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The Hit Song Puzzle
by James Linderman

Let's face it, as songwriters; we are all trying to sort out the pieces of a huge puzzle The puzzle represents what it is that publishers are exactly looking for as they weed through the thousands of demos they receive, in search of the next big hit.

Perhaps it would help if we were to try to imagine what we might ask them to create if it was their job to make the art and our job to sell it. I think we would then begin to look at the music marketplace as a place where business trends and sociological shifts meet with creating art and making your mark. This is where the rubber meets the road if it is a hit song you are after.

James Linderman

If we want to climb "inside the head" of a publisher we would find that they knowingly or intuitively are calculating the marketable merits of a song based on three main musical principles; form, style and originality.

Form is a term that encompasses the musical and lyrical templates, or moulds, that your original creative content, is poured into. Great writers study form and often use an established form that has already been "test driven" on a number of previous hit songs. Amateur writers have a tendency to create their form as they write their song. This often causes the song to lack the impact it would have had on the listener had it been written in a reliable form and therefore dilutes it's marketability. There should be a law that states, "Do not attempt to break into the industry with a piece of music that experiments with form".

Musical form, through history, has evolved only slightly compared to style and so the study and application of form is time well spent. Form has good shelf life. Style is never static and yet, it also never really causes a revolution as is popularly thought. The notion that there are violent and dramatic revolutions in style is a contrived exaggeration used by the industry at large to get us exited about buying products (read "hype").

Style is in fact constantly in evolution What we hear on the radio and get sold in the stores is only incrementally different from what was "large" three months ago. Music on the radio and on the front racks seems to turn over seasonally as it evolves constantly. It could be argued that there are moments of revolution that turn the world on its ear, so to speak. I have heard it said that The Beatles "Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band" created a revolution. I have challenged those that have made this claim to give a fresh listen to "Revolver" and note that in the Beatles preceding album, they were well on their way to creating in the styles that emerged full bloom in "Sgt.Pepper". I'm not saying that "Pepper" is not a pop masterpiece (I do not want to get a mountain of hate mail), I just want to illustrate that stylistically, your music should not just spring up out of nowhere with the expectation that listeners should embrace it without them being brought to that spot through a cultural process.

Great art is created within such a process. Originality is a dangerous feature in a song because songs are designed to express common ideas and emotions that as many listeners as possible will be able to relate to. Originality by definition strives for uniqueness that is not collective. Original however can also be defined as meaning "old style" as in original recipe Great song writing, therefore, is a balance of unique originality and original story telling from our common collection of human experiences.

Perhaps our best chance at finding the most accurate recipe for a hit song is to have, and implement a thorough knowledge and understanding of form and to then marry this to the current trends being displayed as the style of the moment. Add a touch of originality in the actual content to make it fresh and uniquely your own, yet socially relevant and there you have it. Reliable form, popular style and original content, a piece of cake right?

I must agree that this is easier said than done but the more I get to know some of the people that are in the business of choosing music for the popular market, the more I am convinced that many of them know how they need us to write songs for them to be able to sell them. Even if they cannot articulate this in technical terms, they have an inner sense of form, style and originality that is consistent and yet constantly evolving.

Understanding all the things your music needs to be, outside of what you need it to be, is an essential piece in what we would all agree is the very big puzzle of the hit song formula.


James Linderman: Bio

James Linderman lives and works at theharmonyhouse, a music lesson, songwriting and recording preproduction facility in Newmarket, Ontario. James conducted an academic audit for the online songwriting program at The Berklee School of Music in Boston in 2004-2005. In April of 2006 James was selected for a 20 member, international, off campus, academic advisory board for Berklee known as Berkleemusic Ambassadors which advises Berklee administrators and professors on issues such as learning management systems, online course strategies, and curriculum based technologies.

James is also the co-moderator of the CCM Club at SongU, a Nashville based songwriting resource and is co host of Radio Muse, an internet radio program specifically about songwriters and their work, with a global audience of over 1 million listeners. http://www.musesmuse.com/radiomuse.html.

James writes monthly songwriting articles and music book reviews for The Muse's Muse web magazine, www.musesmuse.com (3 million readers monthly), Canadian Musician Magazine (current songwriting / recording columnist) and is the feature journalist for the Australian Songwriters Association members magazine.

James has also written feature articles for Galaris Independent Music website, Professional Musician Magazine, The Ontario Bluegrass Association Newsletter, Songwriters of Wisconsin International, The Fort Worth Songwriting Association, The Baltimore Songwriters Association, and The Dallas Songwriters Association and for many other regional and international print and online periodicals. His writing is also featured in the James Linderman Wing of the library at SongU in Nashville www.songu.com. It has been determined by the EOSC Music Alumni Association that James Linderman was the most widely read academic music journalist in the world in 2004, 2005 and 2006.

James has been a freelance lead guitarist for TACF, Tehillah Toronto Worship Band, GOHOP and was the worship team electric lead guitarist for the 2006 Global Day of Prayer celebrations at The Air Canada Centre in Toronto.

James cowrote a song in 2004 that was on hold for Bonnie Raitt, cowrote "Lead Me There" for Stephanie Israelson which is presently on national Christian radio and is presently writing towards a publishing deal with Warner Chappell Canada.

James has current writing projects with Canadian Idol singer Gary Beals, Toronto Independent Blues Artist of the Year Liz Tansey, national touring artist Suzie Vinnick, EMI recording artist Wendy Lands, and Toronto singer songwriters David Leask, Andrea England, Matthew Tishler, Susan Markle, Lorna McDougall (Tehillah Toronto) and Lorraine Lawson. He is an active member of the Urban Music Association of Canada, The Canadian Gospel Music Association, The Ontario Council of Folk Festivals, The Canadian Country Music Association, and SOCAN and does music jury work for the CCMA and FACTOR.

James has a Canadian University and American College education in music theory, composition, and journalism and is also pretty good at playing the guitar and making up songs.

Contact James at: theharmonyhouse@rogers.com or jlinderman@berkleemusic.com
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