Emily Scott Robinson
“A ritual creates neural pathways that in turn create positive experiences, which lead to the ideal flow state for songwriting.”
And for Emily Scott Robinson, achieving that ideal flow state involves cheap bank pens and vacuum cleaners.
Bank pens and vacuum cleaners: the keys to Emily Scott Robinson's songwriting process.
Robinson and I both agree that having a writing ritual is important. Rituals give us confidence and comfort. But they also help us achieve a flow state where the writing just happens: you don't have to think about the words because they issue forth. It's when you're on a roll.
Achieving this flow state is hard, so that's where the bank pens and vacuum cleaners come in. Robinson is a pen-and-paper person for her lyrics. And there's something about the smoothness of those cheap ball point pens from her local bank that she finds irresistible. When she writes with them, the words flow. So if you see Robinson in your local bank branch when she's on tour, she may be doing more than just a bank transaction.
As for the vacuum cleaner, that's for generating ideas. We talked a lot about the role of movement to the songwriting process. Most songwriters tell me that they get ideas while walking, running, hiking, biking, swimming, or driving. I've also heard cooking and gardening. But Robinson is the first one to cite an upright vacuum. It's not the vacuum itself that gives her ideas, but the repetitive and monotonous movement that helps her brain focus on the writing process, just as it does with the repetitive motion of walking, running, or cutting vegetables. And when your brain can engage in an activity that involves minimal higher order thinking, it can then use that space for creativity.
Besides the bank pens, there are a few other necessary objects: a cheap, beat up notebook that she doesn't mind destroying; a candle; and a cup of coffee. "It's all about creating neural pathways that in turn create positive experiences," she told me. That's why those objects give her comfort and confidence when she writes.
Robinson starts her day with morning pages, a couple of pages of freewriting each day. It's not so much for song ideas, but to clear the clutter from her brain so that the ideas can come. "There are so many ideas in my head that don't need to take up that much real estate. The morning pages help to clear those ideas and free up space for songwriting," she told me.
I'm always hesitant to classify artists in a genre because the internet will come at you if they don't agree, but this is true old-school country. At least to me. And even if you disagree...oh my god that voice. That amazing voice.
Emily Scott Robinson's new album American Siren arrives October 29 on Oh Boy Records. Give it a listen because she is fantastic.
Will Sheff believes in writing every day, first thing in the morning. But he’s also a firm believer in loafing.