08-14-2016, 10:09 PM
(This post was last modified: 10-04-2016, 05:50 PM by Mattias Westlund.)
This is going to seem incredibly pretentious, but bear with me, it's all for fun and experimentation.
Ever since I started poking around with making music on my netbook, I've felt that the tracks I've composed are somehow related. Sample and production-wise, obviously, but also in terms of general mood and feel. It's kind of like that basic little template urges me in a certain musical direction and tickles my imagination. So since Harren's Hope (see below) I've started thinking about tying the tracks together into a storyline. This is what I have so far.
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Chapter I: Harren's Hope
Far to the northwest lies the frontier settlement of Harren's Hope. There lives Tyrin and his two years younger sister, Elyn, along with their mother and father. In Tyrin's 16th year, the crops fail and the cattle are stricken with disease. Facing starvation and death as winter draws near, the family decides to abandon their homestead and return southeast across the sea to Brenland, where they still have relatives that might take them in.
Chapter II: Setting Sail
In the port town of Greenstone, the family boards a merchant vessel destined for their homeland. But only days into their voyage a storm blows the ship off course, driving them far south.
Chapter III: Corsair Attack / Shipwrecked
Before the captain and his crew have a chance to return to their original course, the ship is attacked by southern corsairs. Tyrin's parents are slain during the attack, Elyn is taken captive, and Tyrin himself falls overboard. Clinging to a floating barrel he watches in helpless horror as the ship is set aflame and the corsairs sail off with his sister.
Chapter IV: The Caravan
On a nameless southern shore, a band of traveling merchants discover an unconscious Tyrin, still roped to the barrel that saved his life. They take him in and tend to his wounds, and he slowly recovers as the caravan makes its way to the fabled city-state of Vaz'Dinah, the Jewel of the South.
Chapter V: The Gates of Vaz'Dinah
When told of Elyn's fate, one of the merchants, Olinnon, informs Tyrin that the corsairs normally sell their captives as slaves in Vaz'Dinah. Feeling sorry for the boy and his sister, Olinnon offers to buy Elyn free, should she turn up at the slaver's market.
Chapter VI: Slaver's Market
Five days into Tyrin's stay in Vaz'Dinah, he and the merchant leaves their caravanserai to visit the slaver's market, same as every day since their arrival. This day, however, luck shines on them, and less than an hour into the auction a shackled Elyn is led up on the dais. Olinnon bids on Elyn, but suddenly a hush falls over the crowd as a man in livery makes his way to the front.
Chapter VII: A Concubine Chosen
The liveried man declares that the Neotarch Zalim, ruler of Vaz'Dinah, has chosen this girl to be his concubine and all bidding will stop. Tyrin attempts to interfere but is held back by Olinnon, who warns him of crossing the Neotarch, who is said to be a tyrant and a decadent madman. Again, the boy is forced to watch as his sister disappears to an unknown fate.
Chapter VIII: The Rebel Hideout
Leaving the slaver's market, the boy and the merchant are approached by a man who says he has overheard their conversation, and there is someone who would like to meet them. The man leads them to a squalid part of the city, where in the secret back room of a tavern they are introduced to Nessah, a former captain of the palace guard who is planning an uprising. In just a few days time, Nessah and her men will secretly enter the palace through the city's old catacombs and lead an assault on the Neotarch. But she needs more men and asks Tyrin to join their cause, in exchange for which the rebels will help him free his sister. Tyrin agrees, seeing no possible way of rescuing Elyn on his own.
Chapter IX: Parting Ways
Olinnon, who has too much to lose to get involved in such a risky venture, refuses to have anything to do with the rebels. But he promises Tyrin that no matter the outcome of the attempted uprising, he will help them both get back to the north if the boy manages to free his sister and escape with their lives. Wishing him good luck, he bids Tyrin farewell.
Chapter X: Through the Catacombs
Led by Nessah and her second-in-command, the former gladiator Ulos, the band of rebels cautiously make their way through the catacombs. It is an ancient place, shrouded in an eerie stillness, and the air is thick with the smell of damp and decay. Below the palace, Nessah's men have broken down a section of a wall, which leads them into the lower levels of the palace.
Chapter XI: Assault on the Palace / Reunion
As the rebels begin their assault on the palace, Tyrin and Ulos take advantage of the ensuing confusion to make their way to the Concubine's Quarters, where after a brief battle with two eunuch guards, Elyn is finally liberated and reunited with her brother.
