Friday, September 29, 2023

Words and Music, Music and Words

HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: It’s a question that gets asked at almost every author event: “Do you listen to music while you’re writing?” It’s also a very binary answer–every author can instantly tell you yes or no.


My answer below, and we cannot wait to hear yours. But first:  confetti, champagne, and the strewing of rose petals!  Here is the incredibly fabulous and astonishingly talented Lori Rader-Day to give us her musical secrets.



The Soundtrack of A Story

By Lori Rader-Day



I’m going to tell you a tragic story in a minute, but first some back story and, right up front: controversy.

 

I write to music. I write to songs, with lyrics.

 

Many writers will argue against this. They will say that silence is better, or if they allow music anywhere near their writing practice at all, it can only be instrumental. The complaint? Many will say that the songs will somehow crawl into the work.

 

Whereas I welcome songs into my stories. Hear me out.

 


I have written all of my novels—seven books and counting—to music, and not just any music. I make playlists full of songs you’ve heard on the radio or never will, of songs that fall into genres as diametrically opposed as rap and country, big band and metal. Yes, in the same playlist.

 

Here’s how it works, for me. I start with a few songs I already know, songs I think I can write to. Maybe they have something to do with the story I have in mind, but maybe they just sound right for this particular book. Tone is the most important factor in song choice, and I can’t explain it well without, perhaps, a musician’s vocabulary for how music affects the listener. (There are full books on this, and I’m not writing one.) I’m not a musical expert, only a connoisseur of the song I can write to.

 

The moment I hear a song I can write to, I know it.

 

This is not the story I meant to tell you, but here goes: When I was writing my first novel, The Black Hour, I was struggling to find my way. (I’ve adopted this, the struggle, as part of my process, but I didn’t know it was necessary, then.) I was driving somewhere here in Chicago, always an adventure, when a song came on the radio I had never heard before. It was a fairly metal song I would later identify (and purchase, and listen to on repeat) as “Sail” by AWOLnation. (You may not like it, but… you might still like the book?) Sail! What could be more perfect? My book had a lake in it, and a boat, and a regatta—

 

Or maybe that regatta popped into my mind when I heard the song? It’s hard to remember how things went, now. I only know that this one song became the soundtrack of the second half of my draft. A single song led me out of the morass, that boggy middle ground of a novel’s first draft.

 

When I hear that song now, it’s such a thrill. It sends me right back to that time. Music is a time machine. I’ve been transported back to singular moments in my life, to the origins of friendships, to the best and worst days of my life, by a song playing over the speakers at a coffee shop or, god, the grocery store. Like the country song favored by the exchange student from my freshman dorm, circa 1991. (Garth Brooks, but with an English accent.) Or “It’s a Shame About Ray” by the Lemonheads, having the AUDACITY to play when I’m busy living my now middle-aged life.

 

Even as I’m telling you all this, I’m listening to music. A song starts that reminds me of the day I first heard it, and how it made me miss my dad, and now I’m missing my dad. A song is a feeling as well as the packmule that carries that feeling on its back, trailing behind you wherever you go.

 

Each book has a playlist, and each playlist has one song that goes straight to my memories of writing that book. “Sail” and then “Team” by Lorde for Little Pretty Things, “Blood in the Cut” by K.Flay for The Day I Died. “The Yawning Grave” by Lord Huron helped me finish Under a Dark Sky, and “This Is It” by Lo Moon helped me find the core of The Lucky One. There are both modern songs and contemporaneous ones in the playlist for the historical Death at Greenway; you’d almost be able to hum along with Vera Lynn singing “(There’ll Be Bluebirds Over) The White Cliffs of Dover” if you were reading chapter eleven.

 

A book’s playlist helps me work, and then lives on as a soundtrack for anyone interested and a monument, possibly for me alone, of that book’s creation.

 

All this to tell you the story I promised earlier, about how my playlist for The Death of Us blew up.

