Difference between revisions of "Singer"

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{{lifeform
 
{{lifeform
|image=Parshendi Army.jpg
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|image=Parshendi by Caio Santos.jpg
 
|world=Roshar
 
|world=Roshar
 
|universe=[[Cosmere]]
 
|universe=[[Cosmere]]
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Singers predate humanity on Roshar.{{book ref|sa3|111}} Around the time of the [[Recreance]],{{epigraph ref|sa3|81}} many of the singers had their [[Connection]] and [[Identity]] stolen, pieces of their souls ripped away.{{book ref|sa3|17}} This made those singers docile and subservient, which humans called parshmen and used as slaves for millennia later.{{book ref|sa1|72}} With the advent of the [[Everstorm]], these singers were healed and restored.{{book ref|sa3|17}} Singers grow faster compared to humans but have slightly shorter lifespans.{{wob ref|13401}}
 
Singers predate humanity on Roshar.{{book ref|sa3|111}} Around the time of the [[Recreance]],{{epigraph ref|sa3|81}} many of the singers had their [[Connection]] and [[Identity]] stolen, pieces of their souls ripped away.{{book ref|sa3|17}} This made those singers docile and subservient, which humans called parshmen and used as slaves for millennia later.{{book ref|sa1|72}} With the advent of the [[Everstorm]], these singers were healed and restored.{{book ref|sa3|17}} Singers grow faster compared to humans but have slightly shorter lifespans.{{wob ref|13401}}
   
== Genders ==
+
== Biology and Appearance ==
  +
[[File:Call to Adventure - Willshaper.png|thumb|right|200px|A femalen singer]]
The singers have four distinct genders, two that are recognised as similar to human male and female, and two neutered variants malen and femalen.{{wob ref|6621}} The majority of the [[#Forms|Forms]] are populated by the neutered genders, and their members are often asexual.{{wob ref|3400}}{{wob ref|3388}}
 
   
  +
Singers are humanoid, but not entirely human-like. The most apparent sign of their alien nature is their skin; it's covered in marblings, swirls of various colors - red, black or white.{{book ref|sa2|i|1}} Most singers have two-colored skin; the marblings can appear in various way, both as delicate swirls and large, wind-swept patterns.{{book ref|sa3|i|7}}{{book ref|sa3|116}} There are singers whose skin has all three colors, but they are extremely rare.{{book ref|sa3|54}} Their hair are typically orange or red -- colors that don't seem to naturally occur for Rosharan humans.{{wob ref|5782}}{{book ref|sa3|109}}
There exists a group of singers identifying as a fifth, nonbinary gender.{{wob ref|11152}}
 
   
  +
Other than their multicolored skin, singers have other features that differentiate them from humans. Their bodies have carapace growing over some parts of them; where and how much depends on what form the singer is currently in, but they typically cover the head and the arms.{{book ref|sa3|55}} In addition, their teeth are built differently than human ones; their molars allow them to chew threw shells, and their metabolism is geared towards metabolizing it, allowing them to make better use of the local fauna.{{wob ref|2778}} Also like many local species, singers possess [[gemheart]]s, though theirs are clouded white, and fused to their sternum.{{book ref|sa3|i|7}} Those gemhearts allow them to bond with [[spren]], letting them change their '''forms''', leading to a change in both appearance and some mental faculty.{{book ref|sa2|i|1}}
== Gemheart ==
 
  +
Singers, like many Rosharan fauna, have [[gemheart]]s. Theirs are clouded white, and are fused to their sternum.{{wob ref|9353}} Like other animals with gemhearts, singers also bond with spren, with a bonded spren residing in the singer's gemheart.{{book ref|sa3|i|6}}
 
  +
Despite those differences, singers are like humans in many [[Spiritual Realm|Spiritual]] aspects. Like humans, they can receives boons and curses from the [[Nightwatcher]].{{wob ref|1378}} They can also bond [[spren]] to attain [[Radiant]] powers, though most spren are unwilling to reach out for such a bond.{{book ref|sa3|120}}
  +
  +
=== Sexes and reproduction ===
  +
Singers possess four distinct sexes; male and female, which are capable of reproduction, and their neutered variants, '''malen''' and '''femalen'''.{{book ref|sa2|i|1}} Singers' sex will change from between male and malen, or female and femalen, as they change forms; vast majority of forms is either malen or femalen, and only a few are capable of reproduction. As such, most singers are asexual vast majority of the time.{{wob ref|3400}}{{wob ref|3388}} Singers are usually of one of those four genders as well, though there exists a group identifying as a fifth, non-binary gender.{{wob ref|11152}}
  +
  +
Despite those differences, singers and humans are capable of cross-breeding, with [[Herdazian]]s and [[Unkalaki]] being notable example of human ethnicities with singer ancestry. Traits inherited by them include shell-chewing teeth, stone-like nails, and red hair, as well as higher number of asexual people in their societies.{{wob ref|3922}} It's unknown whether there are currently any people with human-singer ancestry who identify as singers.
   
 
== Forms ==
 
== Forms ==
By staying out in a [[highstorm]] (or the [[Everstorm]]){{book ref|sa3|I-6}} with a [[spren]], singers are capable of bonding with said spren, which has the effect of changing their forms,{{wob ref|9897}} which alters their physical appearance and mental capabilities. When a singer changes forms, the spren used for the previous form is released.{{wob ref|136}} Singers can maintain their form indefinitely, without needing to resupply with a highstorm or [[Stormlight]].{{wob ref|11340}}
+
By staying out in a [[highstorm]] (or the [[Everstorm]]){{book ref|sa3|I-6}} with a [[spren]], singers are capable of bonding with said spren, which has the effect of changing their forms,{{wob ref|9897}} which alters their physical appearance and mental capabilities. When a singer changes forms, the spren used for the previous form is released.{{wob ref|136}} Singers can maintain their form indefinitely, without needing to resupply with a highstorm or [[Stormlight]].{{wob ref|11340}} [[Hemalurgy]] can be used to replicate the transformation of the forms.{{wob ref|3471}}
   
 
The [[listener]]s recounted many common forms in the [[Song of Listing]], which they only had access to only a small subset of. They also have songs which sung of dangerous forms of power in the [[Song of Secrets]] and the [[Song of Winds]].
 
The [[listener]]s recounted many common forms in the [[Song of Listing]], which they only had access to only a small subset of. They also have songs which sung of dangerous forms of power in the [[Song of Secrets]] and the [[Song of Winds]].
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=== Common Forms ===
 
=== Common Forms ===
These forms are mentioned in the listener [[Song of Listing]]. After the [[Recreance]] and before the [[True Desolation]], when the only singers who could think were the [[listener]]s, the listeners only discovered five forms: dullform, mateform, warform, workform, and nimbleform. When the [[Everstorm]] arrived and healed the other singers, singers held these forms and other common forms the listeners could not reproduce, such as artform and scholarform, and had a "dozen" options.{{book ref|sa3|I-7}}
+
These forms are mentioned in the listener [[Song of Listing]]. After the [[Recreance]] and before the [[True Desolation]], when the only singers who could think were the [[listener]]s, the listeners only discovered five forms: dullform, mateform, warform, workform, and nimbleform. When the [[Everstorm]] arrived and healed the other singers, singers held these forms and other common forms the listeners could not reproduce, such as artform and scholarform, and had a "dozen" options.{{book ref|sa3|I|7}}
   
 
====Dullform====
 
====Dullform====
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===Slaveform===
 
===Slaveform===
  +
{{quote
{{quote|slaveform, the form with no spren, no soul, and no song. (...) It wasn't really a form at all, however, but the lack of any form.|[[Eshonai]] musing about slaveform{{book ref|sa2|I-1}}}}
+
|Slaveform, the form with no spren, no soul, and no song. (...) It wasn't really a form at all, however, but the lack of any form.
  +
|[[Eshonai]] musing about slaveform{{book ref|sa2|i|1}}
  +
}}
   
 
There is also "slaveform," which is not a true form, but the lack of a bond with a spren or lack of a form. What mankind called for millennia '''parshmen''' are actually singers in slaveform. Slaveform did not exist until after the [[False Desolation]].{{wob ref|8400}}
 
There is also "slaveform," which is not a true form, but the lack of a bond with a spren or lack of a form. What mankind called for millennia '''parshmen''' are actually singers in slaveform. Slaveform did not exist until after the [[False Desolation]].{{wob ref|8400}}
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They care about and are protective of their dead, usually objecting to anyone other than one of themselves tending to them.{{book ref|sa1|26}} This care for the dead presumably extended to corpses of other singers as well.{{book ref|sa1|55}} They also mated and formed nuclear families if humans didn't disrupt them. {{book ref|sa3|17}}
 
They care about and are protective of their dead, usually objecting to anyone other than one of themselves tending to them.{{book ref|sa1|26}} This care for the dead presumably extended to corpses of other singers as well.{{book ref|sa1|55}} They also mated and formed nuclear families if humans didn't disrupt them. {{book ref|sa3|17}}
   
Slaveform singers lived among humans (notably the [[Alethkar]] but also in [[Jah Keved]] and [[Kharbranth]]{{book ref|sa1|3}}) and generally function as servants.{{book ref|sa1|prologue}} Barely of intelligence,{{book ref|sa1|55}} it is said that these people, if left in the woods, would stand around amiably until someone comes along to tell them what to do.{{book ref|sa1|28}}{{book ref|sa1|36}} Generally, a slaveform would take orders without any objection.{{book ref|sa1|3}} They could speak but rarely did so.{{book ref|sa1|7}} Humans bred singers who demonstrated they could successfully birth healthy children, splitting up families to do so.{{book ref|sa3|17}} Slaveform is described by Sah, a singer who had previously been trapped in the form, as "living in a fog...knowing deep in your soul that something is profoundly wrong...[but] not being able to say a single word to stop it."{{book ref|sa3|17}}
+
Slaveform singers lived among humans (notably the [[Alethkar]] but also in [[Jah Keved]] and [[Kharbranth]]{{book ref|sa1|3}}) and generally function as servants.{{book ref|sa1|prologue}} Barely of intelligence,{{book ref|sa1|55}} it is said that these people, if left in the woods, would stand around amiably until someone comes along to tell them what to do.{{book ref|sa1|28}}{{book ref|sa1|36}} Generally, a slaveform would take orders without any objection.{{book ref|sa1|3}} They could speak but rarely did so.{{book ref|sa1|7}} Humans bred singers who demonstrated they could successfully birth healthy children, splitting up families to do so.{{book ref|sa3|17}} Slaveform is described by Sah, a singer who had previously been trapped in the form, as being in a dreamlike state, vaguely aware of something being wrong, yet unable to name it.{{book ref|sa3|17}}
   
