My Memories of a Future Life
Posts Tagged Valentine’s Day
‘Cyclical melodies, beginnings and endings’ – Nicole Evelina
Posted by Roz Morris @Roz_Morris in Undercover Soundtrack on February 13, 2017
I had a hard time this week picking just one pull quote to represent my guest’s work. She’s a writer of two halves – historical romantic fiction and contemporary romance. And she’s now also venturing into biographical historical fiction as well. The common thread is always music. A song by Sting that evoked for her a sense of an untold angle for the Arthurian legend. Or a friend who recommended music by The Civil Wars that gave her the opening and closing lines of a modern romance. What could be more fitting with Valentine’s just around the corner? Drop by tomorrow for the Undercover Soundtrack of Nicole Evelina.
Arthurian fiction, biographical historical fiction, historical fiction, music for writers, music to inspire writing, Nicole Evelina, romance, Sting, The Civil Wars, undercover soundtrack, Valentine's Day
The Undercover Soundtrack – Dan Holloway
Posted by Roz Morris @Roz_Morris in Undercover Soundtrack on February 13, 2013
‘Neon, nostalgia, regret and joy’
Once a week I host a writer who uses music as part of their creative process – perhaps to open a secret channel to understand a character, populate a mysterious place, or explore the depths in a pivotal moment. This week, spoken-word poet and novelist Dan Holloway @agnieszkasshoes returns with the soundtrack to his latest collection
Soundtrack by Bernard Herrmann, Mamas and Papas, Pink Floyd, Garbage, Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Kills, Nine Inch Nails, Portishead, Tracy Chapman, Eagle Eye Cherry, Melanie Pain, Emily Barker
i cannot bring myself to look at walls in case you graffiti them with love poetry is, according to the blurb I put together for it, ‘a lyrical, heartbreaking, but ultimately joyous picaresque across the neon-soaked night cities of the world in search and celebration of lost friends’. It is about a feeling – one that blends joy and nostalgia and sorrow and celebration and neon piercing the night sky and damp bridges and lives that spring fully and tragically formed from the concrete. The times I’ve seen that done best have both been through powerful connections between image and soundtrack – in the 70s, Bernard Herrmann’s oppressive industrial backdrop to Taxi Driver, and from the 90s the marrying of the dazzling colour of East Asian cities and the Mamas and Papas classic piece of nostalgia California Dreaming.
So music was right at the front of my mind from the start as I was putting it together. It’s also an accompaniment to my first solo spoken word show, which will premier at Cheltenham Poetry Festival on 24 April. So rhythm, cadence, pulling the audience through sound through a rollercoaster ride of the emotions were all right there at the fore. And with the multimedia background to the book, that initial draw towards the neon, nostalgia and grime of the cinematic city soundtrack was the perfect place to begin getting myself into the right place to construct and compile the book.
Rhythm is all
The thing about a collection – and a show for that matter – is that at every level rhythm is everything. Not just within the pieces but within the whole. Every dazzling, intense, searing effect you create is diminished by the wrong amount of repetition, enhanced by the right number of carefully placed repetitions, burnished or dulled by what comes before, after, a similar distance from the beginning, from the end. Every piece must hang together and flow effortlessly just like a perfectly-constructed album. This sense of flow, rhythm, shape is essential to all forms of the written as well as the spoken word, but it amazes me how little I see writers refer to beautifully-crafted albums as their exemplars.
Prog rock and poetry
Being the age I am, married to whom I am, of the musical persuasion I am, and someone who calls himself a prog rocker of the poetry world, there really is only one album to turn to for the perfectly constructed emotional and sensual journey. Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon is perfect in just about every way, and makes as great a live show as it does an album. From helicopters to gloriously crashing waves of sound via alarm clocks and lunatics on the grass, every step is in just the right position in relation to every other to make the journey an almost mystical path to enlightenment.
And yet, steeped in Bernard Herrman and Pink Floyd, I have the path mapped out before me but it’s still not enough. Still not the mix of anger, desolation, joy and nostalgia and, well, neon-soakedness all in one that I’m looking for. Which is why playlists are so fabulous.
