Writing Rhyme Schemes and Bars
Tips to Remember when Writing Verses for Music
By WriterzBlock, published Sep 13, 2007
Published Content: 123 Total Views: 152,901 Favorited By: 7 CPs
Ask any music writer today and they'll tell you, it's hard, or at least it used to be. Writing lyrics for a song can challenge even some of music's most prolific writers. For some it's a challenge of "whether this sounds catchy," or "when I do switch to the next bar?" Some of the best songwriting comes from those who actually take the time to feel what it is they're writing about.
First and foremost, before you begin writing to any beats or form of music, actually take the time to listen and feel the song. Get into the rhythm of the song and take it's structure inside of you. Try to feel what the music means to you and what kind of song you can make out of it. Not every song can give you the same feeling and it isn't suppose to. Different music gives different emotions.
Another a good idea to consider is to perhaps number each bar line out. The two bars used in this particular rhyme scheme are correlated by their context and ending words. This perhaps one of the most basic ways to rhyme; waiting for the ending of each bar.
1. Moonlight in the ghetto, shining dreams over the truth.
2. Accomplishing feats - something our forefathers used to do.
The internal rhyme is the use of rhyming words that actually rhyme within the bar. Internal rhymes can be a little more complex as they require more vocabulary and proper
formation to stay on rhythm.
1. Teaching the youth the values of good deeds,
2. Keep em out of the booth, we value the seeds.
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