The music, the writing and the mood

The music, the writing and the mood

By writer113 [33]

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"So, what do you listen to when writing ... and why?"

This is a question I posed to several writers groups I am a member of. Half a dozen answers returned (out of a possible thousand plus members). The majority said, "Metal" of one form or another. Other replies, claimed it depended on what they were working on at the time, meaning: character or scene.

Stephen King claims he listens to Metallica (or used to).

Doug Clegg doesn't often listen to music. The moment he sits down to write, he's in the zone. If he decides he wants to listen to some sounds, he chooses: either movie soundtracks without lyrics, classical music, French, or Spanish music. All kinds from '60s French pop like Francoise Hardy to The Cider House Rules soundtrack to Vicente Fernandez to Berlioz.

Brandon Massey is another writer who doesn't listen to music -- usually. There are times when he wants to set or capture the mood of a particular scene, when he mentions a song in the course of the narrative. But only at that time. One thing he admits is the need for a strong black coffee to get the juices flowing, the brain in gear.

Bruce Floyd listens to a mix of music when writing to set the mood. The way he would best describe it is that he pictures himself in the story as it is being written, seeing everything, sensing all smells, noises, feelings. The music that plays is almost like a soundtrack to a movie, except he's the only one seeing and experiencing it at the time. "I can write without candles and music," Bruce claims, "but they  help me get into a place that is pleasing for me and only me while I create."

Holly Catanzartia doesn't need music to write. If she listens to anything, it's because she likes it, more than getting a feeling or setting from it.

A couple of people mentioned television. As long as they couldn't see the screen it was okay.

So, why do we listen to music or whatever when writing? The most common answer was: background noise.

#NOTE: There were a few other answers, like: silence. There are writers who need no music or sounds to get the juices flowing; there are some that need absolute silence to write anything at all. A good friend of mine gets up at the crack of dawn everyday and writes before his family awakens and the day starts. He needs quite, no distractions at all. 

Me? I also get up at the crack of dawn but I check my email and then head off to a cafe to write. At home, I write to the lovely sounds of thrash-metal, death-metal, devil-metal, black-metal, hard rock, whatever you want to label it as, if it has a fast beat, I most likely will be listening to it. Link it with Limp Bizkit, POD, Iron Maiden and WASP, and you have a great line up for some serious horror writing. 

But here's the kicker: Sometimes it takes only a few minutes to hit the writing zone, where music or the phone or the door bell, no longer register. Apart from an emergency or the need for a cup of coffee, nothing  else can invade that zone for as long as you can hold it.

So, another question is posed. Does having background noise help you in writing?

Ten years ago, I listened to thrash metal when I sat down to write at the typewriter. I believed it helped me concoct weird horror stories rummaging around in my head. A few years ago, I wrote only in silence (CD player was broken) and I could still write the way I always had. Recently I start by accessing itunes and choosing a play list. I click play, min the screen and open ywriter or mynovel.  I'm already entering the zone by the time the file is loaded and I barely notice the music. My wife is a TV head, so often I am writing to the sound of TV. The TV is next to the computer, this could be a major distraction, but not when I hit the zone.

And so, I have come to this personal conclusion:  Music or background noise doesn't help the writing or thought process of this art. It's not needed, only we like it, like a habit and when we hit the zone, we don't notice it's there. 

A habit. Hardest thing to break. We are accustomed in this noisy world to have something close to us at all times, something we are familiar with and I assume, that would be background noise. 

Everyday we hear cars, buses and trains, groups of people talking and phones ringing, photocopiers photocopying, television and  family conversations. Hundreds of different noises hit us each and every time we run our lives. And while all this noise assaults us, we are thinking and reacting to daily situations. The noise is the habit and perhaps this is why most writers have the stereo playing, the television on, etc. On the flip side of the coin, there's so much noise that some people can't think clearly and need the silence of early morning or late night to get the words on the page. 

Writing is a lonely job. Constructing pictures and emotions from words is not the easiest occupation in the world. We need the noise we are accustomed to, or the silence we long for, to get this crazy job done, like a smoker needs a cigarette after a long absence. 

The music we listen to may help us write the scene or set the mood of a particular scene. It can help set the mood we need to be in when writing such a piece (sad songs make us feel sad, uplifting songs - uplift us, thrash metal gets the blood pumping, etc), I've heard this many times. 

