All posts by Brent Baxter

Put The EmPHASis On The Right SylLABles!

Man vs Row

Next time you’re out (single guys), I want you to say this to a girl:

“Hey, beau-TI-ful girl, what are you do-ING la-TER? wa-NNA go to the luke bry-AN con-CERT?”

Try saying that out loud, with the emphasis I’ve given.  Totally unnatural, right?  (No, I don’t mean the part about going to a Luke Bryan concert- I meant the syllables.)  I don’t care if you even have backstage passes, the girl is going to say, “No way, dude- you sound like an alien robot.”

If this fails so miserably, why do we sometimes write songs that talk like this?

A big part of successful songwriting is the ability to write lyrics that fit naturally into your melody.  If you want your song to be singable, you want the emphases of your melody and the emphasis of the syllables in your words to match up.  Here’s an example:

The word “moment” naturally has more emphasis on the 1st syllable and less emphasis on the 2nd syllable.  You naturally say it like “MO-ment.”  You don’t say “mo-MENT.”  Likewise, the word, “daughter” also has it’s natural emphasis on the 1st syllable. “DAUGH-ter,” not “daugh-TER.”

Your melody also has certain notes or beats that it emphasizes.  So if you’re writing a line with the word “moment” in it, you want to be certain that the melody doesn’t make you sing it “mo-MENT.”  You want it to sing like you’d actually say it in real life: “MO-ment.”

If you’re writing a line with he word “daughter” in it, you want to be certain that the melody doesn’t make you sing it “daugh-TER.”  You want to sing it like you’d actually say it in real life: “DAUGH-ter.”

If you run into this conflict, I suggest that you either adjust your melody or replace “moment” or “daughter” with a word that sings better.

I’ve used the words “moment” and “daughter” as examples, but this holds true for any word.  You want to get the syllable emphasis right on every word in your song.  If you don’t get it right, here are at least two things that can go wrong:

It’s harder for a singer to remember your song.

When your syllable emphasis and melodic emphasis don’t compliment each other, one part of your singer’s brain will be trying to say the words normally (“MO-ment”) because that’s how he’s said it his whole life.  But the other part of his brain is trying to sing the melody correctly (“mo-MENT”).  It’s unnatural, and so it’s harder to learn.  If he has trouble learning it, he just may not cut it.  He’ll cut something that’s easier to remember.

It’s a speed bump for the listener.

The A&R rep, publisher or audience member is grooving along with your song, everything is fine… then you hit “daugh-TER.”  It sticks out like a sore thumb- in a bad way.  Unless it’s somehow your gimmick and you do it enough where it’s a “thing” and you make it cool… it just sounds like a rookie mistake.

You want your words to sing naturally and conversationally.  You want your lyrics to flow naturally over the tongue so they flow believably into the ears.

So, if you remember nothing else from this post, remember this:

Don’t be an alien robot.  They don’t get the girl… and they almost never get a hit.

Today, I also want to let you know about a course I’ve put together to really boost your songwriting.  It’s called, “Use Imagery To Supercharge Your Songwriting (Like The Pros Do)” and it’s available now!

The course guides you as you learn to:

  1. Effectively use both literal and figurative imagery.
  2. Make your story come to life using imagery.
  3. Prove your character’s personality using imagery.
  4. Make your listener connect to your character’s emotions using imagery.
  5. Hook your listener in the song’s first few lines using imagery.
  6. And begin more songs (more easily) using imagery exercises as the start of your songwriting process.

And since we’re all songwriters, that means you might not have the means to pay for the full course right now.  Not to worry.  I’ve made three packages of the course available.  Each one has great, helpful content.  Just choose the one that works best for you by CLICKING HERE.

And there is an upcoming LIVE imagery workshop on Tuesday, May 17.  Not only does it come with all the course materials, I’ll be there to answer your questions and walk you through some great material not covered in the course!

If you’re ready to “Use Imagery To Supercharge Your Songwriting (Like The Pros Do)” CLICK HERE or on the image below.

imagery_square_copy

God Bless and Enjoy the Journey,

Brent

Man vs Row

The C.L.I.M.B. Episode 8: Do You Deserve Success In The Music Industry?

theclimbFINAL

The C.L.I.M.B. Podcast Episode 8 is live and ready for download!

