SPOKEN WORD MUSIC - a late night improvisation
Hey people! I hope everyone recovered from the heavy partying going on these days and is ready for the challenges and the fun that is yet to come.
(here's a beautiful photo of the New Year celebration in my little hometown of Koprivnica, Croatia)
I've always loved spoken word music. Combining poetry with music often makes for a great result, especially because poetry was always about music. Poetry was initially designed to be performed live in front of an audience with music being played as someone would recite verse. In time, poetry became more of an intimate thing, something to be enjoyed in private and in silence in order to eliminate any distractions from what the poet is trying to say. People decided that poetry doesn't need back up music because it's music in itself so music and poetry kind of parted ways. However, popular music found a way to combine the two together again, mostly in hip-hop and rap. Now, some people might say rap lyrics aren't poetry but rap music is in fact reciting verse on top of music. I never was a fan of rap but I love Lou Reed and what he did was always spoken word music. So, I had yet another improvised session with my band and we ended up with a spoken word track.
I ended up reciting Ana Ahmatova, one of my favorite modern poets. The book was on the table so I grabbed it and marked some verses from two different poems. That way we created an entirely new context out of what was already there. I didn't want to construct the melody of the spoken word in advance so I just read it and we used the first take.
One of the most interesting things we did was switching roles. Everybody played instruments they don't usually play or even don't know how to see what happnes and to get a spontaneous feel of the music. I played a fragment of John Coltrane's ''In a sentimental mood'' on electric piano, our singer Buga played the rest of the piano, our bassist played the snare drum without the sticks and then me and him played a cello together at the same time. I added the melodica and he made a bass loop. We ended up with a really cool sort of an ambient track but featuring vocals.
(this is a portrait of Luc, my bandmate in a living room the recording sessions usually take place. I don't have a better photo and I never remember to take the pictures of the process when it is happening)
Anyway, we called the track ''Weep not for me Mother'' because that particular verse stood out sort of as a chorus. This is the unmixed and unmastered version, just as it was recorded. Our newest member Vedran added some sounds in the whole thing (he is our loop-soundscape-sounds-ambient-fieldrecording Mastermind) using Ableton and it sounded finished right away. I haven't touched it since so I really hope you'll get the authentic thing and feel the atmosphere!
(for those who don't know, this is Ableton, a great must have tool for playing around with sounds and loops)
Here it is! Enjoy and feel free to comment!
This is really exceptionally well produced. Almost has a tortoise meets slint sorta vibe but the production has a modern shimmer to it that I'm really digging. I'm new to the music community on here, have only just made my first post (and with it gained newfound respect for the grind habitual musical content providers put in on here) and am just generally glad to be a part of the #originalmusic community on here.
This is really -good- stuff my man. Definitely instafollow.
wow man, thank you!
What a great title for this sweet song. I like your article a lot because you tell your story around
Thank you. It's not hard because we always have a story around everything... Makes things more interesting :)
LUV LUV LUV this!
:O thank you!
nice post
Cool. Now i'm curious. I'm a hip hop producer (I use Reason, Cubase and FL studio :P. Ableton scares me). Anyway I'm interested because this spoken word over music sits in a bit of a grey area for me. I'm aware of rap (obviously) and I've also had a few poets come to my studio to record their poetry as an accapella. This feels like a bit of an in between as it wouldn't fit under conventional rap yet there is a "backing track" of sorts to support and even enhance what is being said. Thanks for the insight and I'll look you up on soundcloud.
Yeah, you're kind of right. I don't really know if this kind of music has an actual name.. I just call it spoken word music because I'm not really singing but I'm not just reciting either and I'm not sure if this track would work without this kind of vocals or with a normal singing vocal. I'm also not sure if the vocal could stand alone. I'm not into hip-hop or rap but I know some performers and I just used the reference because it makes it easier to explain what I wanted to say... I guess this is a gre area, something like what Lou Reed and Leonard Cohen used to sometimes do... Spoken word music or not, I don't have a better name for it :)
No stress. I find it interesting nonetheless.
I love music of anytime simply because its misic. A great post you have there.
Thank you