Last Friday, we raised the topic of writing to music, and we asked all of you out there what music you write to, if you write to music at all. The number and variety of your suggestions was a little overwhelming, and very welcome, and provided a wealth of recommendations to put together into a playlist. There was quite a lot of agreement among you and a near-consensus on instrumental music over vocal. But it also came as no surprise that Open Culture readers’ tastes span a range of genres, cultures, and periods and that everyone who wrote in seemed to raise the bar a little higher for drop-dead gorgeous, meditative compositions.
Out of all of your recommendations, I have made a selection of sixteen artists that I believe is representative. (Apologies if your suggestions didn’t make the cut—there’s bound to be some bias here). Whatever your posture and preference for volume levels, lighting arrangements, or time of day or night, you might try on each of these while you tap away at your latest piece of work. Who knows? You could strike a new rhythm, hit an unfamiliar groove and shake out of a too-familiar rut, or shift the tempo just so, change perspective, temper an unruly mood….
Or maybe just find some cool new music to dig while you cook dinner.
Last week’s post began with Miles Davis’s In a Silent Way, which I believe inspired some jazz lovers to comment. Komiska suggested the top-notch Modern Jazz Quartet’s rendition of “Lonely Woman” (above).
Bill Evans’ name also came up quite a bit in your suggestions. Below is his “You Must Believe in Spring.”
Minimalist composer Steve Reich, and other contemporaries of his like Philip Glass, got many a mention. Below is a live performance of the first two sections of Reich’s Music for 18 Musicians.
Ambient synthesizer music by the likes of the Scottish duo Boards of Canada, Tangerine Dream, former Cocteau Twin Robin Guthrie, and Brian Eno came up quite a bit as well. Commenter Emma Gray Munthe mentioned the work of less famous but very influential electronic composer Jean Michel Jarre. Listen to his groundbreaking album Equinoxe below:
A few of you pointed out that any kind of music serves to distract from your process. Cheeky Michael West said as much and more however with his laconic reference to John Cage’s 4’33″, the ultimate minimalist composition. Below, listen to (or observe, rather) an orchestral interpretation of Cage’s concept:
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