The [[Everstorm]] healed all slaveform singers by restoring Connection and Identity, and so this "form" no longer exists during the [[True Desolation]].{{book ref|sa3|17}}
+
In the past, a slaveform given [[Breath]] may become more cognizant, though that is now a moot point, as the passing of the [[Everstorm]] has healed all of them by restoring their [[Connection]] and [[Identity]]. As such, this form no longer exists during the [[True Desolation]].{{wob ref|3643}}{{book ref|sa3|17}}
   
 
== Rhythms ==
 
== Rhythms ==
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The singers speak and sing to the rhythms; they carries the singers' emotions, as well as add meaning to their words. However, not all forms can attune the rhythms equally. Dullform can only hear them weakly; slaveform cannot hear them at all.{{book ref|sa3|55}} Additionally, those infused with the power of [[Odium]], mainly the [[Regal]]s and the [[Fused]], can only hear Odium's rhythms, also called the Rhythms of Power. Those rhythms, while similar to regular ones, are usually more violent and aggressive, and represent more twisted, angrier emotions -- for example, Ridicule replaces Amusement, and Command approximates Appreciation.{{book ref|sa3|i|3}}{{book ref|sa2|i|11}} They also feel and sound different than the ordinary rhythms.{{wob ref|1682}}
 
The singers speak and sing to the rhythms; they carries the singers' emotions, as well as add meaning to their words. However, not all forms can attune the rhythms equally. Dullform can only hear them weakly; slaveform cannot hear them at all.{{book ref|sa3|55}} Additionally, those infused with the power of [[Odium]], mainly the [[Regal]]s and the [[Fused]], can only hear Odium's rhythms, also called the Rhythms of Power. Those rhythms, while similar to regular ones, are usually more violent and aggressive, and represent more twisted, angrier emotions -- for example, Ridicule replaces Amusement, and Command approximates Appreciation.{{book ref|sa3|i|3}}{{book ref|sa2|i|11}} They also feel and sound different than the ordinary rhythms.{{wob ref|1682}}
  +
 
[[Soother]]s can affect singer Rhythms and may dampen Odium's influence.{{wob ref|8424}}
   
 
== History ==
 
== History ==
Singers predate humanity on [[Roshar]]{{book ref|sa3|111}} but both races existed prior to the Shattering.{{wob ref|3922}} After the [[Expulsion]], where mankind destroyed the [[Tranquiline Halls]], ancient singers were ordered by gods--perhaps [[Honor]] and [[Cultivation]]--to help the human refugees to Roshar.{{book ref|sa3|111}} These ancient singers were the Dawnsingers.
 
   
  +
=== The Dawnsingers ===
At one point in their history, singers interbred with humans, creating the modern day [[Herdaz|Herdazians]] and [[Unkalaki]] (Horneaters).{{wob ref|5262}}
 
  +
{{quote
  +
|Our pity destroyed us.
  +
|From the [[Eila Stele]]{{book ref|sa3|111}}
  +
}}
   
  +
Singers predate humanity's arrival on Roshar, having been created as part of the planet's natural ecosystem.{{wob ref|1723}} After the [[Expulsion]], where mankind destroyed their homeworld of [[Ashyn]], ancient singers were ordered by their gods to help the human refugees who arrived on their planet. These ancient singers were the Dawnsingers.{{book ref|sa3|111}} Initially, this seems to have gone rather peacably, with some singers and humans even intermingling, creating [[Herdazian]]s and the [[Unkalaki]].{{wob ref|5262}}
Humans used powers the singers were forbidden to touch, powers involving [[spren]] and [[Surge]]s, presumably some kind of [[Surgebinding]].{{cite}} However, humans also brought [[Odium]] with them, and the singers called these ancient humans the [[Voidbringer]]s. Humans were granted the lands of [[Shinovar]], but they expanded out eventually, and fought the singers. This original conflict was the [[First Desolation]], with humans on the side of Odium.
 
   
  +
However, humanity's arrival also brought with it [[Odium]], and soon, conflict began. Humans, originally granted only the land of [[Shinovar]], sought to expand, causing conflict that would eventually come to be known as the [[First Desolation]]. During that time, singers came to call humans "Voidbringers", as they believed humanity deliberately brought Odium with them. In that conflict, [[spren]] eventually came to side with humans, leading to a feeling of deep betrayal on the part of the singers.{{book ref|sa3|111}} This being said, it seems as thoguh it was some sort of event that the singer partook in that had caused the spren to change their mind.{{wob ref|5653}}
According to the listener Song of Histories, after the singers felt [[spren]] betrayed them, the listeners turned to other gods (this song, however, could be warped to history). The exact timeline is not clear, but at some stage, there were souls of ancient singers, valiant soldiers at that time, had been granted great power from [[Odium]] to fight against humans.{{book ref|sa3|38}} The power from Odium made them into [[Cognitive Shadow]]s and allowed these ancient singers to be reborn in singer bodies, creating the [[Fused]].{{book ref|sa3|38}} The Fused came to rule the singers. The Fused ultimately despise humanity and want them wiped off Roshar, even if it required the destruction of Roshar.{{book ref|sa3|38}}
 
   
  +
=== The Fused ===
To stop the Fused from being reborn, Honor chose ten humans to be the [[Herald]]s, and the Heralds would imprison the Fused on [[Braize]]. The Fused tortured the Heralds until one Herald relented, which allowed the Fused to Return to Roshar. When a Herald gave in, that started a Desolation. The Desolations continued for an unknown amount of time, nearly destroying humanity many times. Eventually, at the [[Last Desolation]], all Heralds except one, [[Taln]], abandoned their [[Oathpact]] and kept the Fused at bay for the next four and a half millennia.
 
