Tag Archives: Songwriting

Don’t Handcuff Yourself: Keith Urban & “Cop Car”

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Brent is a hit songwriter with cuts by Alan Jackson, Randy Travis, Lady Antebellum, Joe Nichols, Gord Bamford, Ray Stevens, and more.  He’s written a top 5 hit in the US and a #1 in Canada… so far.

I’ve been a big fan of “Cop Car” ever since I heard Sam Hunt’s version on his album, “Between The Pines.” The songwriters are Hunt, Zach Crowell, and Matt Jenkins. Melodically, I think it’s great- it’s hooky, fresh, and modern. Sounds like a hit. Plus, it’s a title that makes you curious- what is it about a cop car? Today, let’s look at what they did with the lyric – and how the songwriters didn’t handcuff their chances of getting a big hit.

First of all, the title, “Cop Car,” could’ve gone the hellraisin’ “I’m running from a cop car” route. That might be the first thing that pops into your mind: party in a field, cops show up, and now we’re running. But they broadened the appeal by making it about LOVE. “I fell in love in the back of a cop car.”

Secondly, they also made it YOUNG- “your daddy’s gonna kill me.” That just aims at a bigger bullseye- the market wants young, and that what the writers provided.

Thirdly (and this is the biggie), the made it INNOCENT. The writers could’ve written about how the singer got in a drunken brawl and somehow got cuffed and stuffed with some drunken hooker. Ooookay, interesting, yes. But who’s going to cut that? Or maybe the characters were underage drinking at a party or in a parking lot.  Or maybe they just raised “too much hell” and got arrested. Better, but maybe still too limiting.

Instead, all the characters did was trespass to hang out and watch the planes take off. There’s no mention of alcohol. They’re just a couple of kids- certainly not hoodlums. This really softens the line, “I fell in love in the back of a cop car.” Many, many male artists in Nashville could’ve sung this lyric.

They actually made getting cuffed in the back of a cruiser ROMANTIC. That’s a great job of taking a title or hook line and writing it in a very commercial way. Very well done!

God Bless,

Brent

YOU VS…

Anything you’d like to add or ask?  Leave a comment!  Are there any topics  you’d like to see addressed in a future MvR post?  Thanks!

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Brent’s Twitter: @Razorbaxter

Brent Baxter Music:  http://www.brentbaxtermusic.com

Things I Say “Yes” To

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Brent is a hit songwriter with cuts by Alan Jackson, Randy Travis, Lady Antebellum, Joe Nichols, Gord Bamford, Ray Stevens, and more.  He’s written a top 5 hit in the US and a #1 in Canada… so far.

As I mentioned in my post, “Slash Songwriters” (read it HERE), for the past several months, I’ve been a songwriter/salesman.  Obviously, this has limited how much time I have available for writing.  And as much as I don’t like it, it has forced me to make tough choices- choices about where I spend my time and energy, who I write with, and what I write.

So, since, I can’t say “yes” to everything, what DO I say “yes” to?  Now, my situation is likely different from yours, but I hope this glimpse into my thought process is useful for you.  So here are the opportunities that get me to say “yes”- in order of priority.

1. Cowriting with an artist on a record label.

This is my top priority because it’s the shortest route to a cut.  And right now I’m focusing on just a couple artists who I believe in, write well with, and get along well with- and who are hopefully going to cut an album within the next six months.  I also spend some time outside the cowriting room generating and polishing ideas to bring in to these cowrites.  This is where I spend most of my writing time.

2. Writing lyrics for a specific project.

A buddy might call and say, “I’m connected to ‘x’ project, and I need a so-and-so type of song.”  If I think there’s a possibility of a good return on the investment, I’ll generate some ideas/lyrics in the early mornings or late nights.  We can then hash things out over phone/email and minimize the time in the room together – which comes out of family time.

3. Writing lyrics to melodies / tracks.

Right now, I have some time to listen and write while I’m driving around in the truck for work.  So this is a good way to work solo.  But it takes a while, so I still have to choose carefully.  I have to really dig the melody.  And it really helps if the writer is connected and can work the finished product effectively from his or her end.

