| Turning a Band Into Songwriters
– 10 Songs In One Hour
By Brandon
Drury
That's right, if you did the math, you quickly figured out that
the band must write a song every 6 minutes to stay on target and
THEY MUST STAY ON TARGET. That's the challenge. You must enforce
that they have to get 10 songs done in one hour.
Here's how I do it:
I divide the band in groups of two. If they are a three piece,
I'll jump in and play along. Each group gets a guitar, a small amp,
and small PA system. I put a wall of gobos (sound deadening device)
in between them and I hit go while recording both the guitar amp
and vocal mic from each room. One person is expected to sing, the
other is expected to play guitar. After each song is written, they
must switch.
While this method might seam a little off the wall, it's the best
way to get a band to work creatively together. It breaks down a
lot of barriers and it's common for about 10% of the songs to be
very good. I like this method because it solves a lot of problems.
It forces the band to be a band.
One problem the 10 songs in one hour challenge fixes is the notion
that the singer has to come up with all the melodies. Why? Okay,
a singer should be able to sing, but the melody is the entire song
in my opinion. The only thing separating a great song from a crappy
song is vocal melody, in my world. So, let's get the entire band
in on writing the melodies. You'd be surprised how good your drummer
might be at creative vocal melodies.
A lot of guys are shy in front of the mic. I've never recorded
any Kansas type bands where the entire band can sing. I'm lucky
to find a band where one guy can sing. So the guy with absolutely
no clue about singing must get on the mic and do it. Even when a
terrible singer gets on the mic, the intent is usually clear. A
real singer would have no problem making your drummer's melody sound
great. So when you force a guy to sing, he usually adapts to his
situation.
It forces everyone to play guitar or similar instrument. This is
great. It makes the drummer pick up an instrument that he's not
used to. If he can't play it, he must deal with it. That's part
of the process. He can play one note lines if he has to. I just
want a song. Seldom does proficiency at the instrument effect the
quality of the song.
While there are certainly exceptions, a band that is not used to
writing a lot of songs, simply won't write a lot of songs. By adapting
to this lighting fast method, the band will understand that not
ever song has to be great. In fact, you need to write a few terrible
songs on purpose just so your brain will be creative enough to do
something interesting. Bands play it safe all the time. They feel
like each song has to be great. In fact, it's the opposite. I noticed
it more with 80s pop groups who weren't going to be dropped after
the first record like they are now. They would come up with the
most screwed up, stupid songs sometimes. Listen to a bunch of Human
League. They had at least 3 top 10 hits, but then listen to "Black
Hit of Space" or "Empire State Human". You can tell they just messed
around. When you are actually being creative and experimenting is
when you will come up with your hits and your crap.
I'm not saying that the 10 songs in one hour method is the best
method for all bands. I think it's a great method for bands who
need to come together as a group. It's a great songwriting tool
for any band that just expects the singer to write songs. There
is no finger pointing. Every band member is responsible for writing
great tunes in this situation.
Brandon Drury has tried the 10 songs in one hour method over 10
times. It has improved
songwriting everytime.
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