Chapter XII: Betrayal and Sorcery
When Tyrin, Elyn and Ulos attempt to rejoin the others, it suddenly becomes clear that they have walked into a trap. Someone among the rebels has betrayed them and alerted the Neotarch to their plans. A large contingent of soliders have Nessah and the rebels surrounded in the palace gardens. Nessah is captured in the battle that follows, and as she is dragged away she orders the others to flee to fight another day. The two siblings, along with Ulos and a handful of rebel survivors flee down to the catacombs, but they find no safety there. With a rumble and a groan the countless tombs start to break open, and they are attacked by the mummified remains of the ones buried there -- a measure taken by the ruler's High Magi to ensure no one gets away. They fight their way through the undead menace, and Ulos sacrifices his life to allow the others to escape.
Chapter XIII: The Neotarch Triumphant
After the failed uprising, Vaz'Dinah enters a state of martial law. Bent on rooting out all opposition, the Neotarch begins a purge, capturing or killing everyone even remotely suspected of being in league with the rebels. Disguised as lepers in rags, Tyrin and Elyn watch in horror as a series of public mass executions begin. Nessah is among the captured, and it takes her three whole days to die.
Chapter XIV: Escape From Vaz'Dinah
Tyrin and Elyn spend two miserable weeks living in the gutters of Vaz'Dinah, until one day a beggar child seeks them out bringing word from Olinnon, who has also gone into hiding. They meet with the merchant, who is holed up in an abandoned bathhouse in the Temple Quarter. After having expressed his relief at seeing them both alive and well, he informs them that he will be leaving Vaz'Dinah in two days, and urges them to join him. Dressed as pilgrims they will join a group of worshipers on their yearly pilgrimage to the Martyr's Shrine in Jafir to the east.
Chapter XV: The Journey Home
In Jafir, the two siblings bid Olinnon goodbye and board a ship set for the north. After an uneventful voyage they arrive in the town of Alysport in western Brenland. The remainder of the coin provided by Olinnon buys them two seats on a merchant's cart headed north. Despite their joy over seeing the rolling springtime landscape of Brenland, Tyrin can't help but notice that his sister is troubled and somehow distant. After a fortnight they finally arrive in Barwycke, a village by the river Elwyr and home to their uncle Burl.
Chapter XVI: Redemption
Burl, a miller, a widower, and a ageing man of few smiles, takes the siblings in without question, but also without apparent joy. He makes them work hard and sleep little. As spring becomes summer, Tyrin notices that his memories of the south and their lives in Harren's Hope before that grow increasingly distant. But at the same rate he finds hope again, Elyn becomes more silent and reclusive. She waves off his questions and his worries, saying she will be fine. At one point though, when he asks what is wrong, she says "I just want to go home". Three weeks later Tyrin wakes up after a night of restless sleep to find Elyn's cot empty. In the pre-dawn gloom he goes out to look for her. And he finds her, floating face-down in the dam by the mill.
Epilogue
The Neotarch Zalim is pleased. It has been eight months since the purge, and his enemies have been rooted out or has fled the city with their tails between their legs. Life is good. Especially so since his servants will be bringing new flesh from the market to his chambers tonight: A northern youth, just shy of manhood. Zalim has always had a taste for fair hair and skin. He drinks his wine and smokes his Khash, anticipating, while the servants prepare his new toy.
As the boy is brought before him, naked, oiled and shaved, Zalim experiences a tinge of expectation. This youth has an air of defiance about him. While the Neotarch doesn't mind innocence and fear, there is nothing quite like breaking the minds and wills of the strong. As he orders the boy to come forward and kiss him, he reminds himself to reward the slaver handsomely. In a world of cretins, it is important to show capable men the gratitude that they deserve.
To his surprise, the northern youth obliges without hesitation. And as Zalim feels the burnt, bitter taste of Dragon Lotus on his tongue, the boy smiles at him.
"For Elyn", the boy says. "For Elyn."
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Like I said, it's pretentious as heck, and I have no idea where this is going to end. There's also not a lot of thematic connection between the pieces as some were composed before this idea had really taken root. But I have a few ideas where I could maybe work some thematic hints into the more complete tracks, just to create a sense of continuity.
