When I spoke frivolously about Bluegrass and Country being kissin’ cousins, turns out bluegrass is a subgenre of country: a kinda country if you will.
Knowing that may change the way you approach a form but it shouldn’t. Concentrate on mountain shacks and moonshine. Or bend your own theme to the hoedown.
Every genre has its subgenres with acid jazz and doom metal sharing the same musical planet with bebop and hair metal. The list is endless. Country morphs with the countryside, metal clangs to ponderous life, folk have common concerns but clashing credos that take greater precedence further down the road, rock as we’ve remarked before is capable of splitting itself so far that even its subgenres have subgenres of their own.
Do I think that there is much to take from this when writing the words to a song? This depends on how far you want to drill down. If you want a set full of sludge metal then there are songwriting approaches that will help.
To put this in perspective from my own songwriting journal. The pieces I wrote in the remainder of September (after I’d left the verandah) don’t show any signs of genre at any level. Regardless of size, some are poems and others lyrics but this isn’t always the upfornt intention.
It wouldn’t be wise to interrupt this process by pondering whether it’s hard rock
Here’s a rundown:
- Practicality 7-8 / 9 / 2015
- Probably Not 11-12 / 9 / 2015
- [revised setlist]
- draft piece with opening line ‘You look nice in that lawsuit’ 13 / 9/ 2015
- The Same Set of Questions 14 / 9/ 2015
- Returnable 17 / 9 / 2015
- Could You Commit to Deluxe 17 / 9 / 2015
- P.O.V. first version
- P.O.V. second draft
- P.O.V. third draft
- Exclamation Marks 22 / 9 / 2015
Now admittedly I’m not writing these with genre in mind. These are from my exercise book and were written on the train. I’ve got two later pieces I wrote a couple of days ago and there was a conscious decision to go with the flow to the point of not making (immediate) sense. As the lines appear on the page you wonder what the purpose is lo, sitting up in bed I can see actual songs emerge in second drafts for both. Just like that.
If the Muse can lead you through then you’re free to go in all directions and, unless you’re wedded to alt country, you’ll get more from it
In my tattered notebook I have a couple of solid formal pieces, I have the freedom to scribble in thoughts on stuff relevant to songs and singing and past pieces that work, a vague polemic, a poem that doesn’t work (yes, there’s the odd one) before hitting a song and spending a bit of time on it, which was P.O.V which I wrote the first draft for on the eighteenth, chorus on nineteenth (I think that’s a first, writing the chorus the following day), second draft also on the nineteenth probably on the train home, and third and final draft on the twentieth of September.
For your delectation – this time just the finished song
P.O.V
It's in our line of sight It's finally come to light Three sixty degrees Far across the seas Sees everything seize everything We're not blind to the kind or what we expect to find in corners of the mind Are they reflected witness protected In a mirrored mirage Objects enlarged The power of purview Ask after askance and askew From every angle perception dangles In every direction scene selection Some folks focus is hocus pocus as like as loco at that locus Get obsessed with what is best who is blessed and all that is left to detest If you track the tried and true even truths that tried and withdrew Their P.O.V There P.O.V [repeat]