  +
{{for|Fused}}
  +
[[File:The Fused by jurassicpencil.jpg|thumb|right|350px|<center><small>by {{a|jurassicpencil}}</small></center> A flying [[Fused]] ]]
   
  +
At some point, [[Honor]] and [[Cultivation]] sided with humanity, while singers came to work with [[Odium]], who granted their most valiant warriors immortality and great power to fight against the human scourge. This power made them into [[Cognitive Shadow]]s, and allowed them to be reborn by possessing the bodies of other singers. Those immortal singers came to be known as the Fused.{{book ref|sa3|38}} They became both gods and rulers of singer-kind, and came to despise humanity, wanting them wiped off Roshar regardless of the collateral damage.{{book ref|sa3|38}}{{book ref|sa3|i|3}}
The singers, no longer the dominant species on Roshar, continued to fight humanity and the [[Knights Radiant]]. Around two thousand years after the Last Desolation, near the Recreance, there was the [[False Desolation]].{{book ref|sa3|56}} The [[Unmade]] [[Ba-Ado-Mishram]] Connected with the singers and provided them [[Regal|forms of power]] and [[Voidlight]], as Odium once did in the Desolations.{{epigraph ref|sa3|80}} The [[Knights Radiant]] sought to stop this threat by imprisoning Ba-Ado-Mishram. They succeeded but in doing so, stole part of singers souls, ripping out their [[Connection]] and [[Identity]].{{book ref|sa3|17}}{{epigraph ref|sa3|81}} These singers no longer had a form and were termed "slaveforms".
 
   
  +
To combat them, Honor created the ten [[Herald]]s, who would imprison them on [[Braize]] until at least one of them broke, whereupon the Fused would return to Roshar and the a new [[Desolation]] would begin. The cycle continued for many centuries until finally, at the [[Aharietiam]], the Heralds decided to leave only the strongest among them, [[Taln]], to face the torture alone.{{book ref|sa3|38}}
Some singers who threw off the Fused and freed themselves, the [[listener]]s, were spared from this event, perhaps not Connecting with Ba-Ado-Mishram. The listeners became the only singers with their minds intact for millennia. They eventually formed the [[Parshendi]] nation around [[Narak]] before meeting with the [[Alethi]] and starting the [[War of Reckoning]].{{wob ref|5823}} The rest of the singers, however, were all essentially mindless, which the humans used as slave labor.
 
   
  +
Not all singers, however, were on board with the plan to continuously battle humanity for Odium. One such group, the '''Last Legion''', abandoned the [[Regal]] forms granted to them by Odium and left for the [[Shattered Plains]], where they would eventually settle, far from the ongoing conflict. They would eventually dub themselves the '''[[listener]]s'''.{{book ref|sa2|i|4}}
Later, the listeners, manipulated by [[Voidspren]], entered stormform, one of the forms of power. In doing so, the listeners summoned a great storm at the [[Battle of Narak]]: the [[Everstorm]]. The Everstorm, full of Odium's power, passed through the world and restored the slaveform singers Connection and Identity, healed them.
 
  +
  +
=== The parsh ===
  +
{{quote
  +
|The parsh, as they are now called, continue their war with zeal, even without their masters from Damnation.
  +
|From the [[Urithiru gem archive]]{{epigraph ref|sa3|77}}
  +
}}
  +
  +
The singers, no longer the dominant species on Roshar, continued to fight humanity and the [[Knights Radiant]]. Over the centuries, they came to be known as the '''parsh''', though the meaning of the word is unclear.{{epigraph ref|sa3|77}}
  +
 
Around two thousand years after the Last Desolation, near the Recreance, another conflict between the two species flared up. Dubbed the [[False Desolation]], it was notable for the participation of [[Ba-Ado-Mishram]], one of [[Odium]]'s [[Unmade]].{{book ref|sa3|56}} Ba-Ado-Mishram Connected with the singers and provided them [[Regal]] forms and [[Voidlight]], as Odium once did in the Desolations, allowing the singers to wage war at levels closer to those of the real Desolations.{{epigraph ref|sa3|80}} In response, the [[Knights Radiant]] imprisoned Ba-Ado-Misrham to stop this. They succeeded, but in doing so, stole part of singers' souls, ripping out their [[Connection]] and [[Identity]] and turning them into near-mindless husks.{{book ref|sa3|17}}{{epigraph ref|sa3|81}}
  +
  +
These singes without form -- "slaveforms" to listeners, and '''parshmen''' to humans -- would eventually become property of humans, turning into cheap, mindless labor that would be exploited for millennia to come.{{book ref|sa1|3}}{{book ref|sa2|i|1}} The only ones to have escape that fate were the listeners, likely thanks to having broken ties with Odium.{{book ref|sa2|i|4}}
  +
  +
=== The listeners ===
  +
{{for|Listener}}
  +
[[File:Parshendi Army.jpg|thumb|right|350px|<center><small>by {{a|Petar Penev}}</small></center> A [[listener]] army]]
  +
  +
The listeners would live on in the [[Shattered Plains]] for the next few hundred years, forming a number of groups settled in the craters around the western edge of the Plains. Eventually, they made contact with humans, and, thorugh diplomatic efforts, forged a treaty between the two species. However, on the night the treaty was to be signed, the listener [[Eshonai]] learned about human king [[Gavilar]]'s plans to return the "listener gods" -- the [[Fused]] -- to Roshar. Fearing the consequences, the listeners arranged for Gavilar to be assassinated.{{book ref|sa3|prologue}} As a result, they were forced to flee, abandoning even their homes for a more distant plateau of [[Narak]] right as humans arrived to exact their vengeance. Thus began the [[War of Reckoning]].{{book ref|sa2|i|4}}
  +
  +
After six years of constant warfare, the listeners, manipulated by the [[voidspren]], recovered the use of stormform, one of [[Regal]] forms. Spurred on by its mental state, they planned to summon the [[Everstorm]], which they've succeeded at during the [[Battle of Narak]].{{book ref|sa2|85}} As it passed over Roshar, the Everstorm restored all the Parshmen within, healing their [[Connection]] and [[Identity]].{{book ref|sa3|17}}
  +
  +
=== The new singers ===
  +
{{quote
  +
|Can't we simply enjoy being able to '''think'''? Being able to '''exist'''?
  +
|[[Vldgen]]{{book ref|sa3|121}}
  +
}}
   