(and yeah, I wanted to become a fantasy writer but I don't have the patience for it)
Ever since I started poking around with making music on my netbook, I've felt that the tracks I've composed are somehow related. Sample and production-wise, obviously, but also in terms of general mood and feel. It's kind of like that basic little template urges me in a certain musical direction and tickles my imagination. So since Harren's Hope (see below) I've started thinking about tying the tracks together into a storyline. This is what I have so far.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Chapter I: Harren's Hope
Far to the northwest lies the frontier settlement of Harren's Hope. There lives Tyrin and his two years younger sister, Elyn, along with their mother and father. In Tyrin's 16th year, the crops fail and the cattle are stricken with disease. Facing starvation and death as winter draws near, the family decides to abandon their homestead and return southeast across the sea to Brenland, where they still have relatives that might take them in.
Chapter II: Setting Sail
In the port town of Greenstone, the family boards a merchant vessel destined for their homeland. But only days into their voyage a storm blows the ship off course, driving them far south.
Chapter III: Corsair Attack / Shipwrecked
Before the captain and his crew have a chance to return to their original course, the ship is attacked by southern corsairs. Tyrin's parents are slain during the attack, Elyn is taken captive, and Tyrin himself falls overboard. Clinging to a floating barrel he watches in helpless horror as the ship is set aflame and the corsairs sail off with his sister.
Chapter IV: The Caravan
On a nameless southern shore, a band of traveling merchants discover an unconscious Tyrin, still roped to the barrel that saved his life. They take him in and tend to his wounds, and he slowly recovers as the caravan makes its way to the fabled city-state of Vaz'Dinah, the Jewel of the South.
Chapter V: The Gates of Vaz'Dinah
When told of Elyn's fate, one of the merchants, Olinnon, informs Tyrin that the corsairs normally sell their captives as slaves in Vaz'Dinah. Feeling sorry for the boy and his sister, Olinnon offers to buy Elyn free, should she turn up at the slaver's market.
Chapter VI: Slaver's Market
Five days into Tyrin's stay in Vaz'Dinah, he and the merchant leaves their caravanserai to visit the slaver's market, same as every day since their arrival. This day, however, luck shines on them, and less than an hour into the auction a shackled Elyn is led up on the dais. Olinnon bids on Elyn, but suddenly a hush falls over the crowd as a man in livery makes his way to the front.
Chapter VII: A Concubine Chosen
The liveried man declares that the Neotarch Zalim, ruler of Vaz'Dinah, has chosen this girl to be his concubine and all bidding will stop. Tyrin attempts to interfere but is held back by Olinnon, who warns him of crossing the Neotarch, who is said to be a tyrant and a decadent madman. Again, the boy is forced to watch as his sister disappears to an unknown fate.
Chapter VIII: The Rebel Hideout
Leaving the slaver's market, the boy and the merchant are approached by a man who says he has overheard their conversation, and there is someone who would like to meet them. The man leads them to a squalid part of the city, where in the secret back room of a tavern they are introduced to Nessah, a former captain of the palace guard who is planning an uprising. In just a few days time, Nessah and her men will secretly enter the palace through the city's old catacombs and lead an assault on the Neotarch. But she needs more men and asks Tyrin to join their cause, in exchange for which the rebels will help him free his sister. Tyrin agrees, seeing no possible way of rescuing Elyn on his own.
Chapter IX: Parting Ways
Olinnon, who has too much to lose to get involved in such a risky venture, refuses to have anything to do with the rebels. But he promises Tyrin that no matter the outcome of the attempted uprising, he will help them both get back to the north if the boy manages to free his sister and escape with their lives. Wishing him good luck, he bids Tyrin farewell.
Chapter X: Through the Catacombs
Led by Nessah and her second-in-command, the former gladiator Ulos, the band of rebels cautiously make their way through the catacombs. It is an ancient place, shrouded in an eerie stillness, and the air is thick with the smell of damp and decay. Below the palace, Nessah's men have broken down a section of a wall, which leads them into the lower levels of the palace.
Chapter XI: Assault on the Palace / Reunion
As the rebels begin their assault on the palace, Tyrin and Ulos take advantage of the ensuing confusion to make their way to the Concubine's Quarters, where after a brief battle with two eunuch guards, Elyn is finally liberated and reunited with her brother.