 

Let’s skip the technology part. I don’t know what happened. The book was done, so I could have just moved on. Very few people demand these musical lists. My friend Debby, basically.

 

But I didn’t. Instead, I painstakingly re-created the playlist from my memories of the process of writing The Death of Us and from its themes and characters. Which song made me think of Lissette’s love for her son? (“Oh My Heart” by REM.) Which song’s spoken portion always took me out of the writing but earned its spot by helping me center the story in its earliest, most fragile days? (“Family and Genus” by Shakey Graves.) Late in the process of rebuilding the playlist, I suddenly recalled “I Don’t Mind,” the perfect Sturgill Simpson song that helped me capture my town marshal character’s heart, and happily added it back. I built the book again in reverse, an exercise that helped me sort out what my book was really about: family, sacrifices and betrayals, secrets, and the choices that make a family.

 


Writers don’t often revisit our work after edits are closed, but there was something satisfying about the rediscovery of the music that had helped me write The Death of Us, a book whose creation had run along parallel tracks to the most challenging months of my life, through cancer treatment.


No project of mine so far has been totally joyous—the struggle, as I said, is part of my process—but writing this book was medicine, towing me along through the tough spots even as I started to pull apart at the seams. Its soundtrack, now, is the packmule, loaded down not just with the book but with my survival.

 

I couldn’t have left these songs behind if I’d tried. They would have waited for me in the speakers of some coffee shop in the future or, god, the grocery store. But because I rebuilt the list, I offer them to you now: The Death of Us playlist.

 

In fact the very best thing about writing to music is that it gives me an excuse to discover new artists and a chance to share the treasures I’ve found—supporting other creative people along the path of my own creative life.

 

Oh, my heart. It has always belonged to music, even if I can’t sing a note. I’ve already started building the next list for the next book. I hope you all like Patsy Cline.

 

HANK: Oh, I adore Patsy Cline! And now I am singing. To myself. Because –as you well know, I am the world’s worst singer, truly, and the good news/bad news is that when I try to sing, I can completely hear how awful it is. Luckily for the rest of the world.


Oh, I forgot to say. Ah....usually I prefer quiet. I have had my musical inspirations, though...but usually away from the computer. I do have to admit, a climactic scene of TRUST ME was written to Prokofiev. Played live by the Boston Symphony. Long and wonderful story.


How about you, Reds and Readers?



 

 


Lori Rader-Day (here with Clementine) is the Edgar Award-nominated and Agatha, Anthony, and Mary Higgins Clark award-winning author of Death at Greenway, The Lucky One, Under a Dark Sky, and others. Her latest book is The Death of Us (Harper Collins.) Lori lives in Chicago, where she co-chairs the Midwest Mystery Conference and teaches creative writing at Northwestern University. Visit her at www.LoriRaderDay.com.

 

 

 


THE DEATH OF US

 

From the award-winning author of Death at Greenway and The Lucky One comes a chilling suspense novel in which the discovery of a submerged car in a murky pond reveals betrayals and family secrets that will tear a small town apart.

 

One rainy night fifteen years ago, a knock at the door changed Liss Kehoe’s life forever.

 

On that night, Ashley Hay stood on Liss’s front porch and handed over her brand-new baby Callan.

 

She was never seen or heard from again.

 

Since then, Liss has raised Callan as her own, and loves him as fiercely as any mother would. But in the back of her mind, she’s always wondered whether Ashley is still out there somewhere—and feared what might happen if she comes back.

 

When Ashley does reappear, it’s not in the way Liss expected. After all these years, Ashley’s car has been found… in the quarry pond on Kehoe property. But the discovery of the car dredges up more questions than answers. What really happened on the night of Ashley’s disappearance? Was it a tragic accident, or something far more sinister? Someone in town knows the truth, and they’ll go to great lengths to keep it quiet.

 

As tensions rise in the small community, Liss must fight to protect her family and keep her own secrets hidden—or risk losing everything she loves.



PS form Hank. This is SUCH a terrific book! Friday NIght Lights goes psychologically sinister–with the heartbreaking knowing voice of LRD. Do not miss it!