I’ve always loved playlists, ever since as a seven-year-old I’d endlessly sort through my dad’s 45s making little stacks to play in order. And there is nothing better for keying you into the rhythms of whatever you are writing than a playlist the follows your work’s rhythms. So, get your headphones and have a listen to what is, in essence, my latest book.
Each track manages to blend the urban and the nostalgic, painting a constant backdrop as it were whilst the foreground moves with the rhythm of the collection’s picaresque.
We begin with the wistful recollective regret of Garbage’s You Look So Fine and the haunting Red Hot Chilli Peppers classic Scar Tissue we find the brutal, angry, relentless drumbeat of The Kills’s No Wow as the reality of loss loses its romanticised edge and gives way to a despair that becomes exhaustion at the nadir of Nine Inch Nails’s stunningly dissonant Hurt and Portishead’s Roads with its pitch perfect association with the film Requiem for a Dream. From that low point we emerge to appreciate the preciousness of the memories with Tracy Chapman’s Fast Car and Eagle Eye Cherry’s celebration of the intense, fleeting joyfulness of life, Save Tonight. But the celebration is only temporary and gives way to the bitterness and desperation of the pounding beat in Portishead’s Machine Gun before, exhausted and scarred but unbowed we emerge with Melanie Pain’s Bruises and finally lay down our heads, our lives and lost friendships streaming ever slower before our eyes as we fade into the night with Emily Barker’s Pause.
Dan Holloway is a novelist, poet and cultural commentator. He runs 79 rat press through which he publishes his own conceptual books and will, in June 2013, be publishing debut collections from five of the most groundbreaking new voices in poetry and prose. In the picture he appears with Diophantus, one of the 79 rats. He blogs at Authors Electric and is a member of the League of Extraordinary Authors. Find him on Twitter @agnieszkasshoes
79 Rat Press, authors, Authors Electric, Bernard Herrmann, Cheltenham Poetry Festival, Dan Holloway, Desert Island Discs, drama, Eagle Eye Cherry, Emily Barker, entertainment, Garbage, i cannot bring myself to look at walls in case you graffiti them with love poetry, League of Extraordinary Authors, love poetry, male writers, Mamas and Papas, Melanie Pain, music, music for writers, music for writing, My Memories of a Future Life, Nail Your Novel, Nine Inch Nails, Pink Floyd, playlist for writers, poetry, Portishead, prog rock, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Roz Morris, spoken word, The Kills, The Undercover Soundtrack, Tracy Chapman, undercover soundtrack, Valentine's Day, writers, writing, writing to music
‘Every piece must hang together and flow like a well-constructed album’ – Dan Holloway
Posted by Roz Morris @Roz_Morris in Undercover Soundtrack on February 11, 2013
Another familiar face this week – one of the first Soundtrack contributors returns with a new poetry collection. i cannot bring myself to look at walls in case you graffiti them with love poetry, which you’ll notice is be-eecummingly lower case. It’s a lyrical, heartbreaking, but ultimately joyous celebration of lost friends – with prog-rock tendencies. In a subversive nod to pink-hearts week, Dan Holloway will be here on Wednesday with his latest Undercover Soundtrack.
Dan Holloway, familiar face, i cannot bring myself to look at walls in case you graffiti them with love poetry, joyous celebration, love poetry, male writers, pink hearts, poetry, poetry collection, prog rock, progressive rock, rock tendencies, romance, spoken poetry, spoken word, undercover soundtrack, Valentine's Day, writing to music
- The Undercover Soundtrack is a series where writers - and occasionally other arty folk - reveal how music shapes their work.
- It began as a companion to my first novel, My Memories of a Future Life, and now thrives as a creative salon in its own right. Pull on your headphones and join us.
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Kobo featured book, London Book Fair 2013
Seal of Excellence for Outstanding Independent Fiction, Awesome Indies 2013
Underground Book Reviews Top Summer Read 2012
League of Extraordinary Authors Top 10 Indie Elite 2012
Multi-Story Pick of the Month March and October 2012
Alliance of Independent Authors Book of the Month, January 2013
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What is The Undercover Soundtrack?
Sleeve notes hereFor the soundtrack of My Memories of a Future Life, you'll need Chopin's Sonata in B Minor, Rachmaninov preludes, lashings of Grieg's piano concerto in A minor and The Clash's Rock the Kasbah (they go together well).
