Songwriting Tip - Don't Put Up Listening Barriers For Your Audience

Make your songs as easy for your potential listeners as possible.

I am making some assumptions here but as songwriters, one of our major goals with our writing is that we want more people like what we do and listen to our songs than not.

I came across an article by Sheena Metal which outlines some of the barriers that songwriters put up and how you can remove them from your audiences way.

I am amazed how some songwriters put up barriers in front of their songs for their potential audience to jump over.

Unless the audience are your friends or an extremely patient lot:

Songwriting Barriers = No Listening Audience


Every Song Tells A Story - But Does It Need To Be An Abstract Novel?
By Sheena Metal

For a musician, your songs are your art. They are the physical embodiment of your creative gifts.

Every bit of anger, happiness, angst, joy, pain, elation, knowledge or humor goes into the story known as your song. You write and re-write it, scouring over each note and word, perfecting it for recording and live performance.

But when you play it for others, you’re not getting the reaction you expected.

Your friends, fans and family seem less than enthusiastic as they dully respond, "Yeah. That was, um, good."

How could this be? You poured your soul into this piece.

This was your "Stairway To Heaven!" This was your "Smells Like Team Spirit!"

It’s a lyrically amazing ode about the persecution of pagan midwives in grass hut tribes! It flows, it breathes, and it’s seven and a half minutes of pure musical perfection!

Whoa! Stop right there, Mozart.


You wrote a seven and a half minute song about the persecution of pagan midwives in grass hut tribes and you’re wondering why your thirteen year-old cousin fell asleep in the middle of the fourth verse?

You wrote a seven and a half minute song about the persecution of pagan midwives in grass hut tribes and you’re confused as to why your drummer’s girlfriend began calling her friends on her cell phone before the song had reached its bridge?

It may be hard to believe when you’re penning an opus such as this, but the normal human brain is wired a little differently than an accomplished musician’s, like yourself.

And although music is art, it’s also popular culture and the goal should be for others to enjoy your creative efforts as much as you do.

So, how can you make sure that your writing experience is as positive as your audience’s listening experience? What can you, as musicians do, to eliminate aspects of your songs that may alienate, confuse or just plain bore your fans?

The following are a few tips that may add success to your songwriting experience:

1. After Four Minutes, It Becomes Background Music
Music aficionado’s aside, the average person has roughly the attention span of a young adult hummingbird. As a songwriter, you need to grab your audience’s attention and hold it until the end of the song before they flit off to something else more interesting to them.

Although four minutes (or less) may seem like the blink of an eye when a songwriter is storytelling, it’s a very long time to expect your run-of-the-mill club-goer or web-surfer to stay fixated on your music.

2. Tell Your Story As Directly As Possible
We all love allusions, allegories, vague references, and subtle metaphors but use them sparingly or become a beat poet. A little abstractness goes a long way when writing a popular song.

Song lyrics fly into people’s minds as quickly as the bassist plucks out quarter notes. If you make your lyrics too complicated, then your audience may still be trying to figure out the verse when you’re already playing the chorus.

This could prompt the average listener to tune out your masterpiece, order another beer and switch on their Ipod.

3. If English Is Your First Language, Use It In Your Song
It’s great that you’re an educated, cultured, artistic intellectual sponge but remember that most people who hear your music are not book worms or art whores.

Big, involved words make for memorable song lyrics but use them occasionaly. It’s good for your fans to ponder the meaning of a particular lyric but give them too many to ponder and they’ll get so caught up in the words that they may forget your song.

4. Obscure Musicality Can Be Confusing Too
Lyrics aren’t the only way to confuse the average listener.

Obscure time signatures, discordant instrumentation and avant guard drum lines may seem like genius to your fellow musicians, but if your listeners can’t tap and/or hum along, you may find yourself only invited to perform in underground opium bars where the audience members have all had one too many hash brownies.

If you’re not sure where to begin, start simple. Write a short, but sweet, song that packs an emotional punch in a universal way. Write about something everyone is familiar with: love, politics, lifestyle issues or the sociology of being a human being on the planet.

Once people have fallen in love with your music, it will be easier to get them to give the extra listen to your more complicated, artistic pieces.

Remember that just because a song is popular or easily understood, doesn’t mean that it’s not good creativity. Art is subjective, and truly in the eye of the beholder. Your least favorite song could be someone else’s favorite.

You never have to stop being creative or artistic, just acknowledge that there’s an audience out there that wants to hear what you have to say.

But they’ll need to be able to comprehend it first.

About the author

Sheena Metal is a radio host, producer, promoter, music supervisor, consultant, columnist, journalist and musician.

Her syndicated radio program, Music Highway Radio, airs on over 700 affiliates to more than 126 million listeners. Her musicians’ assistance program, Music Highway, boasts over 10,000 members.

She currently promotes numerous live shows weekly in the Los Angeles Area, where she resides.

For more info: http://www.sheena-metal.com.


"And although music is art, it’s also popular culture and the goal should be for others to enjoy your creative efforts as much as you do."

This is the main thing that we, as songwriters need to remember.

We are adding to the mass of content that adds up to our collective popular culture.

Bear in mind though, my personal goals in songwriting maybe different to your goals. You might have a specific niche that you're writing songs for and if that's the case.

Fantastic! :)

Sheena's article however, demonstrates the power that the general listening public has.

If your goal is to write "hit" songs you want to make sure that you make it as easy as possible for your listening audience to "get" what you're doing.

Always remember that.it's the listening public (not you) that makes your song a "hit".

Until next time, happy writing,

Corey Stewart
Singer/Songwriter/Indie Musician
www.coreystewartonline.com
www.myspace.com/coreystewartonline

www.orangutangmusic.com

www.myspace.com/orangutangmusic


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Corey Stewart Songwriting Tips
The Bizzo - Indie Music Industry Tips

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Keywords: songwriting tip, songwriting, song writing, singer songwriter, songwriting news, songwriting idea, songwriting help, songwriting blog, corey stewart

Comments

Luigi Cappel wrote:

Hey Corey
great information,I guess a key thread is understanding your target audience and writing for them. Of course you can write for multiple targets as I do, but when performing, make sure the audience matches the music you are performing.
Friday 25 January 22:07

Pat Kashtock wrote:

Thanks Corey -- useful info. I am more of a worship leader who writes stories than a song writer, but the information you have made available is helpful for story and vignette writers. I am going to pass your web site onto a a song writing friend.

Peace,
Pat Kashtock
Sunday 04 November 23:01

coreystewart wrote:

Good point Marta,

I think what Sheena is trying to say is that lofty, verbose language (regardless of what language you write your songs in) will get in the way of the general listeners ability to understand what you are wanting to say.

After all we write songs so others can relate to it not be alienated by it.
Tuesday 21 August 22:03

Marta wrote:

If English Is Your First Language, Use It In Your Song

and if it isn't?
Tuesday 21 August 12:53

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