4. Writing lyrics to shop around.

If I have a strong idea that doesn’t fit into one of the categories above, I can work up some lyrics and “shop” it around to some buddies.  The ideas that I’ll work with this way are either things I really need to get off my chest, or what I think are incredible ideas.  I’ve found that trying to shop around MY versions of what’s on the radio right now (pickups and dirt roads) haven’t gotten traction with my cowriters- they just haven’t been motivated enough to work on those ideas when I’m not sitting in the cowrite with them.  So I’ve recently decided to ONLY work on lyrics that I think are different, meaningful, and something that clearly falls into what I do best.  If I send my cowriters versions of what’s already being written all over town- it just doesn’t get the results I want.

Like I said, I don’t expect your situation to be just like mine.  But, like me, you don’t have unlimited time for your songwriting.  Prioritize, then say “yes” to what is mostly likely to get the results you want.

God Bless,

Brent

YOU VS…

What do YOU say “yes” to?  Anything you’d like to add or ask?  Leave a comment!  Are there any topics  you’d like to see addressed in a future MvR post?  Thanks!

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If you like this blog, don’t miss a single post!  Subscribe by putting your email in the “Follow Man vs. Row via E-mail” section on this page.  It’s either in the upper righthand corner or down below.   Also, please share this blog with anyone you think would benefit from it.  I appreciate it when you share it on Twitter, Facebook, and anywhere else.  Thanks!

Brent’s Twitter: @Razorbaxter

Brent Baxter Music:  http://www.brentbaxtermusic.com

This Ain’t The 90’s: Miranda Lambert and “The House That Built Me”

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Brent is a hit songwriter with cuts by Alan Jackson, Randy Travis, Lady Antebellum, Joe Nichols, Gord Bamford, Ray Stevens, and more.  He’s written a top 5 hit in the US and a #1 in Canada… so far.

First of all, “The House That Built Me” is one of the strongest hooks I’ve heard in forever.  Strong.  But, of course, a great title is only part of a commercial hit.  A big piece of the puzzle is writing that hook in a way that fits the commercial marketplace, and this is where I want to focus today.

In the 1990’s, the winning way to write “The House That Built Me” would’ve been to make it a 3-act play:

1st verse: I was a kid, put my handprints in the wet cement, etc.

Chorus: That’s the house that built me.

2nd verse: I was stuck in my bedroom after getting grounded, and that’s when I started playing guitar.

Chorus: That’s the house that built me.

Bridge: I came home to find myself again.

Chorus: That’s the house that built me.

Makes sense, right?  That would be the country 101 way to write it.  But today, most everything is “in the moment.”  Look at how the writers, Tom Douglas and Allen Shamblin, still get in a bunch of snapshots of the singer’s past, but frame them in the present.  Those handprints in the front steps ARE mine.  My favorite dog IS buried in the yard. Great work.  The 1990’s were awesome, but this ain’t the 1990’s anymore.

God Bless,

Brent

YOU VS…

Anything you’d like to add or ask?  Leave a comment!  Are there any topics  you’d like to see addressed in a future MvR post?  Thanks!

FOLLOW AND SHARE THIS BLOG

If you like this blog, don’t miss a single post!  Subscribe by putting your email in the “Follow Man vs. Row via E-mail” section on this page.  It’s either in the upper righthand corner or down below.   Also, please share this blog with anyone you think would benefit from it.  I appreciate it when you share it on Twitter, Facebook, and anywhere else.  Thanks!

Brent’s Twitter: @Razorbaxter

Brent Baxter Music:  http://www.brentbaxtermusic.com

The Links Between You And A Cut

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Brent is a hit songwriter with cuts by Alan Jackson, Randy Travis, Lady Antebellum, Joe Nichols, Gord Bamford, Ray Stevens, and more.  He’s written a top 5 hit in the US and a #1 in Canada… so far.

I think of getting a song cut as a chain- I’m on one end and the cut is on the other.  Each link in the chain is someone who has to say “yes” to the song and pass it up the chain to the next link.  However, each link is also a person who might say “no” and break the chain.  The longer the chain, the greater the chance somebody will say “no.”

