J
Julia238
New member
All lines in a song have the potential of being great. It might not work or fit into the first song your writing, but it can be the inspiration of another song. So I suggest to never toss out any lines.This is an issue that I've run into. I have a five-subject notebook that I keep a lot of lyrics and lyric ideas in.
The first several pages of this notebook have various parts of songs. Generally one or two lines. Maybe something that might work as a title, or occasionally something that might be a verse or a chorus.
The problem is, I'm stuck with most of them. I don't necessarily want to throw them out, but I don't know how good they are, or if they could be turned into something good.
As an example, something I wrote down that I think would not only make a good title, but also a good "hook" is "The Same As It Never Was".
The basic premise of the song is that the singer still doesn't have the woman he wanted. So I would have to have things like, "i'm still not holding you..." and finish it off with "so it's the same as it never was"...
But I don't know if it's GOOD or not. I guess I wouldn't really know until I actually wrote something under that premise.
So how can you tell if a line, few lines, verse, or chorus are worth keeping (and revising) or tossing?
However, to know if the line is a great fit for the song your writing walk away from writing music for a few hours and see if you catch yourself repeating a verse of your song.
Good Luck and all the best.
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