the Dark," Hoobastank
2. "Song of Choice," Solas (Peggy Seeger cover)
3. "Rise Up," Yves Larock
4. "One-Trick Pony," Nelly Furtado
5. "Virus of the Mind," Heather Nova
6. "Another Train," The Poozies (Phil Ochs cover)
7. "Mainstream," Thea Gilmore
8. "Walk the Walk," Poe
9. "Hammer and a Nail," Indigo Girls
10. "Don't Fence Me In," David Byrne (Cole Porter cover)
11. "Learning to Fly," Tom Petty
12. "In These Shoes," Kirsty Maccoll
13. "Unwritten," Natasha Bedingfield
14. "The Rainbow Connection," Sarah McLachlan
15. "Turn the World Around," Harry Belafonte
16. "It's Not Easy Being Green," Jesse Palter (Kermit the Frog cover)
17. "Finale (Allegro giacoso, ma non troppo)," Concerto for Violin & Orchestra in A min Op_53, Dvorak





The theme for Snippet Saturday tomorrow is "Kickass Heroines."

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Valentine Playlist

Valentine Playlist

"Sunday Kind of Love," Etta James
"Whatta Man," Salt-N-Pepa with En Vogue
"Dance Me to the End of Love," Madeleine Peyroux
"The Queen of Argyll," Silly Wizard
"Trouble," Alannah Myles
"Lover's Cross," Jim Croce
"No Ordinary Love," Deftones (Sade cover)
"Love's Divine," Seal
"Baby, I Love You," Aretha Franklin
"Love Lockdown," Kanye West
"Train Song," Eliza Carthy (DNA remix)
"Alla That's All Right, But," Sweet Honey in the Rock
"Ghost," Indigo Girls
"Not Fair," Lily Allen
"Layla," Derek and the Dominos
"Jolene," Dolly Parton
"Did We Not Choose Each Other," Sophie B. Hawkins
"Fire At Midnight," Jethro Tull
"Have a Little Faith in Me," John Hiatt