How to Write Lyrics

How to Write City Pop Lyrics

How to Write City Pop Lyrics

If you want neon soaked late night songs that smell like rain on asphalt and expensive cologne, you are in the right place. City Pop is smooth, glossy, and sentimental without being mushy. It tells small stories about big feelings. This guide will teach you how to write City Pop lyrics that sound authentic and not like a dated cosplay. You will get concrete word choices, lyric structures, examples, exercises, and a real life way to make your lines land with listeners who live for nostalgia and blue hour energy.

Everything here is written for artists who want songs that feel cinematic, personal, and irresistible. We will explain genre terms so you do not need to be a music history major to write better lyrics. We will break lyric craft into scenes, images, and phrasing that match the smooth grooves, slick production, and warm synth pads typical of City Pop. By the end you will have lines you can sing in a hotel bar or on a rooftop at golden hour and have people lean in like they just heard something true.

What Is City Pop

City Pop is a style of music that grew in Japan in the late 1970s and early 1980s. It blends pop, soft rock, funk, R B which stands for rhythm and blues, disco, and adult oriented rock which is often abbreviated as A O R. The sound is glossy with crisp production and often includes jazzy chords, warm electric pianos, and bright synths. Lyrically the songs tend to live in urban scenes. Think night drives, neon, cocktails by the bay, mid century apartments, and small acts of intimacy that feel huge when you are twenty five and restless.

City Pop is not just retro. It is a mood. It is the feeling of moving through city light with a little distance and a lot of longing. It pairs well with images that are specific and tactile. The genre rewards lines that give music a scene to live inside. The words should smell like coffee, rain, and cigarette smoke even if you never touch a cigarette in real life.

Core Themes in City Pop Lyrics

City Pop lyrics work because they are honest without oversharing. They focus on small cinematic moments that reveal emotional states. Here are the recurring themes you will see and how to use them.

  • Night life and late nights A taxi light, a neon sign, a 24 hour coffee place. These are shorthand for vulnerability and freedom.
  • Romantic ambiguity Not every love story is full commitment. Many City Pop songs flirt with possibilities and miss them at the same time.
  • Urban solitude Being alone in a city can feel like being in a crowd. Use that tension.
  • Travel and movement Trains, drives, flights, and hotel rooms. Movement is a metaphor for change or avoidance of change.
  • Affluence and aspiration References to suits, vinyl records, neon cocktails, and summer resorts paint a context without bragging.

Pick one central emotional idea and let the rest orbit it. City Pop thrives when the lyric acts as a camera that follows a character for a small, revealing minute.

City Pop Vocabulary Bank

Words create atmosphere. A list of reliable images will speed up your writing. Use them as building blocks and do not rely on all of them at once. Specific choices win over general lists.

  • Neon
  • Taxi
  • Midnight
  • Turntable or record player
  • Vinyl
  • Electric piano
  • Sea breeze
  • Hotel room
  • Rain on the windshield
  • Suit jacket on the chair
  • City lights
  • Crosswalk
  • Sunroof
  • Glass of whiskey or highball
  • Konbini which is the Japanese word for convenience store

Real life scenario. You are walking home at 1 A M because you could not sleep. A vending machine hums. The streetlight flickers. You have a memory that feels like it happened to someone else. That is the mood that City Pop lyrics love. Use specific nouns and sensory details to place your listener in that moment.

How to Choose a Voice and Perspective

City Pop songs often use first person for intimacy and second person for address. Third person is rarer but can work if you are telling a small cinematic story about someone else. Decide who speaks and why. A soft confession to the listener feels different from a monologue over a late night drive with a lover in the passenger seat.

  • First person You are inside the mind of the narrator. This is intimate and direct.
  • Second person You talk to another person. This can feel like a conversation in a small bar booth.
  • Third person You watch someone without judgment. This gives a voyeuristic, cinematic quality.

Real life example. You choose first person. The narrator is leaving a party alone and missing the person who did not stay. Use immediate detail like the jacket on the back of a chair to make the line feel lived in.

Structure That Fits the Genre

City Pop songs often have gentle builds and grooves that let the chorus breathe. The form can be classic verse chorus verse chorus bridge chorus or a slightly more pop oriented variant with a pre chorus. The pre chorus acts as a polite lift before the chorus opens like a curtain.

Reliable structure to try

  • Intro with a melodic hook
  • Verse one sets the scene
  • Pre chorus lifts the emotional pressure
  • Chorus states the main feeling
  • Verse two adds a new detail or consequence
  • Bridge offers a twist or quiet reflection
  • Final chorus with small variation

Keep choruses short and memorable. City Pop chorus lyrics are not long dissertations. They are small, repeatable statements you can hum while looking at the skyline.

How to Write a City Pop Chorus

The chorus is the feeling. It should be a simple sentence you can imagine repeating on a loop while driving by the bay. Aim for one to three lines with a clear emotional claim. Use open vowels for singing and place the title idea so listeners can sing along quickly.

Chorus recipe

  1. One line that says the emotional truth in plain speech.
  2. One line that adds a consequence or image.
  3. Repeat or paraphrase the first line for emphasis.

Example chorus

Learn How to Write City Pop Songs
Capture neon romance and cruise ready polish. Blend jazz kissed chords, silky bass, and breezy hooks that sound like midnight drives with windows down. Arrange glossy verses, radiant choruses, and bridges that sparkle. Keep grooves soft while melodies glide.

  • Seventh and ninth progressions with tasteful lifts
  • Rhythm guitar and Rhodes patterns that shimmer
  • Topline shapes for effortless chorus lift
  • Bass and drum pocket for smooth motion
  • Mix choices that feel glossy without glare

You get: Chord banks, melody maps, side A and side B guides, and tone recipes. Outcome: A city that glows inside a perfect chorus.

I ride the midnight train alone, lights chasing me.

Your laugh still echoes through the rear view, soft and free.

I ride the midnight train alone, but I keep you with me.

The chorus uses simple language and strong images. The title idea is the midnight train which is a clear image that listeners can picture. The second line adds motion and emotion without spelling everything out.

Verses That Show Instead of Tell

Verses in City Pop should be miniature movies. Use objects and movements that reveal the feeling rather than name it. Keep each verse focused on one scene. A camera pass technique will help you write sharper lines.

Camera pass exercise explanation. Read your verse and imagine a camera. For each line write a short note about the shot. Are you close on hands? Are you wide on a skyline? If you cannot imagine a shot, the line is probably abstract and needs more detail.

Before and after example

Before. I miss you when I am alone at night.

After. I warm the last cup of coffee from your place and leave lipstick on the rim.

The after line gives an object and a small action that implies missing without naming it. That is the City Pop move.

Learn How to Write City Pop Songs
Capture neon romance and cruise ready polish. Blend jazz kissed chords, silky bass, and breezy hooks that sound like midnight drives with windows down. Arrange glossy verses, radiant choruses, and bridges that sparkle. Keep grooves soft while melodies glide.

  • Seventh and ninth progressions with tasteful lifts
  • Rhythm guitar and Rhodes patterns that shimmer
  • Topline shapes for effortless chorus lift
  • Bass and drum pocket for smooth motion
  • Mix choices that feel glossy without glare

You get: Chord banks, melody maps, side A and side B guides, and tone recipes. Outcome: A city that glows inside a perfect chorus.

Pre Chorus and the Gentle Build

A pre chorus in City Pop should feel like the moment the elevator reaches the floor. It raises tension and creates a desire for the chorus to open. Use shorter words and rhythmic phrasing. Point the language toward the chorus without repeating it entirely.

Example pre chorus

The taxi slows at your corner. I almost text. My hands forget the route.

Then let the chorus resolve that lift with a more open melody and an image that feels like a reward.

Bridge and the Tiny Twist

The bridge can be a place for irony or acceptance. City Pop bridges are often quieter. They are not a fireworks show. Use the bridge to reveal one unexpected detail that changes the meaning of the chorus just a little.

Bridge example

I thought the skyline would hide the nights we wasted. It only keeps the shapes of your silhouette sharper in the rain.

This twist does not change the whole story. It deepens it. That is what the bridge does best.

Prosody and Singable Lines

Prosody is how words sit on the music. A good lyric sits in the mouth. If you speak your line at normal speed and hear natural stresses, those stresses should match strong musical beats. If a heavy word falls on a weak beat the line will feel off even if it reads well on paper.

Simple check. Read the line out loud. Tap a steady beat. If the stressed syllable lines up with the strong beat, you are good. If not, move a word or change the phrasing until it does.

Real life example. You want the word midnight to land on a long note. Say the line out loud and feel where midnight wants to sit. City Pop likes open vowels that sustain like ah and oh so favor words that are comfortable to hold.

Rhyme and Rhyme Choices

City Pop does not require perfect rhyme. In fact slant rhyme, internal rhyme, and repeated consonant sounds often feel more modern. Use rhyme to create gentle ear hooks. Avoid forcing rhymes that make lines sound awkward.

Rhyme palette

  • Perfect rhyme when you want a punch at the emotional turn
  • Slant rhyme for a smooth, glossy feel
  • Internal rhyme to add musicality without obvious endings

Example internal rhyme

Neon on my face, rain on the interstate

The internal rhyme between face and interstate is subtle and musical without sounding like a nursery rhyme.

Language Choices and Code Switching

Some City Pop writers mix English and Japanese. If you are not fluent in Japanese do not fake it. Cultural respect beats cheap authenticity every time. If you use words like konbini explain them. For English lyric writing that wants a City Pop vibe use simple conversational phrases with vintage adjectives like warm or satin. Avoid slang that dates the song unless that dating is intentional.

Example of gentle code switch explanation in lyric context

We stopped at the konbini which is the convenience store with lights like a postcard. You buy a cold can and we laugh as if everything is still possible.

Imagery That Reads Like Film

City Pop imagery should be cinematic and tactile. Use sensory detail. Smell, light, and texture help. Here are image pairs that work well together.

  • Neon and rain
  • Suit jacket and spilled drink
  • Vinyl crackle and open window
  • Taxi meter and cigarette ashtray
  • Harbor light and distant laughter

When you pair two sensory anchors you create a scene that feels lived in. That is the emotional shortcut City Pop lyrics love.

Write Lyrics That Fit Modern Listeners

City Pop originally floated out of a specific culture and time. You want to borrow the feeling not write a museum piece. Keep language fresh. Use present tense when possible. Keep choruses short. Avoid language that dates itself unless you intend vintage charm.

Example updated lyric

Old style. We drive the Datsun toward the beach and the tape deck warms our bones.

Updated. We roll the windows down, cassette hums under the sun, your hand finds mine like a map.

The updated line keeps tactile detail but uses language a modern listener can picture without needing a history lesson.

Examples That Show the Move

Here are three short song sketches you can steal and adapt. They show how to move from scene to chorus with City Pop flavor.

Sketch 1: Rooftop Afterparty

Verse 1. The elevator pukes us onto the ninth floor. Someone left a record spinning. Your laugh folds into the breeze.

Pre chorus. I almost say the thing. The skyline is patient. My mouth rehearses the line.

Chorus. Tonight we are light, not promises. We leave our footprints in cigarette smoke and glass. Tonight we are soft and impossible to keep.

Sketch 2: Rainy Midnight Drive

Verse 1. Wipers cut the neon into honest shapes. The meter ticks in a language I almost understand. Your shoulder leans into mine like it belongs there.

Pre chorus. I think about calling you tomorrow. My thumb knows the number by heart and still feels new.

Chorus. Rain on the windshield writes your name. I drive and I keep driving. The city holds us like a secret until we decide to stop.

Sketch 3: Hotel Room Resolution

Verse 1. A minibar light blinks like a tiny skyline. Your tie hangs over the chair like a question mark.

Pre chorus. The TV shows a weather map and I choose not to care. Your hand finds mine in the dark and presses like an answer.

Chorus. I will not leave this bed with a suitcase full of what if. Tonight the sea is small and the city is loud and we are quiet enough to be honest.

Use of Repetition and Hooks

City Pop likes hooks that repeat, but gently. A ring phrase works well. That is a small word or short phrase that appears at the start and end of a chorus. It helps memory without beating the listener into submission.

Ring phrase example

Start chorus with your name. End chorus with your name. The repetition becomes a quiet chant that is personal and memorable.

Editing and the Crime Scene Edit

Every lyric needs a ruthless pass where you remove anything that explains more than it shows. City Pop values implication. Do the crime scene edit. Remove weak abstract words and replace them with detail.

Crime scene edit checklist

  1. Underline abstract phrases like I feel or it was sad. Replace with tactile detail.
  2. Mark any line that repeats the chorus idea without adding image. Cut or change it.
  3. Check prosody by speaking lines against a metronome or a simple chord loop.
  4. Remove filler words that exist only to make the syllables fit. Rewrite to be natural.

Exercises to Write City Pop Lyrics Fast

Try these timed drills to get a chorus or verse in ten minutes. Speed reduces self editing and surfaces interesting images.

  • Object in the Room Pick one object where you are. Write five lines where that object appears in different states. Ten minutes.
  • Neon Walk Imagine you walk down a street. List five signs you see and write one sentence each that includes a feeling. Seven minutes.
  • Dialogue Write two lines as if you answer a text. Keep it natural and unfinished. Five minutes.
  • Vowel pass Play a two chord loop. Sing on vowels for two minutes. Mark the phrases you want to repeat and turn them into a chorus. Ten minutes.

Real World Examples and Before After Edits

Before. I am lonely when you are gone.

After. Your side of the bed holds the shape of your shoulder like a ghost that knows the shoreline.

Before. We had a good night together.

After. The hotel coffee still tastes like the last laugh we shared at three A M.

Before. I miss the city when I leave.

After. The subway station breathes and I feel like an unclaimed song in a crowded playlist.

Collaborating With Producers

When you write City Pop lyrics your producer will likely add warm chords and soft percussion. Know the space you want the vocal to occupy. If you want intimate, write lines that fit a single mic close up. If you want the vocal to be glossy and airy, leave spaces for ad libs and harmonies. Communicate prosody. Tell your producer which words you want to land long and which syllables are quick. This saves time and gets the performance you imagine.

How to Avoid Cultural Cheapness

City Pop arises from Japanese musical culture. If you are borrowing the vibe be respectful and specific. Learn about the artists who influenced the sound. Use Japanese words only when you understand their cultural weight. If you mention konbini explain it in a line or in supporting content like a blog post. Collaborate with artists who live in the culture if you can. Authenticity is kind and it is never a costume.

Common Mistakes and Easy Fixes

  • Too vague Replace broad feelings with objects and actions.
  • Trying to sound old instead of timeless Use modern phrasing with nostalgic images.
  • Overwriting Cut any line that repeats information without adding new detail.
  • Awkward prosody Speak the line at conversation speed and move stresses to strong beats.
  • Overused tropes If your lyric uses the same image as every other song, swap one word for a fresh detail.

Title Craft for City Pop Songs

Your title should be short and singable. It can be a place, a time of day, or a small object. Titles that are long or confusing are harder to remember. Try to craft a title that people can text to a friend and understand the mood instantly.

Title examples

  • Midnight Marina
  • Neon Letters
  • Two A M and the City
  • Room With Vinyl

Finish the Song With a Routine

Here is a quick finish routine you can use when your song starts to feel finished.

  1. Lock the chorus. Make sure the chorus title appears exactly as sung and that the main image is clear.
  2. Run the crime scene edit on each verse. Remove abstractions and add one small object to each line.
  3. Check prosody with a metronome and a simple chord loop. Speak the lines at normal speed and align stresses to beats.
  4. Record a simple demo with your phone and listen through headphones for details you miss in the room.
  5. Play the demo to two friends who are not your mother and not your producer. Ask them what line they remember. If they cannot remember a line, add a ring phrase.

