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Sunday, November 13, 2016

Creative Differences Still Serve To Motivate


Inspiration is everywhere. 

Most recently, I’ve been re-inspired by two vastly different music documentaries: Lost Songs: The Basement Tapes Continued and Presenting Princess Shaw. These documentaries show a totally cool range of just how music can come to life.  Whether created side-by-side with a note pad, pen, string instruments and painstakingly stacked vocals or culled from YouTube video edits bridging the gaps created by oceans, socio-economic demographics, language, and prior consent.  Music demands life like a long buried seed exposed to sunlight.

Tasked with the gift of uniting the lyrical drafts of Nobel Prize winner Bob Dylan with new music, Mumford & SonsMarcus Mumford collaborated with fellow Grammy winner producer T-Bone Burnett.  Doing so led to a range of collaborations to make the best music possible from one of the best writers of our time.  To do so, Mumford relied on other geniuses like Elvis Costello, Rhiannon Giddens, Taylor Goldsmith, and Jim James.  The gift created by the documentary is an awesome peek inside the humility, intention to be heard and musicality required to create a song.  Check out the gritty, quietly determined battle to craft “Lost On The River,” waged between the collaborators from which Giddens emerged the victorious and sonorous gladiatrix.

Yet, for all of the instrumentation and intimate collaboration style exhibited in The Basement Tapes, Princess Shaw shows another side of the spectrum.  This is music that is created in mutual vacuums by two people; one a New Orleans nursing assistant and singer-songwriter Samantha Montgomery, the other Israeli musician and cutting edge YouTube producer Kutiman.  These are individuals who need to create because they need to create. Two who believe that when you chop down a musical tree, it always makes a sound even if it is just heard by its creator ... or the creators legion of online fans.

What may be most applicable to why music must come to life, could have been best analogized by Montgomery in a recent Salon.com interview as she talked about the tough motivational forces in her life,  “I don’t want to give up on life. I just keep going.  I don’t want to live like a caged bird. I want to be free. I’ll fly even if my wings are broken.”  But no matter what, states Montgomery, “ Self-love and self-worth are worth more than any check.  If [her success in music] ends tomorrow, I’m OK with my life.”

And so should it be that no matter how and why you create your music, do it because you have to let it soar.  Make music and your art with unencumbered creativity.  Keep creating because you have to.