Need "better lyrics" on return S210809NK

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Casey H
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Re: Need "better lyrics" on return S210809NK

Post by Casey H » Sat Aug 21, 2021 6:32 am

Cameloide wrote:
Fri Aug 20, 2021 6:17 pm
markanthony wrote:
Fri Aug 20, 2021 8:33 am
Hi everyone. This is my first post in forums, first submission, first return! haha

My question: I agree with the feedback, but asking the community for suggestions. It's hard for me to hear what could be improved in the lyrics based on the feedback. Listening the references, the lyrics seem metaphorical to me. The feedback was lyrics needed improvement and looking for some tips on how.
This is the kind of feedback that I find misguided (unless you didn't include all of it). It's left you trying to fix a minor problem while not pointing you in the direction of the main issues holding you back. Bob Dylan (or any of the actual top writer's in the pop world) could re write all the lyrics and that wouldn't get you any closer to nailing a "modern pop" listing.

On the other hand if you forced Billie Eilish's brother to produce a modern pop song with these lyrics he could do it, and I bet nobody would say a word about the lyrics. The point being there's a much larger gap you'll need to clear on the production/mixing/vocal performance side before any lyric changes would do you any good. And that will come through scouring the Web for good information from Pros, and through repetition, trial and error, and ruthlessly comparing every facet of your production to A level productions.
I disagree. The feedback is not at all misguided. All one has to do is look at the lyrical styles of modern pop artists per the reference tracks. There is imagery, "show me don't tell me" aspects, more conversational-ness (at times), etc. Mark's song is a very lovely ballad and not contemporary. It might have it's place but not even close for this listing. And the lyrics are very cliche, nothing new and interesting. Based on the feedback, look at the lyrics to the reference tracks and look at yours (Mark).

I think suggesting that Billie Eilish's brother could produce this and the screener wouldn't say a word about the lyrics is dead wrong. Screeners review per the listing requirements and this listing was very clear that excellent lyrics were required. And Billie and her brother would never produce something with words like these so it's a moot point.

Mark... Read some of Robin Frederick's books. Study the lyrics of modern artists. I often look at Billie Eilish, Taylor Swift and others for inspiration on modern female lyric writing. The other refs here are good as well. One thing I do a lot of is "ghosting". I take a known song by a contemporary artist and write a new set of lyrics to the approximate melody. As I do it, I get to study how they express themselves.

Best,
Casey

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Re: Need "better lyrics" on return S210809NK

Post by markanthony » Sat Aug 21, 2021 7:48 am

Great suggestions, Casey. Thank you. I do like Taylor Swift! I will listen closely to lyrics in pop and also check out the book you referenced. The ghosting thing is interesting. I supposed this could also be done by ripping the vocal track out of a tune and trying to top line it.

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Re: Need "better lyrics" on return S210809NK

Post by Cameloide » Sat Aug 21, 2021 10:31 am

Casey H wrote:
Sat Aug 21, 2021 6:32 am
I disagree. The feedback is not at all misguided. All one has to do is look at the lyrical styles of modern pop artists per the reference tracks. There is imagery, "show me don't tell me" aspects, more conversational-ness (at times), etc. Mark's song is a very lovely ballad and not contemporary. It might have it's place but not even close for this listing. And the lyrics are very cliche, nothing new and interesting. Based on the feedback, look at the lyrics to the reference tracks and look at yours (Mark).

I think suggesting that Billie Eilish's brother could produce this and the screener wouldn't say a word about the lyrics is dead wrong. Screeners review per the listing requirements and this listing was very clear that excellent lyrics were required. And Billie and her brother would never produce something with words like these so it's a moot point.

Mark... Read some of Robin Frederick's books. Study the lyrics of modern artists. I often look at Billie Eilish, Taylor Swift and others for inspiration on modern female lyric writing. The other refs here are good as well. One thing I do a lot of is "ghosting". I take a known song by a contemporary artist and write a new set of lyrics to the approximate melody. As I do it, I get to study how they express themselves.
Well, we all have opinions don't we? But I stand by what I said. The difference between Mark's lyrics and Pink or Lady Gaga's song is much smaller and less important than the gap between his production/mix and the production/mix of the references, and it's not even close, consequently the misguided feedback has him scrambling to fix a minor issue when he should be refining his production/mixing. My point is that until he level's up in that area lyric changes won't make much difference.

And yes Finneas could easily produce this into something screeners would forward. Let's not kid ourselves either "excellent lyrics" in the pop world is pretty much an oxymoron, cliches are the norm, but never the less there are plenty of creative writing books out there that could help one improve, so the sky's the limit.

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Re: Need "better lyrics" on return S210809NK

Post by markanthony » Sat Aug 21, 2021 10:47 am

Ok so I have a clarifying question, I believe I asked earlier but got buried. The listing did not ask for broadcast quality. Just good enough to represent the song. That is why it is only vocals and piano (it's not even a human playing it). I think the reviewer didn't mention production aspects because it wasn't meant to be a finished mix/master ready-to-go. This is a demo mix, basically. Did I interpret the listing wrong in that area? If it said "broadcast quality" then yes that's a different story. But "good enough to represent song well" can be interpreted in different ways, too (I interpret that as "demo mix").

