Editor's Note: Today's essay is only tangentially about music, and is entirely self-indulgent. My apologies for both, but writing this is far more interesting to me than finding a thousand words this week to describe an album I wasn't actually interested in listening to.
And thus:
Our relationship with music can become complicated to the point of knotting, the threads of thought winding around themselves so often finding the way back to the origin can be impossible. Of course, there is music that exists as nothing more than a good time we bop our head along to while never pondering if it has any meaning to life beyond reminding us how ridiculous we look when trying to dance. That might explain a lot of people, but it doesn't explain me. When music gets under my skin, I start trying to unravel the how and why, and in the best of circumstances I discover something I had not yet figured out how to put into words.
That is true of the music I listen to, but it was also true of the music I made. Or attempted to make, if we want to be more realistic than generous. Music was not just a hobby, it was a form of therapy that allowed me to speak the truth without worrying about anyone hearing it. The metaphors and melodies obscured the message enough that I was free to be honest without incurring any of the judgment that comes along with saying things I would otherwise find too uncomfortable to mention. It worked well, until it didn't. Eventually, I learned that my assessment of my own talent was grossly exaggerated, and the very act of trying to pry music from myself became self-inflicted depression I could set my watch to.
Even after setting down my pen as a musician, and as a writer of prose and stories, I could not shake the nagging voice in my head that tells me I need to be creating something. I tried my best to ignore it, and to find what my next chapter would be, but that was wishful thinking. Eventually, when a certain scene kept playing out in my head as I was trying to sleep, it became clear the only way to excise that demon was to write it down. As fate would have it, when I sat down to do just that, I realized it was the key to unlocking the ultimate cliche of the wannabe writer; the screenplay.
Film is not my preferred medium, but there has always been something about the movie "High Fidelity" that has stuck with me. I didn't understand it when I first saw the movie, but the years have shown me that despite the character Rob Gordon and I being entirely different, we also share pieces of our psychology. As such, the idea had occurred to me at one point to write my own version of that movie, if for nothing else than to go on my own journey similar to Rob's.
I never did that, but I did write script pages that were intended to be a sitcom set in a record store. It amused me, but it felt self-contained, and I had no idea where to take the story if I wanted to write more. That was true... until that recent episode.
With a plot point in hand, I was able to quickly sketch out the remainder of where the story should go. What started as the thought of writing my own version of the movie became something different, but in actuality exactly what I intended all along. I was not writing pages to catalog my own history of failure in a ranked form, but the writing did become about working through aspects of my story.
The writing went quickly, and within a week I had completed a screenplay that feels perhaps more satisfying than anything else I have written over the years. Writing a novel is a massive undertaking, but a purely fictional story has a level of detachment that lets me forget about the very act of writing it. The songs I've written were more honest, but since I cannot voice them in any way I want to ever hear again, they too exist in a recess of reality I often overlook. This script, though, is something I was able to pour my psyche into that I enjoy playing through in my mind.
We write fiction for many reasons, some of which are only apparent to our subconscious. Only after I was finished did I realize what I was doing the whole time was using the format to write an ending to a chapter of my life. When I stopped writing music, it was anticlimactic. Something that was so important to me ended with a whimper, and left me with an empty feeling. I was done writing music, but I didn't feel like I was done with music.
My script is a fictionalized version of myself, where giving up was not the end of the story. In the pages, I work through the fact that sometimes quitting is more an act of trying to convince ourselves than anything. Despite the pain it causes, there is still hope that it might work out in the end. More than that, I wrote a line that was far more honest than I intended it to be. Upon hearing his artistic fantasy brought to life, he realizes that fantasy has always meant more to him than anything we would typically call a fantasy. He didn't care about the more lurid or intimate things ever as much as he cared about his music. I know the disappointment of being without that dream fulfilled, but I didn't realize until penning the line that I not only regret that failure more than my personal embarrassments, but that it means I may have locked away the possibility of ever truly being happy.
More than that, the pages also fictionalize a happy ending for a connection I know I should have let fray along these years. It has been unhealthy for me, which I have admitted not just to myself, and the act of writing the words down was akin to telling myself the lie enough times to begin believing it might be more real than reality. Writing an ending, even if it exists only in my head, might let me move on from being stuck in that desperate cycle. That's wishful thinking, perhaps, but that's the point of writing fiction.
Much like how writing lyrics allowed me to say things without people understanding, writing truth in the form of jokes allowed me to be honest while claiming to be able to laugh at myself. It counts even if I'm laughing at the absurdity, right?
Music has been a constant companion, in both relationships, and it seems all too fitting that music was the key to letting me find my way back to being a writer. Music is supposed to connect us to something in ourselves, something in other people, that is otherwise difficult to put into words. It would be too dramatic to say music saved me, but it certainly has kept the water from rising past the drowning point. In this case, music led me to write something that showed me what it is that truly matters to me, what it is I should and shouldn't care about... who I should and shouldn't care about.
That's giving a lot of weight to jokes I wrote without any of this psychology behind them. I was trying to amuse myself, but there is an old saying about how great jokes have a grain of truth in them. That is what happened here, and I'm thankful for it.
I've written essays here about some of these issues, but that was me talking to/with myself. Writing a screenplay put my words into a character's mouth, and that minor distance lets me hear them differently, or perhaps hear them at all. Nothing that this year's new releases have to offer is going to be able to impact me the way this experience did, but it all gets thrown into the pot.
My colleague here was struck by the concept when I wrote that music is "my currency of thought". Even when music seems to be behind me, it paints the way forward, which only goes to prove the point. Reality may never live up to the fiction I have now written for myself, but having that story to live inside is a sense of comfort, if only because I have a better idea of what I want the remaining pages to look like.
That's not bad for a bunch of jokes I thought I was writing just to amuse myself.






