Wednesday, July 05, 2006

The Best Living Songwriters

An interesting article on who are the 10 best living songwriters. Not sure if Itotally agree with the choices made, as there are far too many diamonds outthere. As an example, Stevie Wonder (who I personally consider one of thegreats) doesn’t even get a mention. But yet, PJ Harvy makes the top ten.


Check out the article...


http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5536035


Many thanks to NPR and Robin Hilton of 'All Songs Considered' for his perspective.

Calvin

"I'm not sure why it should matter, but I always love a good "best of"list. I'll tear through the names and numbers, rolling my eyes withmouth agape at various placements. Paste's list has PattiGriffin 20 places higher than Ray Davies and the Kinks. KrisKristofferson is twice as high as Outkast, Pink Floyd and FleetwoodMac. You gotta be kidding."
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5536035

Diane Warren - Songwriter Extraordinaire

A quick but brilliant talk with Diane Warren here. I fact, that's putting rather lightly. This is a MUST read for ALL of aspiring or established songwriters. Having three decades of hit songs under her belt, you know that Diane Warren has a mentality that we all should adopt.

Check it out...

Calvin


Diane warren interview

"Diane Warren has probably touched your life at least once a day during that last ten or fifteen years and you may not have even known it. She has written songs for the likes of The Starship, Michael Bolton, DeBarge, Gladys Knight, The Jets, Joe Cocker, Cheap Trick, Dusty Springfield, Daryl Hall, Whitney Houston, Celine Dion, Kenny G., Peabo Bryson, Aaron Neville, Ace of Base, Monica, Chicago, Belinda Carlisle, Meat Loaf, Cher, Patti LaBelle, Taylor Dayne, Expose, Gloria Estefan, Roberta Flack, Michael McDonald, Elton John, Aretha Franklin, Toni Braxton, Barbara Streisand, Heart, and many, many more top artists...."

>> http://www.aandronline.com/reading-room/diane_warren.html

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A Songwriters Mindset

Hello fellow songwriters. When I wrote this article, I was completely writing with the novice songwriter in perspective. However, since reading I've realized that this applies to everyone. It's certainly reminded me of how easy it is to not 'get stuff done'.

Hope you enjoy it.

Calvin

The Songwriters Way Of Thinking

Is there ever a 'right time' to write a song? So many songwriters have asked me, "can you write whenever you want?" -- well, the answer is a resounding YES. You can indeed.

But let's be real, what if your mum was in hospital or you just went though a divorce.. then what? What if you simply weren't in the mood? Well, here's the secret.

First of all, let's switch the word 'writing' with the word 'creating'. In theory we are 'writing a song', but in practice we're actually creating something. Just think about that for a second. We're 'CREATING' something here.

So if we are creating something, we need to fuel that creativity with something. We fuel that creativity with INSPIRATION.

Before we even THINK about what to write about, what structure the song should be, what melody to use, etc, we need inspiration.

I can hear you already... "what if I don't feel inspired?", well this is exactly why you need to 'switch' your mind.

I can't even begin to tell you how important this is.
Let me explain -- stay with me here...

Here's a typical a scenario. You wake up early in the morning to go work, you miss your train and when you get there your boss gives you a hard time for being late.

Because you're late, you're made to work through your lunch hour. When you do, you eat some crummy old sandwich which makes your stomach upset. Despite the fact that you're now not feeling well, you carry on working -- dying for the day to end.

Work is finally over. You get home, and cook yourself some food. It's the best meal you've had all day. You're feeling a little better knowing you can finally relax and watch some TV over a nice beverage.

But guess what, you're too tired to write a song. You've had such a mad day, you just can't be bothered. You don't know what to write about. You just don't feel inspired.

Now here's where you 'switch' your mind. Everything that has happened in your day are a series of events all leading up to writing a song. How many events can YOU draw inspiration from?

The answer is ALL of them. You can write about your whole 'bad day' but the key here is to pick one or two events and elaborate on them.

For example, we can do something with 'being late for the train' and 'late for work'. You could structure it in a way were your verses would be about getting up late, how your breakfast was burnt, when you left it was pouring with rain and you left without your umbrella, the trains were running late, you were late for work again.

In fact, that could actually be your hook -- 'I'm Late Again'. The song can be structured in a way were you are simply stating how you are always late! (It doesn't matter whether that's the truth or not! It just has to flow well, that's all).

Songwriters who write constantly understand how to harness the power of inspiration. The above example was quite a negative day, but if was the opposite, then you would write about just that, (ever heard of 'Lovely Day' by Bill Withers?).

Structure your song so you are keeping your listener interested in where your song is taking them next.