111 comments:

  1. Congratulations, Lori, on your newest book . . . it sounds amazing, and I'm looking forward to reading it.
    I'd never thought about the question of music/no music for authors as they create the wonderful stories that speak to us readers . . . . music does indeed inspire.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, some authors love to write to music, others absolutely can't!

      Delete
    2. It does! Thanks for commenting, Joan!

      Delete
  2. Not that it matters, but I'm one of those who doesn't write to music; or maybe only to the music of the voices I hear in my head. That said, I LOVE this post. And I adore this playlist. And I suspect I will likewise adore this book. Thanks for sharing, Lori. This is such a super idea! I feel like it's a real view to the inner workings.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I love that everyone is different. I know several writers who can't even begin to fathom writing to the songs I do. Thanks for commenting, Linda!

      Delete
  3. LORI: Congratulations on the upcoming release of THE DEATH OF US & for sharing your writing process with us!!. I am so glad you signed an ARC of this book at San Diego Bouchercon. Yes, some other mystery writers I enjoy reading write their stories with music: the late Peter Robinson (DCI Banks) and Ian Rankin (Rebus) are two examples.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh, I have heard that--Ian Rankin's book titles are all from songs, too, right?

      Delete
    2. HANK: Yes! Rankin's book titles are often from albums or song lyrics. LET IT BLEED, BLACK & BLUE are Rolling Stones albums, EXIT MUSIC is a Radiohead album, Rebus also explicitly mentions bands or artists within the story: U2, The Beatles, Simon & Garfunkel, Guns n Roses, Rod Stewart, the Clash etc.

      Delete
    3. Ah! I didn't know that Ian Rankin wrote to music. Now I have something to talk to him about if I'm ever in an elevator and awkward... Thanks, Grace! Great to see you at Bcon!

      Delete
  4. First, I want to tell you again, Lori, how much I enjoyed the interview of Ann Cleeves you and Catriona McPherson did. It was obvious how close the three of you are and it was fun to watch! (I say “tell you again” because I told you the first time as you were leaving the ladies room and I was entering. You were very gracious and even introduced me to Sara Paretsky!)

    As to music or not, I am not a writer, but can remember way back to my college days when I was doing homework or writing a paper. I liked having music on, but it had to be either classical (which, for me at the time cuz I didn’t know better, was usually the first [aka Episode 4] Star Wars soundtrack) or something I already knew by heart. If I had something I didn’t know playing, I would pay attention to it rather than what I was supposed to be doing.

    Congratulations on your new book. And I hope you are feeling much better. — Pat S

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That interview was so fun to do, and who doesn't love to talk to ANN CLEEVES when they get the chance? Soundtracks are some of my favorite albums, but the ones that are score... the timing of some of the music might be wrong for what I'm writing. Exciting bits when I'm writing introspective moments, etc. Thanks for commenting!

      Delete
    2. Pat S - exactly! During my career, studying for civil service exams, I liked listening to music, but it had to be something I didn’t know, so KJazz went on.

      Delete
  5. Congratulations on your new book. I always read or wrote to music.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Lori, this process is completely alien to me - but I'm glad it works for you! And that, for The Death of Us, it got your through your awful personal struggle. I can't wait for the new book.

    So true about music being a time machine. Nearly 40 years ago, I went alone to an outdoor folk music concert at the iconic Hatshell on the banks of the Charles River in Boston. Back in California, my beloved father had had a sudden fall and was in a coma. I sat in the breezy sunshine and listened to "River" by Bill Staines and just wept (Daddy died a few months later). That song still makes me weep.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. A song will take you right back, won't it? To every emotion, whether you want to remember that precisely or not. Thanks for commenting, Edith!

      Delete
    2. Hank, WGBH's Dick Pleasants organized the concert and was the MC. Do you remember, he had a Saturday folk music show, I think?

