Saturday, September 5, 2020
Piboidmo Day 17 Alter Your Rhythm Like Mark Ury
by Mark Ury Blogging always seems to include sharing some sad truth about yourself, whether itâs your obsession with trash TV or one too many trips to the freezer for more mint chocolate chip ice cream (P.S. these are examples and any resemblance to my life is coincidental). So hereâs my share: I canât draw. Admitting you canât draw isnât much of anything, really. Over 90% of the world canât draw. But context is everything. Admitting I canât draw to my bowling friends isnât worth a second glance (P.S. I donât bowl), whereas sharing it with picture book writers and illustrators is like asking your bowling friends to switch to five-pin balls since your wrist is to weak to use the grown-up sizes (P.S. this has never happened). Itâs kinda sad and wimpy. Now, donât feel embarrassed for me (P.S. you are not my mother). I have at my disposal an entire platform to compensate for my lack of artistic skills. With it, I can inspire myself to great heights and pen imaginative stories that kids everywhere read and love. But, sleazily cross-promoting my venture is not what this post is about (P.S. unless you find my venture intriguing and possibly useful, in which case we should have coffee and be friends). No. This blog post is NOT about (shameful) marketing or even (sad) admissions of inferior uses of pencils. Itâs about music. Or, more specifically, itâs about how music helps me get the feeling of a story long before (and sometimes after) Iâve seen the images or typed the words. Itâs quite possible you are already familiar with how music can shape your work. If so, perhaps you might be better off reading Sarah Dillardâs postâ"it has cute bunnies. But if youâre like me (P.S. heaven help you), you may only be modestly aware of how music can be used to give your story the tone or pitch your characters are longing for (and, eventually, if you score that deal with HarperCollins, your readers). For the longest time, I *thought* what was inspiring the tone of my writing were the images I would paper on my walls, stash in my notebook, or hide under my pillow (P.S. the images under my pillow were not at all being hidden from my mother). Weathered photos of Sid Vicious and Marianne Faithful propelled my early poetry. An image of Kate Spade holding one of her early designs became the central figure in one of my (wretched and unfinished) screenplays, and a stark image of Vanessa Redgrave has been taunting me to start my graphic novel (P.S. yes, you read correctly that I canât draw). But, upon reflection (.PS. while searching for a theme for this blog post), only recently did I notice that while images were influencing *what* I was writing about, the actual tone came from the music around me. This story, about memory and love, was shaped by This is the Kitâs Two Wooden Spoonsâ"an earthy and lush little song that I couldnât get off of replay on my iPod. And my story about a gruesomely self-centered girl rose from the the chill of Radioheadâs There There (P.S. This is ironic since Thom Yorke wrote the song as a kind of bedtime story for his son. P.P.S. I
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