N
Nate
New member
Crap-- lost my post...
I think that Sheila Davis' books sucked, as do all of them I have read, with the exception of "Writing Better Lyrics" by Pat Pattison. His book is more involved with the technical aspect of writing-- constructing useful metaphors, rhymes--how to use the frigging rhyming dictionary, etc. It's more of a "how to write" instead of "how to write a generic crappy Dianne Warren hit song". His exercises seem pretty cool, too. Unfortunately, you need at least a small group to do them (I should find a writing group...)
If credentials matter, he designed the songwriting program at Berklee--BFD, it's still a good book.
I think the best advice I could give someone for improving their writng would be to READ. Not "how to" books, but just well-written books in any genre. Check out Nabokov-- his use of English was amazing- lots of alliteration and flow and humor, but it never seems forced.
Nate
I think that Sheila Davis' books sucked, as do all of them I have read, with the exception of "Writing Better Lyrics" by Pat Pattison. His book is more involved with the technical aspect of writing-- constructing useful metaphors, rhymes--how to use the frigging rhyming dictionary, etc. It's more of a "how to write" instead of "how to write a generic crappy Dianne Warren hit song". His exercises seem pretty cool, too. Unfortunately, you need at least a small group to do them (I should find a writing group...)
If credentials matter, he designed the songwriting program at Berklee--BFD, it's still a good book.
I think the best advice I could give someone for improving their writng would be to READ. Not "how to" books, but just well-written books in any genre. Check out Nabokov-- his use of English was amazing- lots of alliteration and flow and humor, but it never seems forced.
Nate