Really cool story. Thanks.
quote:No worries.
Really cool story. Thanks.
quote:Thank god someone else has noticed that the same thing has happened with rap and R&B. Every single time I turn it to a pop station, I hear the exact same type of "Drake style" rap or power ballad "R&B" song. They sound so identical that it's incredibly weird when I hear something different.quote:Rap and R&B may be even worse that Country. I have reached the point that I will only listen to talk radio when in my truck. There is literally nothing on the radio worth the effort of searching stations.
An example of how different it is now vs. when I moved here.
I remember on several occasions bringing a song idea, or even a song I had finished, to my first publisher (a veteran songwriter named Frank Dycus - wrote Unwound, Marina Del Ray, I'm Gonna Get A Life and a lot of others). I ran my idea or my song by him, and he said something like "oh yeah, that's been written...it was the B side of a George Jones single in 1963" or something similar. I always wondered how the hell I was supposed to know the B sides of ever song that Jones et al had recorded, but the point was that in his mind the song and/or idea weren't original.
Fast forward to now, where not only does everything sound the same, it has virtually the same lyrics...insert "dirt road" here, cut and paste "daisy dukes" there, and ta da! you have a song. Same titles written over and over. Same cliches used over and over. It's taken formulaic writing to an entirely new level, and I hate it.
My kid has taught herself guitar and piano and loves writing. She is always concerned that she's subconsciously copying other songs. She even sent me the video Frick posted above after here songwriting teacher shared it with the class. At 15, she is already looking for internships at local studios here in Austin. Seems like she is more interested in writing music than becoming a star, which is music to my ears.
quote:Rock has actually diverged far away from the other 3 and has split into numerous different subgenres (e.g. metal now has progressive metal, thrash metal, death metal, orchestral metal, etc. and that's just metal). It's really time for the others to do the same because putting everything underneath one main genre clearly isn't working and it is slowly destroying the genre.quote:actually, it seems like mainstream rap, rock, r&b, and country are all converging on the same exact song.
Rap and R&B may be even worse that Country.
quote:Almost every single country song is about narcissistic women now. It's why you rarely ever hear songs about a guy sleeping around and generally being a wild man. It's all about the dude singing about how perfect some woman is and how he worships the ground she walks on.
that florida Georgia line song doesn't even make any ****ing sense. so "h.o.l.y." stands for "high on loving you", but in the song he says "you're holy". so what he's saying is "you're high on loving you". is it a song about a narcissistic woman? because it's sure not presented that way.
sorry, it's a slow day at work.
quote:Is it bad that I can hear the exact intro to these songs and the stupid wannabe country voice inflections that one of these scrubs would use to sing these with?
I'm a non professional musician and I can appreciate all types of music. I like to write humorous songs in my spare time. Almost quit college 25 years ago to be a professional.
I like to poke fun at today's country music by writing joke songs with my warped sense of humor. Usually about beer, boats, hunting, fishing, pick up trucks and women...
My latest is called "Sh-itty Friends". It's about a woman that did me wrong... It starts out...
"Yeah, I've got sh-ittyfriends
Don't get me started talking about them
But all my sh-itty friends, are better than you... "
Another one I wrote is called "Breakfast Beer". It's about drinking beer after waking up early to go fishing or hunting...it starts out...
"I'm up in the morning about 5 am
But, I ain't up early to go to the gym
No, that six-pack pop top sound you hear
Is me crack'in open my breakfast beer..."
quote:Hate to break it to you, but a Canadian beat you to it...
I'm a non professional musician and I can appreciate all types of music. I like to write humorous songs in my spare time. Almost quit college 25 years ago to be a professional.
I like to poke fun at today's country music by writing joke songs with my warped sense of humor. Usually about beer, boats, hunting, fishing, pick up trucks and women...
My latest is called "Sh-itty Friends". It's about a woman that did me wrong... It starts out...
"Yeah, I've got sh-ittyfriends
Don't get me started talking about them
But all my sh-itty friends, are better than you... "
Another one I wrote is called "Breakfast Beer". It's about drinking beer after waking up early to go fishing or hunting...it starts out...
"I'm up in the morning about 5 am
But, I ain't up early to go to the gym
No, that six-pack pop top sound you hear
Is me crack'in open my breakfast beer..."
quote:JB and the Moonshine band did "Beer for Breakfast" 4 years ago
Hate to break it to you, but a Canadian beat you to it...
Breakfast Beer
quote:I've always wondered about that.
okay, I see what you mean.
Kinda funny that George Strait has 2 separate songs titled "She'll leave you with a smile"
quote:
I don't think it is as much satire as him just having fun but that is my opinion.
quote:
thats a killer version, too
quote:
Another illustration of just how rare the feat is, out of the entire 60-song Country Airplay chart this week, "Humble and Kind" is the only current single written by one person.
quote:
Eric Church believes in the power and longevity of country music, but he's disappointed in the way the genre has developed lately, he says. According to the artist, country has a special place in the American conscience, but because of its growing and widespread popularity, it has gotten away from its roots.
"Country has become a bigger umbrella. It's good and bad," Church shares with the Las Vegas Sun. "Country has become too homogenized and too commercial. It has lost what makes it special. It's great that it's popular, but then it starts to become watered down."