
fat_fleet
Swollen Member
I personally really like it when other people dig my stuff....just sayin'.
I personally really like it when other people dig my stuff....just sayin'.
Yeah, feel free to praise my shit all day.
If someone puts one of my songs in their listening rotation, that it the ultimate praise.
It's hard to define songs as good and bad as people have previously stated, but I'd say that song structure, meshing melodies with chords and musical theory in general does have a huge effect on whether you and others will like your music or not. You don't need to be classically trained but I'd say it's good to put in at least a little effort to learn chords and scales.
If I can convince one burnout to drop out of high school I will die a success.
It's hard to define songs as good and bad as people have previously stated, but I'd say that song structure, meshing melodies with chords and musical theory in general does have a huge effect on whether you and others will like your music or not. You don't need to be classically trained but I'd say it's good to put in at least a little effort to learn chords and scales.
I think everyone agrees to this point for the most part, but me, I wouldn't want to be such a stick in the mud and say, boy (girl), this is the way you write a song (smack on the head with a ruler). Now do scales for 4 hours, then go out and play.
As soon as one says this is the only way to do it, then they are stuck in yesterday without an open mind of what could be.
Well if somebody says there is only one way, they are wrong. There are many many ways to write a song.
There are many ways to write a letter, but one alphabet. Cant do it without letters, punctuation, grammar. Those are all things you had to learn, you dont even realize it but you did.
I just think you have a better chance of writing a great song, if you know what a great song is, at least what makes it great for you.
Nothing wrong with that at all, but you might want to question is that is REALLY why you do it. I mean you are here, you are reaching out to fellow musicians and songwriters, you must have some need to do it outside of yourself
^^^^^^ this ^^^^^^I'm not really reaching out to anyone here to listen to my music and gain fans. I've asked for better ears than my one ear to listen and help me with regards to my mixing skills from time to time, but never with the intention of gaining respect for/fans of my music. It's mine, if people like it, cool. If they don't, cool.
The same as I'm not hear to find music. I like listening to what other people do and hearing their production, on all styles of music and believe me, I have heard some pretty damn good stuff. I've also heard some turd and some in between.
But mainly I'm here for the banter and the people. It's actually a really good laugh around here.
You've said these or implied it a lot in this thread barry c. It would be helpful if you actually laid out the ingredients of good songwriting as you see them.The only person you have to impress is yourself, but that should include doing it correctly. Combining inspiration with at least some understanding of how you are doing, and why something works, why it doesn't. What makes a great song great, what makes it stink. Recognizing those things and then trying to do it.
You've said these or implied it a lot in this thread barry c. It would be helpful if you actually laid out the ingredients of good songwriting as you see them.
A thought struck me yesterday. Prior to the multi~tracking age, what constituted "good" songwriting was easier to have a consensus on because songs were immediate and playable. People heard music live or heard someone playing it via sheet music on a piano and records played on the radio or in the home reflected this. Music listening was a communal activity not a private one and I don't think many songwriters/composers moved outside of accepted {or what would be accepted by large numbers of people} bounds.
But that really began to change as multi~tracking took hold and younger artists began writing different kinds of songs and in doing so, shifted the boundaries that had for hundreds of years been accepted. But many self appointed proponents of what art and songwriting was never made {indeed, refused to make} the shift.
Songwriting in so many instances over the last 45 years or so has been indivisible from recording. And as such,what constitutesgood songwriting necessarily changes. Multi~tracking has enabled countless imaginations to become unchained and put things into songs that actually weren't possible 75 years ago. It has also enabled songs to go in directions that wouldn't have been possible for hundreds of years. Where the song can go has changed which changes older definitions of what a good or bad song may or may not be.
Of course, many of the ingredients of yesteryear that went into the creation of songs remain. But they are not fixed forever, neither will they be in every song.
I often read people talking about analyzing why certain songs work but in truth, all songs work.........to someone.
IMHO I think a lot of people over analyze the structure and content of a given song and completely miss the reason it appeals to a individual or not if that is the case. Basically the song conveys an emotion similar to poetry only with sound or rhythm added. If a person connects with the song it is on one or more of those levels. When a person asks how to write a successful song or how many bad songs they have to write before a good one appears, they are in reality looking for a short cut or formula to get a "good song". If it were that simple anyone could just pour out "good songs" on a regular basis with no chance of failure. As an example, the successful country artist Don Gibson, never had any real schooling in fact he could barely read and write. And yet he was a success because he could convey his emotions in a way that others could connect with . . . at that time. If you were to step back in time and take a successful rap tune of today and go back 50 years and perform that same tune, what do you think the chances are that it would be successful? So, as stated before not only is the successful song a product of composition using what might be considered good lyrics, sounds, rhythm etc, but to a larger degree the connection on the emotional level. Not so simple and yet at the same time to simple for words . . . IMHO
Usually i start writing when i feel the time is right, i consider it to be a calling...