21/07/08 03:30
Now that I've done a little house keeping in the way
of establishing my view point on the pedagogy of
Songwriting, I thought I'd get into some of the stuff
I have learned over the last year. The only place
that I can think of to start is at the mother load.
This particular point changed me as a Songwriter and
I think as communicator in general. This notion is
the balance of personal expression and
communicability of an idea. I think most people
involved in music on a popular level (like artists,
people in the biz, etc) would agree that music is
simply a medium of commercial communication. People
value the ideas and sounds put across by bands and so
they pay money to experience them. There is a two
part transaction that takes place. First a cerebral
transaction where a listener buys into what the
Songwriter is doing, and then a financial part where
the listener forks over the looooong green. The first
part of that transaction is something I think about
every single day. Why is it that some tunes "connect
with people" and others just don't? How come some
tunes sound authentic and others sound like they're
trying just a little too hard? I think it really lies
in an intrinsic balance between personal expression
and communicability. My mentor Andy West has this
theory that for a song to work really well a writer
has to first find a very strong personal connection
to the material and then focus on making that
material widely palatable. In practice, that would be
like, a Songwriter must find a set of lyrics that
really mean something to him personally, set it to
music, and then after all that think about how they
could edit the tune to make other people understand
their message. Both practices are equally important,
both are totally essential. Without the personal
connection the song ends up cloying--a kiss ass doing
what it thinks you want it to do. With out the
refinement that song is abstract, self indulgent, and
keeps the listener outside of the experience. The
hardest part I've found is in the balance. It's never
completely equal. Too much of one makes for
weirdness, too much of the other makes pastiche. For
me it's a big step just being conscious of these
elements when I start a new tune and I think it's
helped my writing a lot. I feel like a learn this
process for the first time whenever I start a new
tune . . .