City Pop Lyric Examples You Can Model

Theme. A quiet reconciliation after a fight.

Verse. The kettle clicks like a tiny apology. You pass the sugar and I watch the light on your knuckles.

Pre chorus. We talk like strangers but the sentences fit like the same pair of gloves.

Chorus. We patch the night with small repairs. We promise nothing and mean everything. Your laugh becomes the mail I want to collect.

Theme. The ache of leaving a summer city.

Verse. The pier keeps the gulls and the fading postcards. Your jacket smells like salt and the subway map on your collarbone.

Pre chorus. I fold our weekend into a paper plane. I send it on the next train.

Chorus. I go home with your name in my pocket. The city glows behind me and I keep looking back like a bad habit.

Promotion and Storytelling Around the Song

City Pop thrives on mood. When you release, tell a short story about where the lyric came from. Share an image of a corner of the city that inspired a line. Explain konbini if you used the word. Short context makes listeners feel included and deepens their connection to the lyric.

City Pop FAQ

What differentiates City Pop lyrics from other pop lyrics

City Pop lyrics emphasize scene and mood. They use small tactile details, night imagery, movement, and urban solitude to express feelings. The lines often read like short film scenes rather than direct confessions.

Can I write City Pop in English

Yes. Many City Pop songs have English lines or are entirely in English. The key is to capture the mood and specificity. Use clear images, simple language, and present tense. Avoid clumsy attempts to imitate a language you do not know.

Should I reference actual City Pop artists

You can reference influences in interviews or liner notes. Do not rely on name dropping in the lyric. The song should stand on its own. If you name an artist, do it because it adds meaning not because it signals influence.

How do I make a chorus memorable in City Pop

Keep the chorus short, use a ring phrase, and place the title on an open vowel that is easy to sustain. Use repetition gently and add a small image that complements the emotional claim.

Is it okay to use modern references like smartphones in City Pop lyrics

Yes. Modern references can keep the song relevant. Use them carefully so the song does not date itself. If a line relies on a technology that will feel weird in five years, make sure the emotional claim is timeless.

Learn How to Write City Pop Songs
Capture neon romance and cruise ready polish. Blend jazz kissed chords, silky bass, and breezy hooks that sound like midnight drives with windows down. Arrange glossy verses, radiant choruses, and bridges that sparkle. Keep grooves soft while melodies glide.

  • Seventh and ninth progressions with tasteful lifts
  • Rhythm guitar and Rhodes patterns that shimmer
  • Topline shapes for effortless chorus lift
  • Bass and drum pocket for smooth motion
  • Mix choices that feel glossy without glare

You get: Chord banks, melody maps, side A and side B guides, and tone recipes. Outcome: A city that glows inside a perfect chorus.

Action Plan You Can Use Tonight

  1. Pick a single emotional idea like longing or freedom and write one sentence that states it plainly.
  2. Choose three images from the vocabulary bank and place them into a single verse. Use the camera pass to make each line visual.
  3. Run a two chord loop for two minutes and sing on vowels. Mark the moments you want to repeat and turn one into a chorus title.
  4. Write a pre chorus that points toward the chorus without repeating it. Keep the words short and rhythmic.
  5. Do the crime scene edit. Replace abstractions with objects and actions. Speak the lines and align stress with a beat.
  6. Record a rough demo on your phone and play it for two friends. Ask them which line they remember. If nothing sticks, add a ring phrase.


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About Toni Mercia

Toni Mercia is a Grammy award-winning songwriter and the founder of Lyric Assistant. With over 15 years of experience in the music industry, Toni has written hit songs for some of the biggest names in music. She has a passion for helping aspiring songwriters unlock their creativity and take their craft to the next level. Through Lyric Assistant, Toni has created a tool that empowers songwriters to make great lyrics and turn their musical dreams into reality.