Even if it’s about an actual experience that you had, the song you’re writing has an inherent reality of its own. Enhance it by creating a focused message that resonates within the song’s own world.
Monthly Archives: April 2013
Today’s Songwriting Tip | Simplicity & Clarity
Music is a poor medium for telling overly complicated stories. Simplicity and clarity are your best assets when writing songs.
Today’s Songwriting Tip | Dynamic & Metric Interest
Strive to write songs with a lot of dynamic and metric interest; you want them to reach a crescendo and subside rather than just moving along at the same level.
Today’s Songwriting Tip | Identify the Song’s Essence
Songs rarely come out perfectly. Look beyond your first draft and try to identify the deeper essence of why you write it in the first place.
Today’s Songwriting Tip | Inspiration & Impulse
You don’t need a degree in Music Theory to write great song. All you need are inspiration and a strong impulse to share with listeners.
Today’s Songwriting Tip | Writing on the Fly
Practice writing your music on the fly; honing those improvisational abilities will only enhance your ability to craft great songs.
Today’s Songwriting Tip | Boring Song Melodies
Avoid writing song melodies that linger around two notes. Using such a restricted range will likely bore your listeners.
Today’s Songwriting Tip | Staccato & Legato
Combining opposite patterns like staccato and legato (separated or connected notes) can be a very effective song-crafting tactic. If you’re using long-held chords, consider a shorter or punchier vocal line. Writing a polyrhythmic bass line? A good option could be to complement it with a simpler, more straightforward guitar part.
Today’s Songwriting Tip | Songwriting Collaboration
One good way to write a collaborative song is to have every member of your songwriting team write a different line to the song. Add one line each until the song is complete, and then collaborate again on the revision.
Today’s Songwriting Tip | Change Words But Not Meanings
Sometimes you might have a great verse that doesn’t seem to fit well with the melody you have in mind. Work on learning to change your words without changing the meaning, so you can make these seemingly disparate elements mesh.
Today’s Songwriting Tip | Musician Unboxed
Don’t put yourself in a box. Stop thinking too much in terms of limitations; what you should or shouldn’t do, and don’t force yourself to write a particular way. Your song doesn’t even have to rhyme so long as it feels right. Trust your instincts.
Today’s Songwriting Tip | 30 Minutes of Writing & Playing
Try writing and playing for at least a half-hour straight, deliberately avoiding cliche themes and melodies. Instead, do your best to new and original ideas. By doing this, you’ll learn to channel a mindset where ideas flow more easily.
Today’s Songwriting Tip | Review Old Ideas & Drafts
One of the biggest mistakes musicians make is never reviewing their notebook of ideas or drafts. Remember to consult yours regularly, and your ideas will grow and evolve organically.
Today’s Songwriting Tip | Finding Your Song’s Narrator
Each song can be thought of as having a narrator — a real or imagined person who’s the ‘voice’ of the song. By using a first-person narrator, for example, you’re implying the narrator is a character in the events described by the song.