These healed singers exemplified traits of the culture in which they had lived all their lives. The [[Azir|Azish]] singers submitted a complaint to the government, while [[Thaylenah|Thaylen]] singers stole ships and sailed away.{{book ref|sa3|65}} These singers can remember their lives before the were healed. [[Sah]], a singer who both [[Kaladin]] and [[Moash]] meet, remembers his wife taken from him and his anger at the event.{{book ref|sa3|17}} These singers, though conscripted into Odium's forces, are generally reluctant to fight, though they hate their enslavement.{{cite}}
+
The newly restored singers assumed seemingly random forms.{{book ref|sa3|i|7}} Their temperaments, as well as their attitudes, became similar to those of the humans they spent their entire lives around -- the [[Alethi]] singers were angry and warlike, the [[Azish]] ones wished to negotiate with the government, and the [[Thaylen]] stole the ships and sailed away. Most of them, however, were quickly swept up by the [[Fused]], who have now returned and sought to create new armies to conquer Roshar with.{{book ref|sa3|65}}
   
  +
To make those new singers more combat-ready, the Fused employed not only their natural anger at their former oppressors, but also hefty amounts of propaganda, most notably using the supposedly-last [[listener]], [[Venli]], as their mouthpiece.{{book ref|sa3|i|7}} However, many singers are still apprehensive about fighting humans, and some outright wish that peace was, in some form, an option.{{book ref|sa3|121}}
== Trivia ==
 
* Singers were not made by [[Honor]]{{wob ref|5636}}, [[Cultivation]]{{wob ref|5625}}, or [[Odium]]{{wob ref|5624}} but were created as part of [[Roshar]]'s ecosystem.{{wob ref|1723}}
 
* The singer gods are similar to the [[Herald]]s.{{wob ref|469}}
 
* The ten [[spren]] involved with the [[Knights Radiant]] don't accept bonds with singers because of some events in the past.{{wob ref|5653}}
 
* Slaveform given [[Breath]] may become more cognizant.{{wob ref|3643}}
 
* [[Hemalurgy]] can be used to replicate the transformation of the Forms.{{wob ref|3471}}
 
* [[Soother]]s can affect singer Rhythms and may dampen Odium's influence.{{wob ref|8424}}
 
* If a singer was able to access bronze Allomancy, they would find the pulses heard by a [[Seeker]] to be "somewhat familiar but a little odd".{{wob ref|11606}}
 
* Singers can receive boons/curses from the [[Nightwatcher]].{{wob ref|1378}}
 
   
 
== See Also ==
 
== See Also ==

Revision as of 19:06, 8 June 2020

Singer
Parshendi by Caio Santos.jpg
World of Origin Roshar
Universe Cosmere
This page or section needs to be updated with new information for Oathbringer!
Be aware that in its current state, it may not include all additional content yet.

The singers are a sapient species on Roshar,[1][2] which humans called the parsh[3] or parshmen.[4] One such group of singers are the listeners.

Singers communicate through special Rhythms--hence them being called singers. Singers can bond various spren which change their forms.

Singers predate humanity on Roshar.[5] Around the time of the Recreance,[6] many of the singers had their Connection and Identity stolen, pieces of their souls ripped away.[7] This made those singers docile and subservient, which humans called parshmen and used as slaves for millennia later.[8] With the advent of the Everstorm, these singers were healed and restored.[7] Singers grow faster compared to humans but have slightly shorter lifespans.[9]

Biology and Appearance

A femalen singer

Singers are humanoid, but not entirely human-like. The most apparent sign of their alien nature is their skin; it's covered in marblings, swirls of various colors - red, black or white.[10] Most singers have two-colored skin; the marblings can appear in various way, both as delicate swirls and large, wind-swept patterns.[11][12] There are singers whose skin has all three colors, but they are extremely rare.[1] Their hair are typically orange or red -- colors that don't seem to naturally occur for Rosharan humans.[13][14]

Other than their multicolored skin, singers have other features that differentiate them from humans. Their bodies have carapace growing over some parts of them; where and how much depends on what form the singer is currently in, but they typically cover the head and the arms.[15] In addition, their teeth are built differently than human ones; their molars allow them to chew threw shells, and their metabolism is geared towards metabolizing it, allowing them to make better use of the local fauna.[16] Also like many local species, singers possess gemhearts, though theirs are clouded white, and fused to their sternum.[11] Those gemhearts allow them to bond with spren, letting them change their forms, leading to a change in both appearance and some mental faculty.[10]

Despite those differences, singers are like humans in many Spiritual aspects. Like humans, they can receives boons and curses from the Nightwatcher.[17] They can also bond spren to attain Radiant powers, though most spren are unwilling to reach out for such a bond.[18]

Sexes and reproduction

Singers possess four distinct sexes; male and female, which are capable of reproduction, and their neutered variants, malen and femalen.[10] Singers' sex will change from between male and malen, or female and femalen, as they change forms; vast majority of forms is either malen or femalen, and only a few are capable of reproduction. As such, most singers are asexual vast majority of the time.[19][20] Singers are usually of one of those four genders as well, though there exists a group identifying as a fifth, non-binary gender.[21]

Despite those differences, singers and humans are capable of cross-breeding, with Herdazians and Unkalaki being notable example of human ethnicities with singer ancestry. Traits inherited by them include shell-chewing teeth, stone-like nails, and red hair, as well as higher number of asexual people in their societies.[22] It's unknown whether there are currently any people with human-singer ancestry who identify as singers.

