Friday, July 8, 2022

The Making of "Gazing"

Lyrics and music inspired by a dream from 6/30/2021

Written July 2021

“Gazing” was (out of these) the last song I dreamed, the last song I wrote, and naturally the last song on the album. In the dream, I was watching an R&B style music video -- all I remember is a blue sky and a woman dancing -- with lyrics appreciating the musicianship of shoegaze. However, the lyric was, oddly “I see you’re standing straight” -- which doesn’t make sense because those musicians are supposed to be gazing at “shoes” or the pedals on the floor, right? So it was fun to integrate that into the lyrics somehow. The instrumentation in the dream had guitar, as well as a synth and drum part that sounded exactly like “Hip Hop Is a Way of Life” by Kim Hiorthøy, an experimental electronic song that I absolutely adore.

I’m really proud of the guitar on this song. The short guitar intro was the first thing I came up with, using already well-known chords, but that didn’t sound enough like what I heard in the dream. After noodling around, I came up with chords that sounded exactly like the dream. Making up completely new chords is always fun. 

The biggest challenge was to make the song as close as possible to “Hip Hop Is a Way of Life”. I don’t know why I had to make it so similar, I just had to because I loved the song so much. I borrowed several melodies and sound design quirks from the song, but still tried to keep it original. I tried to get help from Tobias to design the “clarinet” sound to be like the original song, but I ended up using the one I produced anyway. Tobias mostly ended up helping to improve drums and the chorus synth. I wish the clarinet was mixed even louder so you all could hear my effort in making it the closest clone to Kim Hiorthøy as I could, but I recognize that would’ve been a little obnoxious. 


The Making of “June 18th”

Music inspired by 2 dreams from 6/18/2020 and 6/18/2021

Written July 2021

“June 18th” is easily one of my favorite songs I’ve ever written, but it was also one of the easiest to write. Almost all of the lyrics and melodies were just taken right from the 2 dreams I had - both of which were somehow on the date June 18th, exactly one year apart. The song is probably just the most straightforward love song I made. What I find interesting is that, after I dreamed the lyrics “I got a box with your old ID”, the account of the subject person got deleted for some reason, meaning he lost access to all our old texts and now only I could read them... the song manifested itself into reality. 

I had another dream that there was a song where the first half was sung passionately by Jandek, an avant-garde folk musician, and the second half was sung by pop songwriter Fiona Apple and produced with a chamber pop style. Like Jandek usually does, I improvised the first half of the song on guitar with random made-up chords. I’m glad I got a good one on the first take. 

For the piano and strings in the second half, I just played what felt right in my heart -- but for some reason, part of me thought it wasn’t good enough for a long time, probably ‘cause I’m not a pianist or string arranger. I eventually decided this arrangement was good enough, though, especially because the person who I dedicated the song to told me that the demo made him cry. With some help from a collaborator Will to make the string arrangement more dramatic and professional, I re-recorded the song and was very happy with it. 


The Making of “Hinman Park”

Lyrics and music inspired by a dream from 6/21/2020

Written July 2021

The song was inspired by a brief dream that I only remember vaguely; at the end of the dream, I knew I had committed a crime, and I had gone to the nearby park to wait until I knew I was just going to get caught anyway. I started to hear the song as a soundtrack to the dream. My dreams about serious crimes and tragedies are emotionally resonant for me, especially when it’s about me doing something I wouldn’t have wanted to do. In the lyrics, I compare the image of standing in the park after committing a crime to the feeling of waiting with anxiety about completely insignificant circumstances. 

I didn’t remember what genre the song from the dream was, so I took this song as a blank slate, and chose arrangements that I thought would fit the thematic atmosphere. I recruited my previous collaborator Mestup to help me with the piano. I wanted something more detailed and dark as the song progressed, but I couldn’t come up with anything beyond simple chords. Thankfully, Mestup came through with an absolutely gorgeous composition for the rest of the song on the first try, and the song was almost done. After spending a lot of time pondering over how to complete the song, I added the minimalist synthesized string arrangement. 

The Making of “Only a Hunter”

Lyrics inspired by several different dreams

Music inspired by 2 dreams from 10/14/2019 and 7/1/2020

Written July 2021/November 2021

My goal for the album was to be as eclectic as possible, so of course, I have to include a dance-pop/club-influenced song. The song is about various situations in which you just become evil when you’re by yourself (“The club of the hide, the things I hide, the things that you can’t see) -- especially in a dream, when the mind is unhinged. Because of the album flow, I had to put this song after “Poor Face”, but it does kind of hurt because that song is about how we don’t have to live like animals, but “Only a Hunter” is basically about living like an animal (“Whoa, place is allowed, only a hunter”). 