Chapter XII: Betrayal and Sorcery
When Tyrin, Elyn and Ulos attempt to rejoin the others, it suddenly becomes clear that they have walked into a trap. Someone among the rebels has betrayed them and alerted the Neotarch to their plans. A large contingent of soliders have Nessah and the rebels surrounded in the palace gardens. Nessah is captured in the battle that follows, and as she is dragged away she orders the others to flee to fight another day. The two siblings, along with Ulos and a handful of rebel survivors flee down to the catacombs, but they find no safety there. With a rumble and a groan the countless tombs start to break open, and they are attacked by the mummified remains of the ones buried there -- a measure taken by the ruler's High Magi to ensure no one gets away. They fight their way through the undead menace, and Ulos sacrifices his life to allow the others to escape.
Chapter XIII: The Neotarch Triumphant
After the failed uprising, Vaz'Dinah enters a state of martial law. Bent on rooting out all opposition, the Neotarch begins a purge, capturing or killing everyone even remotely suspected of being in league with the rebels. Disguised as lepers in rags, Tyrin and Elyn watch in horror as a series of public mass executions begin. Nessah is among the captured, and it takes her three whole days to die.
Chapter XIV: Escape From Vaz'Dinah
Tyrin and Elyn spend two miserable weeks living in the gutters of Vaz'Dinah, until one day a beggar child seeks them out bringing word from Olinnon, who has also gone into hiding. They meet with the merchant, who is holed up in an abandoned bathhouse in the Temple Quarter. After having expressed his relief at seeing them both alive and well, he informs them that he will be leaving Vaz'Dinah in two days, and urges them to join him. Dressed as pilgrims they will join a group of worshipers on their yearly pilgrimage to the Martyr's Shrine in Jafir to the east.
Chapter XV: The Journey Home
In Jafir, the two siblings bid Olinnon goodbye and board a ship set for the north. After an uneventful voyage they arrive in the town of Alysport in western Brenland. The remainder of the coin provided by Olinnon buys them two seats on a merchant's cart headed north. Despite their joy over seeing the rolling springtime landscape of Brenland, Tyrin can't help but notice that his sister is troubled and somehow distant. After a fortnight they finally arrive in Barwycke, a village by the river Elwyr and home to their uncle Burl.
Chapter XVI: Redemption
Burl, a miller, a widower, and a ageing man of few smiles, takes the siblings in without question, but also without apparent joy. He makes them work hard and sleep little. As spring becomes summer, Tyrin notices that his memories of the south and their lives in Harren's Hope before that grow increasingly distant. But at the same rate he finds hope again, Elyn becomes more silent and reclusive. She waves off his questions and his worries, saying she will be fine. At one point though, when he asks what is wrong, she says "I just want to go home". Three weeks later Tyrin wakes up after a night of restless sleep to find Elyn's cot empty. In the pre-dawn gloom he goes out to look for her. And he finds her, floating face-down in the dam by the mill.
Epilogue
The Neotarch Zalim is pleased. It has been eight months since the purge, and his enemies have been rooted out or has fled the city with their tails between their legs. Life is good. Especially so since his servants will be bringing new flesh from the market to his chambers tonight: A northern youth, just shy of manhood. Zalim has always had a taste for fair hair and skin. He drinks his wine and smokes his Khash, anticipating, while the servants prepare his new toy.
As the boy is brought before him, naked, oiled and shaved, Zalim experiences a tinge of expectation. This youth has an air of defiance about him. While the Neotarch doesn't mind innocence and fear, there is nothing quite like breaking the minds and wills of the strong. As he orders the boy to come forward and kiss him, he reminds himself to reward the slaver handsomely. In a world of cretins, it is important to show capable men the gratitude that they deserve.
To his surprise, the northern youth obliges without hesitation. And as Zalim feels the burnt, bitter taste of Dragon Lotus on his tongue, the boy smiles at him.
"For Elyn", the boy says. "For Elyn."
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Like I said, it's pretentious as heck, and I have no idea where this is going to end. There's also not a lot of thematic connection between the pieces as some were composed before this idea had really taken root. But I have a few ideas where I could maybe work some thematic hints into the more complete tracks, just to create a sense of continuity.
(and yeah, I wanted to become a fantasy writer but I don't have the patience for it)