Music Monday: Vocal remixes

Opinions vary widely in the VGM (video game music) community on the place of vocal remixes – that is, arrangements of originally instrumental tracks with fan-written and -performed lyrics. Although they are becoming more common, there are still some who refuse to listen to vocal remixes.

It took me a while to warm to the idea of vocal remixes, especially since I heard a few in the early days that were not to my taste. But eventually, I came to judge them on the same merits as any other arrangement – on the quality and originality of the song, rather than the style or instruments used.

This week, I’m going to feature a handful of the (now many) vocal remixes I have amassed in my collection over the years.

Darangen – To Hold You Again

While there are songs with more interesting lyrics or smoother vocals out there, “To Hold You Again” is featured first because it was one of the first vocal remixes I enjoyed enough to save, back in 2004, and helped start me on the road to accepting them. This sweet rock rendition of a track from the Super Nintendo game Lufia and the Fortress of Doom is a classic story about the singer having ruined a relationship he later realizes was a mistake.

DrumUltimA, Jillian Aversa, XPRTNovice, zircon – Generations

Nine years ago, well-known remixer and professional singer/songwriter Jillian Aversa made her first solo VGM rearrangement “Prayer,” a version of the Forest Temple theme from The Legend of Zelda: The Ocarina of Time. I still adore that version of that song with its minimal instrumentation more reminiscent of the original haunting theme, but recently, she released “Generations,” an updated version of the track with new vocals. This updated new age version is more melodic, with rolling vocals along the same theme of discovery as her latest original album, Atlantis Awakening. Jillian has done a number of other lovely vocal remixes worth checking out as well.

Featured on playlist: Fantasy, perfect to listen to while writing.

Poolside – Shine Tonight

Modern pop music is not a particular favourite genre of mine, so a song like this, a rendition of “Fragments of Memories” from Final Fantasy VIII done in a modern pop style with an almost hip-hop-esque beat and slightly distorted lyrics, wouldn’t usually strike my fancy. But I find this song catchy with nice variation and the dual vocals complement each other well, and it became a quick favourite.

Harmony – Dragon Song

“Dragon Song” gave “Prophesy” from Secret of Mana a different feel using acoustic guitar instead of flute for the opening riff, but it maintains the dark, haunting mood of the original with a song about escape on the wings of a dragon. This song is a little less vocal than the others, but it is a featured element of the song, and the smooth performance adds to the atmosphere. Despite the changes made from the original, this song still invokes the feeling of flight like the original.

Block Party – Tetris Plays You!

I close out this week’s post with a little bit of levity courtesy of Block Party, a collaboration made up of several long-standing remixers in the VGM community, including Jillian Aversa and her husband, Andrew “zircon” Aversa. Whether it’s something you want to add to a regular music rotation or just want a quick laugh, take a listen to this vocal rendition of a theme from Tetris, featuring lyrics which personify each of the different shapes in the classic game into themed characters such as the nerdy ‘Z’ block and the French diva ‘L’. Maybe I’m just speaking from the perspective of someone who doesn’t really understand the work that goes into making music, but it amuses me to no end that this group put together such a solid and full-depth performance of an entirely comedic song based on a 30-year-old video game.

That’s it for this week! As before, if there is any song, album, or artist you would like me to be aware of, please comment and let me know. See you next time!

New art: At Long Last

Finally taking an image off my pile of works in progress, this one was originally drawn two years ago.  I remember the image appearing suddenly in my head at the time, with no particular inspiration or provocation, at a time when I wasn’t drawing much worthwhile.  As such, it’s nice to finally see it finished, even though it’s not one of my more recent works in progress.  Hopefully something that’s been waiting a little longer to come soon.

Why an author’s schedule is not his own

I seem to have committed myself to a lot more writing than I had initially planned.

I have been working on rewriting Ghost’s Reflection, now one of my oldest fantasy novels and my project for last NaNoWriMo.  Most of what I wrote last November has been scrapped, as further development in December and later has resulted in fairly significant changes to the story.

I have always known that this story spans more than one novel, as a portion of the conflict is left unresolved at the end.  Up until now, I’ve simply left that as is, as something to deal with later.  I was content with writing this story and looking forward to moving on to a different project afterward.

However, due to further discussion with my collaborator this weekend, that open ending has been sketched out into a full trilogy.  Not that I’m disappointed about that; what struck me about this development was that if I plan to publish this first book anytime in the near future, I’m going to have to continue writing the second and third books right afterward.  Otherwise, readers will lose interest with the series or believe that it will never be finished.

