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Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Sonic Worldbuilding: How My Genre Rotation Feeds Work and Play

For the last year, "Extruding the Noise" has been dead air. I spent months hauling boxes from New Jersey to Pennsylvania, then finally out here to Indiana, and my studio gear has spent more time collecting dust in cardboard than making any actual sound. Life got in the way. The creative flow didn't just slow down; it evaporated.

Now that I’m finally plugging cables back in and setting up the new office, I realized I couldn’t just sit down and expect the magic to happen. My brain was stuck in a loop of algorithmic garbage. I needed a hard reset before I even touched a synthesizer.

Two weeks ago, I started the Workday Genre Rotation. It’s a strict, self-imposed diet for my ears. The point isn't just to listen to "good tunes." It's about forcing my brain to analyze different sonic textures so that when I finally hit record, I’m not just regurgitating the same three ideas I had two years ago.

But I’ve realized this schedule isn't just about music production. It has become the engine for my entire day. My professional work revolves around CAD, coding, and 3D modeling (topics I usually cover over at Old School CAD Wizardry & 3D Sorcery), and my other passion is worldbuilding for the Worlds of the Dragon Mist Chronicles. It turns out that designing complex 3D assemblies, writing code, producing music, and writing fantasy lore all feed off the same sonic energy.

Here is how the week actually feels now.

  • Monday (Psybient & Psychill): Coding flow, future textures, and digital dreams.
  • Tuesday (Classic Rock & Prog): CAD precision, structural integrity, and technical prowess.
  • Wednesday (Metal - Melodeath & Thrash): Pure aggression to power through the modeling grind.
  • Thursday (Dark Noir & Doom Jazz): Deep focus, debugging, and smoky atmosphere.
  • Friday (New Age & Celtic Fantasy): Creative modeling and decompression.

Monday (Psybient & Psychill)

Mondays are for the future. I dive straight into Psybient and Psychill to wake up. It’s mostly Entheogenic (Spontaneous Illumination is basically a religious text for me at this point) but I throw in a lot of Carbon Based Lifeforms, Solar Fields, and Shulman too.

For my work, this is perfect for coding. The complex, repetitive structures of Psybient put me in a trance state where I can stare at lines of code for hours without distraction. For the producer in me, this is active study. I’m taking apart the delay lines and the stereo width in my head, trying to figure out how they weld organic samples to digital synthesis without showing the seams. It fuels the "magic" system in Dragon Mist too; listening to World of Sleepers makes visualizing strange biomes and magical flora effortless.

Tuesday (Classic Rock & Prog)

Tuesday is where the foundation gets poured. I switch to Classic Rock and Prog, but only the giants. I’m talking Pink Floyd (The Division Bell is underrated, fight me), Led Zeppelin, and Queen. I’m a massive David Gilmour fan. I remember hearing The Wall for the first time and just losing my mind over those solos. Wish You Were Here might actually be the best album ever made. I consider "Shine On You Crazy Diamond" the grandfather of all Psybient music. Back in high school, I listened to nothing but Floyd, day in and day out. Even The Final Cut got airtime, mostly because Gilmour’s work on it saves the whole thing.

Later, as I got better at guitar, I gravitated toward the technical wizardry of Rush and Primus and the storytelling of The Who's Quadrophenia. This technical precision mirrors my CAD work perfectly. When I’m defining constraints or working on complex assemblies in AutoCAD (often discussed on my CAD blog), I need music that appreciates structure and virtuosity. It’s a reminder that a song, like a 3D model, needs a solid skeleton to stand up.

Wednesday (Metal - Melodeath & Thrash)

Wednesday is for Metal, and honestly, this day is built on a very specific memory. Back on Labor Day Weekend in 1991, WSOU-Pirate Radio (Seton Hall’s metal station) aired their "All-Time Top 895" countdown. My friend and I didn't just listen; we went to war. We recorded the entire 72-hour broadcast onto cassettes, logging every single track on a printed WordPerfect template. It was a marathon of magnetic tape that earned us a shout-out on air. When Metallica’s "Master of Puppets" finally hit number one, it felt like we had survived a battle. That weekend solidified the obsession.

I spent the next few years chasing that high. I saw Megadeth in small NYC clubs right when Countdown to Extinction broke, and Metallica in arenas after the Black Album exploded. I even caught Queensrÿche doing the full Operation: Mindcrime set. Later, a college fling got me hooked on Manowar, a band I still can't put down. But the modern Wednesday playlist is dominated by my discovery of "Melodic Death Metal." I picked up Opeth on a whim, which opened the floodgates to Arch Enemy, Dark Tranquility, At The Gates, and Soilwork. I also have to mention Metalocalypse. That show was bat-shit crazy and absolutely awesome. Dethklok’s music wasn't just a joke; it actually fueled my love for the genre even more. It’s also the main connection point between my wife and this chaotic music. She isn't a metalhead, but she loves that show. It’s our weird little shared frequency.

Work-wise, this is for the grind. If I have tedious 3D modeling tasks or a deadline approaching, this wall of sound pushes me through. For the worldbuilder, it is pure Dwarven fuel. When Amon Amarth screams about Valhalla, or Wind Rose chants about digging holes, I am mentally standing inside a Dwarven forge. Even the pirate themes of AleStorm have found their way into the coastal lore of Dragon Mist.

Thursday (Dark Noir & Doom Jazz)

Thursday brings the rain. I shift hard into Dark Noir and Doom Jazz. This obsession didn't start with music; it started with H.P. Lovecraft. I used to play the Call of Cthulhu RPG at a local game store, and the GM would always play this smoky, unsettling jazz to set the mood. I went looking for that sound and stumbled onto The Kilimanjaro Darkjazz Ensemble on BandCamp. From there, I fell down the rabbit hole and discovered The Sarto Klyn V, an obscure project that hooked me instantly. Now, Thursday is filled with Bohren & der Club of Gore and Trigg & Gusset.

This provides the deep focus I need for complex problem solving or debugging code. It teaches me patience. These guys will let a reverb tail ring out for ten seconds before playing the next note. It’s the perfect antidote to Wednesday’s noise. In my fiction writing, this is the soundtrack for the undercity; it's the music for the thieves' guilds, the spies, the rainy nights in a port city.

Friday (New Age & Celtic Fantasy)

Friday is for decompression, specifically New Age and Celtic Fantasy. This obsession started way back in the Napster days. I was scrolling through file shares looking for anything D&D related, searching for keywords like "Druid," "Merlin," or "Arkenstone" (because of The Hobbit). That search led me straight to Medwyn Goodall and David Arkenstone. Even though both artists are still active today, I always find myself pulled back to those specific classics I downloaded twenty years ago.

This is my creative modeling day. If I’m sketching out a new concept in 3D or documenting a project for Old School CAD Wizardry, this is the backdrop. I listen to the orchestration, specifically how the mandolins and nylon strings sit in the mix. It actually convinced me to buy an Ovation Celebrity Classical next year because I need that organic sound in my setup. It sounds like the history of my Elven cultures being told through song.

I used to keep my hobbies and my work in separate boxes. CAD lived in one, music in another, writing in a third. This experiment smashed those walls. When I listen to In Flames, I hear a Dwarven battle. When I listen to David Arkenstone, I see Elven spires. By curating what goes into my ears now, while I’m still wiring up the studio, I’m making sure that what eventually comes out—whether it's a line of code, a 3D model, or a new track—will be worth the wait.


Track My Progress
If you want to see exactly what I'm listening to in real-time (or check if I broke the rules and listened to Metal on a Monday), you can follow my rotation here:
Last.fm: https://www.last.fm/user/Strulg