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#268719 - 08/03/09 08:26 PM
New Original Song done with PSR-S900
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/27/01
Posts: 2227
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www.myspace.com/larrylevin www.reverbnation.com/larrylevin Title: Nothing Really Matters Much Pop ballad 74 bpm 3:45 Piano, bass, percussion, strings done on PSR-S900 Drums done with EZ Drummer Acoustic: Yamaha LL400 acoustic Electric: Yamaha Pacifica USA2 I hope you like it. I took a hiatus from recording the last few months. I've gotten a lot of rejections from publishers. Still waiting to hear from some others. I've entered several of my songs in some songwriting contests, and I will find out about those in September and October. In the meantime, I have been doing Brett Manning's singing success: www.singingsuccess.com. I cannot recommend it more highly. I have been doing the exercises for about 5 weeks, and I have learned to get into my head voice. I still have a lot of progress to make. I think you will notice some improvement with my vocals. I'm also really proud of the electric guitar solo. I just fully converted the drum track from my PSR to EZDrummer and uploaded it again. Thanks for listening Beakybird [This message has been edited by Beakybird (edited 08-04-2009).]
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#268720 - 08/04/09 12:44 PM
Re: New Original Song done with PSR-S900
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14282
Loc: NW Florida
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Another great tune, Larry. Still very seventies, though, which is not a BAD thing, but if you are getting more rejections that you want, you might try maybe listening to a bunch of stuff by the Killers, or Puddle of Mud, or Kings of Leon, etc., and see if you can't write something like those guys. Are the publishers you are sending to specializing in older music for films and TV? Truth is, if not, they are looking for stuff that is basically NOW... But don't let it get you down. Even successful songwriters have maybe 99% of what they write rejected, or not used. But that one hit will feed you for a year or two! There's only one way to win in this business, and that is to be persistent... for years, if necessary. You've got talent and a steady output... the trick may be as simple as writing stuff that THEY like, rather than what YOU like...
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#268723 - 08/05/09 03:03 AM
Re: New Original Song done with PSR-S900
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/27/01
Posts: 2227
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Originally posted by Diki: Another great tune, Larry. Still very seventies, though, which is not a BAD thing, but if you are getting more rejections that you want, you might try maybe listening to a bunch of stuff by the Killers, or Puddle of Mud, or Kings of Leon, etc., and see if you can't write something like those guys. Are the publishers you are sending to specializing in older music for films and TV? Truth is, if not, they are looking for stuff that is basically NOW...
But don't let it get you down. Even successful songwriters have maybe 99% of what they write rejected, or not used. But that one hit will feed you for a year or two! There's only one way to win in this business, and that is to be persistent... for years, if necessary.
You've got talent and a steady output... the trick may be as simple as writing stuff that THEY like, rather than what YOU like... Thanks to all three of you! To tell the truth, I have been getting a little discouraged, and I've pulled back from full throttle (which has probably saved my marriage anyway). Like many songwriters, I suffer from illusions of grandeur. I thought that one of my recent songs, Please Say Yes, sounded so incredible that no publisher in his right mind would reject it. It has been rejected by about 6 publishers so far. In my reverbnation account, I can see that the average listener to "Please Say Yes" listens to 38% of the song. If that's the average listener, what do you think is the percentage for publishers? None of them probably listen up to the point where there are multi harmonies weaving in and out. I will try to sound less '70's. The melody of the chorus of this new song, while super catchy IMO, is vintage sounding to put it mildly, but I thought that the melody and sound of the verse is more modern. I wanted to get a little bit of a Wallflowers feel, at least vocally, slurring my words a bit. Hopefully, the hook's catchiness can overcome it's old fashioned sound. I know that this decade's pop songwriters are much more tangential in their reference to love. What I would like to ask a Yamaha user is, if I wanted to make this particular song sound more like a ballad by the Goo Goo Dolls or by the Fray or Matt Nathanson, what style would I use? Would I chuck the PSR altogether and use software? If so, what software? To Nigel, thanks. Recording done with Yamaha USA2 in middle pickup position. Electric guitar has a capo on the first fret because I wanted to get an open chord sound on the solo. I am using Peavey Revalver sofware with one of the British settings along with a bit of Sonar 7 Studio Edition reverb. My trying to learn the solo to Aerosmith's Dream On when I was younger, helped me in devising and performing the triplets going down during the solo. Thanks again, Beakybird [This message has been edited by Beakybird (edited 08-05-2009).]
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#268724 - 08/05/09 03:28 AM
Re: New Original Song done with PSR-S900
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14282
Loc: NW Florida
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If you are trying for a Wallflowers feel, or any contemporary music (which the Wallflowers are honestly a little past their shelf life, anyway!), you've got to concentrate a LOT more about just the basic chord and melody structure. It's not simply a matter of STYLE...
What I would suggest is to go out, and buy two or three CD's by bands currently successful. Now chart each song, Nashville out the chords, and write the melody... Look for how simple things tend to be. Look for how little complexity in the changes there is. Look for how often sections repeat whole chord structures from other parts of the song. Look at the melody, and see how relatively un-virtuostic it is...
That's the sound of modern pop. It is generally a far cry from the typical chordal complexity in music from the sixties and seventies, and the vocal stylings and range are completely different.
Look at how fast the hook arrives. You seldom get the length of setup for the hook as you used to. Sometimes, there IS no hook, just a change of guitar tone!
You've also got to understand that, except possibly in Nashville, there really isn't the market for selling songs to publishing houses any more. Bands write their own material, on the whole, or work with songwriters they are familiar with. Ever since the Beatles, bands have realized that the majority of the money to be made doesn't come from selling a few records. It comes from owning the songs themselves. Once upon a time, the job of the A&R man was to put Artists and Repertoire together, pick the songs that suited the band or singer. Now their job is to go out and find artists that are usually writing their own stuff, and get them signed with as little input as possible...
Maybe a different avenue than simply submitting songs to publishing houses is to go out and find good local bands that might be receptive to your writing, and see if THEY want to use your songs. In other words, bypass the publishing house. If they get signed, you'll get the deal... But perhaps working with young musicians that NEED material might get you into writing songs in the style of modern bands. I'm afraid it's a kind of uphill battle tying to sell something as dated as this is (no offense, just describing the genre).
But there's a LOT about your writing style that naturally reflects what you are most interested in. Unfortunately, the time to write those songs was back in the seventies, when that WAS the style. Immerse yourself in what is NOW, steep yourself in the chordal vocabulary that is being spoken NOW, the melody styles that are being used, and you vastly increase your chance of success.
Trying to shoehorn a modern arranger style on dated chords and melody won't help at all, IMO. It's got little to do with the production (publishing houses won't give a damn about the production), and everything to do with the song...
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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