Forms

By staying out in a highstorm (or the Everstorm)[23] with a spren, singers are capable of bonding with said spren, which has the effect of changing their forms,[24] which alters their physical appearance and mental capabilities. When a singer changes forms, the spren used for the previous form is released.[25] Singers can maintain their form indefinitely, without needing to resupply with a highstorm or Stormlight.[26] Hemalurgy can be used to replicate the transformation of the forms.[27]

The listeners recounted many common forms in the Song of Listing, which they only had access to only a small subset of. They also have songs which sung of dangerous forms of power in the Song of Secrets and the Song of Winds.

There is also slaveform, which was the lack of any form, which most singers were locked into for centuries, until the Everstorm arrived and the True Desolation began.

Common Forms

These forms are mentioned in the listener Song of Listing. After the Recreance and before the True Desolation, when the only singers who could think were the listeners, the listeners only discovered five forms: dullform, mateform, warform, workform, and nimbleform. When the Everstorm arrived and healed the other singers, singers held these forms and other common forms the listeners could not reproduce, such as artform and scholarform, and had a "dozen" options.[28]

Dullform

Dullform dread, with the mind most lost.
The lowest, and one not bright.

To find this form, one needs banish cost.
It finds you and brings you to blight.

— final stanza of the Song of Listing[29]

Dullform is an older form which was rarely used after the discovery of the newer forms. Those in dullform are not very intelligent.

Mateform

Mateform meek, for love to share,
Given to life, it brings us joy.

To find this form, one must care.
True empathy, one must employ.

— 5th stanza of the Song of Listing[30]

Mateform is used for reproductive purposes. A few listeners maintain mating form constantly, although most enter it only briefly in order to reproduce with a partner; if these partners later entered warform they became a warpair.[citation needed] It is a distracting form which makes productive work difficult. Nothing is stopping other forms from reproducing, the mateform is merely a speciality.[19]

Warform by User:Khal

Warform

Warform is worn for battle and reign,
Claimed by the gods, given to kill.

Unknown, unseen, but vital to gain.
It comes to those with the will.

— 15th stanza of the Song of Listing[31]

Warform gives listeners an armor-like carapace; it also seems to give them advanced physical capabilities, although it severely hampers artistic ability and is not equipped to handle abstractions. Most singers that interact with the Alethi are in warform. Out of all the forms known to the listeners, warform requires the most food, but is also the most durable.[32]

Workform

Workform worn for strength and care.
Whispering spren breathe at your ear.

Seek first this form, its mysteries to bear.
Found here is freedom from fear.

— 19th stanza of the Song of Listing[33]

Workform also endows significant physical strength, although without the armor of the warform; those in workform also have thinner fingers. While in workform, singers find it difficult to commit violence and do not like confrontation.

Nimbleform

Nimbleform has a delicate touch.
Gave the gods this form to many,

Tho' once defied, by the gods they were crushed.
This form craves precision and plenty.

— 27th stanza of the Song of Listing[34]

Nimbleform was a form used by the listener scholars because they do not know the correct spren to bond with for scholarform. It does not impede the mind and the fingers are delicate enough for recording their findings. It grows long hair without any carapace to block it and yields delicate swirling patterns in their skin, along with a thinner facial structure.

Mediationform

Mediationform made for peace, it's said.
Form of teaching and consolation.

When used by the gods, it became instead
Form of lies and desolation.

— 33rd stanza of the Song of Listing[35]

Scholarform

Scholarform shown for patience and thought.
Beware its ambitions innate.

Though study and diligence bring the reward,
Loss of innocence may be one's fate.

— 69th stanza of the Song of Listing[36]

Scholarform produces "long hairstrands and angular features".[11]

Artform

Artform applied for beauty and hue.

One yearns for the songs it creates.

Most misunderstood by the artist it's true,
Come the spren to foundation's fates.

—90th stanza of the Song of Listing[37]

Artform for colors beyond our ken;
For its grand songs we yearn.

We must attract creationspren;
These songs suffice 'til we learn.

—279th stanza of the Song of Revision[38]

Forms of Power

Many singer forms are considered by the listeners to be forms of power.[citation needed] For a singer to gain one of these forms, they must bond with a Voidspren.[39] Singers wearing a form of power are referred to as Regals in the context of Odium's army.[39] Forms of power are intoxicating to those first come into one,[40] and give access to new Rhythms, but drown old, common rhythms.[citation needed]

Forms of power include: stormform, nightform, smokeform, decayform, and envoyform.

Slaveform

Slaveform, the form with no spren, no soul, and no song. (...) It wasn't really a form at all, however, but the lack of any form.