      Delete
  7. Lori, Congratulations! And thanks. I've never even thought of a playlist for a book and now I am going to try it ... maybe start with a short story.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh, yay! I use Apple Music but you could use Spotify very easily and for free. (That's where all my playlists go eventually so that I can share them.) Good luck! And thanks for commenting!

      Delete
  8. First of all, I LOVE Sail. Thanks for the link, Lori. Great way to energize my morning.

    Second, congratulations on the new book! It sounds amazing. No surprise. After all, you wrote it!

    Third, I'm a silent writer. I like the idea of a soundtrack but just can't do it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Well, based on your terrific new book, whatever you're doing is working!

      Delete
    2. Hi, Annette! Sometimes I will choose silence. I can also write to cafe noise IF no single person is braying somewhere nearby, as they so often are. Thanks for commenting!

      Delete
    3. I love Sail, too!

      Delete
    4. Right, Lisa? It's a song that stopped me in my tracks!

      Delete
  9. Lori, thank you for sharing your process with us. It is truly fascinating to see how differently all of our minds work. I don't write books, but when I write anything at all, there cannot be voices around me. It is hard for me to have a conversation if the TV is on. When I read, I do not process well if other words are floating in the air.

    I love music and truly admire the range of choices that you have for the background of your days. My choices are much narrower. The one thing we absolutely have in common is how a certain piece of music can return us to a moment in time.

    Wishing much good health in your future and the creation of many more award winning stories.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Judy! I can't write (or think!) when the TV is one. I think the music works for me because I cease to hear the words. I wrote my (first) master's thesis to one single Radiohead album, and I swear it was basically hypnosis.

      Delete
    2. Ha! I’ve told people about the time I was ice-skating with Carmina Burana on my Walkman :-) and I was so hypnotized, I tried to do a backflip spin. Which I did not know how to do, and failed miserably

      Delete
    3. You fail every backflip spin you don't attempt, Hank!

      Delete
  10. Congratulations on your new book Lori!

    Since I haven't written a book, I would have no answer about whether or not I listen to music while writing my book.

    However, since I write CD and concert reviews I do listen to music while writing those. If I'm writing a review for an album, I am usually listening to the album as I write up my review from my notes. And when I'm writing a concert review I'll throw in a random CD from the band's catalog as I write.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes! That's so cool. That's exactly what I would do. You're getting into the zone for the piece you're writing, and selecting based on that mood just like me!

      Delete
    2. That seems so perfect! It transports you!

      Delete
    3. Lori and Hank, for the concert reviews, sometimes I'll get very lucky and by the time I'm ready to write my review, someone will have posted a whole show video of the event I'm writing about on Youtube. This lets me listen to the actual concert I'm writing about all over again.

      Delete
  11. Lori, welcome! So good to have you here, and what a fascinating post! I will order the book and also go back and listen to the music after I silently do my own writing. We are so glad you've come through the terrible treatment year in such good form!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you so much, Roberta! Happy to be here! A silence girl--well, to each her own. :)

      Delete
  12. I like the quiet but sometimes I am so engrossed in the words, when someone in my family softly turns on the overhead music, I don't even notice.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yeah, maybe once you're in the zone (however you get there), the music doesn't play a role. I use the music to GET into the zone. Some days, that's a big task, to get my mind focused. Thanks for commenting!

      Delete
    2. Oh the zone. A whole nother blog, right?

      Delete
  13. Yay! I a new book from Lori! I can't wait and congratulations!

    Ah, music. I love it. I used to write to it all the time. Like you, Lori, the song had to fit the tone of what I was writing. Especially when I worked in an office. I needed the music to tune out my co-workers so I could focus on the story.

    Then I started working at home. That's when I started noticing the music became a distraction because I could sing along. Which totally broke my concentration.

    I can still listen to music to get into the mood to write, though.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, a mood creator. Sometimes I sing along, but usually I get to a place where I'm not even aware of the music anymore. Noise canceling headphones are a godsend in an office situation, by the way. Thanks for commenting!

