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“Play it like your heart’s on fire.”

“Play it like your heart’s on fire.”

Creative Process x Tom Waits

Be ready to let it go when it vanishes. If a song “really wants to be written down, it’ll stick to your head. If it isn’t interesting enough for to remember, well, it can just move along and go get in someone else’s song.”
“Some songs,” he has learned, “don’t want to be recorded.” You can’t wrestle with them or you’ll only scare them off more. Trying to capture them sometimes “is trying to trap birds.” Fortunately, he says, other songs come easy, like “digging potatoes out of the ground.” Others are sticky and weird, like “gum found under an old table.” Clumsy and uncooperative songs may only be useful “to cut up as bait and use ‘em to catch other songs.” Of course, the best songs of all are those that enter you “like dreams taken through a straw.’ In those moments, all you can be, Waits says, is grateful.

“Children make up the best songs, anyway,” he says. “Better than grown-ups. Kids are always working on songs and throwing them away, like little origami things or paper airplanes. They don’t care if they lose it; they’ll just make another one.” This openness is what every artist needs.

In Chains

In Chains

A lot of revisiting. Showstudio revisiting the early days of Kate Moss. Me finding the perfect theme song for a new project, I can’t talk about. Though the brand and the band are from the UK.

You’ve got me dying for you
It’s you that I’m living through
You’ve got me praying to you
Saying to you
Anything you want me to
You’ve got me reaching for you
My soul’s beseeching me to
You’ve got me singing to you
Bringing to you
Anything you ask me to
“In Chains” x Depeche Mode