The C.L.I.M.B. stands for “Creating Leverage In The Music Business,” and that’s the goal of this podcast- to help singers, indie artists and songwriters like YOU to create leverage in the music business.  What is leverage?  It’s “strategic advantage; the power to act effectively.”  We want to help YOU make stuff happen in the music biz.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE C.L.I.M.B. ON ITUNES

If you aren’t on iTunes, you can listen to the show at our website:

TheCLIMBshow.com

Thanks to everyone who has already downloaded our first run of episodes, covering topics like “5 Reasons Why You Need To Know WHY You Write” and “The 5 Things Songwriters Must Know To Go Pro.”

Today’s episode is guided by Johnny, my co-host from Daredevil Production, and the topic is “Do You Deserve Success In The Music Industry?”  It’s cool- check it out.

It’s been exciting to see how folks are digging the show- and being helped on their CLIMB.  If YOU like it, we’d really appreciate it if you’d subscribe and leave a rating or review on iTunes.  Positive ratings and reviews help us to climb the iTunes rankings so more people become aware of the show and we can help more singers, songwriters, and indie artists like you make The CLIMB!The CLIMB iTunes review 3

CLICK HERE TO LEAVE AN iTUNES REVIEW

Climb reviews

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE C.L.I.M.B. ON ITUNES

If you aren’t on iTunes, you can listen to the show at our website:

TheCLIMBshow.com

Thanks for your time. It means a lot to me, and hopefully it’ll be a lot of help for you!

God Bless and keep C.L.I.M.B.ing,

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 and a #1 in Canada… so far.

Man vs Row

Wordplay Thursday #137

Wordplay Thursday

Welcome to Wordplay Thursday!

Here’s a writing prompt for you. It’s a simple fill-in-the-blank. You can use one word or several. Feel free to get as crazy, genre-appropriate, or as imaginative as you want. The point is to get the creative juices flowing. And it’s a good thing to dig deeper, so don’t stop at the first idea that hits you. Try coming up with at least five things.

And this week, let’s try to get at least ONE IMAGE in at least one of our plays.

“Anger is _____.”

I’ll give you an example to get you started:

“Anger is lightning looking for a place to strike.

Wordplay Thursday

I’d love to hear what you come up with, so please share in the comments. Oh, and please keep your posts below an R-rating. It’s a family show, after all!

And thanks to Linda Keser, Mark Westendorf, Ken Matthiesen, Ty Devine, Tommy Kib, Sam Moore, MW McDonough,  Brandon Tijolo Russ, Joe Slyzelia, Nick S, Barney Coulter, Kris Rogge Fisher, Michael Klenda and everyone else for your great additions to Wordplay Thursday #136 (read it here)! Great job!

Since strong imagery is such an important part of professional-level songwriting, I’ve put together a course on imagery. It’s called, “Use Imagery To Supercharge Your Songwriting (Like The Pros Do)” and it’s available now!

The course guides you as you learn to:

  1. Effectively use both literal and figurative imagery.
  2. Make your story come to life using imagery.
  3. Prove your character’s personality using imagery.
  4. Make your listener connect to your character’s emotions using imagery.
  5. Hook your listener in the song’s first few lines using imagery.
  6. And begin more songs (more easily) using imagery exercises as the start of your songwriting process.

And since we’re all songwriters, that means you might not have the means to pay for the full course right now.  Not to worry.  I’ve made three packages of the course available.  Each one has great, helpful content.  Just choose the one that works best for you by CLICKING HERE.

And there is an upcoming LIVE imagery workshop on Tuesday, May 17.  Not only does it come with all the course materials, I’ll be there to answer your questions and walk you through some great material not covered in the course!

If you’re ready to “Use Imagery To Supercharge Your Songwriting (Like The Pros Do)” CLICK HERE or on the image below.

imagery_square_copy

God Bless and Enjoy the Journey,

Brent

Man vs Row

Does having a day job make you a failure as a songwriter?

Man vs Row

You’re a songwriter.  You’re passionate about writing songs.  Maybe you’re pretty good.  Maybe you’re even excellent.  And maybe you feel called to do music- called by God or by “the universe.”  But you have a day job.  You haven’t been able to transition to doing music full-time.

Are you a failure?

We’ll get back to that in a second.  First, let me tell you about a guy named Paul.

Maybe you’ve heard of the Apostle Paul.  Paul was passionate.  He was also very, very successful- widely considered the greatest Christian missionary in history.  He was literally called by God to spread the gospel of Jesus Christ.  If there’s one guy who should’ve been able (and deserved) to follow his passion full-time, it’s Paul.

But Paul was also a tent-maker.

He made tents to help make ends meet.  At times, he’d work his day job during the week and chase his dream around it.  Sound familiar?