      Delete
    2. That’s hilarious! I can just picture you, singing along at work. Off to human resources with you!

      Delete
  14. I am not a writer but yes I could imagine myself writing with music in the background. However, if Aretha Franklin comes on I'm up and dancing!

    Hank you said, "When I try to sing, I can completely hear how awful it is." That is so interesting because I don't think I sing on key but when I sing I can't tell - I can't hear the mistakes. I wish I could though, so I'd know how bad I am and maybe correct myself.

    Lori, your explanation of how your write and the music you chose is so well done - I enjoyed it so much!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you so much! And thanks for commenting. Sometimes, I do chair-dance a bit...

      Delete
    2. Chair dancing is part of the deal, especially when you get a good idea!

      Delete
  15. It's a great day when another Lori Rader-Day title hits! Congratulations, Lori. However you have to make the magic, I say go for it. We're all different. Bonus today: a photo of you with your sweet Clementine!

    Like Judy, I get distracted by other words, so when I was actively writing books I had to have instrumental music playing. But I can still, 30 years later, get straight back into the zone when I hear those albums (on cassette tapes at the time, for heaven's sake). Two different pianists, plus later the soundtrack for Shakespeare in Love, which is also all instrumental.

    I cannot for the life of me figure out what sailing has to do with that song, though. It's like a secret language.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yeah, I don't think the song is about sailing AT ALL. Ah, well. It worked for me! Shakespeare in Love---I'll check that out. Have you heard the soundtrack for the 2005 Pride and Prejudice? It's lovely. Thanks for commenting!

      Delete
    2. Oh, I'd love to hear that soundtrack!

      Delete
  16. I am running to the airport---headed for Denver! More to come! xx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Safe travels, Hank!! Thank you so much for having me on the Reds today!

      Delete
  17. Fascinating to learn about how music plays into your writing, Lori. I'm a 'silence, please' writer, but having a playlist for a book is a terrific thing, I can see that. Congrats all round!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Amanda! If nothing else, it gives me a Jungle Reds post idea. :) Thanks for commenting!

      Delete
    2. I can also see you making a playlist after the book is done. Someone did that for me for the house guest, and it was incredible! And also, if I may go on, very insightful about what they thought the Book was about. Which was perfect.

      Delete
  18. Lori, a fascinating glimpse into your writing process--and so true how music (anywhere, even the grocery store) takes us back to a time/place/event in our lives! Glad you had that playlist to get you through your personal struggle, too. Music is magic! When I write, I sometimes play music, but when I'm in the zone, I don't even hear it. The question is: does the music lead me into the zone? (from Flora)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Flora! I think music does lead me into the zone. Sometimes if I'm having a very hard time with distraction, I'll shut it off and write to silence. But usually, music takes me where I need to go. Thanks for commenting!

      Delete
    2. This is all so intriguing, isn’t it, about how our brains work, and what they want?

      Delete
  19. Your book sounds awesome, Lori! I usually write in silence because I work in a large open plan office, but in the past when I had a really dull job on deck I would put on my headphones and play something that would energize me and keep me focused. Like Stephan Grapelli and Django Reinhart's jazz. I realize that different periods in my life have had different playlists--there was the Carole King period, the Laura Nyro period, the Joni Mitchell one. When my son was small we had his favorite music--especially in the car and before bedtime. My Dad, a classical music enthusiast, made my son a tape and we played that constantly. Whenever I hear one of those songs now, I think of my Dad, and my son, age 5.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh, that is so special that you have that connection to your dad that way. I used to have a day job in communications, so sometimes writing/editing, sometimes design. On writing days I would listen to music. On designing days, I could listen to This American Life, which was great. Proto-podcasts!

