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Posts Tagged ‘music producers’

Make A Career Out Of Songwriting

June 19th, 2008 orlando5 No comments

The music industry is always overflowing with rags to riches stories and successful songwriters are always a part of this mix because without songs, there would be no hits!  But how does one chase a songwriting career, and are there any obvious, time-tested steps one can take to reach their dreams of being an in-demand, prolific songwriter?

Songwriting is one of the few positions in the music industry not limited by age–you can literally write a successful song at any age.  There are plenty of youngsters with gold records by the time they’re 17!  There  are many “over 40″ songwriters starting out and making a great living through their songwriting.  These are usually, but not always, musicians who never ventured into the songwriting aspect of music, musicians who’ve played an instrument and merely dabbled in writing a song or two without ever exposing their work, or simply people who finally decided to chase their dream of learning the craft of songwriting and “giving it a shot.”

Aspiring songwriters are always posing the question, “How do I get started in songwriting?” and “Can I make any money at it?”  Successful songwriters, along with successful music producers, are the real, consistent money-makers in the music industry.  Think about it.  Very few major label recording artists actually succeed, and many come and go, but proven songwriters and music producers are always called upon to provide their services!

Now, I’m certainly not trying to discourage you performing artists from trying to get a record deal, but if you do, make sure you hang on to as much of your music publishing as possible—that is—learn to write your own songs, and accept outside material only when you really believe in a song, not merely to fill up space.  There are just too many great songwriters out there to settle for mediocre songs.

To make a career out of songwriting, understand you have to wear many different hats.  First and foremost, you have to develop songwriting skills—and yes—I assure you, this can be learned.  Some songwriters are extremely naturally-talented, but even those select few learn the craft of songwriting somewhere along the way to maximize their talent.  With proper training, anyone can learn how to write songs as long as they put forth great effort.  Songwriters, also, at least initially, have to have a little business sense and learn how to market their songs by researching who needs what, and by getting out there and networking with people in the music industry.   

You can’t get into songwriting thinking, “Well I’m going to write this great song for artist X, be discovered, and become rich overnight!”  Although overnight success stories can happen, these are few and far between, and many have originated from somebody already being “connected.”  In other words, in the real world—chances are high that nobody’s going to find you.  On the contrary, you need to go out and find them, and show them how talented you are!  This is mainly how rags to riches stories develop–you’ve got to sell yourself and have the songs to prove it!

In an upcoming series titled “How To Build A Songwriting Career From Scratch” I’ll give you a step-by-step blueprint to give you the absolute best chance at becoming a successful songwriter.  Stay tuned.

Inject More Life Into Your Songwriting-Part 1

June 17th, 2008 orlando5 No comments

We, as human beings, either consciously or subconsciously tend to fall into routines in pretty much every aspect of our lives because we like staying in our “comfort zones,” and we feel more safe and secure with things that are familiar to us. 

Songwriters are no exception to this rule, especially when they find they’ve written a few solid songs using the same “routine” and “formula,” so to speak.  In songwriting, it is sometimes hard to break free from a proven method of songwriting,  and some songwriters resist change by sticking to “their style of songwriting,” while declaring, “If it ain’t broken, don’t fix it.”

So consequently, as an example, some songwriters stay focused on the classic song forms of verse-chorus-verse-chorus-bridge-chorus, in pop and country music , or verse-chorus-verse-chorus-rap-chorus in r&b with little or no variation.  After a while, songs start to sound the same and you not only risk losing your listeners, but you also run the risk of having music industry people think you’re one-dimensional.

It’s not that difficult to add some variety in your songs and give them a definite boost if you know where to inject them with song form variations.  That’s right!  All you have to do is start experimenting with song forms.  This is the easiest way to lend variety to your future collection of original songs.   

If you find yourself in these songwriting shoes and you want to break free from the “all too familiar” type of song, try using the following song forms to help your songs be more original and stand out in a crowd:

1.  Instead of verse-chorus-verse-chorus-bridge-chorus (ABABCB) format, use:

For rock, pop, r&b, and country music

verse-verse-chorus-verse-instrumental-chorus-verse-chorus
verse-chorus-verse-verse-chorus-bridge-chorus
chorus-verse-chorus-verse-bridge-chorus
chorus-verse-chorus-verse-instr-bridge-chorus
verse-chorus-instr-chorus-verse-bridge-chorus
verse-prechorus-chorus-verse-chorus-instr-prechorus-chorus

also:

try using the rarely-used verse-verse-chorus-verse (AABA) format, and variations such as:

verse-verse-bridge-instr-verse-bridge-verse
bridge-verse-verse-bridge-verse-new section-instr-verse

This list can go on and on–there’s no limit, and this works well for many other genres!
Try making a 2nd verse only half of a verse, or a 2nd chorus a half-chorus—You get the idea! Cut a song section in half and go into an instrumental part.
Don’t always settle for what’s expected. Sometimes rearranging a song’s form can bring out the life you never expected in that song. Big-time music producers routinely and instinctively rearrange song forms to make songs more powerful because oftentimes they’re presented with twelve songs that basically have the same song forms. Why not take care of all that work by yourself by being original in the first place?

These days, to stay competitive and original, songwriters are thinking outside the box far more often than just a few short years ago. Don’t get left in the dust! Always look for new ways to add spice and originality in your songs even if it means rearranging your song form in a small way to add that extra “ooomph,” and you can’t go wrong. Yes, human beings love familiarity, but didn’t someone say once that, “Variety is the spice of life?”