You'll also need Samuel Barber's Dover Beach on piano, although that doesn't actually exist so do the best you can.
And the novel's undercover pieces. You can find them here
Previous guests
- Aaron Sikes
- Adam Byatt
- Adrienne Thompson
- AJ Waines
- Alice Degan
- Alison Layland
- Amanya Maloba
- Andrea Darby
- Andrew Blackman
- Andrew James
- Andrew Lowe
- Andy Harrod
- Anjali Mitter Duva
- Annalisa Crawford
- Anne Allen
- Anne Goodwin
- Anne R Allen
- Anne Stormont
- Audrina Lane
- Barry Walsh
- Ben Galley
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- Brendan Gisby
- Bryan Furuness
- Cally Phillips
- Camille Griep
- Candace Austin
- Carol Cooper
- Caroline Leavitt
- Caroline Smailes
- Catherine Czerkawska
- Catherine Ryan Howard
- Catherynne M Valente
- Catriona Troth
- Chele Cooke
- Chris Cander
- Chris Hill
- Chrissie Parker
- Christina Banach
- Christine Tsen
- Claire King
- Claire Scobie
- Clare Flynn
- Consuelo Roland
- Corwin Ericson
- Dan Gennoe
- Dan Holloway
- Daniel Paisner
- Dave Malone
- Dave Morris
- Dave Newell
- David Biddle
- David Gaughran
- David Penny
- Davina Blake
- Debbie Bennett
- Debbie Moon
- Deborah Andrews
- Denise Kahn
- Devon Flaherty
- Diana Stevan
- Dianne Greenlay
- Dina Santorelli
- Dwight Okita
- EJ Runyon
- Ellie Stevenson
- Erika Marks
- Erika Robuck
- Fanny Blake
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- GD Harper
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- Gwendolyn Womack
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- Helen Hollick
- Ian Sutherland
- Isabel Ashdown
- Isabel Costello
- Jake Kerr
- James Scott Bell
- Jan Ruth
- Jane Rusbridge
- Jason Hewitt
- JB Dutton
- Jennie Coughlin
- Jennifer Scoullar
- Jessica Bell
- Jessica Thompson
- Jim Ruland
- JJ Marsh
- Joanne Phillips
- Jonathan Pinnock
- Joni Rodgers
- Josh Malerman
- JW Hicks
- Karen Wojcik Berner
- Katharine Grant
- Katherine Langrish
- Katherine Roberts
- Kathleen Jones
- Kathryn Craft
- Kathryn Guare
- Keira Michelle Telford
- Kelley Wilde
- Kelly Simmons
- Kerry Drewery
- Kevin McGill
- Kim Cleary
- Kim Wright
- Kirsty Greenwood
- KM Weiland
- Kris Faatz
- Laura K Cowan
- Laura Pauling
- Leah Bobet
- Leonora Meriel
- Leslie Welch
- Leslie Wilson
- Libby O'Loghlin/Christoph Martin
- Linda Collison
- Linda Gillard
- Linda W Yezak
- Lindsay Stanberry-Flynn
- Liz Fisher-Frank
- Louisa Treger
- Louise Marley
- Lydia Netzer
- Marcia Butler
- Marcus Sedgwick
- Margot Kinberg
- Mark Richard Beaulieu
- Mark Staufer
- Mary Vensel White
- Matthew Dicks
- Meg Carter
- Melissa Foster
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- Michael Golding
- Michael Stutz
- MJ Rose
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- Natalie Buske-Thomas
- Nick Cook
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- Nicole Evelina
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- Sanjida Kay/O'Connell
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- Theresa Milstein
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- Tim McDonald
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- Tracy Farr
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- Victoria Dougherty
- Vivienne Tuffnell
- VR Christensen
- Warren Fitzgerald
- Wayne Clark
- Wendy Storer
- Will Overby
- Wolf Pascoe
- Wyl Menmuir
- Yasmin Selena Butt
- Zoe Sharp
- What's on their soundtracks? Zip down to the footer and you can search by artiste or composer. See who shares your taste in inspirational music
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