I am almost as much a lover of music as I am of golf, and so I was thinking about both at the same time yesterday when it occurred to me that some similar principles must be going on in the craft of an album as go on in the design of a golf course. In other words, what traits of our favorite artists' albums are also traits, at least a little bit, of great golf courses? What could a golf course architect, established or aspiring, learn from a great rock and roll or jazz or classical multi-track work of music?
I am a big fan of Tom Waits' music in part, I believe, because I have found his studio albums to be put together in an extremely interesting way. When you listen to one of his albums, he seems to be in complete control of the pace at which his work is unfurling itself and he is not afraid to include songs of quite markedly different length and style over the course of an album because when considered as a whole, the work is going to be shown not to be a collection of songs but an album in the truest and most wholesome sense. (As a sidenote, this aspect of great music has been almost totally destroyed because of the massive change in how we take it in). One such album is "Real Gone," from 2004. Its longest song is "Sins of my Father," at 10 minutes, 37 seconds. The shortest song on the album is 46 seconds, called "Clang Boom Steam." And if you listen to the album, you'll notice that Waits seems to go back and forth from very harsh-sounding tunes like "Hoist That Rag" to more gentle-sounding and quiet songs like "Green Grass." This sense of the virtue of variety seems to be lost on musicians and golf course architects alike.
As with Tom Waits in music, I have always perceived that grasp of the utility of variety on the golf side from Mike Strantz. Caledonia, which I am playing tomorrow, has always struck me as a golf course containing great variety and near-perfect pacing. I will be happy to comment further on Caledonia and furnish some pictures to go along with it tomorrow and after if there is interest.
Perhaps this whole line of thought is a little out-there. But if anyone else has any thoughts along these lines, I'd love to see them.
Happy New Year, everyone.
--Tim