“If I knew where the good songs came from I’d go there more often”
— Leonard Cohen
Great song titles, topics and lyric lines can come from anything and everything around you. So always be prepared to grab them as they come up.
In the same way that a photographer always needs to carry a camera, you should always keep a pen and a notebook with you. Or, like Taylor Swift, Max Martin and REM’s Michael Stipe, use the voice memo/notebook option on your phone to capture ideas for themes, lyrics or melody lines before you forget them.
As Paloma Faith told American Songwriter magazine: “I like going through life with a notebook in my pocket or a notebook on my phone. Sometimes I hear somebody say something on the street. I like to capture a sentence and it resonates and takes on a different meaning for me.”
Make a note of phrases that you hear or read in newspapers and magazines, and create sketches of these potential songs.
And make sure you’re well organized. Maintain a list of ideas for titles and hooks. Keep them safe in a digital folder or a physical workbook or ‘Ideas’ file, along with other unfinished songs, melody lines and lyrics.
It is important to keep all of these odds and ends in one place so you always know where to find them. Coming back to them at a later date—and looking at them from a fresh perspective—can often result in a spark of inspiration that helps you finish the song. Sometimes the best songs just need to gestate a little in your sub- conscious before all the pieces fit together.
The Bee Gees’ Robin Gibb always believed in “keeping the tape running” during the writing process—even if a writing session doesn’t seem to be going well. “You never know when you’re going to come up with something and then if you’ll remember it completely,” he said.
“All the ideas, everything, will be on tape and then you can always refer back at any time,” he added. “Melodies will be born for the first time during writing and unless you have it on tape you haven’t got any way of remembering them.” Don’t make the mistake of letting good song ideas get away just because you’re a little disorganized.
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