Thursday, September 15, 2011

How To Write A Song

How To Write A Song


Did you ever wish that it was your song playing on the radio? It could be. It is not that hard once you know the formula. With a puny creativity, a puny knowledge, a puny luck and a good recipe to follow, your song could be one of the next biggest hits.

Songwriting comes easy for some, and is very difficult for others. I have literally written songs in my sleep, and immediately upon awaking, written it as quickly as I could get the words on down on paper.

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What I want to discuss here is favorite songwriting, like the songs you hear on the radio. A good pop song, either rock, country, middle of the road, is composed of two things: a catchy tune and some good lyrics.


There is a recipe that most great songwriters use to write great songs. It regards the buildings used to write a song. Granted, it is music and it is art, so the rules are not hard and fast. But if you want to growth your chances of getting your song on the radio, it is a good starting point.

Here is the formula. Verse, chorus, verse, chorus, bridge, chorus.

Write that down on paper leaving plentifulness of space between each word and this will be your script.

Verse

The verse is the part of the song that tells the story, the part that leads to the chorus. Each verse is ordinarily different, telling a dissimilar part of, or adding to, the story. It ordinarily explains how you got to the things you are singing about in the chorus.

Chorus.

The chorus is the part of the song that is repeated after each verse. The lyrics are ordinarily the same each time the chorus comes around. The verse ordinarily leads to the chorus, and the chorus is ordinarily the pay off for listening to the verse. Does that make sense?

Here is a lame example (you did not think I would give you my best work, did you?):

(verse)

My dog is sick, he's got a tick

He's my best friend, don't let it end

(chorus)

Oh, woe is me, can't you see

Woe is me, will I ever be free

(verse)

My car broke down, just out of town

It got towed in, but it's broke again

(chorus)

Oh, woe is me, can't you see

Woe is me, will I ever be free

Now, if you would kindly stop laughing at my lame song for a minute, I want you to think about either or not you understand my point. Songwriting is story telling. The verse tells the problems, the chorus expresses the results or the emotions.

All right, now that you have that mastered, let's tackle the bridge. Ah, yeah, there is more to the song than the pain and the release. We need the diversion. That is what the bridge is; it is the diversion from the verse and the chorus.

The bridge may have a slightly dissimilar melody to it, or it could even have a dissimilar rhythm or a dissimilar tempo (Elvis' "Suspicious Minds" did a great job on this technique).

Let's go back to the lame song and add a bridge:

(verse)

My dog is sick, he's got a tick

He's my best friend, don't let it end

(chorus)

Oh, woe is me, can't you see

Woe is me, will I ever be free

(verse)

My car broke down, just out of town

It got towed in, but it's broke again

(chorus)

Oh, woe is me, can't you see

Woe is me, will I ever be free

(bridge)

Tomorrow is a great day, I've got a new truck on the way

My dog just had a flea it seems, so once again I'll live my dreams

(chorus)

Oh, woe was me, can't you see

Woe was me, but now I'm free

The bridge offers a solution to the problems I was having. You don't want to leave your listener on the edge of suicide, you want to give them hope.

Notice, I also changed up the wording of the chorus. This was done to reflect my new found joy.

One more thing on formula. It can be anyway you want, but most verses and chorus come in lines of 4. So, instead of this:

(verse)

Oh, woe is me, can't you see

Woe is me, will I ever be free

(verse)

My car broke down, just out of town

It got towed in, but it's broke again

it would be:

Oh, woe is me, can't you see

Woe is me, will I ever be free

My car broke down, just out of town

It got towed in, but it's broke again

The same goes for the chorus. Again, if you are creative, do it any way you want. But for a new songwriter, this gives you some guidelines to scratch out and start carving out your new creation.

One more thing, do not make the notes to the melody so high that your fans cannot sing along. We are literally all not Stevie Wonder.

How To Write A Song


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