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How Songwriting
REALLY Works!,
Vol. 1: Music, and
Vol. 2: Lyrics


If you would like to be
notified when these books
become available,
send an email to:
booklist@roedyblack.com
Top
How Songwriting
REALLY Works!,
Vol. 1: Music, and
Vol. 2: Lyrics


If you would like to be
notified when these books
become available,
send an email to:
booklist@roedyblack.com
Top
How Songwriting
REALLY Works!,
Vol. 1: Music, and
Vol. 2: Lyrics


If you would like to be
notified when these books
become available,
send an email to:
booklist@roedyblack.com
Top
How Songwriting
REALLY Works!,
Vol. 1: Music, and
Vol. 2: Lyrics


If you would like to be
notified when these books
become available,
send an email to:
booklist@roedyblack.com
Top
How Songwriting
REALLY Works!,
Vol. 1: Music, and
Vol. 2: Lyrics


If you would like to be
notified when these books
become available,
send an email to:
booklist@roedyblack.com
Top
How Songwriting
REALLY Works!,
Vol. 1: Music, and
Vol. 2: Lyrics


If you would like to be
notified when these books
become available,
send an email to:
booklist@roedyblack.com
Top
|
|
How Songwriting
REALLY Works!,
Vol. 1: Music, & Vol. 2: Lyrics
by Wayne Chase
& Tom Johnson
|
|
|
In Production . . . Available 2007 or 2008
 |
Title:
How Songwriting REALLY Works!, Vol. 1:
Research Findings
on the Musical Differences Between Great Songs and Ordinary
Songs ... How You Can Transform the Way You Write
Music
Authors:
Wayne Chase
and Tom Johnson
Publisher: Roedy Black Publishing, Vancouver, Canada
ISBN: Not yet
assigned.
For the first time ever...
these research findings
will show precisely
how great songs differ
musically from ordinary songs,
and how
to apply
these findings to your own songwriting.
Scroll
Down for Book Details
|
 |
Title:
How Songwriting REALLY Works!, Vol. 2:
Research Findings
on the Lyrical Differences Between Great Songs and Ordinary
Songs ... How You Can Transform the Way You Write
Lyrics
Authors:
Wayne Chase
and Tom Johnson
Publisher: Roedy Black Publishing, Vancouver, Canada
ISBN: Not yet
assigned.
For the first time ever...
these research findings
will show precisely
how great songs differ
lyrically from ordinary songs,
and how to
apply
these findings to your own songwriting.
Scroll
Down for Book Details
|
|
|
ABOUT
THESE
TWO
BOOKS
Group
A—The "Great Song" Group: A sample of the worlds greatest
popular songs by the world’s greatest songwriters.
This sample is drawn from the
www.GoldStandardSongList.com
Group B—the "Ordinary Song"
Group: A
sample of songs with no significant distribution
by relatively unknown songwriters and bands
aspiring to music industry success.
-
These
research findings will show exactly
how
the music and lyrics
of "great" songs differ
from the music and lyrics of "ordinary" songs
on the use of technical
elements.
-
"Technical
elements" refers to the use of musical
and lyrical variables covered extensively in
How Music REALLY Works, 2nd
Edition.
-
Here are some examples:
Some MUSICAL Variables
- Scale types
- Modes
- Modulation
- Chord types
- Chord progression types
- Beat
- Pulse
- Meter
- Tempo
- Rhythm
- Structural phrasing
- Vocal-melodic phrasing
- Melodic intervals (steps, leaps)
- Melodic repetition
- Note values
- Non-chord tones
- Sequences
- Melodic climax |
Some LYRICAL Variables
- EPA scores
- Content words
- Function words
- Noun types
- Verb types
- Adjective types
- Adverb types
- Preposition types
- Word counts
- Syllable counts
- Word repetition
- Personal words
- Personal sentences/phrases
- Concrete/abstract vocabulary
- Symbolism
- Parallel construction
- Rhyme types
- Accent-matching |
USEFULNESS FOR SONGWRITERS
- Songwriters who
mishandle
the technical aspects of music and lyrics unwittingly sabotage
their own creative work.
-
By pointing out the specific differences (using
real-world examples) between the use of
technical variables in the music and lyrics
of great songs,
compared with the use of the same variables in ordinary
songs,
How Songwriting REALLY Works!, Vols.
1 and 2 will show
you:
-
Where you're making technical musical
and lyrical
blunders that unnecessarily doom songs that might
otherwise have "classic"
potential; and
-
Where to go in
How Music REALLY Works!, 2nd
Ed., to
find out how to avoid making such blunders.
PRELIMINARY
RESEARCH
FINDINGS:
10
EXAMPLES
OF TECHNICAL
BLUNDERS
Based on the preliminary findings of this
research, here are just 10 of the many
technical blunders songwriters make, and how to avoid making them. (NOTE:
The final results may vary from
these preliminary findings.)
1.
Using
Musically Unpalatable Chord Progressions
-
Songwriters who have no knowledge of
harmonic scales tend to write, clunky, musically unpalatable chord
progressions. Such progressions mitigate against the human brains natural tendency
to want to process intervals and harmonies that reflect simple frequency ratios.
-
Our preliminary findings show that the chord progressions of
"Great Songs" tend to follow the natural clockwise flow of the
harmonic scale to a much higher degree than "Ordinary
Songs":