Perhaps you have a character that listens to metal, or Classical or. As a writer, one may feel the need to listen to such music, so one could connect with the emotional aspect when wearing said character's hat. Kind of like a 'character actor' who becomes the character while shooting the film. It helps them (they believe) get into the character's mind - the same reason a writer would do this for the words on his page. 

I am not going to comment on whether this is good or bad, everyone has their own style, a way they feel comfortable with. I have my way, it is mentioned above. This doesn't fit well with a lot of people. To each their own. Earnest Hemingway, I believe,  wrote in a cafe with a pad and pen; I write in a cafe with a laptop. Same job, different tools. Sometimes I also use a pad and pencil, same as Hemingway. Different times, same job. 

As writers, we are all doing the same job, hence the need for some authors to 'Get into' a character's mind. This style is not for me. The music I listen to, doesn't help me write. I listen to anything I want to, no matter when I am in the story. For example, I'm listening to The Three Sixes (heavy metal) while writing this article. It's not helping me write this, it's just ... background noise. 

I'm a writer who likes the noise. It doesn't bother me when I am writing, or dealing with daily life. Nor should it.

Music can help. Silence can help. The TV can help.

But in the end, it's all up to us and our use of the language. 

 

*This article is based on personal opinion and from emails I have received. This is the side of the coin that landed on my palm. Show me the flip side. 

 

END

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Comments, critiques and replies

TitleByDate
Thank you for sharing the results of your interesting survey of writers.  I agreed with your conclusion
that what we listen to while we are writing or trying to get into the "zone" is mainly a matter
of habit... whatever we feel comfortable with... soft, piano music usually does it for me.
bobchoi [488]26/12/2009
Recently, the only thing that I can't listen to is the radio, with all the adverts and DJ chatter, it
is distracting for some reason. At cafes I can get into the zone with jazz playing in the background and
groups of people talking away. It all become background noise. 

I think music is more important than we give it credit for. 

Thanks for the comment.
writer113 [33]27/12/2009
THE FLIP SIDE IN MY OPINION IMAGINATION NUMBER ONE CRITERIA FOR A WRITER.
mature gent [110]28/12/2009
Very interesting...
I prefer to listen to more, um, peaceful music when I'm writing... Taylor Swift and Owl City mostly.
Sometimes the radio, but not often when I'm writing.
Audrey
audreyhepburn [474]02/01/2010
If I listen to music at all, it has to be soundtrack music...I find that if I try to listen to music with
words, I end up singing along...and I am no longer in the zone...but then again, I sing, so that could
be the reason why. Thanks for sharing this. I found it an enjoyable read...
Sourceling [63]04/01/2010
I have my laptop computer facing the main road and the beautiful noises of cars, buses, the occasional
fire truck, an ambulance perhaps, the pedestrians that glide the sidewalk; sometimes with their stubborn
dogs, a lady on bike, a squirrel climbing up the maple tree in front of me chasing the other frisky tail
jumping on to the other tree ... all these are my sights and sounds that keep me company. Lately the silent
shroud of snow floating away and piling up on my Hemi-powered pick-up to the left of my peripheral vision.
Oh yes, the soft hum of the aquarium to my right with the seven fishes wondering often what the heck I
was doing in front of a bright screen tapping the keys.
Grampa Pogi [547]05/01/2010
Thank you for all your comments.
writer113 [33]05/01/2010
I agree with your comments about listening for the background noise. I choose to write in my local bookstore/starbucks
because I am continually surrounded by snippets of real conversation that I am able to draw on if needed
to add realism to my characters. Besides, it's cheap office space and they even bring me my coffee! :-)
For intense scenes, it makes no difference where I am because I find myself so absorbed in the craft that
I am hearing and seeing the scene as if I were there.
Teresa [28]18/02/2010
When I lived in Japan, I spent two or three hours in the morning before work at a small cafe writing by
hand and later transferring to computer. The atmosphere was wonderful and I produced work faster than
usual. There was a lot of background noise and jazz.
writer113 [33]23/02/2010
Hi, thank you for sharing this story, as for me i need total silence if i want my work done fast. Noise
disturbs me wether it's television, music or a noisy neighbor =)  And I have a tendency to eat a lot since
my brain needs it.  But now I started to limit my food intake because i needed to reduce wait.  Thanks
for your pointers, in creative writing perhaps, music really helps.
Evita Sagalongos [213]23/02/2010
I mean "weight" =)
Evita Sagalongos [213]23/02/2010

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