Dear Ethan (@Ethan_Hein) and Ethan (@eptc), it’s officially National Ethan Day!!
Thank you both so much for your suggestions both here and on SoundCloud.
Ethan Hein wrote on SoundCloud: “One strategy might be to deliberately go for a murkier and more processed piano sound. For example, use Auto Filter, distortion/saturation, weird reverbs/delays, beat repeat, etc to gently distress the sound in ways that suit its somber mood.” This got me thinking about the process of “gentle distress” being performed on the piano (voice of Sibyl) to represent her voice becoming more shrill and frail over time.
Then Ethan Persoff wrote: “Maybe the withering (of her body) itself could be incorporated into the latter half of this piece.” I like this focus on the body // voice duality, and maybe it can be introduced even earlier in the track.
So now I’m thinking: have the first half of the track accompanied by some pulsing but fading synth (the withering of Sibyl’s body) while the second half of the track witnesses acts of gentle distress performed on the piano sound (the cracking of Sibyl’s voice).
Also, thank you to @gis_sweden for thinking thinking about the size of reverb used. Perhaps the track should start with a small amount of reverb (as body and voice are still connected) but then open up as they fall apart.
I’m very excited to try these ideas out over the weekend. Thank you everyone!!