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Re: Need "better lyrics" on return S210809NK

Post by Casey H » Sat Aug 21, 2021 11:35 am

Mark
Was that the ENTIRE feedback? Given it was an "S" listing, I would think there would be more. Often, the screener lists a main reason for return which does not mean everything else meets the bar and there may or may not be comments on other aspects. Given that it is an "S" listing (full review), if that's ALL you got, I would contact Taxi and ask if they could provide more.

Also keep in mind this is an ULTRA high bar listing (a HUGE, Grammy-winning Artist working on her next album). Only the creme of the crop in all aspects of the submission would be forwarded. The listing makes it clear that it has to sound like something that would be on the Top 40 charts right now.

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Re: Need "better lyrics" on return S210809NK

Post by markanthony » Sat Aug 21, 2021 11:57 am

That was the complete feedback except for parts they said they like in that text box. The only checkbox was the lyrics and the text parts I copied verbatim form the screener (in my original post).

Edit: here's the part not posted in OP:

What I like most about this song:

I love the chord progression of this song. I love the passion in the vocal.

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Re: Need "better lyrics" on return S210809NK

Post by Kolstad » Sat Aug 21, 2021 1:18 pm

adding to the suggestions, here are some pointers

- the lyrics does not introduce the characters in the song, first verse is a good place for that
- title is "we are not alone", but this is not set up in any way, it just comes out of the blue, it mght be a good idea to lead more up to the title. Try the old advice, that every line in the lyric should be written so the title could be sung after it
- there are lines about pride ect in the lyrics, yet it is sung by a female. It sounds like a man wrote this for a woman, which is not very kosher these days. Get a male singer, or get a female cowriter to sort out the male lyrics
- the vocals/mix has an intimate vibe to it, yet the lyrics seems very abstract, so the prosody is not great. Try change the lyrics to first person perspective, so it becomes more believable as an intimate song
- the vocals are very pitchy in the first line. This creates a filter for listening to the rest, try pitch correct it, or do some more takes. In a demo you want every note to the point, so they can hear the song properly as written

Lyrics is definitely the one thing that can make or break a song - keep up the good work!

I second the advice to get Robin Frederick's books. If you write lyrics, it's a must-have.

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Re: Need "better lyrics" on return S210809NK

Post by markanthony » Sat Aug 21, 2021 1:32 pm

Good feedback. And no, that line wasn't written by me. The female cowriter and vocalist wrote it. I only wrote the first verse. The rest was written by her (with minor revising by the both of us). I got the 3 books by that author today on my Kindle now. Great recommendation.

As for pitch, I've tried various ways to polish but sounded strange if I went further than was done. Need to get better at Melodyne or just leave the vocals alone. I think I may have made it more pitchy by accident.

Thank you all!

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Re: Need "better lyrics" on return S210809NK

Post by cosmicdolphin » Sat Aug 21, 2021 2:53 pm

Without reading the whole thread, I agree with the Screener - There's a lot of cliche's in your lyric, it's very much old hat-been there-heard it before kinda stuff.

Contemporary lyrics are a lot more conversational these days. Make it more personal and give us details.

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Re: Need "better lyrics" on return S210809NK

Post by RPaul » Sat Aug 21, 2021 3:49 pm

markanthony wrote:
Sat Aug 21, 2021 10:47 am
Ok so I have a clarifying question, I believe I asked earlier but got buried. The listing did not ask for broadcast quality. Just good enough to represent the song. That is why it is only vocals and piano (it's not even a human playing it). I think the reviewer didn't mention production aspects because it wasn't meant to be a finished mix/master ready-to-go. This is a demo mix, basically. Did I interpret the listing wrong in that area? If it said "broadcast quality" then yes that's a different story. But "good enough to represent song well" can be interpreted in different ways, too (I interpret that as "demo mix").
Given that this was a song pitch for a major artist, which means extremely high bar on the song quality, as well as its fitting the specific listing criteria (e.g. genre, being sufficiently contemporary within that genre, etc.), if the song didn't measure up (which it clearly didn't on the lyrical front, and I strongly suspect on being sufficiently contemporary -- I wasn't paying much attention to that side of things since your question was specifically related to the lyrics), it wouldn't matter how good the demo was or wasn't.

Had the song measured up, then it would likely depend on how effectively your demo presented your song, and that will at least partly depend on the song itself. For example, a ballad can often come across with a piano/vocal demo (there have even been some big hits that don't have much production beyond piano/vocal), while a dance-oriented number probably won't. Of course, it depends on who is ultimately listening to the demo -- can they hear it through whatever level of production you have? If it is a producer hearing it first, a more stripped down demo can often be beneficial since it is easier to hear what they might do with it than if you've got a lot going on that would distract from hearing the thoughts. Ultimately, though, with an artist of the stature suggested in the listing, a high caliber producer would be producing tracks for any songs the artist picks, so your tracks aren't likely to matter beyond their being sufficient to sell the song.

Mind you I'm talking about arrangement and production level, not recording quality. Even if you've just got a piano/vocal demo, you'll want a quality mix. (I didn't notice any obvious issues with your recording in my quick, once-through background listen to your song, but I wasn't really paying close attention to that, beyond getting a feel for the song itself, especially with respect to whether it felt contemporary or not given the listing.) How much you can conceivably get away with on that front may depend on the combination of how compelling your song is and who is listening. Anything that isn't up to snuff, and thus might distract from paying full attention to the song, is best avoided. So probably don't send the version digitized from a hissy cassette version. :D

Rick

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