M
mindwave_21
New member
Hey all! Great section of the BBS if I do say so myself. I've got a question about vocal melodies for songs that I think you all can help me with...I'm STUCK. Ok maybe you can't help me with it
. Anyways, I play guitar and have written some stuff I really want to write lyrics to, and every time I do, I sing it like it's got no body (well, that's how I interpret). The melody has no direction and basically just follows the changes (read root, fifth, and some notes in between which are probably quarter steps
). I'm getting frustrated because I feel I have enough musical knowledge and creativity to get the ball rollin. So here are a few questions:
1. Any advice you think will help me in this process? I've just realized that when I play songs, I just play them like changes and don't know the key of the song as a whole (I used to think they were the same thing...oh well...). I've just recently searched out the key of some songs of mine, so hopefully that will help me out. Any suggestions appreciated.
2. What do you think will help contrast or differentiate vocals from the guitar riffs. I'm not looking for counterpoint on guitar and vocals or anything, though that would be kinda interesting...Do you find that many successfil vocalists use more intervallic jumps or stay within the flow of small scale degrees? For example, singing something like the guitar intro to Dave Matthew's "Satellite" versus something like the vocals to Weezer's "Undone". Also, is the use of pentatonic scales more common than the 7-tone scales (Ionian, Dominant, Aeolian, etc.) in rock/blues blah blah blah?
3. Any bands or songs in particular to check out for inspiration? Any opinions welcome except rap, country, screamo hardcore. Sorry, but I can't stand country or screaming vocals...and well...rap doesn't really apply to my question.
I'm writing stuff on acoustic and electric guitar and trying to keep it within rock/blues/jam styles. For BG reference, I really enjoy DMB, Phish, STP, SRV, Weezer, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, Soundgarden, & Chris Cornell among many other bands and artists. Also, I think Rob ??? from Matchbox 20 has a great way of forming a melody that is totally different from the guitar riffs. I guess what I'm looking for is a melody that is strong enough to be sung a cappella and still get the point across.
Thanks for all the great help.


1. Any advice you think will help me in this process? I've just realized that when I play songs, I just play them like changes and don't know the key of the song as a whole (I used to think they were the same thing...oh well...). I've just recently searched out the key of some songs of mine, so hopefully that will help me out. Any suggestions appreciated.
2. What do you think will help contrast or differentiate vocals from the guitar riffs. I'm not looking for counterpoint on guitar and vocals or anything, though that would be kinda interesting...Do you find that many successfil vocalists use more intervallic jumps or stay within the flow of small scale degrees? For example, singing something like the guitar intro to Dave Matthew's "Satellite" versus something like the vocals to Weezer's "Undone". Also, is the use of pentatonic scales more common than the 7-tone scales (Ionian, Dominant, Aeolian, etc.) in rock/blues blah blah blah?
3. Any bands or songs in particular to check out for inspiration? Any opinions welcome except rap, country, screamo hardcore. Sorry, but I can't stand country or screaming vocals...and well...rap doesn't really apply to my question.
I'm writing stuff on acoustic and electric guitar and trying to keep it within rock/blues/jam styles. For BG reference, I really enjoy DMB, Phish, STP, SRV, Weezer, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, Soundgarden, & Chris Cornell among many other bands and artists. Also, I think Rob ??? from Matchbox 20 has a great way of forming a melody that is totally different from the guitar riffs. I guess what I'm looking for is a melody that is strong enough to be sung a cappella and still get the point across.
Thanks for all the great help.