      Delete
    2. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
  20. Lori, I must read your new book; it sounds fabulous! Congratulations! You are so right when you say that music is a time machine! Sometimes scent is too, but music, definitely. This is sad but every time I hear a certain Herman's Hermits song I think of the first fatal space flight accident in the late 1960s, when the men could not get out of the burning capsule. I had just heard that song when the news came on. I have had so many similar experiences with songs, or music, many times and I am very grateful for that musical time machine!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Interesting. I use a certain Herman's Hermits song to get over anxiety when I'm flying, on takeoff and landing. :) It requires no thinking, just humming. Thanks for commenting!

      Delete
    2. I had a whole comment about Herman's Hermits and it's gone now... hmm. SCENT, yes. There's a certain mall-bakery smell that sends me right back to being 11 years old. Thanks for commenting!

      Delete
    3. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
    4. I use a Herman's Hermits song to calm flight anxiety--I've been using it wrong! Thanks for commenting.

      Delete
  21. LORI: congratulations on DEATH OF US, your new novel! It was great to meet you at Bouchercon in San Diego.

    In my online writing group, our writing teacher asked us about our Playlist. I didn't have a Playlist. If anything, perhaps poems from the time period (I'm writing a historical cozy).

    Hard for me to focus on a task if I am listening to Music. If I listen to Music, then I get up and Dance! Speaking of time machine, for me it is a painting or a photo. Looking at a painting or photo, it takes me back in time

    Look forward to reading your new novel!

    HANK: who won a copy of your Novel?

    Diana

    ReplyDelete
  22. Hi Lori!

    Your books are going on my TBR list!

    I can’t do anything that requires me to think unless there’s absolute quiet in the background. So I don’t listen to music when paying bills or writing emails, for example. But if I’m doing mindless tasks, like housework, I like the distraction of music, and it makes the time go by faster.

    DebRo

    ReplyDelete
  23. I can't listen to music if I'm reading/writing emails or just reading anything. I do listen if I'm just scrolling the Internet or playing games though. aprilbluetx at yahoo dot com

    ReplyDelete
  24. Lori is valiantly attempting to answer all of your comments, but blogger has decided she is a bot. I will fix this as soon as I can, but meanwhile, she’s here, and she’s reading, and technology is getting in the way :-)

    ReplyDelete
  25. It is so true how music can transport us back in time. Whenever I hear Brown -Eyed Girl by Van Morrison I am immediately about 16 or so in the alley by our house with the large tree to the right blowing in the wind, and the sun warming my face. It is funny because Brown-Eyed Girl is about remembering the good times between two people - the singer asks remember when we used to sing?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Brown-Eyed Girl reminds me of dancing with my friend Tim at our friends' weddings when we were both single. I am a blue-eyed girl, but... Thanks for commenting!

      Delete
    2. Love that song, too. LOVE! But would it help you write?

      Delete
  26. I love reading this! Lori, you are amazing. And NO I cannot write to music (there's no arguing with the quality of your results... Lori's books are absolutely sensational and the new one AMAZINGLY dear and thought provoking) but now I'm wishing I could. And PATSY CLINE ... an all-time favorite of mine. I used to have a CD of her songs in the car and my kids FORBADE me to play it because I ... sang along. Badly, in their estimation.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, Hallie! I'm so glad you liked The Death of Us--high praise from you and Hank!! You have to sing along to PATSY.

      Delete
    2. Agree--how can you not sing along with Patsy? Linda Ronstadt, too.

      Delete
  27. Lori, what fun! And so lovely to see you here--chiming in on how much I loved your and Catriona's interview of Ann Cleeves.

    I don't write to music at home but, weirdly, I'm fine with music in coffee shops. I seem to be able to process that as energizing, not distracting. But I love the idea of playlists--may have to rethink this...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you! Did I even SEE you at Bcon?? What a busy few days... Maybe in coffee shops, the music just blends with all the voices? I like white noise. Except right now the cicadas are SCREAMING outside and... having a little trouble concentrating. Thanks for commenting!

      Delete
    2. Yes, coffee shops..I wonder if it's because we have to try SO HARD to focus, and then it works.

