Friday, November 20, 2015

Music to My Eyes



Sometimes blog entries are my nemesis. At least that’s the way I see them at first. Little enemies, lingering behind my thoughts…

It’s time you write one of us. You’re never going to be a good writer if you keep avoiding us. Come out and play, Timmy. We won’t bite.

Truth be told, I’m hesitant because I don’t usually know what I’m going to write, whether or not it will be interesting, or if I will just stare stupidly at a monitor. The first is almost always true, the second I have little control over, and the third never happens. The words always come. I just don’t know where they will lead me. I find that a little daunting.

Or maybe it’s just an excuse for something I’m really good at: procrastination.

I also don’t want limit myself or, God forbid, bore you with another pining for some old horror movie, or author that you really couldn’t give two shits about. I reserve the right to do so, but my intention is to somehow bring variety into the mix.

I am a music lover, have been since my older brother bought me vinyl records of Cher, Olivia Newton John, and Elton John, at the tender age of 8 (Yes, I am gay too—go figure). Through the last forty years, I can honestly say that not a day goes by without me listening to music. My tastes have grown, immensely since then. Hard rock will always be my go-to, but I also listen to classical and traditional jazz as well. I am completely comfortable playing Barbra Streisand one moment, and Ozzy Osbourne the next. The context may seem strange to you, but I love them equally.

I don’t think I realized it at first, but music plays a large part in my writing. I don’t listen to it while I write, but I do hear rhythm in the words, and if the flow is not right, I will hone it until it is. There is also a broader punctuation in prose, meaning that a sentence, or even a word, can be used as comma, a period, or an exclamation point.

Get it?

Music is also my greatest inspiration. Hearing a combination of great lyrics and a moving melody sends me to heights so dizzying sometimes that I have to compose. Even if I am driving and cannot write, I will still chip away at an idea in my head for later. The sources are varied, but some that always come through are Alice Cooper, The Doors, and—bringing things a little more current—Foo Fighters. 


Sometimes, it’s not just the music, but the title of a song. I am not going to name any of these, because I am considering a project of short stories inspired by song titles. But you know what I mean. Just think of a musician you admire, and then think of their song titles. Which stand out to you? Why? There’s a story in there, whether you write it or not.

The marriage of music and writing is not a new concept. And there are people that do the same with painting. It’s probably a safe conclusion to say that all of the arts are intertwined somehow, some way. It just depends on the person as to what art form(s) they gravitate to. Creativity stimulates the mind, thus inspires. Inspiration, blossoms within, and often results in creation. It’s a beautiful circle, the joy it brings—limitless.

What inspires you?

Shameless plugs:

The fourth chapter of my zombie apocalypse novel, “Will to Live: The Dead Next Door,” is now available for free on Wattpad. For those of you not caught up, the preceding chapters are available there as well. Just click here. Please vote and/or comment on it. Thanks for your support!

Stories available for purchase are on Amazon: click here. Thanks in advance for your purchase and please, please, please write an honest review.

Happy Thanksgiving!


TWS

Sunday, November 1, 2015

The Original


Well, here it is—the day after Halloween, November 1st, All Saints Day. It’s time to put away the Halloween candy, shelve those scary films and books, and put all spooky thoughts away until next October.

Funny—if I were able to do that, would I? I doubt it. As I wake up this Sunday morning, realizing that I have an extra hour thanks to the government, the first thing I want to do is go on to Amazon and see if Ash vs. The Evil Dead is available (I don’t have Starz, and didn’t get to see it last night). Also, being a lazy Sunday morning, there’s some unread horror—old and new, professional and amateur, calling to me from my tablet.

I am sitting here at my kitchen table, savoring the first cup of coffee and reflecting on why it is that I am so pulled in the direction of the horror genre. I’ve compared it to comfort food in the past, and I’ll always stick with that comparison. I’ve spoken about my sister taunting me at an early age with horrifying ghost stories of maniacs dismembering little children—the same sister who used to make me watch first-run episodes of Dark Shadows (I was 5 or less), and werewolf movies so as not to be alone herself.

The truth is I don’t know why I harken for horror. It has been a constant presence for my entire fifty years of consciousness, so I will leave it at that.

But let me share this little story with you. It’s not a scary one, but one you will appreciate if you follow classic horror movies.

Back in the late 1970s, not quite 1980, a little film began filming less than a mile, and around the corner from my house. A group of students from the University of Michigan were in Morristown, Tennessee, using a later friend of mine’s cabin (either his parent’s, or uncle’s land) to make a movie called The Book of the Dead.

Yes, THAT movie.

We only went down there a couple of times, because we were young and had heard stories that they would have us arrested, or shoot us, or who knows, maybe dismember us (we weren’t even old enough to drive and had no idea what savages film “crews” would employee). I remember specifically going down there one day (they slept during the day, filmed at night), and actually walking around a grave that had been dug (to the left of the cabin), with a primitive cross made of bound sticks at its rim.

What I would give to have that cross today.

You could also see that there were crude holes sawed into the door for when Cheryl later shoves her hands through. Oh, and the blood. Everything was stained with a red Karo-syrup mixture (I know this because two later friends had actually ended up helping with the production).

So, yes, The Evil Dead was literally made around the corner from my house in Quail Hollow subdivision, off of Kidwell’s Ridge Rd. Look it up.

I also attended the premier—at the dinky little Capri movie theater—where they actually flew stars like Bruce Campbell in via helicopter. Big stuff.

Not.

But appropriate.

The movie did scare the snot out of me though, and I will always favor the first over the rest.

The cabin burned down a few years later. I know who did it and—even though he’s dead—I won’t reveal. I’m sure it was drunken foolery, and unfortunate. God knows what a tourist site it would be now had that not happened.

I’m pretty sure I could still take you to the place though—even though I left Morristown 25 years ago. But like most things, it’s probably better in my memories.

You know the rest. Three people—Bruce, Sam, and Rob-- involved with that movie are major Hollywood bigshots now. Good for them. They deserve it.

And now, I think I’m going to go watch Ash vs. The Evil Dead.

Happy All Saints Day!

TWS