Eshonai musing about slaveform[10]

There is also "slaveform," which is not a true form, but the lack of a bond with a spren or lack of a form. What mankind called for millennia parshmen are actually singers in slaveform. Slaveform did not exist until after the False Desolation.[41]

Physically, slaveform singers are strong enough to perform physical labor.[42] Their skin has either a marbled pattern of black and red or white and red, although the white and red is more common in Alethkar.[43][8] Slaveform looks similar enough to dullform that humans could confuse the two.

They care about and are protective of their dead, usually objecting to anyone other than one of themselves tending to them.[44] This care for the dead presumably extended to corpses of other singers as well.[42] They also mated and formed nuclear families if humans didn't disrupt them. [7]

Slaveform singers lived among humans (notably the Alethkar but also in Jah Keved and Kharbranth[4]) and generally function as servants.[43] Barely of intelligence,[42] it is said that these people, if left in the woods, would stand around amiably until someone comes along to tell them what to do.[45][46] Generally, a slaveform would take orders without any objection.[4] They could speak but rarely did so.[47] Humans bred singers who demonstrated they could successfully birth healthy children, splitting up families to do so.[7] Slaveform is described by Sah, a singer who had previously been trapped in the form, as being in a dreamlike state, vaguely aware of something being wrong, yet unable to name it.[7]

In the past, a slaveform given Breath may become more cognizant, though that is now a moot point, as the passing of the Everstorm has healed all of them by restoring their Connection and Identity. As such, this form no longer exists during the True Desolation.[48][7]

Rhythms

Singers are connected to rhythms, the underlying "beats" of the cosmere that manifest particularly strongly on Roshar.[49][10] There are numerous rhythms, and singers can attune to any one of them. Each rhythm represents a certain state of mind, emotion or feeling; when not paying attention, singers will attune to the rhythm that corresponds to their mood, but can also attune another to fit with their message. This attuning manifests as hearing the beat of the rhythm in one's head.[32] All rhythms connect the singers to each other and Roshar itself.[50] This, and their regular nature, allows the singers to use the rhythms for measuring time, among others.[32]

The singers speak and sing to the rhythms; they carries the singers' emotions, as well as add meaning to their words. However, not all forms can attune the rhythms equally. Dullform can only hear them weakly; slaveform cannot hear them at all.[15] Additionally, those infused with the power of Odium, mainly the Regals and the Fused, can only hear Odium's rhythms, also called the Rhythms of Power. Those rhythms, while similar to regular ones, are usually more violent and aggressive, and represent more twisted, angrier emotions -- for example, Ridicule replaces Amusement, and Command approximates Appreciation.[40][51] They also feel and sound different than the ordinary rhythms.[52]

Soothers can affect singer Rhythms and may dampen Odium's influence.[53]

History

The Dawnsingers

Our pity destroyed us.

—From the Eila Stele[5]

Singers predate humanity's arrival on Roshar, having been created as part of the planet's natural ecosystem.[54] After the Expulsion, where mankind destroyed their homeworld of Ashyn, ancient singers were ordered by their gods to help the human refugees who arrived on their planet. These ancient singers were the Dawnsingers.[5] Initially, this seems to have gone rather peacably, with some singers and humans even intermingling, creating Herdazians and the Unkalaki.[55]

However, humanity's arrival also brought with it Odium, and soon, conflict began. Humans, originally granted only the land of Shinovar, sought to expand, causing conflict that would eventually come to be known as the First Desolation. During that time, singers came to call humans "Voidbringers", as they believed humanity deliberately brought Odium with them. In that conflict, spren eventually came to side with humans, leading to a feeling of deep betrayal on the part of the singers.[5] This being said, it seems as thoguh it was some sort of event that the singer partook in that had caused the spren to change their mind.[56]

The Fused

by jurassicpencil
A flying Fused

At some point, Honor and Cultivation sided with humanity, while singers came to work with Odium, who granted their most valiant warriors immortality and great power to fight against the human scourge. This power made them into Cognitive Shadows, and allowed them to be reborn by possessing the bodies of other singers. Those immortal singers came to be known as the Fused.[57] They became both gods and rulers of singer-kind, and came to despise humanity, wanting them wiped off Roshar regardless of the collateral damage.[57][40]

To combat them, Honor created the ten Heralds, who would imprison them on Braize until at least one of them broke, whereupon the Fused would return to Roshar and the a new Desolation would begin. The cycle continued for many centuries until finally, at the Aharietiam, the Heralds decided to leave only the strongest among them, Taln, to face the torture alone.[57]

Not all singers, however, were on board with the plan to continuously battle humanity for Odium. One such group, the Last Legion, abandoned the Regal forms granted to them by Odium and left for the Shattered Plains, where they would eventually settle, far from the ongoing conflict. They would eventually dub themselves the listeners.[32]

The parsh

The parsh, as they are now called, continue their war with zeal, even without their masters from Damnation.

The singers, no longer the dominant species on Roshar, continued to fight humanity and the Knights Radiant. Over the centuries, they came to be known as the parsh, though the meaning of the word is unclear.[3]

Around two thousand years after the Last Desolation, near the Recreance, another conflict between the two species flared up. Dubbed the False Desolation, it was notable for the participation of Ba-Ado-Mishram, one of Odium's Unmade.[58] Ba-Ado-Mishram Connected with the singers and provided them Regal forms and Voidlight, as Odium once did in the Desolations, allowing the singers to wage war at levels closer to those of the real Desolations.[59] In response, the Knights Radiant imprisoned Ba-Ado-Misrham to stop this. They succeeded, but in doing so, stole part of singers' souls, ripping out their Connection and Identity and turning them into near-mindless husks.[7][6]