Therefore, it’s worth taking time to build the relationships which make the chain shorter.  This is one of the reasons it’s valuable to write with the artist- it really shortens the chain.

God Bless,

Brent

YOU VS…

Anything you’d like to add or ask?  Leave a comment!  Are there any topics  you’d like to see addressed in a future MvR post?  Thanks!

FOLLOW AND SHARE THIS BLOG

If you like this blog, don’t miss a single post!  Subscribe by putting your email in the “Follow Man vs. Row via E-mail” section on this page.  It’s either in the upper righthand corner or down below.   Also, please share this blog with anyone you think would benefit from it.  I appreciate it when you share it on Twitter, Facebook, and anywhere else.  Thanks!

Brent’s Twitter: @Razorbaxter

Brent Baxter Music:  http://www.brentbaxtermusic.com

Songwriters, Pick Your Pain

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Brent is a hit songwriter with cuts by Alan Jackson, Randy Travis, Lady Antebellum, Joe Nichols, Gord Bamford, Ray Stevens, and more.  He’s written a top 5 hit in the US and a #1 in Canada… so far.

Success comes at the cost of comfort.  And once you’re hooked by the dream of writing songs for a living (or just getting a song cut) pain is unavoidable.  So pick your pain.  You can either have the pain that comes from trying or the pain that comes with not trying.

There’s pain in putting your songs out there just to have them rejected.  There’s pain in getting up early to write before you go to your “day job.”  There’s pain when you cut back on eating out so you can pay for a demo.  And there’s the possible pain of failure- of never getting that cut or getting to make a living writing songs.

But on the other side, there’s pain in knowing you didn’t try.  There’s pain in not knowing what might’ve happened if you had really put your heart into it.

If you have a dream, pain WILL happen.  So… which pain will you pick?

God Bless,

Brent

YOU VS…

Anything you’d like to add or ask?  Leave a comment!  Are there any topics  you’d like to see addressed in a future MvR post?  Thanks!

FOLLOW AND SHARE THIS BLOG

If you like this blog, don’t miss a single post!  Subscribe by putting your email in the “Follow Man vs. Row via E-mail” section on this page.  It’s either in the upper righthand corner or down below.   Also, please share this blog with anyone you think would benefit from it.  I appreciate it when you share it on Twitter, Facebook, and anywhere else.  Thanks!

Brent’s Twitter: @Razorbaxter

Brent Baxter Music:  http://www.brentbaxtermusic.com

Cut Study: Drew Gregory, “Farm Hands”

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Brent is a hit songwriter with cuts by Alan Jackson, Randy Travis, Lady Antebellum, Joe Nichols, Gord Bamford, Ray Stevens, and more.  He’s written a top 5 hit in the US and a #1 in Canada… so far.

Drew Gregory is an indie Canadian country artist from Alberta.  He gets some radio airplay and TV exposure, and he’s building his career.  He ended up cutting a song of mine called “Farm Hands,” which I wrote with Jaron Boyer and Chris Hennessee.

The story of how Drew got the song is pretty interesting, and I’ll let Drew tell you in his own words.

“A song that was not even originally pitched to me managed to find its way on to our album.  I was sent a DropBox by my producer, Aaron Goodvin, with a bunch of songs to consider but within the DropBox, another folder was accidentally sent.  I was never meant to see it, but I thought it was just too good a song to let go.  I remembered the tune, and months later when we were making final selection of songs for the album I let Aaron know I wanted it.  He worked his magic and we were able to cut “Farm Hands” as a perfect addition to our ‘farm boy’ themed record!”

The takeaway for me is a reminder that a song is like a message in a bottle.  After we write the song, we throw it out into the ocean.  After that, we don’t control where it goes or who gets it.  Surprises like this are part of what keeps songwriting fun and exciting.  Thanks to Drew and Aaron for the cut- it sounds great!

You can check out Drew’s music at: www.drewgregorymusic.com

God Bless,

Brent

YOU VS…

Anything you’d like to add or ask?  Leave a comment!  Are there any topics  you’d like to see addressed in a future MvR post?  Thanks!

