Susan Maughlin Wood

Composer for Media and Concert Music

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Embrace the Journey

First off, I apologize but it turns out I inadvertently fibbed on my last post. Was so proud of having created everything from one source (MRI scan sounds) that I forgot that I also used a sample of Bermuda tree frogs. Okay then, a mere TWO sources, for all of the colors of the sonic rainbow. Still not bad, I say!

And then there is the string quartet. Can't wait to hear them tomorrow.

Here is the poster for the concert. It looks great. We heard more soloists at rehearsal tonight… and… just… wow. You really want to come see this.

 


Ah the Sheer Grace

(I have been electronically manipulating sound files of recordings of MRI machines and using these new sounds as the exclusive material for transitional interludes, as part of a collaborative compositional effort for an upcoming choral concert...)

It has been a powerful feeling to take this blaring, intrusive, mutation-conveying MRI noise and impose mutations back onto it, and in the process, take back a measure of control from an uncontrollable, impersonal void and reshape it into something with dignity and grace. The experience is transformative in the literal sense. In the same way that our challenges shape who we are as people, the underlying malignancy of the sound informs the end result which is all the sweeter for having transcended its own grim origins.

***

The above statement, while absolutely true, may be the closest I have come to an actual BS Artist Statement. The thing is, it really is the clearest way I know how to convey it in words. That it has so very many words, I will make no further apologies.

You should come to our concert August 13! The program will be amazing. The title of this post is a lyric from "Dark Night of the Soul" by Norwegian composer Ola Gjeilo. It is very cinematic. OH! Funny thing: having googled a bit was going to say the sound, with its grand chromatic voice leading chord progressions is similar to what I remember the Alan Silvestri score sounding like for "The Abyss," and weirdly, it turns out Gjeilo has collaborated with a different Silvestri on a companion piece called "Luminous Night of the Soul." I love the internet. Ok, back to work.

 

 

Been workin'

Just signed a contract. Can't say more, but very excited to share everything when it's time! Everything is Awesome, everything is cool when you're part of a team!

One thing I didn't really expect in this business but should have, is all the stuff I can't talk about. 

But, just so this post is not entirely vague, I'll tell you that 8/13 is a UW Chorale concert that will feature a string quartet playing interludes between pieces… beautiful little interludes...

Brief, Heavy, Recurring

Not to be presumptuous or anything, but if you ever happen to want to look through a big picture window straight into my soul, when the sun is low and making the best shadow patterns, take a couple of hours and read a beautiful children's book by Lois Lowry called A Summer To Die. She can be forgiven the earnest, sledgehammerish title for the fact that right up front it spares you the shock that certain other children's stories are guilty of slamming you with, and because she is a gifted writer and it was her first of many children's books. You can practically feel her soul pouring into it from her own experience. If you need a simple catalyst for your own complex grieving process, you can walk through it with her. "It was Molly who drew the line" is still one of the most memorable first lines of any novel I've read.

The number of things I directly relate to in the story is, frankly, absurd. The quiet awkwardness of dorky, weird, brainy Meg compared to her outgoing, popular, pretty older sister(s.) Her preoccupation with creating delicately decorated eggs and of hiding behind a camera as a way of relating to people. The era when she grew up, with no hint that digital tech was soon to take over every aspect of life, Photoshop was about to replace the darkroom and texting would replace the phone. A new life arriving as an older one is exiting. And of course the primary element: the death of an immediate family member, in a hospital that she was too young to be allowed to visit. In fact I identified so closely with Meg that, for awhile, I had a not unreasonable fear of my own sister, with whom I bickered constantly, contracting something fatal and it would feel like my fault. The parts I directly identified with are so numerous (if she'd mentioned piano on top of everything else, my head would have exploded) that it only highlights what was different. I longed for my dad, or even a Will Banks as a surrogate dad. "It is Margaret you mourn for." It is Susan I mourn for.

Every few years I pick up my sister's old copy of this little book from where it rests and read it again as quickly as possible when I know it will be safe to have a little grief hangover. This morning I sniffled at my twelve year old son with his head nodding that I would love for him to read it, now or someday. It will always be there for him and for my daughter, and every page in it can give them a very good understanding of a very good many things. 

It holds up well. Go read it in the two hours you might have spent zoning out to another stream of click bait articles on the Twenty Most Insanely Amazing Whatevers That You Won't Believe. A book title "A Summer to Die" may be just as dramatic, but there is substance to back it up. The internet tells me that Lois Lowry has said, "My family, stoic, Wasp and Nordic, was silent after the loss." Yet another thing to relate to. I should contact her, and thank her. 

GDC was fantastic!

Just came home from the monster power-up known as GDC and am full of excitement for my work and that of my peers and mentors. Met so many great people that even the "I" in my I(E)NTP was coaxed into singing along with my "E." Fantastic and lucky to be there and in this industry!

GDC or Bust!

Going to the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco this week! Gonna be a lot to take in. Hoping to meet up with people there and not have too many scheduling conflicts. Message me if you will be there and want to try to meet up!