I want to write my first song

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chardin

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I've been playing guitar and bass for over 20 years and lately I've had the itch to write a song. I can come up with chord progressions but melodies elude me. I also have no idea what to write about. So far, I've had a good life without any regrets; happily married with two great sons.

What was your first song about? Do you have any suggestions for me? Thanks.
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Chris Hardin
 
Of course, you can write about anything. But if you are
asking what to write about for a COMMERCIAL song,
that is different. In that case, some variation of love,
meeting someone, getting dumped, getting married,
thinking about an old lover, ect. Or there were a bunch
of songs in the 60's about cars (although that trend
seems to have died out).

Personally, I think you should try to get your initial melody
idea AWAY from your instrument although some people like
to riff vocally over chord changes. I just never had any luck
that way. Get a hand held cassette machine and go walking.
Look for titles and then get an ORIGINAL concept, something
that hasn't been done to death.

I like to brainstorm before I write (using clustering), looking
at different angles. Even when I've got the angle, I try to
"map" the song....in verse one....she leaves me, in verse
two I'm thinking of how to get her back, ect instead of just
writing down lines. Of course, if a line comes to me, I sure
write it down. Anyway, that's my take.

PaulB
 
I made my first song when I was about 7 years old, formed a band with some of my playmates, playing acoustic guitar ( without knowing any chords ) hammond organ ( without knowing ... ) and my moms pots and pans. It was about a guy selling Icecream ... well - what do you expect from 7 year old kids - an epoc on the cold war ???? :D
My suggestion for you must be : hook up with someone writing lyrics, that's the way I'm workin' now
bizz
.. by the way - I still have the tape - great fun *LOL*
 
chardin said:
I've been playing guitar and bass for over 20 years and lately I've had the itch to write a song. I can come up with chord progressions but melodies elude me. I also have no idea what to write about. So far, I've had a good life without any regrets; happily married with two great sons.

What was your first song about? Do you have any suggestions for me? Thanks.
---
Chris Hardin

Hmmm...What to write about?

What makes you happy, sad, angry, or brings a smile? What pet peaves or great memories do you have? Every song I write, I am emotionally connected to it, in one form or another. But thats just the way I write.

Some examples may be:

What did you feel when your first son was born?

What obstacles have you overcame?

What went through your mind when you first met THE girl?

What pushes you through the grind of your job?

What were your thoughts the morning of 9/11/01?


There is no one-formula-fits-all in songwriting. Just a desire to write with what ever fashion works best for you.

Good luck with your first song.

<><
George :cool:
 
Just write from the heart, man.

There's really no formula.

Granted, the greatest art you may think of may very well have been related to personal suffering and pain. Angst begets the best art, doesn't it?

What do people like you [us/me too] have to write about? Clean the pool? Mow the lawn? Having great kids? Hey, Graham Nash already wrote "Teach Your Children".

I'd say, look for some angst to write about, and there's plenty to go around in the world today. It doen't necessarily have to be your angst, you may choose to write in the third person. What you write about may be based on something hypothetical or totally made up. The art of language is totally wide open. You can write practically any song you want, but in the end judgement, it's very hard to write a truly good song. It's probably easy to write just any garbage, but I think it's hard to write something that's really eloquent, that says something substantial. Practice makes perfect, I suppose.

Just hammer away at it. Have fun with songwriting, and experiment with it, to define your style and voice.

Either that, or go hang out in the skid row bars, etc, [go find the bohemian/underground/artist scene] and hook up with a real songwriter, or two. No kidding. Find someone, maybe, that has the angst that you don't have. Haha, no kidding.

I once met these 3 brothers, and they wrote the most clever, funny, interesting, moving 'folk-style' songs I've ever heard. It was like 3 Dylans with a great sense of humor, and they had a fantastic sense of song construction and how to turn a really great phrase. They had a little cult following, and everything, including me, but I produced a few tapes of them. I met them in a skid row bar, haha, no kidding, but it wasn't as bad as it sounds. We were all relatively young, living in the city, and just hanging out, in what was otherwise a skid-row-adjacent artist's community.

I met some really talented songwriters back then, but I still have trouble writing a legitimate song, haha. [I met some kooks, too, haha].

A good song has to be engaging on many different levels. It's hard to put it all together, and make the song work on every level. There's a certain amount of expertise you need, and inspiration, and craft. Songwriting and music, like anything else, takes practice.

I'm sure the greatest songwriters you may think of probably have written dozens of scratch songs before coming up with a real hit,... Dylan, I suppose, has probably written hundreds of songs that we've never heard, etc.

-Just have fun with it, guy. Experiment and practice. It doesn't hurt to meet other good players and/or songwriters. Good luck.
 
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I would just sit down with a tape recorder and play that chord progression over and over....as you do, hum and just sing off the top of your head...fill up a tape or two...next day go back and listen to the tape and see what stands out.....

good life without regrets, happily married with two sons...thats alot to sing about there....
but also, and trust me this is a sick way to appraoch art, for one second let yourself feel what it would be like if you lost that...how would you feel if you came home one day and the wife had left you?.....if you limit yourself to only writing about what has happened to you, you are cheating yourself.....

a little bit of deep hearted empathy goes a long way.....
 
Was your first song about the blues?

Thanks for all the suggestions!

Several folks recommended writing about angst, imagined or real. I started thinking about this. One of my favorite bands is The Who and Pete Townshend has written a lot about pain and anger. The first time I heard Pearl Jam's "Ten" album I thought "How could any one have so much bottled up inside?"

My next question is: Were your first songs about pain and misery? How many of you are blues writers?

Thanks again for all your help.
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Chris Hardin
 
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