Category Archives: Write Like A Pro

Songwriting MasterClass: Chris Janson & “Drunk Girl”

Chris Janson has served up a Song Of The Year level single with “Drunk Girl.” Cowritten by Janson and two of Nashville’s finest poet-hitmakers, Tom Douglas and Travis Hill, “Drunk Girl” is a masterclass in country songwriting.

Today, let’s dive into a few of the many reasons why this song is one that so many pro songwriters wish they’d written.

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

_________________________________

The title doesn’t give everything away.

When you hear the title “Drunk Girl,” you probably thought what I did: “Okay, he has a fun fling with a drunk girl. Big whoop-de-doo.” But, boy, was I wrong! The first clue was the melody and production. “A song called ‘Drunk Girl’ is a ballad??? What’s going on here?” You have my attention, Janson.

The twist isn’t saved until too late.

The first verse serves up the hook line “take a drunk girl home” twice, both leading the listener to think what we normally think is going to happen in a country song about a drunk girl at a bar: somebody’s hooking up.

And they could’ve played this out all the way to the bridge by having us ride along with the singer and the drunk girl as she leans on his shoulder, maybe trying to kiss him in the parking lot on the way to his car. We could’ve followed them as he drove through the night to her place as she talked about wanting to make her ex jealous. Then the bridge would’ve made it clear that the singer was just getting her home safely to sleep alone. No hooking up.

That would’ve been a huge mistake.

Most listeners would’ve checked out by then. It would’ve been way too creepy. We’d be getting that sick feeling in the pit of our stomachs. Lesser writers might be tempted to save the twist until late in the song in order to maximize the surprise. But there might not have been anyone left to hear it by that point.

No, these writers knew the danger, and they got to the twist at the top of the chorus. Now we can spend the rest of the song rooting for our hero.

The details make it real.

There are so many great little details in this lyric. In the first line we have “couple cover charge stamps got her hand looking like a rainbow.” So right off the bat we know she’s been bar-hopping. And they don’t stop there describing this girl, “dancing with her eyes closed like she’s the only one in the room,” “her hair’s a perfect mess” and “falling out of that dress” let us know she’s drunk before they ever call her that. We know she’s drunk just by the picture they’ve painted of her.

And just like they painted a vivid picture of the drunk girl, the next verse paints a stark picture of his loneliness. He’s watching happy couples pairing off while he gets “something bad to eat.” Then back at his apartment, his tv has the sound turned off and he can hear the “neighbor’s cigarette cough.”

Not only did the guy do the honorable thing, he’s paying a price for it. It’s not like he went back home to his wife and daughter. No. This guy had to go home to a lonely apartment. He could’ve avoided that loneliness for a night by taking advantage of that girl, but he didn’t. It makes you like this guy even more.

In a genre which has more than its share of beer and tailgate hook up songs, it’s a breath of fresh air to hear a song that speaks to our better angels. And it’s a song that works within the context of country music (bars, drunk girls, etc.), but comes at it from a much different place.

I encourage you to dig deeper into YOUR song ideas. Dig deeper into real-life conversations with your cowriters. Fun songs surely have their place in music- and they always will. But now and then, it sure does the soul good to hear music that reminds us that both the song AND the listener can be more than just a country cliche’.

If you want some more guidance on how to write “market-smart” songs that artists want to record and audiences want to hear, I have a great resource for you.  It’s called, “Cut/able: Lessons In Market-Smart Songwriting,” and it’ll help you give your songs their best chance to get recorded.

Click here to take your songwriting to the next level.

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.  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

Song Title Challenge #25: “Blue Blooded Redneck”

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE C.L.I.M.B. ON iTUNES –  HERE FOR STITCHER (Android) – & HERE FOR THE WEBSITE

Get into a pro songwriter’s mind!

Johnny takes a title submitted by a CLIMBer like you, and he springs it on me live!  Then I have to figure out how to make it a hit… yikes!  Watch me blow up or flame out.

If you want to submit a title, send it to Johnny at info@daredevilproduction.com.

