Tag Archives: Trevor Rosen

Cut/able Songwriting: Old Dominion & “Hotel Key”

Old Dominion has the key to a hit song with their new single, “Hotel Key.”

Matt Ramsey, Trevor Rosen and Josh Osborne are multi-hit songwriters, and it shows on “Hotel Key.”  They use several techniques that help the song stand out- and stand a chance of getting cut.  In short, they made this song “Cut/able.”  Here are a few of those techniques.

WIN BEFORE YOU SPIN.

This song starts winning before the it’s even spinning. “Hotel Key” is a fresh title that hasn’t been done to death. It’s an image, so it puts a picture in the listener’s head immediately.  And, for me at least, it opens a loop. It’s a title that almost asks the question, “what happened in the hotel room?” And that makes me curious. Already, I’m getting invested in the song before I even hear it.

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SAVE THE WORDS, SAVE THE HOOK.

Notice how the songwriters never say the words “hotel” or “key” until the hook. But they still let us know it’s in a hotel right from the first verse. Terms like “do not disturb” and “checkout was supposed to be at noon” let the listener know that this takes place in a hotel.

Two things are important here. 1) They let us know it takes place in a hotel so we aren’t confused when the chorus starts with “she kept the hotel key.” 2) They didn’t steal the thunder from the hook by using “hotel” or “key” until the hook. This kept those words fresh so they had more impact at the top of the chorus.

PAINT THE PICTURE.

They use some great imagery in this song. They give us so much to “see,” from her slipping the hotel key into her purse, to her sitting “indian style” on the bed – not JUST sitting on the bed – sitting INDIAN STYLE on the bed. So much more clear and unique.

We also see him pulling up a song on his phone and them dancing by the TV- which was never turned on, by the way. This image of the TV always-off reminds us of how small hotel rooms are and how there’s not many places to dance. It also reinforces how they were too wrapped up in each other to chill and watch TV.

DOUBLE THE MEANING, DOUBLE THE IMPACT.

The chorus has a great line right before the hook: “we both know we can’t open the door no more.” Not only does it lead right into the thought of the hotel key, it lets us know that this was a one-time fling. But this isn’t a line just thrown in as a cool line. No, that thought is supported by lines in each of the verses such as “neither of us looking for three little words” (they aren’t looking for love) and “this isn’t one of those stories that ends up that way” (they aren’t running away together).

This line also has a literal meaning- hotel keys stop working after you check out. They physically can’t open that door anymore. But it also means they know it was a one-time fling. The singer and the girl can’t “open the door” to that relationship/romance again. They doubled the meaning and doubled the impact of that line.

2ND VERSE, NOT THE SAME AS THE 1ST.

While the first verse was setting up the intoxicated, buzzy, fuzzy state they were in when they hit the hotel, verse two moves the story and the imagery forward. It gives us a view into the room with her half drunk smile, talking about Austin, etc.

The first verse was mostly outside the hotel room. The second verse was all inside the hotel room. They didn’t just give the listener more of the first verse- they moved the story to a different place and let us know the characters a little more.

BRIDGE TO THE LAST CHORUS.

They did something different in the bridge which really helped shine a spotlight on that last chorus. They focus on what all they left or she left. They left the lights and the crowd and the world. She left a picture in his head and a night he can’t forget.  BUT… she TOOK the hotel key.

Nowhere else in the song do they contrast “left” and “took.”  So it’s a new thing in the bridge, giving it more of a reason to be there. This bridge shines a little different light on that hook line, and it lets the listener hit the chorus in a little different way than before. This gives us something new while we head into the now-familiar chorus.

GROOVE GROOVE GROOVE.

Last, but certainly not least, the song just plain grooves. It feels great. Even though the song is maybe a little bittersweet, the singer is too busy remembering it with a grin on his face to feel sad. They had a great time, and the song FEELS like a great time.

Knowing pro techniques like this can make a big difference in YOUR songwriting.  Applying them will help you write market-smart songs: songs that have a competitive advantage in the market.

If you want to dive into songwriting craft; if you want learn how to write songs that will get you noticed in the music business, I have a great opportunity for you.

Every Monday night in October, I’m hosting The C4 Experience.  It’s an exclusive, live online event where I help 10 writers like YOU create explosive growth in your commercial songwriting.  I want you to win, and I’m going to help you write songs that artists want to sing, radio wants to play and fans want to hear.

CLICK HERE TO GET ALL THE DETAILS AND RESERVE YOUR SPOT IN THIS EXCLUSIVE EVENT!

God Bless and Enjoy the Journey,

Brent

Brent Baxter is a hit songwriter with cuts by Alan Jackson, Randy Travis, Lady Antebellum, Joe Nichols, Gord Bamford, Ruthie Collins, Ray Stevens and more. He’s written a top 5 hit in the US, a #1 in Canada, and a top 10 in Texas.  His songs appear on 5 industry-certified gold & platinum albums & singles… so far.  He also hosts a top-rated songwriting and music business podcast called, “The C.L.I.M.B.” which can be found on iTunes or your favorite podcast app.SWP 4

Here’s A Great Way To Make Your Song Lyrics More Believable

If the listener doesn’t believe your lyrics, they’re never going to fall in love with your song.  There will always be an emotional disconnect.

So how do you make your song more believable- and more powerful (and profitable) as a result?  Read on.

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To BE a pro, you need to THINK like a pro, and this FREE ebook will help transform your thinking, your songwriting, and your success.  Get it today!

