ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Career

Write a Song on the Guitar

Author : Steve Bishop

Most songs that have ever written can be broadly grouped into one of several categories; songs written around a chord progression, songs written around a melody, or songs written around a riff:




  • Chord Progressions - In songs written around a chord progression, the writer creates an interesting series of chords, then organizes a vocal melody and an arrangement around that progression.

  • Melody - This is probably the most common method of songwriting. The composer starts with a vocal melody, and around that melody creates a chord progression and song arrangement.

  • Riff - These songs are born out of a guitar (or other type of instrumental) riff, after which a vocal melody (which often mimics the guitar riff) and chord progression are added.

If you choose to develop the song in a minor key this will give the whole piece a sad or moody feel. While writing in a major key will give you an upbeat happy tune.


Many songwriters will use both major and minor keys within their songs, perhaps choosing a minor key for the verse, and a major key for the chorus, or vice versa. This has a nice effect as is good for the listener as it helps break up the monotony that sometimes results when a song lingers in one key.


Of all the aspects involved with creating new songs, writing a strong melody is undoubtedly the most commonly overlooked and possibly the hardest component of music, particularly with modern pop/rock music. This wasn't always the case because the pop songwriters of the 1930's and 1940's focused only on writing melodies and in many cases it was the basis for a song, with lyrics and chords only added in later to give the song more depth.


Generally, the process of writing a song is much different nowadays because usually songs will be created from a guitar, bass or keyboard riff, or a groove. This is built upon, along with the writing of a chorus is written and the adding of bass lines so that the entire instrumental part of the song has been assembled even before the melody has been taken into consideration.


Most people will focus most of their effort of writing lyrics. While lyrical content is obviously of great importance, a strong melody is absolutely necessary, for without this component; the vast majority of people won't listen to the song long enough to even bother listening to the lyrics.


The vocal melody of the song is what is remembered most people; and in many cases is what makes them like or dislike a song. If melodies are well-written and catchy, people will remember and enjoy the music but if the melodies are carelessly or poorly written and bland, people won't – it really is that simple.




ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Learning to play the guitar may take a little while so why not take a lesson or two from http://www.learn-how-to-play-guitar.com">http://www.learn-how-to-play-guitar.com



Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. Tips For Successful Job Hunting: How To Get A Job Without A Resume
  2. How to Turn a Job Search into a Career Find
  3. How to Pick the Best Career For You , Part 2: From Exposure-to-Opportunity
  4. My Landscaping Business is Better Than Your Lanscaping Business...
  5. Why Culinary Education
  6. How To Pick The Best Career For You, Part 1
  7. 4 Internet Job Search Mistakes to Avoid
  8. Get A New Job - Career Choices
  9. Electronic Resume Writing Tips That Boost Your Interview Appointment Success
  10. Travel Light to Work
  11. Sawbones
  12. Whiners Need Not Apply
  13. Discover your passion
  14. Workplace Violence - 8 Tips For Spotting Early Warning Signs
  15. Your Best Job Search Tool May Be Your Computer
  16. Practice Speaking
  17. Smokin’ Up a Storm: Clothing, Smokers, and the Job Interview
  18. Resume That Effectively Promotes You!
  19. What is Contract Programming? An Alternative to the Conformity of Everyday Employment
  20. Ten Great Careers For Computer “Geeks"
  21. The Six Figure Job Search
  22. An RX For Your Résumé
  23. Powerful Phone Interviews
  24. Your Self-Image in the Workplace
  25. Thank-You Notes: An Integral Part of Your Career Design
More related feeds
My thoughts on Daft Punk’s Discovery (or, Why You Are Probably Too ...
If you listen to the radio or most pop music these days, it’s pretty obvious that a lot of musicians just don’t know how to write a good song. There’s no sense of structure or development, or there is but it’s awkward or wrong. ...

The Benefits Of Joining A Songwriting Forum
Kathy Unruh is a singer/songwriter and webmaster of ABC Learn Guitar. She has been writing songs and providing guitar lessons to students of all ages for over 20 years. For free guitar lessons, plus tips and resources on songwriting, ...

days ARE different
I wish i can be like Lisa Loeb and write a song about how i feel. i may have the magnificent glasses but i'm still not qualified. i don't have any potential to write a song, play the guitar while singing. I might as well listen to her ...

Richie Havens Keeps 'Freedom' Alive
“Usually when it’s title for the (album) each song is a piece in the umbrella; the title is the handle and I’m being told what’s attached. Any song I write I hold onto. They don’t go away - they attach to the back end of the last album. ...

Music & Writing
Ever get that perfect song lodged in your head, and it's all you can do to just run with it, praise it through interpretation and mimicry? A guy I know, Erich, once wondered aloud how you would go about writing out a guitar riff that ...

May 15 Playlist
1. Someone That You're With by Nickelback. A real stalker song, but the guitar riff also appeals to me. 2. I Write Sins Not Tragedies by Panic At The Disco! The song titles have nothing to do with the song, which in this case, ...

The Triggermen
Life as we know it comes to an end one fine Saturday in early May, not long after Boone Handler has given up trying to write a song. The morning air is warm and clear and Boone can hear kids playing on the far side of his condo ...

GONNA ROCAN'TOLA TONITE "In Ram Country and Live" Disincentive ...
I just happened to have my guitar and I started singing "Rub It In - Rub It In." And my wife said to me, "If nobody has that, you need to write that song." So I just started writing it and I had the verse and the chorus right quick and ...

The idealistic things I believed, the optimist died inside of me.
The melody here is definitely a standout, with haunting guitar hooks that my 9-year-old niece really digs. She wants to bring this song to her guitar lessons as one of the next songs to learn. I’m not quite sure what her teacher will ...

Old Grungesters Still Going Strong
On 12 Angry Months the unique two-man line up of Scott Lucas on vocals and guitar, and drummer Brian St. Clair explore post-breakup relationships and love gone sour. The stories are chronicled in these 12 songs (each song corresponds to ...

 


 

© 2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved