I Hear A Symphony

Writing prose without thinking about cadence is like trying to seduce a man by handing him your résumé. The facts are there, but the electric charge isn’t.—Meaghan O’Rourke

By PJ Parrish

I was listening to Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony the other night.  And it suddenly struck me how similar it is to a really good mystery. It has a specific structure. It has themes. It has peaks and valleys of emotion. And it builds to a rousing climax wherein all that has come before makes perfect sense, even if you didn’t hear it coming.

And here’s the cool part: Although a symphony adheres to a formula, within that is room for endless variety. Sound familiar? That’s what we do when we write crime fiction.  We are working within an old and venerable tradition with a time-honored structure. Yet look at the variety we come up with!

You’re not going to mistake Brahams for John Adams. You won’t mistake P.D. James for S.A. Cosby.

So, I was wondering, are there lessons for us from say, Beethoven?

Now, I have studied music some, but not symphonic structure. So I had to go do some research. Bear with me here for a moment. I’ll try not to get obtuse and artsy-fartsy.

A symphony is usually divided into four parts that conform to a standard pattern — The first movement is lively and sets a mood. The second is slower, more thoughtful and develops the theme. The third is an energetic dance or has boisterous surprises. The fourth is a rollicking finale.

Or in our terms:

Movement 1. The action set-up. Or as James Scott Bell often calls it “the disturbance in the norm.” The first “movement” often poses an unanswered question that gets answered by the novel’s’ end.  Here’s some good examples, as presented by Hallie Ephron in her essay for Mystery Writers of America:

  • A baby is found abandoned on the steps of a church. Unanswered question: Who left the baby and what happened to the mother? (In the Bleak Midwinter, Julia Spencer-Fleming)
  • A criminal defense attorney meets her new client— a woman accused of killing her cop boyfriend. The woman extends a hand and says, “Pleased to meet you, I’m your twin.” Unanswered question: Is this woman the attorney’s twin sister and is she a murderer? (Mistaken Identity, Lisa Scottoline)
  • PI Smith receives a late night telephone call from the NYPD, who are holding his 15-year-old nephew Gary. Unanswered question: Why would Gary ask for Smith, whom he hasn’t seen for years? (Winter and Night, S. J. Rozan)

Movement 2. Complications and conflicts. The pace slows down some as the hero investigates. Obstacles fall in his path and clues are dropped. Character is layered in with backstory to deepen our connection with the protag.

Movement 3. The pace quickens as the plot moves toward the final conflict. Roadblocks and problems escalate. You put your protag in physical danger. (Indiana Jones, who hates snakes, ends up in the snake pit). Inner demons affect protag’s ability to act. (but of course you’ve established those demons back in part 2). The stakes keep rising. The clock keeps ticking.

Movement 4. The final conflict and climax. The last shoes drop. The puzzle is solved.. The final face-off happens. The bad guy is vanquished. The world is put back on its correct axis. The orchestra (and you) are now at full power bringing everything to a rollicking and satisfying finale. After your opening, it’s the most important part of your book.

Take a moment and listen to just the first minute or so of the opening movement to Beethoven’s Ninth. (Or if you’re bored with this post, listen to the whole Ninth. I won’t mind).

Isn’t this like the opening chapter of a really juicy thriller?

First, there’s a nervousness in those trembling opening notes. Like we’re looking into this dark place and the hairs are raising on our necks. Then this tiny melody seeps in (the theme in its earliest form). Then suddenly, an explosion of sound that grabs you and says “I have something to show you! Pay attention!” (A body has been discovered? A gun has gone off in the dark?) But then the music pulls back — it’s a scream followed by a regrouging. (The hero has now arrived).

I won’t go into each other movment with such detail. But if you love the Ninth as much as I do, I urge you to listen as if you were reading great mystery. Listen to where the themes are repeated. Listen to where the complications appear. And listen for the echoes and layers of backstory. And listen to that triumphant but poignant ending.

I’ve written here before about how much I think good writing and music are intertwined. Sure, you can write a pretty good book without rhythm. You can even get famous. But you won’t write a book that people remember.