It’s not a cowrite.  You keep 100% ownership of whatever you write, and you’re free to use any ideas I throw out.  I am NOT a cowriter on this.  Any ideas are simply my gift to you!

If you’re a singer, songwriter or indie artist who wants to grow your career, THIS is the podcast for you!

The C.L.I.M.B. Podcast is proud to partner with Disc Makers- who have been supporting indie musicians before indie music was even a thing.

When you’re ready to make CDs, DVDs, vinyl- or distribute your music and videos with customized USBs- www.discmakers.com is the only place you need to go.

And while you’re there, click the “Guides and Resources” tab and download some of their excellent free guides.  They’ve just revised and expanded their Home Studio Handbook, which has got a ton of great advice and information for newbies and studio veterans.

Find them online at www.discmakers.com or give them a call at 800-468-9353.

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.

It’s 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

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

If you have an Android phone, you can subscribe to the show on:

Stitcher

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, a top 10 in Texas, and a #1 in Canada… so far.

Ask hit songwriter Chris Lindsey YOUR questions!

You’re invited to “Know The Row!”

Hello!
  Frettie’s “Know The Row” is a cool opportunity for us to hang out together (online) with a music industry pro.  And this month, we have a great one!  Oh, and it’s 100% FREE.

This event will start off with a brief conversation between me and our guest, as he reveals information YOU need to know about the music biz.  After that, we’ll open it up to YOUR questions (so think ahead).

Read on for more details.

________________________________

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

_________________________________

This month, our guest is hit songwriter CHRIS LINDSEY!  Chris is a Grammy-nominated songwriter and producer, and his cuts include “Amazed” by Lonestar, “Every Time I Hear That Song” by Blake Shelton, as well as cuts by Carrie Underwood, Keith Urban, Tim McGraw, The Civil Wars and more.  He also has a great podcast called, “The Pitch List.”

This is something you do NOT want to miss!

This event will be on Tuesday, October 16, from 7:30pm – 8:30pm CENTRAL TIME.

Oh, and these events are normally only for Frettie subscribers.  But I’ve decided to open this one up to the public, so feel free to show up and send this link to your songwriting buddies! You do NOT have to be a Frettie subscriber to join this great event!

Please note that this Know The Row event WILL be recorded and added to the Frettie Members Area.  These videos are a resource for Frettie subscribers.  In other words, just be aware that what we talk about will not stay just between those of us online that night.

CLICK HERE TO GET ALL THE INFO.

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.

How long should it take to write a song?

“How long should it take to write a song?”  Is there such a thing as writing a song too fast or too slowly?

I recently had this basic question come in from someone in the Songwriting Pro community.  And I figure if one person wonders about it, there are probably a lot of people who wonder about it.  So let’s dive in!

Read on.

________________________________

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

_________________________________

Writing a song takes as long as it takes.

First of all, if anyone tells you anything like, “it should only take 30 minutes to write a song” or “it should never take less than 3 hours to write a song…” ignore them.  They aren’t being correct, and they aren’t being helpful.

Maybe they get their best work done within a certain timeframe.  But that only works for them.  They aren’t you.  You should take as much time (or as little time) to write the song as the song dictates.

“Stand By Your Man” but not by your clock.

The country standard, “Stand By Your Man” was written by Tammy Wynette and Billy Sherrill.  And they wrote it in about 15 minutes.  But so what?  They aren’t you.

“The House That Built Me” was not built in a day.

Tom Douglas and Allen Shamblin went back to “The House That Built Me” for several years before they finally got it right.  And it is a new country classic and won both the ACM and CMA Song Of The Year.  But you know what?  They aren’t you, either.

My point with sharing these polar opposites is to show that great songs don’t have a certain writing deadline.

Some songs come quickly.  Some take hours.  Some take years of “let’s take another look at this one.”  And that’s okay.  You don’t have to judge yourself by anyone else’s opinion of how fast you should finish a song.  You write however it is that you get your best results.  Period.

Two warnings:

Avoid shallow thinking.

Don’t be in such a hurry to finish every song that you don’t really dig into them.  If you just want to write songs, I guess it doesn’t matter if you put in much effort.  But if you want to write GREAT songs, it’s going to take work.