This was definitely the hardest song on the album to make. For the first demo, I was too embarrassed about my electronic production skills to make anything substantial. I made a generic synth and beat to convey what I basically wanted with the song, but it was nothing like the dancey house music that was in my mind. I gave Ramiel this demo to mess around with, and said that I was hoping for something like deep house and the group Everything But the Girl.

But it took maybe 20 iterations and back-and-forth changes of this song to get something that resembled the final one. A big problem was that we had disagreements over the genre influences of this song -- should it sound like drum and bass? No, that doesn’t sound like it did in my dream. Then Ramiel suggested that it should be really crazy and experimental, deconstructed club-esque, because then it would “fit” the sound of the rest of the album. But like, I didn’t really need this song to be experimental or deconstructed, or for the album to have any kind of genre cohesion -- I just wanted to recreate my dreams. I repeatedly had to show the evolving song to my other friends to get some outside perspectives on it because something was clearly going wrong and I was stressed out. Ramiel still helped a lot, though, by making a genuine house beat for the song. They made some really wildly different versions of the song that I would lift small ideas from, to gradually get to the perfect version. 


The Making of “Theme to Being Stuck in a Dream”

Lyrics and music inspired by 2 dreams from 8/27/2020 and 6/28/2021

Written June 2021

I had a dream that I heard a 20-minute Sonic fan soundtrack or something that was so viscerally horrifying that it made me close my music app and throw my headphones across the room, and I was too scared to listen to it again. The beginning was plunderphonics-influenced, with samples of songs that were similar to the work of The Caretaker, but it gradually turned into something like harsh noise that was devastating and sent tingles down my spine. I wasn’t sure whether I hated it or whether it was the best thing I’d ever heard. So, of course, I had to recreate it. I decided to make this a track within the album instead of its own album because I thought that would be an insane idea. 

My idea for the basic structure of the song was to start with instrumental plunderphonics, fade into harsh noise and spoken word, and then end with a repetitive ambient melody. 14 minutes of experimental hell with something somewhat poppy for the last 4 minutes would be such a cool effect. Where would this ambient melody come from, though? I had an epiphany during a lucid dream. I was in my house in the dream, and when I realized it was a dream, I tried to wake up, but truly couldn’t. As I struggled to open my eyes, a simple, sad melody on an electric keyboard was playing; as I listened to that strangely beautiful song, I implicitly thought, “this must be the theme to being stuck in a dream”. And so the lyrical theme for this long experimental song evolved into “being stuck in a dream”. I was so enthusiastic about this beautiful song idea that I finished writing it on the same day I woke up with it.

“Writing” this song was weird because, instead of making chords or melodies, I was writing descriptions of dream sounds. For the lyrics, to convey the experience of dreaming, my structure was inspired by the stages of sleep. The spoken word section is the early stage of dreaming, during slow wave sleep, where dreams are vague, surreal thoughts. It doesn’t feel like sleeping; when you wake up, you usually deny that you fell asleep at all. I wanted to express the feeling of trying really hard to sleep, when you don’t realize that you’re sleeping already. In a state of delusional insomnia, you start thinking these weird urges that keep you from sleeping, like “I can’t sleep unless all of my body parts are laid down like rocks and thoroughly put to sleep individually”.

Except the lyrics of the spoken word section weren’t written for this album. I reused my old lyrics from a 1-minute song called “Shape Your Arm” from Requirements For Sleep. When I wrote “Shape Your Arm”, I attempted to start with a dark, experimental, electronic part with lyrics that expressed that insomniac experience... but I was extremely inexperienced with production and songwriting in 2019, and had no idea how I was gonna do that. So I just said, fuck it, I’m going to speed-read the lyrics and just make the song super chaotic, even if it doesn’t accurately convey the experience of insomnia. At least no one else has done that in a song yet and I can be unique, I think. 

3 years after writing “Shape Your Arm”, now that I have some experience, and people who’re willing to collab with me, I think I can finally make what I originally wanted to do with “Shape Your Arm” and convey insomnia and slow-wave-sleep dreams. So I just lifted the old lyrics directly for the new song. I revisited my a capella demo of that “dark experimental electronic version” of “Shape Your Arm”, and lifted the melodies for the brief singing parts. That was a super complicated 3-year process to write a song, but I hope that makes sense.

The final section of the song is inspired by a lucid dream, which happens during the REM stage. I sang it over the ambient melody that I heard in my own lucid dream, which I mentioned earlier. Lucid dreams sound like the most fun and cool experience, but it’s not really been that way for me, sadly. I’ve tried to live out my fantasies in lucid dreams, but I’m apparently not very skilled at conjuring things to appear in the dreams. I just see empty space, or end up walking around an area that’s something I could already see in real life. And if I do get a person or thing to appear, it’s usually silent and emotionally empty, like some kinda clone, or the dream visual starts turning black and I start waking up. These are interesting experiences to write about, but I wish I could have a “normal” lucid dream. 

