Bastille. In an epic stretch of five months, I have left this project utterly dormant. Now I shall return, since Stephen has graced me with a 40 for 2015 and I'm now officially a failure.
I'm a storyteller. I try to hook my students with well-told stories about my childhood so they'll write stories too. I talk about when my brother beat the dog to save a bird's nest and I felt my mind carom between two conclusions as I learned what was going on. I talk about my sister pushing me from the treehouse and thinking, even for that spit second, that she had killed me, after all. I talk about canoeing down a river with Russell and losing both paddles in a swift bit of the current and throwing myself out of the boat after it. I'm a storyteller by nature and I love feeling people's energy build and tense as the story breaks open in front of them. But: to date, the most universally captivating stories I can tell are those of my past relationships. Maybe it's because I'm so candid about how I was feeling and what I concluded from the terrible things I did and felt with the girlfriends I've had, but I don't think that's all of it. I think stories of past relationships get such strong reactions not because they're enjoyable or interesting, but because they're resonant, like stepping inside an enormous bell and having the outside struck, again and again, by someone else.
I think romantic relationships--and especially sexual relationships--cause scars or change so deep and fundamental to who we are and what we want as young people that my peers will always be transfixed by a well-told heartbreak. When somebody hears a story about love lost, their first and immediate reaction will always be to connect it to some story they've thought they locked away.
That's Haunt.
As adults will grow and maturity showsThe song makes me feel melancholy and hollow, but the song itself doesn't make me think of losing anybody. The words do. The way I relate to music is so liminal, so interstitial that I never had a chance to relate Haunt so very strongly with an emotional loss in my life. Honestly, I have a better chance to relate to Chopin at this point than to Bastille. I've just heard him so little at critical moments. I love it, though. Something in it makes me want to scream the words, even though I don't know them. Something terrible makes me want the song to crash and cry.
All the terrifying rarity of truth,
As you turn to your mind,
And your thoughts they rewind
To old happenings and things that are done
I would buy it, but I haven't. I'm not buying music. I need to change my metric, since I have Amazon Music and I'm likely to have Google Music and the whole world is changing. My students don't know what a CD is. My mother can't believe I don't know how to start an LP. I like Bastille. He's great.
Bastille is a band of like 4 dudes...FYI...
ReplyDeleteAlso. ..you're back!!!!