Tentmaker

Was Paul a failure because he didn’t pursue his passion full-time?

Of course not!  He was relentless in following his calling.  He went about it with passion and intelligence.  He never quit.  Even as he lived out his last days in a prison, he was writing letters to churches- letters which would become much of the New Testament.  And you can bet his jailers were getting an earful of the gospel!

paul prison

He was faithful to his calling, and that made him successful.  The results, he understood, weren’t in his control.  God didn’t “deliver” Paul from his day job (I sometimes wonder if that was the “thorn in the flesh” Paul talked about.  But that’s probably just my personal issues showing.).

God used Paul’s day job to fund some of his missions work.  There was a reason it was best for Paul to step back at times and make tents. (Read my blog post: “Day Job: A Songwriter’s Prison or Patron?“) What was God doing in his heart and mind during those hours that made him even more effective when he was preaching?

So if Paul, the greatest missionary in history, was not a failure in spite of his day job, you probably shouldn’t see yourself as a failed songwriter based on your day job status.  Maybe being a full-time songwriter isn’t the plan for you.  Or maybe this season is to prepare you for full-time writing later.  It’s sure not for me to say.

The question isn’t, “Am I able to write full-time?”  The question should be, “Am I being faithful to my calling?”

I’d love to hear your thoughts on this.  Please leave a comment!

1-to-1 Coaching

Want some personalized help and guidance for your songwriting journey?  I’ve just opened up some spots for 1-to-1 coaching.  I’m happy to be your “personal pro”- to give feedback on your songs, answer any questions I can, help you develop your song ideas, and discuss goals and “next steps.”  I also have some coach-writing spots open.  This is when you and I actually write a song together!  If you’re interested, CLICK HERE.

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 and a #1 in Canada… so far.

Man vs Row

A few notes… (from a songwriter)

Man vs Row

I’ve been hearing some buzz around Music Row, so I thought I’d share.  Here are also some general lessons I’ve learned from my time as a pro songwriter.

Songwriters are now getting publishing deals based on desire alone!

That’s right.  It doesn’t matter how hard you work or how good your songs are.  All that matters is how much you use the word “hustle” on social media.

Radio wants ballads, ballads, ballads!

They’ve decided that it’s not important to keep listeners around between the car dealership commercials.  They’ve decided to play the longest, slowest, most confusing ballads they can find for the 12 people that want to hear them.

It’s easy to get a hit!

It’s not ultra competitive.  There’s aren’t thousands of songs competing for each spot on a record, much less the few spots on radio.  You aren’t up against people who have spent years honing their craft- or whose house payment depends on it.  You can probably just wing it and be just fine.

You can’t do it!

Yep.  The music business is full.  No more room.  Everyone who will EVER be successful is already “in ‘da club.”  Nobody else will EVER go from unknown, unpublished songwriter to hit songwriter.  Never again.  Not ever.  So give up.

What about you?  What news do YOU have to share?  I’d love to read your comments!

God Bless and Enjoy the Journey,

Brent

Brent Baxter is a hit songwriter with cuts by polka luminaries such as Harry Larry and the Flying Hungarians, Seymour Butts and Under The Bleachers, and more. He’s written a top 40 hit in the Netherlands and a #1 in Zimbabwe… so far.

April Fools

Man vs Row

Wordplay Thursday #136

Wordplay Thursday

Welcome to Wordplay Thursday!

Here’s a writing prompt for you. It’s a simple fill-in-the-blank. You can use one word or several. Feel free to get as crazy, genre-appropriate, or as imaginative as you want. The point is to get the creative juices flowing. And it’s a good thing to dig deeper, so don’t stop at the first idea that hits you. Try coming up with at least five things.

And this week, let’s try to get at least one image in at least one of our plays.

“Springtime is _____.”

I’ll give you an example to get you started:

“Springtime is a dandelion, popping up as if to say, ‘I’ll go first’.

Wordplay Thursday

I’d love to hear what you come up with, so please share in the comments. Oh, and please keep your posts below an R-rating. It’s a family show, after all!

And thanks to Brandon Tijolo Russ, Dionne Kumpe, Ty Devine, Mitch Matthews, Nick S, Linda Keser, Debbie Convoy, John C Luna, Barney Coulter, Kim Kondrashoff and everyone else for your great additions to Wordplay Thursday #135 (read it here)! Great job!

I’ve received several requests for 1-to-1 coaching.  I don’t do them very often, but I’ve opened up several spots.  I want to help you on your songwriting journey by giving feedback on your songs, guiding you as you develop your song idea, answering your questions, and even writing a song with you.

