Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Tobacco Spit


I want to be a better songwriter. Usually, I sit down and write my soul, something heart felt and meaningful. Then I listen to popular country radio. I mean I love Country music. I grew up in the south and I'm proud of my southern accent. But come on.

The deep meaningful heartfelt country lyrics I heard last night were: "chew tobacco, chew tobacco, chew tobacco, spit." That was Blake Shelton's new song. He sang with Luke Bryan, Cheryl Crow and his wife Miranda Lambert's band the Pistol Annies, as the opening number for the Academy of Country Music Awards.

Now don't get me wrong, I really like popular music. I think it's easy to hate on Taylor swift or John Mayer or Mumford. But like anything else, it's easy to hate on something or marginalize it until you try it. It's freaking hard to write a good pop song, and it's almost impossible to do it consistently.

So what makes a good song? Well, I don't know exactly. But I thin feeling has a lot to do with it.

Music should be pure emotion. I was talking with a musician friend of mine recently and we were trying to figure out what makes a good song, and the fact that most of the time, sheer musical talent doesn't translate into musical success. So what sets those "good" songs apart? I think it all comes back to pure emotion.

I occasionally do the music for one of the ministries at my church. A couple of weeks ago, after I had performed, the leader emailed me and said that we (my band and I) had "knocked it out of the park." Which has never happened before.

I called the guys in my band and my sound guy and asked if they heard anything special that night. They all thought it was a solid performance, but not a home run. So I was confused about what made it so good. Then as I was talking to my musician friend, I made the statement that I probably had the most fun playing that night that I'd ever had. And that was it. It finally hit me. That was the difference. The people could see, and hear that I was having a great time.

Music has to move people. It can be country, bluegrass, pop, rock, or even the wobbling bass lines of dub step. It doesn't matter, as long as it's pure emotion. And that emotion has to come first and foremost from the performer.

After listening to Blake's songs a few more times, I could hear that he as having a great time. Now I really like the song. It makes all the difference.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Seeing -in this case hearing - the art is one thing. Hearing the artist is something else.

When the artist comes through in the art, it is a complete work and can become a shared experience.

You're right. Loving what you do and being truthful throughout it is the key.