5 simple song starters

These ideas for getting a new song started are just my own little strategies…but maybe they will work for you! And please let me know if you have any other song-starting ideas.

1. Chord progression power

I often take a simple chord progression, either one that I find just noodling around or even one from a song that I like — say, Em/C/G/D — and keep playing it over and over, in different rhythms at varied paces, and see if it sparks something.

2. Pick a phrase — any phrase

I did this great exercise once while camping at the Falcon Ridge Folk Festival with Carolann Solebello, her husband Mark Berube, and a bunch of their pals. They had several people put a phrase into a hat and then you had to pick a phrase from the hat and write a song using that phrase — in just an hour, no less. For example, one phrase was “She swept it all behind the door,” and another that I put in was “Your gentle soul surrounds me.” Believe it or not, several fabulous songs came out of that exercise. Try doing the same, though of course you can give yourself more than an hour!

3. Get your thesaurus out

Sometimes I’ll get song ideas just from noodling through an online thesaurus such as www.thesaurus.com. Just seeing all the synonyms for love, guilt, light, or whatever word you’re thinking about can get your juices flowing.

4. Turn your friends’ lives into tunes

Does your life seem too boring to crib from for your latest song? Turn to your friends…what are they going through? What challenges are they facing in their lives? Any good love/loss story, for example? You don’t have to get so detailed in the song that they feel exposed…it can just spur some good ideas that you can build on.

5. Have a deadline

One of the reasons I’ve enjoyed being part of a bi-monthly songwriting group for the past six years (full disclosure: I’ve been sorely lacking in attendance over the past several months) is that it creates a solid deadline for coming up with a song idea. Even if it’s the night before, I know I’ll have to come up with *something* or else I’ll feel bad. The deadline forces creativity to come, instead of just waiting for it to appear.

  • Anonymous

    Great song-starters. Here's one I'm using this summer while I'm deck-sitting in California: I brought W.S. Merwin's latest poetry with me (Shadow of Sirius). I have found three or four pieces that stir something in me.
    I try to write my version of the same idea or feeling. Then I attack what I wrote to see what I really know or feel about that idea. Then I start over with a new set of images, my personal stuff. Merwin "sets the table," and I start cooking.
    Write on, hugs to all, T Bo

  • nes

    The deadline idea gets a definite thumbs up in my book. Sometimes a complete song idea just "comes", and wouldn't it be nice if it were always that way? Alas, that's not usually the case for me and it can take me forever to finish a song.
    In contrast to that, I completely finished one of my most recent songs in pretty much one day. The reason? A friend had to leave town to join her husband in a city fairly unknown to her, after having cultivated roots in NYC over many years. We (SB) had a gig the week of her departure and I was so touched by what she was going through, that I decided I had to have a song about it and that I needed to sing it at the gig before she left. That forced me to sit down, jot down all my lyric ideas, come up with a melody and stay up super late to finish in time for that gig. It was still rusty, but I was determined that she hear it before taking off for her new life. It's now one of my favorite songs, so I'm all for deadlines….

    :)

  • Sharon Goldman

    Hey Nes, "Nashville" is one my favorite songs of yours too!

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