You can check my available coaching and coach-writing dates and book yourself by clicking here.

God Bless and Enjoy the Journey,

Brent

Man vs Row

The C.L.I.M.B. Episode 7: 10 Ways To Get To A Music Publisher (part 2)

theclimbFINAL

The C.L.I.M.B. Podcast Episode 7 is live and ready for download for subscribers!

If you already subscribe to the podcast (good move!), it’s ready to download into your podcast player.  If you aren’t subscribed (why not?), it’ll show up in a day or two.  Being a subscriber has its advantages!

The C.L.I.M.B. stands for “Creating Leverage In The Music Business,” and that’s the goal of this podcast- to help singers, indie artists and songwriters like YOU to create leverage in the music business.  What is leverage?  It’s “strategic advantage; the power to act effectively.”  We want to help YOU make stuff happen in the music biz.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE C.L.I.M.B. ON ITUNES

If you aren’t on iTunes, you can listen to the show at our website:

TheCLIMBshow.com

Thanks to everyone who has already downloaded our first run of episodes, covering topics like “5 Reasons Why You Need To Know WHY You Write” and “The 5 Things Songwriters Must Know To Go Pro.”

Today’s episode is guided by myself, and the topic is “10 Ways To Get To A Music Publisher (part 2).” Wondering how to get on a music publisher’s radar?  Johnny and I discuss ways you can make this happen.  And it’s part 2- part 1 is already up and ready to go, too!

It’s been exciting to see how folks are digging the show- and being helped on their CLIMB.  If YOU like it, we’d really appreciate it if you’d subscribe and leave a rating or review on iTunes.  Positive ratings and reviews help us to climb the iTunes rankings so more people become aware of the show and we can help more singers, songwriters, and indie artists like you make The CLIMB!The CLIMB iTunes review 3

CLICK HERE TO LEAVE AN iTUNES REVIEW

Climb reviews

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE C.L.I.M.B. ON ITUNES

If you aren’t on iTunes, you can listen to the show at our website:

TheCLIMBshow.com

Thanks for your time. It means a lot to me, and hopefully it’ll be a lot of help for you!

God Bless and keep C.L.I.M.B.ing,

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 and a #1 in Canada… so far.

Man vs Row

How To Make A Bad 1st Impression On A Pro Songwriter

Man vs Row

Here’s the good news. A lot of you probably don’t need to read this. You’re already making a horrible first impression on pro songwriters- and you don’t even know it.

My last few posts have been “6 People Who Can Introduce You To Pro Songwriters” <READ HERE> and “How YOU Can Connect With A Pro Songwriter” <READ HERE.>  So, today, I’d like for us to discuss how to totally blow it when you finally DO connect with a pro songwriter.  Along the way, we might even pick up a couple tips that’ll help you make a good first impression

1. Be an ask-hole

Immediately focus on your needs and what the pro can do for YOU.  Right off the bat, ask him to walk outside with you and listen to your song in your car out in the parking lot.  The thought of getting mugged or stabbed and stuffed in your trunk will be too much for him to resist.  Ask him to take your CD and keep up with it for the rest of the night.  Ask her for a cowrite.  (I know, I know.  You’re really doing the pro a favor by offering to write with her, but she might not see it that way.)  Ask for an introduction to their publisher or other pros.  Or to artists.  They’ll looove that.

2. Grumble, grumble, complain, complain.

If you’re not sucking in favors like a black hole, be sure and spew negativity.  Complain about the biz.  Complain about what’s on the radio.  Complain about the “good ‘ol boy” system.  Complain about how hit songwriters have sold out.  Yeah.  That’ll really make the pro want to spend quality time with you.

3. You’re awesome, and the world should know it.

If confidence is good, overconfidence is even better, right?  Be sure and tell the pro that you’re really, really good.  Better than the trash on the radio.  Sure, you don’t have any major cuts yet, but you ‘da man.  Tell the pro you’ve written a ton of hits.  Well, soon-to-be-hits, anyway.  Fake it till you make it, bro.  The pro, who has been knocked down by the biz time after time, will surely recognize you as an honest-to-goodness brother-in-arms.

Know The Row pic 2

4. Drink up and fall down!

Nothing makes a positive memory in the mind of a pro like hanging with someone on a night they won’t remember.  It does you SO MUCH good to hang with a pro… while drinking so much you can’t recall what you talked about.  What’s even better is if your behavior leads to you actually wanting to avoid them out of embarrassment.  Yeah.  Good times.

