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...Speaking of lyrics, though, reminds me of this music discussion I was having with someone earlier, as they said something about how they preferred instrumental music as they felt like lyrics would get in the way of being immersed in the music. I tend to feel opposite, though, as I feel like lyrics gives my mind more to latch onto, while instrumental music tends to feel too vague and detached.
So it's interesting how differently music can be experienced. Wonder how type might influence that.
Last edited by [redacted]; 12-14-2019, 08:26 PM.
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A tiny moth
Wrapped in lungs
Got my armor
And I got my gun
I told you not to call me hun
She floats so soft
Inside his web
My spider lover
His useless head
I told you not to touch my bed
I'm changing, I'm spinning
I'm morphogenic
I'm webbing I'm morphing
I'm morphogenic
I'm hungry, I'm thirsty
I'm morphogenic
I'm tired, I'm wasting
I'm morphogenic
I stumble from
This empty room
You blow my brains
I'll blow my cool
You know I can't play by the rules
I feel so cold
The sweetest stare
My wool filled eyes
Your hollow care
A tiny game of truth or dareTurning pain into power.
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I really hope you guys enjoy my new song inspired by NBC's Hannibal. This song explores the close, complex "bromance" Hannibal has with Will Graham and Will'...Turning pain into power.
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Exactly! For me it's the opposite. I also have always said songs write themselves through me, and I can't possibly sit down and decide to write one - I have to practice my craft so I know when to capture the songs that come to me. Once a song channels itself through me from the aether, it can be completely finished perfect just as it is, or it can be half finished, or it might need new lyrics, or a different chorus. I feel what's missing because I know the message that the song was fundamentally aiming to get across, and I can see that it's not QUITE getting across. On my first album, only one song was the kind that 'just came out.' Exactly as is - I felt it coming and hit "record button!" The others, part of it "just came out," but there were parts that weren't quite there. So I worked on them over a period of time, refining each word - for anything from 1 day, to a week, to several years!! Because sometimes I wasn't quite in the right place to capture the rest of the song... and then a similar event would occur, and the feeling of the song would draw me in again and I'd finish it. (I've noticed what happens is that I date another guy whose enneagram is similar to the first guy I wrote about, and so it kicks up similar dynamics and I end up writing about it. Or things like that. This is before I knew the enneagram.) Sometimes the whole song was written and the sentiment was all there, but I worked on just that one word, or line. For years. I don't always chisel, but I know exactly when I need to chisel. I don't know how I know; it's just an innate sense of when the song is done. I wish I had that with writing prose. :/
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