From conception to fruition, how long into the process of creating and living your first dream do you begin to feel like the sky is falling, the walls are closing in and your face is covered in brick dust from hitting the preverbal wall.?
When does that feeling go away?
I’ve been dreaming of releasing my own music for a long time. I’m actually old enough to remember when CDs first made their appearance to the music world. My first CD was “And In This Corner” by DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince. Every since, I’ve wanted to make one of my own.
I’m thirty three and I’m almost completely finished with my first. I’ve been saying almost for a long time. It suddenly dawned on me, as I was listening to a couple of my tracks on my iPod to figure out where my adjustments needed to be made, I’m really doing this. It was like a Jacky Chan kick to the face. That’s when everything shut down. I have two songs to complete. One is half done and the other is just about ninety percent there but I just can’t get them to sound right to my own ears.
I tried laying down the vocals on the half finished song and became so frustrated with the fact that my voice sounded so horrible to me that I tore up the lyrics and vowed to rewrite the song to suit the way I was feeling about it. That was almost three months ago.
The song that’s ninety percent complete just sounds like crap now that I compare it to the rest of the work I’ve done that I want to start all over again but I’m too afraid of trying to do that only to make it worse.
These are the times I wrote about in a previous blog. The fear takes hold from the inside, corrupting and contaminating everything your mind touches. The key is to realize that it’s all just an illusion. It’s easier said than done, especially when it comes to such endeavors of the soul.
I tried explaining this to a non-musician and, after a couple of hours of discussion, I came up with a great way to describe it.
Take your favorite thing. It has to be the one thing in this world you can’t live without. Now, let’s give it life. We’ll give it sentience – a soul and you can name it. Nurture it. Care for it. Watch it grow and learn and develop as you do the same. Become as one with it. Now, let’s tie you to a wall and set it in the middle of the room before you. A masked figure enters the room and begins to beat it unmercifully as you watch helplessly. It struggles but cannot fight back. It just wont die. It squirms and twitches, flinching with each swing as it cries out for you to help. The figure removes the mask only to reveal your face. It’s not a copy. It’s you and as the you that is and the you that was looks down upon your precious, beloved “it”, it’s face is yours as well. That is about a tenth of the feeling of this creative block.
(I just scared myself. I mean… who thinks like that? I really need to finish writing my book before someone thinks I’m a danger to society.)
I had experienced a long drought – writers block – some time ago that depressed me to the point of wanting to throw in the towel. Try as I might, I could not put two lines on paper, come up with a melody or even find two words that would rhyme for some time. I couldn’t understand what was damming the creative stream.
I started listening to my iPod without using the play lists. I set it to play all songs and shuffle. I pretended it was a radio with only one station and I had to listen. The songs that I would normally skip until I felt the mood to listen to them would play and I would listen. My favorites would play and I would listen. Then… one song shone through as just what I needed to hear. I remembered when this song first played on the radio. I remember I was cleaning my parent’s backyard and listening to something that made me feel like somebody get’s it. It was Sunshower, by Chris Cornell.
I automatically hit repeat. I must have listened to it about fifteen times in a row before I realized how the time had passed, all my work was done and I was just sitting on the side of the bed with that feeling of just having been on a much-needed vacation. It was a feeling I’ve always wanted to produce with my music.
I’ve gotten close. I’ve seen it in the eyes of some of my listeners. I picked up a pen and started writing. I started humming. I started writing to what I was humming. I started feeling and it was good.
You never know when or where these sparks of inspiration ignite your innovative fuel.
I guess the point I’m trying to make is that there will always be a way out of a dry spell if you’re open enough to find it. No matter what, you should never let yourself be tied down and don’t allow yourself to feel beaten because the only one that is beating you, is you.
I guess the only one beating me, is me…
Pardon me. I have some recording to do.
~KANE~

