M
Mike Freze
New member
I've been a published songwriter with London Records years ago. I'm getting back into my writing again and hope I still have the "juice" I once had (ha-ha).
Anyway, there's a theory out there (especially from old-schooled master songwriters like Barry Manilow, Neil Diamond, Paul Williams, Burt Bacharch, etc.) that you should start writing songs by coming up with great titles to work with before anything else. A great title leads itself to everything you set up in the song: it will give the lyrics focus, will dictate the type of melody or rhythm you use, will be a part of your hook (chorus), and so on.
In other words, get a great title and half your battle is one. It could be a play on words ("Sleeping Single In A Double Bed"), suggestive ("Do Ya Think I'm Sexy?"), direct statement ("The Wreck Of The Edzmund Fitgerald"), funny ("A Boy Named Sue"), etc.
I agree: if you can start with clever or catchy titles even before you start writing lyrics or thinking of melodies, that's half the battle. That gives you (or MAKES you) focus on the song. Too many people start writing a verse or two to get a song going (or get a nice melody going), and then they wander from there and don't have a tight focus a 3-4 minute commercial song demands. Then they have to "force" a hook or chorus somehow or let their verses wander and try to "fit" a song title in there later on.
Yet many monster hits have been made from lousy titles, too: "And I Love You So," "Yesterday," "You're My Everything," etc. So you never know, right? If you have a lousy title, the rest of the music must be more than fantastic in order to pull it off.
Mike Freze
Anyway, there's a theory out there (especially from old-schooled master songwriters like Barry Manilow, Neil Diamond, Paul Williams, Burt Bacharch, etc.) that you should start writing songs by coming up with great titles to work with before anything else. A great title leads itself to everything you set up in the song: it will give the lyrics focus, will dictate the type of melody or rhythm you use, will be a part of your hook (chorus), and so on.
In other words, get a great title and half your battle is one. It could be a play on words ("Sleeping Single In A Double Bed"), suggestive ("Do Ya Think I'm Sexy?"), direct statement ("The Wreck Of The Edzmund Fitgerald"), funny ("A Boy Named Sue"), etc.
I agree: if you can start with clever or catchy titles even before you start writing lyrics or thinking of melodies, that's half the battle. That gives you (or MAKES you) focus on the song. Too many people start writing a verse or two to get a song going (or get a nice melody going), and then they wander from there and don't have a tight focus a 3-4 minute commercial song demands. Then they have to "force" a hook or chorus somehow or let their verses wander and try to "fit" a song title in there later on.
Yet many monster hits have been made from lousy titles, too: "And I Love You So," "Yesterday," "You're My Everything," etc. So you never know, right? If you have a lousy title, the rest of the music must be more than fantastic in order to pull it off.
Mike Freze