Over these 9 previous blogs, I’ve been pushed out of my natural comfort zone to discover different music and production methods. Similarly, this blog project has made me pay a lot more attention to music I already knew, becoming an active listener and noticing things that otherwise would have gone over my head on a casual listen.
Initially, the weekly blogs had a much broader scope, looking at the role of a music producer. While my view of certain topics has changed over these 9 blog posts, I still want to focus on the more technical aspect of production as I stated in that first blog. When later listening to lights in the sky by nine inch nails, there was so much that I realised I had never noticed, such as the subtle ambiences and synths towards the end. This idea of active listening was coined by Carl Rogers in 1957 during a psychological study, and it is something I mean to research more. In the mean time, I’ve been really listening to sings I already believed I knew, finding new things with every listen. I’ve noticed this the most in industrial music such as NIN songs.
Later we looked into culture within music, with a focus on the african record label Hakuna Kulala. I focused on the singer Adomaa and her song ‘smoke and mirrors’. I found her songwriting inspiring, and the combination of the gospel music she was bought up with in the church and the jazzy bossanova-esque chords made a really nice composition that felt authentic to her upbringing within her culture. Similarly the look at aesthetics and context via the cure was very fun for me, being a big fan of goth music. To research this I started reading ‘GOTH’ by lol tolhurst, which in parts documented the making of the cures music. I’m hoping to use this book again for my song report as its such a good resource, and Tolhurst has another called ‘CURED: the tale of two imaginary boys’ documenting the early days of the cure which I plan on reading.
The look into ambient and break core is what I mean by leaving my comfort zone. Through the break core research I discover Igorrr who I really like. While I find standard break core to be a bit dull and trapped in a certain era, Igorrr switches this up by bringing in other influences such as classical, industrial, flamenco and metal. This inspired, and I hope it somehow influences my work later on. Ambient music was a lot harder for me to get. While I understand it’s a close minded view, something about it feels inherently pretentious. Like modern art or elevated horror, it just felt impenetrable, leaving me unable to truly enjoy it. While I understand that for example Eno’s idea of ambient music is to be used as a tool, to put it on and zone out, somewhat meditatively, I just don’t see music that way and couldn’t truly connect with it.
Overall, these 9 blogposts have helped me reflect on music, giving me a greater appreciation of music that I perhaps wouldn’t have expected to like, and given me many ideas and tools to use in my music and later academic projects for UAL.