FOLLOW AND SHARE THIS BLOG

If you like this blog, don’t miss a single post!  Subscribe by putting your email in the “Follow Man vs. Row via E-mail” section on this page.  It’s either in the upper righthand corner or down below.   Also, please share this blog with anyone you think would benefit from it.  I appreciate it when you share it on Twitter, Facebook, and anywhere else.  Thanks!

Brent’s Twitter: @Razorbaxter

Brent Baxter Music:  http://www.brentbaxtermusic.com

Don’t Count Lines

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Brent is a hit songwriter with cuts by Alan Jackson, Randy Travis, Lady Antebellum, Joe Nichols, Gord Bamford, Ray Stevens, and more.  He’s written a top 5 hit in the US and a #1 in Canada… so far.

When you write a song with a cowriter, it’s standard practice in Nashville to have even splits between all the cowriters, no matter how much they contribute.  This means every writer on the song owns an equal share of the copyright.  I’ve heard stories of writers who “count lines” when determining their percentage of ownership of a song.  I am REALLY not a fan of this, for a few reasons.

Generosity wins.  This time, maybe your cowriter only contributed a few lines, if that.  Well, next time, they might contribute more than you.  It should all even out in the end, if you’re well-matched cowriters.

I want my cowriters focused on making the song the very best it can be.  I don’t want it to become a competition over who gets the most lines and the most credit.  Serve the song, not your percentage.

It’s impossible to tell who really wrote the line.  Maybe you got the final wording right, but you only got there based on a line suggested by your cowriter.  You wouldn’t have gotten to that line by yourself, so you BOTH created it.  It’s a collaboration.

And, lastly, counting lines is a good way to alienate your cowriter and make them less likely to write with you again.  Especially in a town like Nashville.  Be generous and win!

God Bless,

Brent

YOU VS…

Anything you’d like to add or ask?  Leave a comment!  Are there any topics  you’d like to see addressed in a future MvR post?  Thanks!

FOLLOW AND SHARE THIS BLOG

If you like this blog, don’t miss a single post!  Subscribe by putting your email in the “Follow Man vs. Row via E-mail” section on this page.  It’s either in the upper righthand corner or down below.   Also, please share this blog with anyone you think would benefit from it.  I appreciate it when you share it on Twitter, Facebook, and anywhere else.  Thanks!

Brent’s Twitter: @Razorbaxter

Brent Baxter Music:  http://www.brentbaxtermusic.com

5 Things Songwriters Should Quit

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Brent is a hit songwriter with cuts by Alan Jackson, Randy Travis, Lady Antebellum, Joe Nichols, Gord Bamford, Ray Stevens, and more.  He’s written a top 5 hit in the US and a #1 in Canada… so far.

It’s hard to quit.  Society says, “never quit.”  Maybe you’ve invested so much in whatever it is that you feel it’s too late to quit.  Pride doesn’t want you to move on.  But sometimes, the only way to win is to quit.  Here are 5 things songwriters should quit doing.

1. Toxic relationships.

If you have “friends” or cowriters who habitually belittle your dreams or always point out why something won’t work, it might be time to find new friends and cowriters.  Yes, we need people that love us enough to be honest with us even when it’s unpleasant.  But some people are energy vampires who will only drag you down.  Figure out who’s who, and act accordingly.

2. Whining.

Don’t be somebody else’s toxic relationship.  A negative attitude not only drives away positive people, it blinds you to opportunity.  If you always focus on the closed door, you might miss the open window.

3. Misaligned cowrites.

You want to write hit country songs, but she wants to write niche novelty songs.  Or you both want to write hits, but his songs sound like 1952 and he refuses to update his sound, meet with publishers, rewrite, or pitch his songs.  Those might be fine “hobby writes,” but you should quit thinking they’re “hit writes.”

4. Lazy artists.

An aspiring artist may have a great voice and be a good writer, but if they don’t want it badly enough, it doesn’t matter.  If they don’t take their career seriously, you can’t take their career seriously, either.

5. Demoing & pitching mediocre songs.

Mediocre songs will not change your life.  But they can take your time and money if you demo them.  Then, if you make a habit of pitching them, you’ll be known as a mediocre writer.  (You don’t always know before writing your song if it’ll be mediocre.  That’s fine.  But you should know it’s mediocre before you demo it.)