If you hear those stories about someone writing a hit in 20 minutes, you have to remember that the hit wasn’t their first song.  Or probably anywhere in their first 100 songs.  They’d written a bunch of songs by that point, and so they were able to work more efficiently- not having to think about structure, rhyme scheme, etc.  It was “built in” to their writing by that point.

Bottom line: it takes a lot of work to make it look easy.  So put in the work.

Avoid analysis paralysis.

On the other end of the spectrum, maybe you overthink your song and beat it to death in your head so much that you never finish it.  You second-guess every syllable.  Then you third-guess it.  Then fourth-guess it, etc.

At the end of the day, for you, maybe you just need to practice calling songs “done.”  Maybe you’re overthinking your songs because you are scared of actually putting them into the world where they might “fail” (whatever failure means to you).  Maybe you’re avoiding something by refusing to finish a song.

Bottom line: you’ll never reach your songwriting goals if you don’t finish some dang songs!  So finish a few and just let them go.

Either way you write, whether fast or slow, nobody really cares.  They only care if your song knocks their socks off.  That’s all.  Then they’ll be curious how long it took you to write it.

You do you, and you’ll do just fine.

Hey, do you have a question you’d like ask a pro songwriter?  If so, I have a great opportunity coming up for you… and it’s FREE.  On October 16, I’m hosting a “Know The Row” event with multi-hit songwriter, Chris Lindsey.  He penned “Amazed” for Lonestar and “Every Time I Hear That Song” for Blake Shelton, and more.  And you can ask him YOUR questions.  And it’s an online event, so you can join us from anywhere in the world.

CLICK HERE TO GET ALL THE INFO.

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

Song Title Challenge #24: “Thanks For Noticing”

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE C.L.I.M.B. ON iTUNES –  HERE FOR STITCHER (Android) – & HERE FOR THE WEBSITE

Get into a pro songwriter’s mind!

Johnny takes a title submitted by a CLIMBer like you, and he springs it on me live!  Then I have to figure out how to make it a hit… yikes!  Watch me blow up or flame out.

If you want to submit a title, send it to Johnny at info@daredevilproduction.com.

It’s not a cowrite.  You keep 100% ownership of whatever you write, and you’re free to use any ideas I throw out.  I am NOT a cowriter on this.  Any ideas are simply my gift to you!

If you’re a singer, songwriter or indie artist who wants to grow your career, THIS is the podcast for you!

The C.L.I.M.B. Podcast is proud to partner with Disc Makers- who have been supporting indie musicians before indie music was even a thing.

When you’re ready to make CDs, DVDs, vinyl- or distribute your music and videos with customized USBs- www.discmakers.com is the only place you need to go.

And while you’re there, click the “Guides and Resources” tab and download some of their excellent free guides.  They’ve just revised and expanded their Home Studio Handbook, which has got a ton of great advice and information for newbies and studio veterans.

Find them online at www.discmakers.com or give them a call at 800-468-9353.

 

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.

It’s 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

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

If you have an Android phone, you can subscribe to the show on:

Stitcher

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, a top 10 in Texas, and a #1 in Canada… so far.

Should my musician get songwriting credit?

QUESTION: I write lyric and melody, but I don’t play an instrument.  If I get someone to put the guitar or piano to my song, should they get songwriting credit?

This question came up during a recent songwriter workshop, and I thought it would be a good one to address here.  Do you wonder about this, too?  If someone puts the chords to your song, should they get songwriting credit?

Let’s dive in.

________________________________

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

_________________________________

The short answer is “no, probably not.”  The longer answer is a little more nuanced.

A song is melody and lyric.

If you wrote both of those things, you wrote a complete song.  Now, maybe you aren’t an instrumentalist, and you need someone to play the song for your recording.  Maybe you don’t even know the chords, so they have to figure them out.

Figuring out the chords for your song is NOT co-writing the song.

The two of you can work out whatever deal you want, but in my experience in the music business, figuring out chords or playing on the recording does not equal a cowriting situation.  It’s either a favor for a friend or a one-time paid job.  It does not entitle the musician to own part of the song.

