
Aaron Cheney
Favorite Chord: C 6/9
Garry Sharp said:Makes you think that when the likes of Aaron bang on here about how you need to structure a song if you want to be commercial, they have a point.
Did someone mention me??
OK...I'll chime in.

But first off, I'm not interested in an argument and I won't be drawn into one. Now, The First Don, (and I say this in the freindliest way possible) your entire premise is so ridiculous that it's laughable. What your attempting to prove is that any creative endeavor that springs from an analytical thought can't possibly be art becuase it carries no emotional weight. I'm sorry, but all art springs from analytical thought. An artist uses analytical thought as a springboard for his creative mind. Take a look at this.
The premise of those songs was to create new song for each letter of the albhabet, with every word in each song starting only with that song's letter. A very analytical begining to some very cool songs.
Furthermore, the point of art isn't only to express the artist's thoughts and emotions, but to evoke emotions from listeners/viewers as well. Otherwise no one else would ever care about an artist's work. Given that, an artists uses his analytical thought to craft his art in a way that will bring about predictable emotional responses to his work. Can't be done, you say? How 'bout if I called you a miserable, horse-eating, dung-bathing, no good so-and-so, and then flipped you off? I bet I could predict your emotional response. I can becuase I've watched other people doing similar things and seen the results, and I've tried similar things myself and seen the results. (but not very often....

As songwriters we use the techniques of songwriting to evoke emotional responses from our listeners. Those techniques come from generations of songwriters experimenting with song form, note choice, lyrical content, etc etc etc., and learning how things work. A great songwriter doesn't blindly follow "the rules", but he knows them and understands how they work. And those rare times when he "breaks" them it's not just from haphazard luck or "for the sake of creative freedom" as TaoManna Don put it (good post BTW!). When a good songwriter "breaks" the rules he "breaks" them brilliantly because it serves the song.
A