Click Here For The Book

_________________________________

Here’s the deal.  Believability matters.  It’s huge.  If the listener has the feeling the whole time that your song is just “something somebody made up,” they will have a harder time connecting with your song emotionally.

And if your song doesn’t connect emotionally to the listener, the listener won’t connect financially with you.

The trick is to put small, not-obvious details into your lyrics.  Only, it’s not a trick.  It’s craft.

There is power in finding images that go deeper than the obvious or cliche images.

I had a publisher tell me once, “write about the truck from the INSIDE THE CAB, not from the OUTSIDE.”

Too many writers (and I was obviously guilty of this) write about “the truck”- the situation in the song- from the outside. They describe it using imagery and details that could be used by anyone who isn’t actually IN that situation. Those are the obvious details.  And, usually, the obvious details are the cliche’ details.

Our job is to dig deeper.

 

Dig Deeper

We need to use our memory, our imagination, research, and whatever we have at our disposal (including our cowriters), to write from the inside of the truck.  Here are a few current examples from hit country songs.

“Written In The Stars” by Old Dominion

(written by Brad Tursi / Matt Ramsey / Shane McAnally / Trevor Rosen)

The song is about a guy wondering and asking a girl where their relationship stands.  Is it a temporary fling, or the love of a lifetime?  This girl seems to be playing games with his emotions, and he needs an answer.  There’s a great line in the first verse:

“I see those bubbles pop up like you’re texting then they disappear.”

What a great, small believable image!  It’s great because it’s fresh (I don’t think I’ve ever seen it in a song before), but it’s also believable (I’ve definitely seen it in real life).  And it speaks right to the situation- how she’s seemingly playing games with him.  Killer line.

“Are we names in a tattoo, or just a number on a hand?”

Another great line.  The “number on a hand” image is great because it’s also small, believable, and speaks to the issue.  It’s a great way of showing – SHOWING – that the relationship is temporary.  It washes right off.  And this is even stronger when set against a name in a tattoo, which (while also written on the skin) is permanent and shows a serious relationship.

“Round Here Buzz” by Eric Church

(written by Eric Church / Jeff Hyde / Luke Dick)

This song is about a guy who’s staying put in this small town, drinking and thinking about the girl that left for the big city.  The first verse kicks off like this:

“Another Friday night – There’s a line of cars leaving – Home team’s got an out of towner.”

This does a great jog of letting the listener know it’s a small town.  It’s Friday night football, and the town only has one team.  And the hometown fans leaving for it makes a noticeable change in traffic.  It also starts to set up the theme by having other people leave town while he’s staying right where he is, drinking.

Isn’t that so much more believable and interesting than just saying, “I’m here in this small town?”  Here’s another great detail:

“No, Scotty’s ain’t got no vibe
Got no gas in his neon light”

What a great way of saying this small town bar is run down.  “No vibe” is a more current way of saying it.  (But in this small town, there probably aren’t many options.)  And instead of just saying Scotty’s is run down, they point out how there’s no gas in his neon light.

What a great way of putting a twist on the same old country song bar scene.  It’s so specific yet believable that I… believe it.  Go figure.

Use inside details, but be sure and use details that make sense to the listener. Be inside but not too inside. In our truck analogy, write from inside the cab, which people can understand. Don’t write from so far inside the truck that you’re in the carburetor and only a mechanic knows what you’re talking about.

The examples above are inside, but accessible.  We’ve probably all seen those text bubbles.  We’ve either had a name and number written on our hand, or we seen it done.  If you’re from a small town (the bread and butter of the country market), you know how football rules.  And even if we don’t know neon lights need gas, we at least see a neon light that isn’t lit up and know he’s in a bar.

Less obvious, yet still understandable, details strengthen your lyrics.

Also, keep the images relevant. They should add to our understanding of the characters or story, not just be filler. In the examples above, all those images speak right to the theme of the song.  They aren’t extra little images thrown in simply because they’re cool.  They serve a bigger purpose than just putting a picture in our minds.

Great details often serve more than one purpose.

They put a cool, memorable, fresh or compelling image in our minds.  They also set up or reinforce the theme of the song.

So next time you write, take your time. Close your eyes and imagine the situation. Then climb into the truck.

What are some other songs that do a good job of writing from inside the “truck?” Do you find that this comes naturally to you, or is it a struggle?

Knowing – and APPLYING –  simple concepts like this is how you write stronger songs.  It’s how you write market-smart songs: songs that have a competitive advantage in the market.

If you want to  learn more about how to write songs that will get you noticed in the music business, I have a great opportunity for you.

Every Monday night in April, I’m hosting The C4 Experience.  It’s an exclusive, live online event where I help 10 writers like YOU create explosive growth in your commercial songwriting.  I want you to win, and I’m going to help you write songs that artists want to sing, radio wants to play and fans want to hear.

CLICK HERE TO GET ALL THE DETAILS AND RESERVE YOUR SPOT IN THIS EXCLUSIVE EVENT!

God Bless and Enjoy the Journey,

Brent

Brent Baxter is a hit songwriter with cuts by Alan Jackson, Randy Travis, Lady Antebellum, Joe Nichols, Gord Bamford, Ruthie Collins, Ray Stevens and more. He’s written a top 5 hit in the US, a #1 in Canada, and a top 10 in Texas.  His songs appear on 5 industry-certified gold & platinum albums & singles… so far.  He also hosts a top-rated songwriting and music business podcast called, “The C.L.I.M.B.” which can be found on iTunes or your favorite podcast app.SWP 4