What about track-writers?

This is where it may get a little tricky.  In the pop world, some producers will provide a musical track with no melody or lyric.  It’s just drums, guitar, whatever.  And that track person/producer will not add any melody or lyric to the song.  They give their track to what is known as a “top-liner.”  This top-liner writes the melody and lyric.

In this case, the producer and top-liner usually share songwriting credit.  However, if the top-liner wrote the lyric and melody FIRST, and then gave it to a producer to build a track, they probably wouldn’t share songwriting credit.  They’d probably just pay the producer for his or her work.

Bottom line: different genres have different norms, but what ultimately matters is what you and your (potential) cowriter decides is fair.

I hope that helps!  If you’d like to ask a pro songwriter your own questions, I have a great opportunity for you.  On Tuesday, October 16, I’m hosting a live, online Q&A session with hit songwriter, Chris Lindsey.  He’s written for Blake Shelton (“Every Time I Hear That Song”), Lonestar (“Amazed”), Tim McGraw, Keith Urban, Carrie Underwood and more.  He also hosts a great podcast for songwriters called “The Pitch List.”

Why don’t you join us for FREE?  That’s right, this event is my gift to you.  Normally, it’s only free for members of Frettie.com, but not this time.  This time, ANYONE can join us.  And Chris and I hope you will!  CLICK HERE FOR ALL THE DETAILS.

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

How deep do you dive into your song?

I hate to tell you this, but YOU are probably never going to write a hit.  But the good news is… the characters in your songs just might.

I recently spent a weekend at the Martha’s Vineyard Songwriting Festival teaching a songwriting workshop with multi-hit songwriter, Jimmy Yeary.  And, boy, I can’t wait to share some life-changing songwriting advice with you!

Read on.

________________________________

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

_________________________________

I re-learned something this weekend.

One thing I love about teaching songwriting is that it’s a great way for me to continue learning the art, craft and business of songwriting.  Preparing a workshop lesson forces me to thoughtfully consider a topic and put it into a framework that songwriters can actually use- a way of writing that you can apply to your own work.  This helps me to remember these lessons and apply them to my own writing.  Not a bad trade off.

I also learn from the professional songwriters around me.  That’s what happened at the Martha’s Vineyard Songwriting Festival with Jimmy Yeary.  Jimmy has written hits for Lee Brice (“I Drive Your Truck”), Kenny Chesney (“Till It’s Gone”), Jake Owen (“Anywhere With You”), Rascal Flatts, (“Why Wait”)  and more.  So, yeah.  He’s legit.  He’s also a great songwriting teacher.

Jimmy was my co-teacher for the weekend, and he kept hammering some important songwriting truths that I know, that I’ve used, but sometimes don’t teach enough.  And, honestly, I don’t always use them enough in my songs, either.  But it’s on my brain right now, and I’m fired up about it.  So let’s dive into some of those lessons today.

Dive deeply into your song.

It’s not enough to just “throw lyrics at an idea.”  It’s not enough to stand at a distance, consider a song idea, then start trying to rhyme it into a story.  No, that’s not enough.  Not if you want to write incredible, moving songs.

You need to really dive deeply into your song.  Dive into the idea.  Dive into the story.  Is it a story about heartbreak?  Go back into your memory and relive a heartbreaking experience you’ve had.  Is your song about a first kiss?  Then don’t just write about a first kiss.  Take some time to go back to YOUR first kiss in your mind.  See it again.  Feel it again.  Feel the emotions.  Then paint the picture.

It can be tempting to stop at the surface.  It can be scary to be vulnerable in your song, to tell the honest truth to your listeners, to your cowriters, and even to yourself.  But don’t stop at the surface.  Your best writing is waiting way down deep.

Become the character in your song.

If your song is a memory or part memory, really try and go back to that time and place in your mind and heart.  Feel those emotions again.

But what if your song isn’t a true experience?  What if you haven’t lived it?

You have to become the character in the song.  You have to imagine what it would feel like- REALLY feel like- to be that person in that situation.

