Monday, April 14, 2008

Songwriting in Nashville

I thought this was an interesting take on the songwriting biz in Nashville. I spent about 6 months being this kind of writer that he is describing here. I wonder if he is on to something. You can read his whole post here.
Somehow the collective wisdom of Music Row has determined that if we put two or three or even four songwriters together in a room the result will be a song that is two or three or four times better when, in reality, the creative process is diluted, the focus blurred and the result is an innocuous little ditty that has all the right parts and then some unrecognizable 24 year old kid from Oklahoma will record it, a promotion team will run it up the charts, someone, somewhere will hear it on their car radio and think to themselves, “That sounds just like the last song they played,” and then the song will win a BMI Award, the songwriters and publishers will make money and so the publishers will encourage the writers to write more of these ditties, the promotion team will urge the A&R department to get the kid from Oklahoma to record more of these kinds of songs because they can run them up the charts, the guy in the car will start listening to the Top 40 station because, “He just can’t stand this sh*t anymore,” the head of the sales department will tell the label head, “That kid from Oklahoma may be having hits but, he’s not selling records,” the kid will be dropped, staffers at the label will be let go, the songwriters’ option will not be picked up, stand-up comedians will make jokes about country music and, eventually, we will all die. This, in my opinion, is the unnecessary result of co-writing.
(HT: Mark Lee)

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