Deep Song Lyric Breakdown
Jewel - Who Will Save Your Soul Song Lyric Breakdown For Songwriters
If you ever wanted to pick apart a song that feels like a journal entry and a hook at the same time, this is your forensic lab. Jewel w...
Ben Folds Five - Brick Song Lyric Breakdown For Songwriters
Brick</strong is the quiet wrecking ball of late nineties piano rock. It moved people the way only a small, honest confession can. I...
Lucy Dacus - Night Shift Song Lyric Breakdown For Songwriters
This is the guide you did not know you needed. If you want to learn how to write a breakup song that reads like a novel and hits like a...
PJ Harvey - Rid of Me Song Lyric Breakdown For Songwriters
If you want to write a song that feels like being shoved into a shower of gravel while someone reads your diary out loud then this is t...
Tori Amos - Silent All These Years Song Lyric Breakdown For Songwriters
Want to steal craft ideas from one of the most intimate piano songs of the early 1990s and actually use them in your own songwriting? G...
Coldplay - The Scientist Song Lyric Breakdown For Songwriters
If you have ever wanted to steal emotional honesty without sounding like a Hallmark card, this one is for you. Coldplay's "The Scientis...
Charles Aznavour - La Bohème Song Lyric Breakdown For Songwriters
You want to steal craft not copy lyrics. You want to mine one of the most beloved French songs for real songwriting tactics you can use...
Noah Kahan - Stick Season Song Lyric Breakdown For Songwriters
Quick truth You are here because Noah Kahan wrote a song that feels like sitting in your parents kitchen at three in the morning and se...
Kris Kristofferson - Sunday Morning Coming Down Song Lyric Breakdown For Songwriters
This song punches you in the chest with a grocery list and a hangover. Kris Kristofferson wrote Sunday Morning Coming Down like someone...
Beth Orton - She Cries Your Name Song Lyric Breakdown For Songwriters
If you write songs and you have ever wanted to unpack how a quiet lyric can feel like a punch to the throat, welcome. Beth Orton wrote ...