I did not live the story of my top-5 Alan Jackson hit, “Monday Morning Church.”  But I kind of did live it for a little while.  I imagined being the character in the story.  I imagined what my house would look like if I lost my spouse, and I saw a Bible on the dresser.  I imagined how I would feel, and I pictured myself lying in bed and yelling at God.

Jimmy Yeary, Connie Harrington and Jessi Alexander didn’t live the story in their ACM and CMA Song of the Year “I Drive Your Truck.”  It was someone else’s story.  But they became the guy who lost his brother in Afghanistan and drove his truck as a way of coping with the loss.  They pictured the 89 cents in the ashtray.  They pictured themselves tearing up that field.  They brought themselves to real emotion, even though they hadn’t really lived it.

Being clever is fun, but it isn’t enough.  You have to bring “heart” and not just “head.”

Playing with words isn’t going to get you where you want to go.  You must really feel it.  So I want to challenge you to dive deeply into your next song.  Don’t float on the surface.  Dive down deep.  Feel it.  Become the character.  Then write what you see.  Write what you feel.  Be honest.  That emotion and that truth will make your song much more real and powerful.

Remember, YOU might never write a hit song, but just maybe the characters in your songs will.  So be that character.

What about you?  Do you have the habit of diving deeply into your songs, or do you tend to stay near the surface?  Have you done both, and can you tell a difference between the two?  I’d love to hear from you, so please leave a comment!

God Bless and Enjoy the Journey,

Brent

________________________________

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

_________________________________

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

Song Title Challenge #23: “Sunshine On Wheels”

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE C.L.I.M.B. ON iTUNES –  HERE FOR STITCHER (Android) – & HERE FOR THE WEBSITE

Get into a pro songwriter’s mind!

Johnny takes a title submitted by a CLIMBer like you, and he springs it on me live!  Then I have to figure out how to make it a hit… yikes!  Watch me blow up or flame out.

If you want to submit a title, send it to Johnny at info@daredevilproduction.com.

It’s not a cowrite.  You keep 100% ownership of whatever you write, and you’re free to use any ideas I throw out.  I am NOT a cowriter on this.  Any ideas are simply my gift to you!

If you’re a singer, songwriter or indie artist who wants to grow your career, THIS is the podcast for you!

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

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

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE C.L.I.M.B. ON STITCHER (for Android)

CLICK HERE TO LISTEN ON THE C.L.I.M.B. WEBSITE

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.

It’s 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

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

If you have an Android phone, you can subscribe to the show on:

Stitcher

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, a top 10 in Texas, and a #1 in Canada… so far.

Are your songs road-ready?

If you want your songs to have a better chance at commercial success, you’re smart to care about what people want to hear on the way to work.

Let me tell you a little story about a meeting from early in my Nashville days.

I was sitting down with Ralph Murphy at ASCAP. (If you’re unfamiliar with Ralph, look him up. He’s great.) I played either a slow song or a sad song… but most likely it was a slow AND sad song. Ralph looked at me and asked, “who wants to hear this on Monday morning on their way to work?”

Great point, Ralph.

________________________________

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

_________________________________

Ralph schooled me in “Murphy’s Laws.”

First thing on a Monday morning, most folks are heading off to either a school or a job they don’t particularly like. Their coffee hasn’t kicked in yet, and they sit droopy-eyed behind the wheel, dreading the next 9 to 10 hours.

Now is not a good time to hit them with a funeral march. (They likely already feel like they’re on one of their own.) Radio wants to give them something to put a smile on those dreary faces.

Don’t believe me that radio wants to put a smile on your face? Then riddle me this. Are the most popular morning DJs deep and quietly thoughtful, gloomily sharing the most negative news from the night before? No.

The most popular radio DJs are… FUNNY.  There’s a songwriting lesson in that.

They make the listener smile. They give off a positive vibe. Do you think those DJs are in a hurry to kill the positive energy by playing a bunch of slit-your-wrist negative songs? No way!

Sure, they may play one or two “downer” songs, but it’s going to be a small minority of the songs they play. So that’s morning drive-time radio.