2.
Incorporating Too Much “Unique” Melody
-
When you take the entire vocal melody of a
three- or four-minute song and subtract out all the repetitions of the melodic
parts, you have the core "unique" melody of the song. In
our preliminary findings, Great
Songs
averaged only about 20 seconds of unique melody. Ordinary
Songs averaged 38
secondsnearly twice as much unique melody:

-
In pre-literate times, songs served the
purpose of transmitting news. Any
successful song really functions as a mnemonic device. It employs as many memory-helping elements as possiblerhyme,
regularity of rhythm pattern, repetition of catchy melodic phrases, etc.
3.
Employing a Musically
Unpalatable Melodic Range

4.
Failing to Firmly
Establish Tonality

5.
Not Building in Enough
Sequence-type Repetition
-
For example, in the Lennon-McCartney tune, "Eleanor
Rigby," think of the melody that goes with the words, "Picks up the
rice in the church where a wedding has been." The three notes corresponding to the
words
"rice in
the"
form a sequence that gets repeated on the
words
"church where
a",
then on the words
"wedding
has."

6.
Paying Insufficient
Attention to Metrical Concordance

7.
Writing in 4/4 Meter Exclusively
-
All of the Ordinary Songs in
the preliminary study were
found to be in 4/4 time. By contrast, Great Songs showed metrical variety. While
most were in 4/4 time, nearly a quarter were in 3/4 or 6/8 time:

8.
Failing to Edit Lyrics
That Go On and On and On

9.
Not Using the Connotative
Content of Words Effectively
10.
Spending More Time and Energy Recording than Songwriting
-
T-Bone Burnett, ace producer of
dozens of great albums (including the movie soundtrack, "O Brother, Where Art
Thou"), put it this way: "These days, instead of musicians playing instruments,
instruments are playing musicians."
-
Bob Dylan once commented:
"See, when I started to record, they just turned the microphones on and you recorded
. . . Whatever you got on one side of the glass was what came in on the controls on the
other side of the glass."
-
The real question is the question of
quality,
substance, emotional staying power. Most songs written in 15 minutes, "in a burst
of inspiration," actually have no emotional
impact on anyone except possibly the
songwriter and his or her mother.
-
A truly great song with
nothing more than a guitar-and-vocal or keyboard-and-vocal presentation,
will sound brilliant to perfect strangers. Vocal skill
matters little. Only the tune, the chords and the words really
matter. If the song does not make it in a bare-bones rendition, it does not make it.
-
These topics are covered in Chapters 11 and 12 of
How
Music REALLY Works!, 2nd Edition.
If
you would like to be notified when How Songwriting REALLY Works, Vol.
1: Music, and Vol. 2: Lyrics, become available, send an email
to:
booklist@roedyblack.com
|