While producing the album, my main collaborators were Tobias and Ramiel. Because of their different creative processes, I decided to give songs to Ramiel that they could take a lot of creative liberties on. On the other side, I gave songs to Tobias that he should be able to make according to my precise vision. I gave an outline of “Theme to Being Stuck in a Dream” to Ramiel... all I had on the page, for the first 7-minute section, was a vague description of the song that I heard in my dream. I said that it was made up of “samples”, and I wrote down some experimental songs that could be an inspiration. I was pretty scared how it was gonna turn out because I’d given such a vague description of what I wanted. 

But somehow, it turned out really good when Ramiel sent me their composition for the first instrumental section of the song. I guess the inspiration tracks that I provided were enough to communicate the vibe! Ramiel decided to only use samples of my old songs, instead of songs from random other artists, which was an excellent call. I hadn’t even considered doing that. Even though the “Sonic soundtrack” from the dream had more of an “old music” vibe like The Caretaker, this still worked really well with samples of my music. Being a big plunderphonics fan, Ramiel also used some clever sampling and editing techniques that put my song snippets into completely new contexts. 

And for the middle section of the song, I already had a “noise” song that I’d made ages ago that catalyzed the production of this whole thing. This has an even weirder backstory, so buckle in. During an awkward video call with my online friends, I was playing guitar, Joey was playing keyboard, and Tobias pulled up FL Studio and said he was gonna sample us. I said jokingly, “turn it into harsh noise”. Tobias took a 7-second sample of us playing and heavily distorted it, making an intense noise song in about 10 minutes. Everyone was laughing hysterically when he played the tune for us. After the call ended, I took the noise song and played around with it a bunch, making it into more of a Dark Ambient style. 

Months later, Tobias asked me if he could use the noise song as the closing track on his next EP. I hesitated to allow him to include it, because I was planning to also use it on my album -- but Tobias suggested that we could both use it, and it would actually be pretty cool if people were listening to my song and recognized that part from his EP. It kind of felt like a joke because this thing was absolutely grating to listen to, but “Flood” ended up being the final track on Carndye’s The Darkest Day EP, and I have a featured credit on it.

The final section of the song was straightforward to make, as I produced it myself with synthesizers. I considered adding another collaborator, but I was happy with the version I made on my own anyway. 

The Making of “Sleep Through the Quiet Lust”

Lyrics and music inspired by 2 dreams from 5/20/2020 and 7/17/2020

Written June 2021

The lyrics weren’t about the events of any dream in particular, although they are about sleeping/dreaming. The title lyric was sung by my church’s band in my dream, which is why it sounds a bit worshippy. Almost all the lyrics of this song came from what I heard in 2 dreams, with very little conscious lyric-writing. Because of that, it was extremely easy to write. 

I mentally debated over the album title for a long time. I couldn’t name it "Requirements For Sleep 2" because I’d already made something called Requirements For Sleep Version 2.0 when I re-recorded my first album, and that’s extremely confusing. I settled on naming it after this song title -- I felt like it was symbolic of the themes of most of the songs on the album, and it was also a lyric that came entirely from a dream. 

Making it was pretty easy and straightforward. I re-recorded the vocals at my school library’s free vocal booth, which is an awesome resource to have. The progressive vocal takes got better and more powerful. As I played the song live, however, I realized that the complexity of the guitar rhythm makes it extremely hard to play at the same time as I sing the lyrics -- they have such different rhythms that I keep twisting them up! 

The Making of “Airpush Down the Stairs”

Lyrics and music inspired by 2 dreams from 7/27/2019 and 2/19/2020

Written March 2021

The lyrics were inspired by some kind of cartoonish dream where I defeated a robot villain. But now he’s about to die, and something that he needs to live has just fallen into the water. I could go underwater and grab it for him and show him mercy, but I could also just come back up and lie “I couldn’t find it” and let him die. In that dream, the lyrics “I can’t find it, I couldn’t find it” played during a drum solo of a rock song, which was an alternate-universe version of the vocal break during “100%” by Sonic Youth. 

The second half was inspired by a barely memorable dream about pushing a baby stroller down the stairs for some reason, maybe to just get it out of my way. This is where the title “Airpush Down the Stairs” and the lyric “I’m gonna lower the secret baby side / You didn’t notice that I was alive” came from, which I always laughed at as extremely ridiculous. 

I decided to combine these two narratives with an overarching message about how the person in these dreams just isn’t who I really am; I’m not the kind of assertive, selfish person from those dreams. But it also feels like everyone around me is that person. 

Another easy-to-make song without collaborations. The drums were somewhat difficult because I don’t know how to play drums, and I don’t have my drums or recording equipment properly set up. I recorded the vocals both high and low to see which one I liked more, but then I realized that they sounded weird and cool when I put the high and low vocals together -- so that’s what I did. 

I recorded the ending that references “But When I Know Who I Am” before I’d even started the other song, which is why it sounds so weird.