Those who write with rhythm do it in such a subtle way that you, the reader, don’t even realize you’re being moved along a current, oarred along by master with a great ear. Often you’ll hear a book’s style described as “lyrical.” James Lee Burke is the usual reference here. Here’s a graph from Bitterroot:

I picked up my fly rod and net and canvas creel from the porch of Doc’s house and walked down the path toward the riverbank. The air smelled of the water’s coldness and the humus back in the darkness of the woods and the deer and elk dung that had dried on the pebbled banks of the river. I watched Doc Voss squat on his haunches in front of a driftwood fire and stir the strips of ham in a skillet with a fork, squinting his eyes against the smoke, his upper body warmed only by a fly vest, his shoulders braided with sinew.

I don’t think “lyrical” is the same thing as having rhythm. The former is more about description (see above). The latter is more about cadence sustained over the book’s whole structure. Not every sentence or paragraph needs to have rhythm. In fact, if you overdo it, you look, well, pretentious. Sort of like Foreigner or Robert James Waller. Sometimes, good rhythm is just moving your characters through time and space with clarity, brevity and precision.

Good writing is an aural thing. But to get that aural vibe right, you have to be visual. You have to pay attention to how your writing looks on the page. Your rhythmic tools are:

  • Sentence length
  • Paragraph length
  • Sentence fragments
  • Punctuation
  • Pacing.
  • Alliteration. This is a potent spice. Use it sparingly.

Too many long paragraphs? It looks old-fashioned and boring. Too many short paragraphs? That makes your rhythm choppy and nervous. (BUT…if you’re writing dialogue, you want short paragraphs to mimic speech. Also, in action scenes, where you want to rhythm to be tense, of course you go shorter.) Longer paragraphs and lush sentences convey a slowing down, good for description. A tense scene might begin slow but escalate into shorter sentences.

And watch out you don’t fall into the trap of nice writing. This is passage after passage of nice, even-paced, unoffensive prose with neat, grammar-perfect, complete sentences. I had to call Delta yesterday. I was on hold for 20 minutes lisening to this nice mundane melody, over and over. I was really to blow my brains out. Note to Delta CEO Ed Bastian: Why don’t you slip Tom Waits’ “Rain Dogs” into your Musak?

E.L. Doctorow was obsessed with music when it came to his writing. His father ran a small music shop and his mother was an excellent pianist. When upset, she would play Chopin’s “Revolutionary Etude” — a wild piece whose chords Doctorow always interpreted as a signal to get out of the house. He once told an interviewer:

At a certain point, the difference between music in music, and music in words became elided in my mind. I became attentive to the sound of words and the rhythm of sentences in some way that I’m not even aware of.

Indulge me and allow me one more quote. It’s from an essay I ran across about 20 years ago and I still have the yellowed old copy. In it Haruki Murakami, a musician and novelist, describes the role that music plays in his writing (I’ve condensed it some):

Whether in music or in fiction, the most basic thing is rhythm. Your style needs to have good, natural, steady rhythm, or people won’t keep reading your work.Next comes melody — which, in literature, means the appropriate arrangement of the words to match the rhythm.  Next is harmony — the internal mental sounds that support the words. Then comes the part I like best: free improvisation. Through some special channel, the story comes welling out freely from inside. All I have to do is get into the flow.

And lastly, he speaks of that magic that happens when all the music comes together:

Finally comes what may be the most important thing: that high you experience upon completing a work — upon ending your “performance” and feeling you have succeeded in reaching a place that is new and meaningful. And if all goes well, you get to share that sense of elevation with your readers (your audience). That is a marvelous culmination that can be achieved in no other way.

And on that note, I leave you. Hit it, Frederic.

 

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About PJ Parrish

PJ Parrish is the New York Times and USAToday bestseller author of the Louis Kincaid thrillers. Her books have won the Shamus, Anthony, International Thriller Award and been nominated for the Edgar. Visit her at PJParrish.com

26 thoughts on “I Hear A Symphony

  1. Obtuse? Thou? Never-ever!

    As I read the post, I’m reminded of the opening of Amadeus, as well as Salieri’s later description of Mozart’s music—https://youtu.be/xYHJRhRym1U?t=6—an impressively performed scene.

    I write poems of all sorts, even those obsolete, rhymed-and-metered things that today’s English teachers turn up their beezers at. So I’m conscious at some level of rhythm as I write. Alliteration and assonance are features of everything I write, possibly excluding grocery lists.

