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DAVID LAPADAT
Music PhD, Songwriter, Poet, Writer


Haruki Murakami A Wild Sheep Chase Review: Why My First Murakami Novel Feels Like It Goes Nowhere Yet Hooks You Forever With Its Unique Magic Realism
In Tokyo’s quiet drift, a sheep with a star mark pulls an ordinary man into infinite loops of magic realism—Murakami’s signature that never ends.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Art of Enough: Aristotle’s Golden Mean and the Geometry of a Well-Spent Life
Aristotle's golden mean becomes a practical test for appetite, balance, and the hard art of knowing when more starts deforming the soul.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Apple Religion: Kierkegaard, Tribalism, and the Trillion-Dollar Walled Garden
Apple appears here not just as a company, but as a ritual system where desire, belonging, and symbolic status merge into a polished liturgy.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Most Beautiful Death Scenes in Literature
Five unforgettable literary deaths show how writers turn endings into beauty, terror, mercy, and revelation rather than mere plot closure.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Socrates’ Question That Will Destroy Your Budget
Socrates asks the most dangerous money question of all: do you want the thing itself, or the image of yourself that comes with it?

David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Palace of Dreams and the Bureaucracy of Nightmare
Kadare imagines a state that governs through dreams, creating one of literature’s strangest and most chilling visions of bureaucratic tyranny.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Epictetus and the Emergency Fund: Stoic Security Without Hoarding
The emergency fund becomes a Stoic exercise in calm preparation: enough to steady the mind, not so much that safety turns into fear.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Doctor Zhivago by Boris Pasternak: The Tragedy of Inner Exile
Pasternak’s novel becomes a drama of conscience under historical violence, where poetry and love struggle to survive revolution.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


American Pastoral by Philip Roth: The Ruin Inside the Dream
Roth’s suburban vision cracks open to reveal innocence, violence, and the American dream’s inability to protect anyone from history.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Nabokov’s Despair: The Madness of the False Double
Nabokov turns the double into an instrument of vanity, delusion, and self-invention, building a comedy that darkens into madness.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Did MTV Help Replace Rock? Billy Corgan and the Story of Its Displacement
Billy Corgan’s provocation opens a larger argument about genre power, mainstream displacement, and the institutions that shape what a culture hears.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Operation Shylock by Philip Roth: The Theatre of the Double
Roth stages identity as a dangerous performance where politics, diaspora, self-division, and impersonation refuse to stay separate.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Odyssey and the Quiet Ache of Homecoming
Homecoming in the Odyssey becomes a long test of memory, longing, and fidelity, then echoes forward into a modern folk-pop register.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


When the Mask Becomes the Face: Pirandello and the Fragmented Self
Pirandello’s theatre exposes the terror of becoming one’s role, where the mask hardens into identity and selfhood fractures from within.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Underground Man and the Shadow That Refuses to Die
Through Dostoevsky and Jung, the wounded self appears as something more stubborn than pain: a shadow the soul refuses to surrender.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Sometimes: The Quiet Power of a Single Word in Literature and Song
A single hesitant adverb opens an entire emotional world, showing how uncertainty in lyric and literature can wound more than certainty.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Eternal Return of a Melody: When an Old Song Comes Back Changed
A song written years earlier returns altered by time, carrying the eerie feeling that art can outlive the self who first gave it form.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Real Life of Sebastian Knight: Nabokov and the Fiction of Identity
Sebastian Knight turns biography into pursuit and pursuit into illusion, making identity feel like a text that can never be fully possessed.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Thomas Mann’s Doctor Faustus: Reimagining the Faust Legend in Music, Madness, and Moral Reckoning
Mann fuses myth, music, disease, and catastrophe into a modern Faust story where genius becomes inseparable from corruption.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Alfred Jarry’s Days and Nights: Unraveling the Pataphysical Maze of Desertion and Illusion
Jarry's neglected novel becomes a feverish study in illusion, military absurdity, and the borderland between dream logic and desertion.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Death in Venice by Thomas Mann: The Price of Beauty
Mann’s novella stages beauty as temptation, discipline as failure, and artistic longing as something already shadowed by decay.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Magic Mountain and Doctor Faustus: Thomas Mann’s Two Visions of Decay
Reading Mann’s two great works together reveals a single haunted question: how sickness, intellect, and culture turn into destiny.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