      Delete
  28. Throughout our discussion with Lori this morning, I have been thinking about how each of us processes information differently. I have a master degree in special education. One of the primary practical parts of that course was recognizing students' individual differences in learning and helping to present information to them in the form that was easiest for them to process. It's years since I taught special education classes, years since I studied for that degree, but some of those lessons stick forever and absolutely have changed my approach in all types of situations.
    This is such an interesting conversation! I love this blog!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That really is interesting, Judy. I think we've really come to understand the truth of that, too. Thank you!

      Delete
    2. Yes, we know that some people want to SEE it, and some people want to HEAR it? And long ago, when I took the yellow school bus, I remember standing by myself ,waiting to be picked up at the end of our driveway, and reading my history book out loud. I had discovered I remembered it better if I read it. I kind of--dramatized it as I read it. :-)

      Delete
  29. I used to work to music. Frequently I used it as white noise. Sometimes we played name that tune when one workplace subscribed to Muzak. Retired now, but I find I can't READ to music. Songs are memories or emotions and are very distracting when they jog those things in me. I love music but not while I'm reading!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Interesting! You must like music... it always surprises me when someone says they don't listen to music that often. Thanks for commenting!

      Delete
    2. OH, reading to music. That's too hard.

      Delete
  30. Congrats on your new release, Lori! It sounds like a wonderful twisty-turny mystery that is sure to pull at the heartstrings as well. Looking forward to reading it! As for music, it depends upon whether I'm stuck or not. Great question!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks so much, Jenn! Always a pleasure to be on JR!

      Delete
    2. Well, wait. Which? When you're stuck you need music? Or don't?

      Delete
  31. Great post, Lori! I write to music—with words—too. Not when I’m editing, though. Just instrumental. And I’ve found a new secret musical weapon for fast writing… anyone curious? Jim

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Bach fugues. I start to type in rhythm as the music gets faster and faster. Here’s a good one. I prefer the orchestrated version to the organ. Anyway, give it a try. I wrote 86,000 words in 40 days listening to this a lot. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x9Sbk3E8-ws

      Delete
    2. Sorry. This anonymous was me. By the way, not a woman or person of color in that orchestra in 1969…

      Delete
    3. Yes, yes, that totally works. I was at Tanglewood, at a rehearsal of the BSO, and it was outside, and I was SO on deadline that I moved away from my pals and to a picnic table to work. They were practicing Shostakovich's 5th Symphony ,which is very bellicose, and I was typing like the wind. But I think there's a thing about Bach, and Mozart, too, that it's supposed to be brain empowering. Should we all try it?

      Delete
  32. Congrats on your latest, Lori! Ordered it at once. As for music - NO Full on silence, please. Well, except for the feline purrs. Those are fine.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Well, sure, kitty purrs are allowed. Thanks, Kait!! Hope you enjoy it!

      Delete
  33. Lori, I look forward to reading your books, and it's fascinating to learn what role music plays in your writing. I only write in a journal, so the stakes aren't as high, but I listen to music every day. It's ironic, but now I can listen to music through my hearing aids as loudly as I want without intruding on anyone. The irony is because in the 60s I donated my hearing to rock 'n' roll, which necessitated the hearing aids. Now that I don't drink or use anymore, music is my favorite mood-changing drug. ~Lynda

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Lynda, ha DONATED your hearing, what a great line. But now you can rock out as much as you want, love that. Thanks for posting, and now when my hearing goes, I might not put off the aids as long...

      Delete
    2. Music can be transporting! I was just on the plane to Denver, and there was a guy across the aisle with headphones, and I really wish I know hat he was listening to--because he--NO EXAGGERATION--chair-danced (seat danced?) the whole way from Boston. It was bizarre, but you can't fault someone who's clearly that happy.

      Delete
    3. Well. It's better than having a guy red-faced and yelling about something, I guess. But very distracting.

      Delete
  34. I just un-spammed a bunch of Lori's comments from this morning when Blogger was trying to flummox her--so it may look like there are duplicates, but I didn't want any of us to miss anything so I just approved them all!

    ReplyDelete