The idea of writing for others is one I’m still getting used to.  I first felt the pressure of a published author when I realized some months ago that if I was to sell at the 2011 Gen Con’s Author’s Avenue, I would need a new book to offer patrons.  Fortunately, that pressure has been lifted due to the fact that I should have a different book available for sale by that point, and that I won’t be going to Gen Con this year.

The pressure remains, though.  If one plans to write and release more than one book, and continue selling books, one must continue putting out new books at a regular pace.  There is an awful lot of competition for fantasy/science fiction novels out there and a reader’s interest must be maintained.

Of course, if my goal is to be a professional author, and publisher, then I need to learn how to write new books and find those by others to release consistently.  It’s part of the job and a part I must embrace if I am truly serious about pursuing my passion.

Finding that my writing schedule is no longer my own is a concept I’ll have to get used to, though.

Fresh beginnings

So, it’s a new year.  New starts, new possibilities, and new goals.

Not something I’ve necessarily taken to heart in regards to creative endeavors.  Starting off the year with a nasty cold hasn’t helped, but in general, I’m accepting that this year will not be a productive one for me.  I have no particularly pressing projects or deadlines I want to have finished, so I’m just going with the flow.

I have begun making progress with Ghost’s Reflection, my NaNoWriMo novel, however.  While most of what I wrote cannot be salvaged due to post-November story development, I have drawn up an outline for most of a much stronger story.  Holidays always tend to take a toll on creative output, and I don’t tend to get much done in the week between Christmas and New Year’s, either, but in the interest of getting the words out, I’ve decided to set myself a goal of writing one scene a day.

Again, I’m not exactly being stringent about this; I fully expect there will be days I don’t manage it, if I even manage to start a scene on some days.  But I’ve managed to meet that goal for the past two days, and felt a personal victory when the cold sent me back to bed this afternoon only under duress, as I just wanted to keep writing.

It’s a modest goal, admittedly, but not only does that make it more attainable, but reaching it would mean writing my entire current story map – up until rather late in the story, I should say – within about a month.  Sounds like a reasonable enough resolution to me.

Testing the Water

Art is something I always have to approach tentatively.  I get immense joy out of creating something I’m happy with, but nothing stresses me out more than when it isn’t working.

In that vein, since I haven’t drawn a thing in the past two months but suddenly had a strong urge to do so, I started light:

Damian Sires, star of my NaNoWriMo novel of this year, as she appeared in the second draft of the story and the current.

One thing that never fails to cause me stress is computer colouring.  While I love the forgiving nature of it – Ctrl-Z is my best friend – I am frequently frustrated by my lack of progress with it.  Given my growing interest in markers this year, I had more or less sworn off computer colouring.

Then, a few minutes ago, I discovered a picture I’d started colouring in Photoshop:

And I was pleasantly surprised at how the little colouring I’d done so far had come out.  It wasn’t the colouring that caused me to abandon this image over a year ago; it was the lineart, which, while I used my smallest inking pen, the digital conversion caused it to become heavy and obnoxious.  Some experimentation when this issue plagued me yielded no solutions, so I had already decided I would colour this with markers instead.

Looking at it again, however, the lineart doesn’t bother me as much, and I like the little colouring so far enough that maybe I will continue colouring it on Photoshop.  Of course, this is one of at least twenty drawings that need to be finished, so who knows when I’ll actually get to it.

In Other Novels…

I have known for a while that the novels section here is incomplete.  I have other novels in the works aside from those listed there.  I didn’t add those other novels largely because they don’t even have working titles with which to refer to them, and some of them were also far too undeveloped to include the same information that is present on the other stories already there – namely, characters aren’t wholly defined in some of them.

However, since my own notes on my works in progress are rather scattered and I like to use that section to keep track of my projects on the go, I decided to add a section to the bottom of the novels page for one-line synopses of those other novels.  Hopefully, I can add further information on those stories in the future.

This effectively doubles the number of novels I have in various stages of progress.  I think I need to do a lot of writing.

Sketches – September 13

After a pretty quiet summer, art-wise, drawing has been taking over my free time of late.  First, sketches of the third sheet in my quarter-page fanart series, this time from Fire Emblem: Radiant Dawn:

Also, I picked up some brush pens this weekend and did a quick drawing yesterday to test them out:

They’ll take practice, but I think I could make something of these.