AI Brainstorming for Songwriters: Better Themes, Better Starts, Cleaner Judgment
AI appears here not as a ghostwriter, but as a disciplined brainstorming partner that can widen idea flow without flattening taste.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Song Ideas That Actually Sing: How to Find Themes Worth Writing
Song themes become usable only when they carry image, pressure, and emotional movement rather than slogan-level concepts.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Darkness at Noon: The Logic of Totalitarian Guilt
Koestler enters the mind of ideological surrender to show how terror works most efficiently once it has been internalized.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Neville Goddard and the Science of Imagination
Neville Goddard is tested against modern psychology and science to ask where imagination persuades, where it overreaches, and why it still grips readers.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Freud’s Totem and Taboo: Origins, Ritual, and the Violence Beneath Culture
Freud’s speculative anthropology becomes a daring attempt to explain how taboo, guilt, and ritual bind private desire to civilization.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Breaking Down Adele’s “Someone Like You”: A Masterclass in Song Structure
Adele’s ballad becomes an exercise in restraint, timing, repetition, and release, showing why its emotional force still lands so cleanly.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Master of Petersburg: Coetzee’s Dostoevsky of Grief and Conspiracy
Coetzee rewrites Dostoevsky as a father in mourning, turning Petersburg into a city of paranoia, revolutionary pressure, and intimate loss.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Nietzsche’s Übermensch and Rock’s Rebellious Icons
Nietzsche’s ideal is tracked through performance, charisma, risk, and the dangerous yes of rock spectacle rather than abstract doctrine.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Secret of Evil by Roberto Bolaño: Posthumous Fragments That Rival His Lifetime Masterpieces
Bolaño’s fragments prove how much unfinished work can still carry: menace, wit, and the pressure of lives suspended before completion.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Across the River and Into the Trees: Hemingway’s Late Wound
Hemingway’s late novel is read as a work of fatigue, longing, and postwar damage rather than a simple afterglow of earlier greatness.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Savage Detectives: Bolaño and the Poetry of Failure
Bolaño turns literary ambition into wandering, disappearance, and residue, making failure feel inseparable from youth and vocation.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Tender Is the Night: Fitzgerald’s Riviera Tragedy
Fitzgerald’s novel shines with glamour, fracture, and emotional waste, turning the Riviera into a stage for disintegration rather than escape.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


How a Week-Long Experiment (Almost) Became My Most Streamed Work
A compressed burst of experimentation unexpectedly became a streaming outlier, offering a live case study in intuition, speed, and release risk.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Vicente Huidobro and Creacionismo: Making the Poem a World
Huidobro’s poetic doctrine becomes a radical claim: the poet should not mirror reality, but create it.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Bible Beneath the Waves: Biblical Parallels in Moby-Dick
Melville’s novel is read through scripture, prophecy, wrath, and sacrificial imagery to reveal how biblical pressure shapes its sea-world.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Moby-Dick by Herman Melville: Obsession, Nature, and the Human Soul
Moby-Dick becomes not just an adventure, but a metaphysical struggle over obsession, creation, and the limits of human command.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


1984: Orwell’s Warning About Truth and Surveillance
Orwell’s novel returns as a study in language control, falsified reality, and the conditions under which truth becomes intolerable.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Pagan Roots of Christmas: Unveiling Ancient Influences in Modern Holiday Traditions
Christmas is traced through older ritual inheritances, showing how pagan seasonal forms persist beneath Christian surfaces and modern custom.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Great Gatsby and the Hollow Core of the American Dream
Gatsby’s brilliance lies in how beauty, longing, money, and performance gather around a center that turns out to be hollow.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Frankenstein and the Horror of Creation Without Care
Shelley’s creature returns as a warning about creation severed from responsibility, whether in gothic laboratories or modern technological ambition.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Animal Farm and the Quiet Betrayal of Revolution
Orwell’s fable remains powerful because it shows how revolutions decay through language, memory, convenience, and the slow corruption of ideals.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Most Secret Memory of Men: A Labyrinth of Influence and Loss
Sarr’s novel becomes a search through literary inheritance, disappearance, and the danger of greatness when it is bound to erasure.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Queen's Erased Salon – Ghosts of Forgotten Mercy
This Crown Saga fragment builds a courtly afterlife of erased women, vanished mercy, and the beauty of power after its living center has gone.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Il Segreto del Bosco Vecchio: Dino Buzzati’s Haunted Fable
Buzzati’s tale turns the forest into a moral and magical frontier where human will meets older presences it cannot fully master.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Confessions of an English Opium-Eater: Thomas De Quincey’s Dream of Ruin
De Quincey’s opium memoir becomes both self-exposure and dream machinery, where addiction is inseparable from style and nightmare.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Under the Frangipani: Ghosts, Memory, and Mozambique’s Fractured Soul
Mia Couto blends haunting and history to show how memory, violence, and postcolonial fracture live on inside the everyday.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Alfred Jarry's Ubu Plays: Absurdity, Power, and the Roots of Modern Avant-Garde Theater
Jarry’s grotesque theatre becomes a blueprint for political absurdity, comic violence, and the avant-garde’s appetite for desecration.

David Lapadat | Music PhD


Alfred Jarry’s Supermale and Messalina: Excess at the Edge of the Human
Jarry pushes desire, stamina, and excess past realism into a zone where the human becomes grotesquely experimental.

David Lapadat | Music PhD
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