My thanks to both NetGalley and Farrar, Straus and Giroux for this advance copy of this book that is both an annotated guide to song lyrics by a band that has remained popular with people who love music, but is really a look at the creative process, the ups and downs in life, and thinking that help make songs that people can relate too, and make their lives a little less lonely.
I have always wanted to live the creative life. My thoughts were always about writing books, or writing comics, or writing movies, writing whatever I liked, and the that people would enjoy. As I got older I found that I lacked that momentum to make my dreams come real, the confidence, and frankly even the talent. However I still love to read, to watch and to hear, and more importantly have always been interested in how people create these little bits of magic. Is it nature or nurture, the life observed, or the life lived? Reading omnivorously, or studying? Having a mentor or forging one's own path? Making mistakes or being afraid to live? These questions have always, not haunted me, but made me want to know how people I respect and admire, and enjoy create. After reading this book, I think it is a little from all these questions, and a whole lot of talent. And love. For writing, for words, for music, for people, and for the artist, whoever they might be. This Year: 365 Songs Annotated: A Book of Days by John Darnielle songwriter for the band Mountain Goats, is a look at the creation of songs, where they came from, where they went, why they hit so hard, as well as a look at the artist who created them, and the life that helped craft them.
The book is presented as a book of days, a song a day with annotation about the creation. The book can be written straight through, or looked at day by day, giving a person something to think about in a world that seems to have given up on thinking in many ways. The songs are well known, at least to fans of the band, some rariites, as well as songs not recorded, or lost to time. Darnielle discusses how the book changed over time, and how many deadlines were passed while the book changed as he wrote it. The chapters are numbered for days of the week, with complete lyrics, and comments about what was going on with the writer. What state Darnielle happened to be in, or state of mind. Friends, bad relationships, bad music deals, college, working and living at a medical facility, traveling as music became a thing, all of these moments are discussed, as are their effect on the words that Darnielle used to create his songs.
There is a story about the author Harlan Ellison being asked where he got his ideas from. Ellison's response was and I am paraphrasing, "There is an idea store in Schenectady, I send them 25 bucks a week, and the send me a six-pack of ideas". Needless to say many asked for this store's address. Creating is hard, To sit down and open oneself up for comment, especially now when AI is rampant, and people like to bring everyone down into the mire. Reading this book is like reading about a better time. The songs are probably not for everyone, but even the weakest songs have a line or two that people will stop on. The book is book a musical history and an autobiography of the creator as Darnielle shares stories about his life, mistakes, wins, and the confusion that is being a human in this modern time. I enjoyed this a lot, not just for the music, but for the insight, writing takes work. Writing takes paying attention, to those around us, and more importantly paying attention to our own selves.
A book not just for fans, but for poets and for burgeoning song writers. And for those interested in a life of creation and and creating art. Even if it is just for one's self. One of the more interesting books I have read this year, and something I might have to look at everyday, for inspiration and for help in getting through the day.