    From my western WIP, which opens with the assassination of the Sheriff, then whips away to this: Lucie Bentham stood looking out one of the schoolhouse windows, watching the sun set in the mountains west of town. What the hell am I doing back here in Ichekaw? she wondered. Am I really doing any good? This place is getting to me. Nothing but cowboys and farmers and bores. Oh, my. I should have stayed in Centerville . . . Her thoughts eventually turn to the Sheriff, the only man in town she has romantic feelings for.

    • Yes. You probably know this already, JG: The music in the opening scene of Amadeus is Mozart’s 25th Symphony. He was 17 years old when he composed it.

    • Ah! Great observation the Salieri scene! Don’t you love the writing in that movie? I forget the exact line but when Salieri is imploring God, something to the effect of: Why did you give me enough talent to recognize his greatness yet not enough to create my own. Heartbreaking.

      I like your segue from the opening. Exactly what I was getting at: A tense scene of a murder then moves to a more languid one of contemplation and character building. It’s good pacing.

    • I would have loved to study music theory, Cynthia. When I started to learn piano, at age 55, I was always asking my teacher: But why? 🙂

  2. Excellent post. I know SmartEdit has a check for sentence length, which I’ll have to look at more often.
    Cadence is one way you know you’re reading Nora Roberts when you’re reading a JD Robb. That part of her writing voice is the same in both.

    • Interesting about Roberts. I haven’t read enough of her work to recognize that. Writing in completely different genres, yet “she” is always there.

  3. I love the last note of a great symphony, the resonance, the vibration that stays with you after the music stops. That’s why I work on my endings, right up to the last line, more than any other part of the book. There is nothing like a last Beethoven note or a perfect ending to a novel, e.g., Lost Light by Connelly.

    • Yes! I often write the last scene well before I actually get to that point. It helps me find the road.

  4. Excellent post. The text you selected by James Lee Burke reminded me of Hemingway in his prime, with its conga line of prepositional phrases: “from the porch of Doc’s house and walked down the path toward the riverbank.” Wonderful, seductive flow that pulls you along.

  5. Great post, as always. I’m a profession orchestra musician/aspiring writer and appreciated the comparison between beautiful writing and great music. Let me know if you’re ever in Cleveland, Ohio. I could hook you up with orchestra tickets.

    • Would love to take you up on that. Haven’t been to a symphony or a ballet since I moved to the sticks, alas. I miss it. Saw the Chicago Symphony on tour in Miami a long time ago, performing Shostakovich’s 5th. My favorite. Still remember that feeling.

      • We play down in Miami every year too. Just let me know when you’re interested in coming.

  6. Kris, wonderful analogies and examples. I’m drafting a new book and will pay more attention to the “musicality”. I write in relative silence b/c my brain is easily distracted. But this adds a new dimension worth thinking about. Thanks!

  7. What a beautiful post! I often think of cadence as I’m writing so the words will make a melody of sorts.

    Another analogy occurred to me as I was watching the video of Beethoven’s Ninth. Orchestra members wear simple black and white dress so the audience will not be tempted to look at them, but will concentrate on the music. Same with writing — the author should stay out of the way and let the story speak for itself. (Maybe not a perfect analogy. 🙂 )

    I was mesmerized by the visual depiction of the notes in the Chopin video.

  8. As a vocal performance major in college, this post was a real treat, Kris. Love the Ninth!

    One of the most difficult skills for me to learn in voice coaching was phrasing. Which fits in nicely with my ongoing bookish skill-learning. A vocalist has to learn how to sing a comma, but not hammer her audience over the head with it. 🙂

    Have a great Tuesday, all.

    • Phrasing! I didn’t even think to address that. It is what makes great writers. It is what makes Streisand and Sinatra so great.

  9. Fantastic post, Kris. Beethoven’s Ninth symphony is a perfect score for the structure of a mystery novel, and this is a terrific mini-workshop in rhythm in writing.

  10. Fabulous, Kris. I’m an auditory writer and reader. It’s the music of words that attract me to certain authors and tell me when I’ve zigged instead of zagged with my writing. Hard to explain, but as someone who’s read and loved your work, you know what I’m saying.

  11. Everyone, Kris sends her apologies as she is unable to get on to post further responses. This sometimes happens here in Hinky Town. Please carry on the conversation.

  12. Thank you for the music! It’s just what I needed today. I always wondered why I only listen to classical music…it fits the way my brain is wired, especially Beethoven’s 9th, and I loved the Chopin selection!

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