PART 1: GETTING STARTED
1 Thinking Songwriting Is Easy
3 Not Knowing Your Job Description
4 Not Recognizing Your Limitations
5 Not Sticking To A Daily Writing Schedule
6 Not Having A Special Writing Place
7 Not Setting Yourself Deadlines
8 Not Laying Foundations For The Creative Process
11 Not Keeping Your Writing Style Current
12 Imitating Instead Of Innovating
13 Not Giving Music Companies What They Want
14 Thinking Your Song To Death
15 Limiting The Appeal Of Your Song
17 Stop Writing ‘Album Tracks’
18 Not Doing Enough Artist Research
19 Ignoring 12 Tests That Decide Your Fate
PART 2: SONG CONSTRUCTION
20 Not Understanding Song Structure
21 No Well-Balanced Shape and Form
22 Not Knowing The Basic Elements Of A Hit Song
23 Avoiding A Tried And Tested Form
24 Not Taking Time To Learn How Hit Songs Work
25 Forcing The Development Of A Song
26 Making Your Song Too Personal
28 Making Your Song Too Complicated
29 Making Your Sections Too Long, Or Too Short
30 Getting Your Song Length Wrong
31 You’re Boring Us… Get To The Chorus
32 Not Using The Verse As A Stepping Stone
33 Not Making Your Song Stand Out
34 Failing To Make An Emotional Connection
36 Not Giving Your Song A Killer High Point
37 Too Many Ideas In Your Song
PART 3: COMPONENTS OF A HIT SONG:
TITLES
39 Your Title Won’t Help the Song Sell
40 Not Positioning The Title Correctly
MELODIES
41 Forgetting The Tune’s The Thing
42 Making Your Melody Hard To Remember
43 Melody And Lyrics Aren’t Compatible
44 Your Melody Range Is Too Wide
46 Too Much Repetition (Or Too Little)
47 Your Repeated Sections Aren’t Consistent
48 No Contrast Between Verse And Chorus
49 Where’s Your ‘Call To Action’?
50 Imbalance Between Chords And Melody
51 Your Chords Have No Direction
52 Avoiding Minor Chords A Major Mistake
53 Your Songs All Sound The Same
54 Don’t Be Ordinary, Be Extraordinary
HOOK
56 Putting Your Hook In The Wrong Place
57 A Lyrical Hook That Doesn’t Stick
58 Relying On A Good Hook To Save A Bad Song
59 Don’t Forget Your Secondary Hooks
INTRO
60 An Intro That Doesn’t Attract Attention
BRIDGE
62 Not Admiring The View From The Bridge
63 Not Building On The Verse And Chorus
64 Building Your Bridge In The Wrong Place
PRE-CHORUS
65 Not Using A Pre-Chorus To Build Tension
CHORUS
66 Failing To Make Your Chorus Stand Out
67 Lyric Imbalance Between Verse and Chorus
LYRICS
68 Thinking Poems And Song Lyrics Are The Same
69 Thinking Lyrics Don’t Matter As Long As The Music’s Good
70 Your Lyrics Don’t Support The Song Form
71 Your Lyric Lines Aren’t Balanced
72 Too Many Words In Your Lyrics
75 Your First Line Could Be Your Last
76 Not Letting Your Song Move Forward
77 Writing Lyrics People Can’t Relate To
78 Not Maintaining A Consistent Viewpoint
80 Your Rhymes Are Too Predictable
81 Not Varying Your Rhyme Patterns
82 Your Lyrics Won’t Motivate An Artist
PART 4: RE-WRITING
86 Hey Buddy, Can You Spare Some Time?
PART 5: RECORDING YOUR DEMO
88 Not Seeing Your Demo As A Selling Tool
89 Spending Good Money On Bad Songs
90 Relying On A Demo To Fix A Song
91 Not Knowing What You Want Before Going Into The Studio
94 Vocals And Lyrics Aren’t Clear
96 Wrong Vocal Style On The Demo
97 Don’t Let Your Ego Get In The Way
98 Putting An Instrumental Break In Your Demo