Part of the advantage of quitting is that it makes room in your life for better things.  Negative relationships can be replaced with inspiring relationships.  Misaligned cowrites can be replaced with properly-aligned cowrites.  Lazy artists can be replaced with serious artists.  The time and money you spend on mediocre songs can be spent finding, writing, and demoing better songs.

Win by quitting.

God Bless,

Brent

PS…

I wouldn’t pretend that this list is exhaustive.  What would you add to the “quit list?”

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Brent’s Twitter: @Razorbaxter

Brent Baxter Music:  http://www.brentbaxtermusic.com

The 4 Cornerstones Of Songwriting Success: W.R.A.P.

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Brent is a hit songwriter with cuts by Alan Jackson, Randy Travis, Lady Antebellum, Joe Nichols, Gord Bamford, Ray Stevens, and more. He’s written a top 5 hit in the US and a #1 in Canada… so far.

I believe there are four cornerstones to professional songwriting success. You can remember them by the acronym, “W.R.A.P.” They are:

1. Writing

This one’s pretty obvious. We’re songwriters, aren’t we? If you’re a writer… write. If you don’t write, there’s nothing to get recorded. And it’s not enough to just write every once in a while. Write hard, write consistently.

2. Recording

It’s not enough to have scratchy worktapes if you want someone else to cut and release your song. You have to get a good recording of your song- one that presents it in a good light. This could be a guitar/vocal, a full demo, or something in between.

3. Accessing

A great demo does you no good if you can’t get it into the hands of someone who can do something with it. Accessing is building relationships and otherwise gaining accesss to singers, publishers, labels, producers, etc.

4. Pitching

You have to ask for the cut, as simple as that. You have to give publishers, artists, etc. the opportunity to say “yes” to your song.

Note that each of these are cornerstones – you won’t have a stable, well-functioning career if you neglect one or more of them. I’m not saying you should spend equal hours on each of these areas, but you should give them the proper amount of time based on your particular situation.

WRAP is also good for helping you focus on what’s important. If an opportunity comes up, compare it to WRAP. If that activity doesn’t fall into one of those categories, it might not be a wise use of your time.

God Bless,

Brent

YOU VS…

Anything you’d like to add or ask? Leave a comment! Are there any topics you’d like to see addressed in a future MvR post? Thanks!

FOLLOW AND SHARE THIS BLOG

If you like this blog, don’t miss a single post! Subscribe by putting your email in the “Follow Man vs. Row via E-mail” section on this page. It’s either in the upper righthand corner or down below. Also, please share this blog with anyone you think would benefit from it. I appreciate it when you share it on Twitter, Facebook, and anywhere else. Thanks!

Brent’s Twitter: @Razorbaxter

Brent Baxter Music: http://www.brentbaxtermusic.com

Write What You Know… Or What Your Cowriter Knows

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Brent is a hit songwriter with cuts by Alan Jackson, Randy Travis, Lady Antebellum, Joe Nichols, Gord Bamford, Ray Stevens, and more.  He’s written a top 5 hit in the US and a #1 in Canada… so far.

If you haven’t experienced the country lifestyle, you probably can’t write about it believably.  Write what YOU know – don’t try to out-redneck a redneck.  However, if your cowriter is a legit country boy or girl, draw from his or her experience.  This expands what you can write about believably.  Teamwork.

God Bless,

Brent

YOU VS…

Anything you’d like to add or ask?  Leave a comment!  Are there any topics  you’d like to see addressed in a future MvR post?  Thanks!

FOLLOW AND SHARE THIS BLOG

If you like this blog, don’t miss a single post!  Subscribe by putting your email in the “Follow Man vs. Row via E-mail” section on this page.  It’s either in the upper righthand corner or down below.   Also, please share this blog with anyone you think would benefit from it.  I appreciate it when you share it on Twitter, Facebook, and anywhere else.  Thanks!

Brent’s Twitter: @Razorbaxter

Brent Baxter Music:  http://www.brentbaxtermusic.com