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Sometimes The Well Runneth Over

Friday, December 12th, 2008

Array

Yesterday I started to cry in my studio as I produced the new song for Matthew Ebel dot net subscribers. I’m not typically an emotional guy, but for some reason the subject matter combined with the lyrics combined with the way the arrangement was unfolding… well I just couldn’t help myself. I was a little surprised. I don’t cry. I’m an American Ebel male and emotions just don’t do that to me, but there I was sitting in my chair wiping off my cheeks.

Whenever something strange like that happens, I turn to the most trusted source in mass groupthink: Twitter. Fortunately, as it turns out, this kind of thing happens all the time:

Once or twice I’ve even cried while performing an original. When singing with a choir, I’ve made puddles ;-)
-carlalynnehall

I’ve done it once or twice when composing. It is usually the really simple parts that get me the most, though.
-Firr

It’s supposed to happen that way, I think. Writing & listening, both should be affected at times. Looking forward to hearing it.
-JimFarley

So who knows? Maybe this song will be fantastic. Or maybe it just means that one of my own songs has impacted me the way some of my others have impacted some fans. I can’t count how many emails I’ve received telling me that I Will Wait For You or Tennessee Never Cried brought someone to tears. Maybe it’s just my turn.

All I know is it felt really good.

Fan your passions, impassion your fans.

Monday, December 8th, 2008

Everyone says to write what you’re passionate about, but as any long-term married couple will attest, passion comes and goes. What one is passionate about one day becomes a simple continuing fascination the next… then suddenly the flames of passion are alive again in another week. How do you keep writing when inspiration is such a fickle fairy?

I believe the answer, at least for a professional writer, is to stop writing once in a while. Don’t just take a sabbatical, go do something to turn the heat back up. If you know what areas you’re passionate about, it shouldn’t be hard to plan something to re-spark your interest. It’ll be better in the long run than simply forcing mediocre material into your lyrics or PR copy or whatever.

Just as people can smell a marketing ploy a mile away, people can tell when you’re forcing enthusiasm. Those argyle socks you REALLY wanted for Christmas? Your mom totally knows you’re lying and you hate them. So do your fans a service: Become a better writer by keeping yourself on fire about something. Are you a political writer? Go to a protest. Better yet, go to a counter-protest. Music writer? Go sit in on a jam session or some cultural recital you’re not familiar with (dude… Tongan drummers are amazing).

Even if you’re not actively writing, every once in a while you need to fire yourself back up to stay passionate. It’s not a sign that you’re losing interest, it’s a sign that you care enough to perform some regular maintenance. Trust me, your fans will thank you.