These singes without form -- "slaveforms" to listeners, and parshmen to humans -- would eventually become property of humans, turning into cheap, mindless labor that would be exploited for millennia to come.[4][10] The only ones to have escape that fate were the listeners, likely thanks to having broken ties with Odium.[32]

The listeners

The listeners would live on in the Shattered Plains for the next few hundred years, forming a number of groups settled in the craters around the western edge of the Plains. Eventually, they made contact with humans, and, thorugh diplomatic efforts, forged a treaty between the two species. However, on the night the treaty was to be signed, the listener Eshonai learned about human king Gavilar's plans to return the "listener gods" -- the Fused -- to Roshar. Fearing the consequences, the listeners arranged for Gavilar to be assassinated.[60] As a result, they were forced to flee, abandoning even their homes for a more distant plateau of Narak right as humans arrived to exact their vengeance. Thus began the War of Reckoning.[32]

After six years of constant warfare, the listeners, manipulated by the voidspren, recovered the use of stormform, one of Regal forms. Spurred on by its mental state, they planned to summon the Everstorm, which they've succeeded at during the Battle of Narak.[61] As it passed over Roshar, the Everstorm restored all the Parshmen within, healing their Connection and Identity.[7]

The new singers

Can't we simply enjoy being able to think? Being able to exist?

The newly restored singers assumed seemingly random forms.[11] Their temperaments, as well as their attitudes, became similar to those of the humans they spent their entire lives around -- the Alethi singers were angry and warlike, the Azish ones wished to negotiate with the government, and the Thaylen stole the ships and sailed away. Most of them, however, were quickly swept up by the Fused, who have now returned and sought to create new armies to conquer Roshar with.[63]

To make those new singers more combat-ready, the Fused employed not only their natural anger at their former oppressors, but also hefty amounts of propaganda, most notably using the supposedly-last listener, Venli, as their mouthpiece.[11] However, many singers are still apprehensive about fighting humans, and some outright wish that peace was, in some form, an option.[62]

See Also

Notes

  1. a b Oathbringer chapter 54#
  2. Oathbringer chapter 106#
  3. a b c Oathbringer chapter 77 epigraph#
  4. a b c d The Way of Kings chapter 3#
  5. a b c d Oathbringer chapter 111#
  6. a b Oathbringer chapter 81 epigraph#
  7. a b c d e f g h Oathbringer chapter 17#
  8. a b The Way of Kings chapter 72#
  9. Starsight Release Party
    Arcanum - 2019-11-26#
  10. a b c d e f Words of Radiance interlude I-1#
  11. a b c d e Oathbringer interlude I-7#
  12. Oathbringer chapter 116#
  13. White Sand vol.1 release party
    Arcanum - 2016-06-28#
  14. Oathbringer chapter 109#
  15. a b Oathbringer chapter 55#
  16. Tor.com The Way of Kings Re-Read Interview
    Arcanum - 2014-06-10#
  17. Orem signing 2014
    Arcanum - 2014-12-06#
  18. Oathbringer chapter 120#
  19. a b /r/books AMA
    Arcanum - 2015-05-19#
  20. /r/books AMA 2015
    Arcanum - 2015-05-17#
  21. Skype Q&A
    Arcanum - 2018-10-08#
  22. General Reddit 2015
    Arcanum - 2015-11-16#
  23. Oathbringer chapter I-6#
  24. Salt Lake City signing 2012
    Arcanum - 2012-11-06#
  25. JordanCon 2016
    Arcanum - 2016-04-23#
  26. Skyward Pre-Release AMA
    Arcanum - 2018-10-22#
  27. /r/books AMA 2015
    Arcanum - 2015-06-11#
  28. Oathbringer interlude I-7#
  29. Words of Radiance chapter 17 epigraph#
  30. Words of Radiance chapter 14 epigraph#
  31. Words of Radiance chapter 13 epigraph#
  32. a b c d e f Words of Radiance interlude I-4#
  33. Words of Radiance chapter 15 epigraph#
  34. Words of Radiance chapter 16 epigraph#
  35. Words of Radiance chapter 21 epigraph#
  36. Words of Radiance chapter 18 epigraph#
  37. Words of Radiance chapter 20 epigraph#
  38. Words of Radiance chapter 29 epigraph#
  39. a b Oathbringer chapter I-7#
  40. a b c Oathbringer interlude I-3#
  41. Oathbringer Houston signing
    Arcanum - 2017-11-18#
  42. a b c The Way of Kings chapter 55#
  43. a b The Way of Kings prologue#
  44. The Way of Kings chapter 26#
  45. The Way of Kings chapter 28#
  46. The Way of Kings chapter 36#
  47. The Way of Kings chapter 7#
  48. /r/books AMA 2015
    Arcanum - 2015-08-09#
  49. Warsaw signing
    Arcanum - 2017-03-18#
  50. Starsight Release Party
    Arcanum - 2019-11-26#
  51. Words of Radiance interlude I-11#
  52. Boskone 54
    Arcanum - 2017-02-19#
  53. Oathbringer Houston signing
    Arcanum - 2017-11-18#
  54. Arcanum Unbounded release party
    Arcanum - 2016-11-22#
  55. Liverpool signing
    Arcanum - 2014-08-05#
  56. Arcanum Unbounded Seattle signing
    Arcanum - 2016-12-01#
  57. a b c Oathbringer chapter 38#
  58. Oathbringer chapter 56#
  59. Oathbringer chapter 80 epigraph#
  60. Oathbringer prologue#
  61. Words of Radiance chapter 85#
  62. a b Oathbringer chapter 121#
  63. Oathbringer chapter 65#
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