What about the other drive-time? What about the drive home? Now the listener is probably worn out or stressed out after a long day of work they didn’t enjoy.

The listener has their own problems- who wants to hear about the singer’s problems?

Maybe they want songs to help them forget about the day or songs to help them blow off some steam. Odds are, they don’t want songs to send them into a deeper funk on their drive home.

Or maybe the listener had a good day, and they want to celebrate. Well, that’s definitely time for a positive song!

Any way you look at it, radio is mostly looking to play positive songs – songs that make their listeners feel good, feel empowered, and generally open to listening through the next round of commercials.

When in doubt, write positive songs.

Knowing simple truths like this can make a big difference in YOUR songwriting.  Applying “cut/able” techniques 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

A pro songwriter’s job is NOT “to write songs.”

When I signed my first staff songwriting deal, I thought it was so cool to “have a job writing songs.”  But I was wrong.  Writing songs was NOT my job.

Wait.  What?  As a staff songwriter in a publishing deal, isn’t “writing songs” exactly what they pay you for?

No.  They aren’t paying you to write songs.  Want to know what they are really paying you for?  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!

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A pro songwriter’s job is NOT just to write songs.

I was signed to Major Bob Music for 3 years.  During that time, I turned in about 250 songs.  That’s an average of about 83 songs per year.  Yeah, I was writing a LOT.

Of those 250 songs, about 70 are demoed and 60 have a guitar/vocal recording.  So a little over half of my Major Bob songs are in a form suitable for pitching to an artist or label.

And during those years, I had a bunch of holds ranging from Brad Paisley, Carrie Underwood, George Strait, Lee Ann Womack, and more.  So I was getting some holds.

And some artists recorded my songs, too.  These included a great signer named John Pierce on RCA who cut my song, “Ring On The Bar.”  The legendary Randy Travis recorded my song “Every Head Bowed.”  And a new act called Lady Antebellum recorded two of my songs, “A Woman Scorned” and “Last Night Last” for their debut album.

250 songs, 130 demos or guitar/vocals, many holds, and a few cuts.  And I lost my publishing deal.

I lost my publishing deal because I didn’t do my job.

So what the heck was my job if it wasn’t writing songs, making demos, getting holds and getting cuts????

A pro songwriter’s job is writing songs… that make MONEY.

Those 250 songs I wrote?  Most of them never made a dime for Major Bob.  (That’s the case for 99.9% of songs written for publishers, by the way.)  The demos?  The ones that didn’t get cut by a fairly big artist actually cost Major Bob money.  They had to pay the musicians, studio, etc.

So what about my cuts?

The John Pierce record never came out.  The Randy Travis record didn’t come out until about a year after my Major Bob deal was over. And the Lady Antebellum songs were cut the week My deal ended, so it was too little too late.  (They went on to become bonus tracks that have made a little money, but nothing life-changing.)

Bottom line:  my catalog didn’t make enough money to keep my gig at the publishing company.

Now, I’m not sharing this to complain.  I’ve been blessed to have some songs that have done quite well.  And I’ve had several songs that have brought in a little cash here and there.  I went on to have other publishing deals.

I’m sharing this because you need to know the truth about being a professional songwriter.

If you want to be a pro songwriter, simply writing songs is NOT enough.  Heck, even writing really good songs is not enough.  Your songs have to make money if you want to do this for a living or even as a good side gig.

I had a blast writing songs at Major Bob.  I keep in touch with the folks there, and I appreciate the investment they made in me and my career.  If I could go back and change anything, I would’ve focused less on “writing songs” and focused more on “writing songs that make money.”

I would’ve paid a lot more attention to the business parts of writing: writing market-smart, pitching my own songs, building a stronger team of cowriters, building a stronger business network, and making decisions in my songs that made them more commercially relevant.

I learned an invaluable lesson in a painful way.  And I want to help YOU avoid that same pain.

Knowing what a pro songwriter’s real job is- and writing like it- can make a big difference in YOUR songwriting.  Applying “cut/able” techniques 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