The
Sound of Muzak
How
Music and Song Influenced My 揇aria?Fanfic
Text ?003 Roger E. Moore
(roger70129@aol.com)
Daria and associated
characters are ?003 MTV Networks
Feedback (good, bad, indifferent,
just want to bother me, whatever) is appreciated. Please write to:
roger70129@aol.com
Synopsis: Music has more of an
influence on fanfic writing than is sometimes thought. Some examples of this
are given from this author抯 own 揇aria?works.
Author抯
Notes: Not
much has been said online about music and fanfic writing, as far as I can tell.
Perhaps this will spark a little thought or help people enjoy my stories
better. 8)
Acknowledgements: Thanks to all who produced
the music that inspired my writing!
Since
then, I抳e written a few other 揇aria?fanfics, and looking back I am surprised
at how many of them were influenced by particular songs or musical works. The
揇aria?show itself made extensive used of background music by alternative
bands, and some fans of the series find the DVD versions of the show sadly
lacking because the music tracks were removed for public distribution, for
royalty reasons. 揇aria?and music are thus joined in my mind, and for whatever
interest this topic has among fanfic authors and readers, this essay on music
and writing is offered. It is hoped that the reader will forgive me if I ramble
a bit. Music is a separate language, and I was never very good with languages
other than English.
Sometimes
music forms only a small part of a 揇aria?story, a background element to a
particular scene. I don抰 recommend certain songs be played during every scene,
as some fanfic writers do, but when it抯 appropriate I mention it. For example,
Daria Morgendorffer and her father Jake listen to Mozart抯 揈ine Kleine
Nachtmusik?during a father-daughter dinner in 揂 Midsummer Nightmare抯 Daria.?I was looking for something that a hotel restaurant would play on a special evening,
and Mozart came to mind, as I was a fan of the movie Amadeus. Daria, I
thought, would appreciate classical music as well as alternative rock.
Another
scene in 揂 Midsummer Nightmare抯 Daria?uses the Rolling Stones?揋imme
Shelter,?which is especially good for this tale as Daria is mentally and
emotionally changed by a supernatural force to become angrier and more
aggressive, the constraints on her behavior suddenly removed. People around her
thus need to seek shelter from her rage. The connection with the documentary
movie of the disastrous Altamont concert (揋imme Shelter? is echoed as well. I
thought about using 揝ympathy for the Devil?in that scene, but 揋imme Shelter?worked better.
A
lyric from a Kid Rock song, 揊ist of Rage,?arises in a scene between Daria and
Jane in 揘ine-Eleven and Counting,?right before they discover news of the
attacks on New York and Washington, D.C. The lyric talks about the singer抯
negative view of the world and his struggle to get through it: 揑 see the future
and it抯 looking grim / A lake of fire, looking like a long swim?described
exactly how I felt about life after 9/11, and I used it here to foreshadow what
was to come.
In
the angst story, 揥inter in Hell,?Sandi Griffin reveals that she once took
piano lessons until she dumped them in favor of running the Fashion Club. In a
piano shop in a shopping mall, she sits down and plays a selection of pieces
that I took from various piano CDs. Neil Young抯 揙ld Man?was reflective of
Sandi抯 trouble with her father, who has abandoned her, and of Quinn
Morgendorffer抯 relationship with the neurotic Jake. The Beatles?song,
揧esterday,?was similarly linked to events in the story, and Sarah McLachlan抯
揑 Will Remember You?echoes Sandi抯 fears that her best (and probably only)
friend, Quinn, will soon head for college and leave Sandi to an uncertain and
lonely future.
The
short, humorous script 換uinnisqatsi?has a musical soundtrack from the movie
揔oyaanisqatsi,?though altered in a ludicrous way by Jeffy, Joey, and Jamie to
fit their home movie about their worship of Quinn. This was the only time I
recall using a song in a humorous way in a story, though you could easily read
the farce 揕uuuv Story?to a selection of 1970s Barry White songs.
In
the alternate-history 揚(yáng)ause in the Air?series, Daria and Jane are gay. They
become lovers (as you would expect), but they then go so far as to get married
and have a baby. In a scene in 揝hock and Aww,?the fifth in the series, Jane
hums the tune to Pat Benatar抯 揥e Belong,?a 1980s song that Jane would to
have heard as a child or seen on MTV as a music video. 揥e Belong?is actually
the theme song of the entire PitA series, and the lyrics reflect exactly what
goes on in their stories as they struggle with personal doubts and real-world
troubles in an effort to make their marriage and family work.
A
song抯 title or lyrics can strike me as inspiration for a story title. 揅lick
Click Boom?(from Saliva抯 song of the same name) worked nicely for an
alternate-history story in which Daria and Jane meet because they are both
camera bugs梬hich they are to a lesser extent in the regular Dariaverse. An
alternate-history story about Jane抯 older sister, Penny Lane, was titled
揟here Beneath the Blue Suburban Skies?after a line in the Beatles?song,
揚(yáng)enny Lane?(probably the source of Penny抯 name).
Sometimes
a song serves as the inspiration for certain scenes in a story, but it is not
mentioned in the tale itself. 揂pril Is the Cruelest Month?begins with Daria
and Jane driving through the Rocky Mountains, which are majestic enough in
themselves, but I wanted a particular feeling to go with this scene and found
it hard to write without something to help the emotional tone along. That
feeling was supplied by Loreena McKennitt抯 揟he Mystic抯 Dream,?from The
Mask and the Mirror. This song perfect captures the eeriness of that
overcast day, the mountaintops wreathed in fog, reflecting a certain loneliness
of spirit and a pending meeting with destiny. I must have listened to 揟he Mystic抯
Dream?fifty times while writing the opening to the story.
AC/DC抯
揝hoot to Thrill?(From Back in Black) came to mind a great deal during
the writing of 揥here No Light Breaks, Where No Sea Runs,?an angst nightmare
story in which Daria becomes a murderer. Many of the lyrics to 揝hoot to
Thrill?evoke memories of the story in me, as the story now makes me think of
the song.
An
incomplete story now posted on the 揕awndale Leftovers?website was helped
along in part by a song by Kid Rock. In this story, 揃uried Alive,?Quinn
becomes trapped in her car under a tractor-trailer following a long
chain-reaction Interstate pileup. The scene in which the accident develops came
vividly to mind while listening to Kid Rock抯 揊?Off?(deletion mine), because
the opening chords of that song have a harsh, screeching, metallic edge to
them, followed by a hard-driving rhythm that fit Quinn抯 panicked and futile
efforts to steer clear of the crashes around her. If I finish the story one
day, I抣l probably rewrite the crash scene梑ut again keep it to the music of
Kid Rock.
I抳e tried a couple of times to write lyrics without music梤ather, the lyrics are to music, but the music抯 locked in my head and I can抰 write it down. Lyrics to unique songs appear in the stories 揋o Ahead and Dance?(actually the lyrics to a song Trent Lane is supposed to have written) and 揗eet the Fashion Club?(an alternate history in which Quinn and the Fashion Club are a rock band).
So,
music is sometimes a part of the stories I write, though I cannot predict when
or control how that happens. It抯 one of those things that come to mind for
writers of any sort梱ou go with the flow and see where it takes you, hoping all
the while that it makes sense in the end for a good tale.
Original:
7/30/03
Essay
FINIS