
fat_fleet
Swollen Member
Dr Seuss rhymes werent fun because of the meaning, but because they were fun to say. Greg L. still is reading Dr Seuss today, he was a little slow.
Ah, glad you made it. Dr.Suess is pretty masterful. I think dismissing him as childish is a little naive. You couldn't re-write Green Eggs and Ham any more than I could re-write Paradise City. Nor could you write something original of the same caliber.
AND, lest we forget that just because you can not make out the words of a song, and that nobody cares about them, that they can still be there, waiting to be discovered by those who care to. For some people, the beat is enough. Others the guitar, the drums, for others, they find themselves really moved by a certain artist, and then they decide to dig deeper.
And just because many rock songs the lyrics dont seem to be important, you'd be hard pressed to get the same effect if you were to write new lyrics. Try it.
Write new words to Paradise City and see if yours sounds as good in the fit of the song.
We're basically agreeing here, right? Because I think you've had different views in the past about the songwriting requirements of hard rock....don't feel like hunting down a quote right now. But I was basically saying the Paradise City verses had to be at least of a certain quality to slide by so easily.
AND, for many artists, the words aremvery important. Those are the story tellers.
Lyrics matter more in story songs. There's no real way to fudge a story with vague imagery and metaphors. And you write a story to tell a story, for somebody to follow the story.
Yes, I dislike that stuff because the music often only plays a supporting role. And for the way I enjoy music, consciously following a narrative takes away from that. I think it's a fairly presumptuous thing to even impose on someone. They should just be able to kick back and enjoy the song.