Q&A: Trace Spath, guitarist for OLY
Trace Spath, a current Western Washington University student, has an enormous passion for music. Spath and his friends formed the band OLY while still attending Tumwater High School.
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Trace Spath, a current Western Washington University student, has an enormous passion for music. Spath and his friends formed the band OLY while still attending Tumwater High School.
Stories come in many shapes and sizes. It’s difficult to discern the best way to tell one, but I think I’ve found it. That would be none other than a little game called Dungeons and Dragons, or DnD, that came out in 1974 and pioneered a new medium for storytelling.
For some, horror comes once a year, arriving in October alongside yellowing leaves and a sharp breeze. Others keep the macabre close all year long, watching scary movies in their free time and flipping through the pages of a horror novel while drinking their morning coffee.
It’s hard not to feel a sense of adventure when reading of steel singing against steel, horse hooves squelching in a muddy charge. Fantasy encapsulates adventure. It throws you into a new world with concepts to uncover and fresh characters to discover.
“We regret to inform you that your story just isn’t the right fit for us.” As a writer, I rejoice and celebrate in the wake of this declaration.
From students regularly screening their own movies at theaters like the Pickford Film Center to playing at venues like the Karate Church, it is safe to say that creativity runs through the veins of Western Washington University students.