Here are some fun songwriting techniques and exercises to help generate ideas for a great title.
Open up your dictionary and put your finger on the page. Choose the closest picture noun to your fingertip and write it down on a piece of paper under "nouns". Do this ten times using a different first letter for each. Then do this ten more times choosing adjectives that you might use in conversation. When you have your list mix and match the adjectives with the nouns. Try each adjective with each noun. Many of the pairings will be silly or nonsense, but you will also find some very interesting ones that spark your imagination. One of my recent dictionary games produced the title "Scarlet Tears", which turned into a song about an adulterous wife ashamed of her extra-marital activities.
Look closely at the paper every day for short and punchy headlines. Newspaper reporters and editors choose their headlines for impact. A story headline serves the same purpose as a song title. To draw us in and make us want to read/listen. When you read them, think of them as song titles. Write down the ones that appeal to you, and collect them in a notebook.
Play around with one of these songwriting techniques today and try writing a song. Remember to have fun with it. Songwriting should be fun. |
Richie Gilbert has been passionate about writing songs for many years. He spends too much time in his home recording studio, and is active in pitching his songs to music publishers. Article Source: http://www.ArticleBiz.com |
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