5. Be a total fanboy (or girl).

Yes, it’s cool to compliment the pro about a song or their success, but remember- we’re here to ruin your first impression.  So it’s important that you overdo it.  Freak out about meeting them.  Make sure the pro doesn’t mistake you for a songwriting peer (or potential peer).  Make it absolutely clear that you’re just a fan.

6. Never leave their side.  Like… ever.

Once a pro makes the mistake of locking eyes with you or shaking your hand, it’s your job to bury yourself into them like a tick in a dog’s ear.  The shadow God gave them is not enough.  They need you to be their other one.  Maybe follow them to the bathroom.  I’m sure the pro left the house this morning for the express purpose of talking to you- and only you- all night.

If you follow these steps, I can pretty much guarantee that you’ll never see that pro again.  Not if they see you first, anyway.  Good luck.

1-to-1 Coaching

Want some personalized help and guidance for your songwriting journey?  I’ve just opened up some spots for 1-to-1 coaching.  I’m happy to be your “personal pro”- to give feedback on your songs, answer any questions I can, help you develop your song ideas, and discuss goals and “next steps.”  I also have some coach-writing spots open.  This is when you and I actually write a song together!  If you’re interested, CLICK HERE.

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 and a #1 in Canada… so far.

Man vs Row

Wordplay Thursday #135

Wordplay Thursday

Welcome to Wordplay Thursday!

Here’s a writing prompt for you. It’s a simple fill-in-the-blank. You can use one word or several. Feel free to get as crazy, genre-appropriate, or as imaginative as you want. The point is to get the creative juices flowing. And it’s a good thing to dig deeper, so don’t stop at the first idea that hits you. Try coming up with at least five things.

And this week, let’s try to get at least one image in at least one of our plays.

“A first crush is _____.”

I’ll give you an example to get you started:

“A first crush is spending all of English class covering the margins of your notebook paper with his name… and flowers.

Wordplay Thursday

I’d love to hear what you come up with, so please share in the comments. Oh, and please keep your posts below an R-rating. It’s a family show, after all!

And thanks to Brandon Tijolo Russ, Mitch Matthews, Wally, Debbie Convoy, Nick S, Kim Kondrashoff,  Barney Coulter, Dionne Kumpe, MW McDonough,  Joe Slyzelia, and everyone else for your great additions to Wordplay Thursday #134 (read it here)! Great job!

 

I’ve received several requests for 1-to-1 coaching.  I don’t do them very often, but I’ve opened up several spots.  I want to help you on your songwriting journey by giving feedback on songs, guiding you as you develop your song idea, answering your questions, and even write the song with you.

You can check my available coaching and coach-writing dates and book yourself by clicking here.

God Bless and Enjoy the Journey,

Brent

Man vs Row

The C.L.I.M.B. Episode 6: How Is An Experiment Different From A Mistake?

theclimbFINAL

The C.L.I.M.B. Podcast Episode 6 is live and ready for download!

The C.L.I.M.B. stands for “Creating Leverage In The Music Business,” and that’s the goal of this podcast- to help singers, indie artists and songwriters like YOU to create leverage in the music business.  What is leverage?  It’s “strategic advantage; the power to act effectively.”  We want to help YOU make stuff happen in the music biz.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE C.L.I.M.B. ON ITUNES

If you aren’t on iTunes, you can listen to the show at our website:

TheCLIMBshow.com

Thanks to everyone who has already downloaded our first run of episodes, covering topics like “5 Reasons Why You Need To Know WHY You Write” and “The 5 Things Songwriters Must Know To Go Pro.”

Today’s episode is guided by Johnny, my co-host from Daredevil Production, and he tackles the topic, “How Is An Experiment Different From A Mistake?”

It’s been exciting to see how folks are digging the show- and being helped on their CLIMB.  If YOU like it, we’d really appreciate it if you’d subscribe and leave a rating or review on iTunes.  Positive ratings and reviews help us to climb the iTunes rankings so more people become aware of the show and we can help more singers, songwriters, and indie artists like you make The CLIMB!The CLIMB iTunes review 3

CLICK HERE TO LEAVE AN iTUNES REVIEW

Climb reviews

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE C.L.I.M.B. ON ITUNES

If you aren’t on iTunes, you can listen to the show at our website:

TheCLIMBshow.com

Thanks for your time. It means a lot to me, and hopefully it’ll be a lot of help for you!

God Bless and keep C.L.I.M.B.ing,

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 and a #1 in Canada… so far.

Man vs Row