The Song of Your Life IV

In the movie, Before Sunset, Ethan Hawke is on a book tour where he is talking about his next project: this idea of a song transporting you back in time. How it grabs you and can make you remember things you’d forgotten – all of it locked within a song.

I feel the same way, where the music moment can transport you back to those memories you might not always have right at your fingertips. Things you thought had been lost are now crystal clear once again.

***

Far – Water and Solutions Album

When you have a group of friends your musical tastes can certainly merge over time. It only makes sense since once you discover a cool band, you’d want to share it with everyone else. Other times you break off into smaller groups within the circle where you celebrate a particular album with everyone else merely tolerating it.

When I first heard Far’s Water and Solutions a group of us had headed up to North Carolina/Tennessee mountains to go skiing. We arrived that first night, and Egg put on the album and when it finished, someone else started it again. This continued throughout the weekend when we were in the cabin. And it was always someone different who restarted it.

I don’t know if I’ve ever quite seen that before or since. Whatever magic contained on that CD was exactly the right sound for the weekend.

***

Helmet – Impressionable

Back in the dark ages of the internet (the 90s), it was suddenly possible to find out about rare songs from your favorite band without needing to scour random record stores throughout the city (now, we still did that too, but this helped narrow down exactly what it was we were looking for). For some bands, the list was extremely long (Pearl Jam, I’m looking at you), but for some others they became these names without any knowledge about what they may or may not have sounded like. And there was one song we did manage to hear: “Impressionable”.

At the same time I started working at the Georgia Tech Radio Station, which meant I could sign up for Will Call tickets for various shows in the Atlanta and Athens areas. Now, I was low man on the totem pole, so most of the bigger acts’ tickets were gobbled up, but a band like Helmet was just the right size for me to snag one for myself and one for Egg.

We make it to the show and decide that any time there was a lull between songs, we’d shout “Play Impressionable”. Aside from being a crazy plan, we certainly didn’t really think about the fact that most of these bands had a pretty standard setlist night in and night out. So unless Impressionable happened to already be on the agenda for the night, there was no way they would have practiced it enough to even play it. Maybe if we’d chosen a one of the rarer album songs… maybe, but not some b-side which had never made it on much of anything.

So, this isn’t the story of victory where the band suddenly heard us, decided we were hardcore fans, and played the track. No, but the song always brings that concert back to my memory.

***

LIVE – Throwing Copper Album Tour

This is effectively an anti-memory. Don’t get me wrong, I love LIVE, but when Throwing Copper came out I was in my Freshman year of college and my tv viewing had gone to near nothing, and my radio listening had done much the same. I still listening and buying new music, but LIVE was not the type of act which would have fallen into my lap without some radio play (which I wasn’t hearing anyway).

Except, it should have been right in my wheel house. My roommate bought a six disc changer that he loaded his music in to play on my stero. He was listening to LIVE, but somehow, I never really heard of them. Maybe it was just one of those things where it didn’t make it into the changer or maybe it was on a different disc when I was in the room, but regardless, I had no idea who the band was.

Flash forward to November of that year, and LIVE was going to play on GA Tech campus. It was literally the largest show they’d done up to that point. My roommate and his girlfriend got tickets, but I don’t remember any talk about the concert prior to them heading out that night. I saw plenty of people heading down to the arena as I walked around campus.

Maybe I was just in my own little world. Just me in blissful ignorance.

Over the next couple of months, I discovered LIVE and only then did I realize I’d missed out on something special. It’s no one’s fault (I do blame Chris a little for not forcing me to listen to them), so it becomes this weird not memory of the time I didn’t get to see a favorite play.

***

John McGuire is the writer of the sci-fi novel: The Echo Effect.

He is also the creator/author of the steampunk comic The Gilded Age. If you would like to purchase a copy, go here!

Click here to join John’s mailing list and receive preview chapters of upcoming novels, behind the scenes looks at new comics, and free short stories.

His other prose appears in The Dark That Follows, Hollow Empire, Tales from Vigilante City, Beyond the Gate, and Machina Obscurum – A Collection of Small Shadows.

He can also be found at www.johnrmcguire.com

The Song of Your Life III

In the movie, Before Sunset, Ethan Hawke is on a book tour where he is talking about his next project: this idea of a song transporting you back in time. How it grabs you and can make you remember things you’d forgotten – all of it locked within a song.

I feel the same way, where the music moment can transport you back to those memories you might not always have right at your fingertips. Things you thought had been lost are now crystal clear once again.

***

Image by Mollyroselee from Pixabay

Def Leppard – Hysteria

One of the first albums I ever owned, I nearly wore out the cassette tape as it would play behind me while I shot baskets throughout so many afternoons. But more than anything it transports me back to a particular summer where I’m maybe 12 or 13 at my grandparents’ house in south Georgia. My sister and I would normally spend two weeks with them every summer and hand out with our cousin. The thing was that south Georgia heat is nothing to play with. We’re talking 100 degrees easily during most afternoons, and in the area I’m talking about, it was probably closer to scrubland than woods sometimes (so not as much shade to potentially keep you cool). We tried to stick to the indoors as much as possible, but even back then the adults were always wondering why we weren’t outside playing (I wondered if adults didn’t feel heat in the same way, but now, as an adult, I know it’s certainly not the case). So I took a basketball out to the weathered and battered goal and turned on Def Leppard and cooked in the heat.

Good times…

***

Guns N’ Roses – November Rain

When you are a poor high school student, you really depend on tape trading with your friends in order to experience anything more than what your own feeble funds might allow you to purchase. One of those tapes was a copy of Use Your Illusion 1 (and 2 as well) which Chad Shonk had made a copy of for me. I devoured that tape over the course of many weeks before I finally decided to just go and get the CD. Imagine my surprise when this song Novemeber Rain came pouring through my stero… a song I did not recognize at all. I popped back on the tape, fast forwarded to where the song appeared and got a weird gabled version of the song that was abruptly shortened as well. So it was that one of the bands greatest songs finally managed to be appreciated by me… months after the album had been out.

***

Korn – Blind

Right after I graduated from high school, my parents moved the family up to Richmond, Virginia, leaving their oldest in behind in Georgia to begin college at GA Tech in the fall. It was a great summer as for many weeks I pretty much was by myself. My dad would be down about every other week, but otherwise I was on my own (luckily for them, I was anything but a wild kid – I wouldn’t have known how to throw a party even if I’d wanted to). Just before the end of summer, the movers came and packed up all our worldly items and off we went to Richmond, where I think I technically lived for about two weeks.

It was there I discovered a record shop a couple of miles away from the new house. Every couple of days I would pop up there to see if they had anything of interest. And one day they had these sampler tapes from a band named KORN. Free means go ahead and grab one just in case. I got home, popped it into the stero, and was blown away by what I heard. Suddenly, a random trip to the store had introduced me (and my friends shortly thereafter) to not only a brand new band but the beginnings of a whole new music (Nu Metal).

***

John McGuire is the writer of the sci-fi novel: The Echo Effect.

He is also the creator/author of the steampunk comic The Gilded Age. If you would like to purchase a copy, go here!

Click here to join John’s mailing list and receive preview chapters of upcoming novels, behind the scenes looks at new comics, and free short stories.

His other prose appears in The Dark That Follows, Hollow Empire, Tales from Vigilante City, Beyond the Gate, and Machina Obscurum – A Collection of Small Shadows.

He can also be found at www.johnrmcguire.com