I don't necessarily agree, but I'm certainly not going to dissuade you from writing the song in a way that makes sense to you. Your creative viewpoint is what's most important in all this.
And I don't necessarily disagree with you.
I just want to bring up one point as food for thought. If a song begins with its most significant emotional hook, then what remains to keep the listener engaged for the rest of the song?
Think of this like a country song. The chorus has a particular meaning after the first verse, but each verse adds an additional meaning and weight to the chorus as it progresses.
I
think this is what happens here, although it's happening in the opposite order.
That you're arguing I take the
opposite direction tells me that as
you are listening, my choice isn't an effective one.
Songs are like mini-movies with a beginning, middle, and end. Ideally, the ending delivers a payoff that makes everything that came before it worth the journey. I wouldn't want a movie to give away its ending right from the start. The beginning should be compelling enough to get me interested, and the story should evolve in a way that's engaging and reveals new information, but all of that goes out the window if the ending doesn't deliver.
You're suggested that perhaps:
- The beginning is not compelling enough to get you interested;
- The story doesn't evolve in a way that's engaging and reveals new information;
- The ending doesn't deliver.
I think those elements
are there. Whether they're done
artfully enough is certainly open to interpretation.
Before I dive into this, let me again acknowledge:
You wouldn't have written this if you didn't think there were issues with the song. I'm
not saying there aren't issues. I'm going to suggest that these elements
are there, just perhaps not
effectively done.
I'm putting this here so you can understand
my thinking, and what and how I've
intended to communicate. Hopefully, that'll explain what I
tried to do, and
how I tried to accomplish it in this song.
The Beginning
I've attempted to open with a "problem statement", adding in some admittedly generic but descriptive language to hook in the listener:
cold september / woke me from my sleep
chill in the air / my lover's gone
It sets the scene to a specific time and place, and lays out the problem. The initial version of the song had her emotional reaction to this:
my so-called true love is nowhere to be seen
he slipped away first light of dawn
However, this was the wrong approach, as it misleads the listener into thinking the core problem is the
relationship, and not
environmental. So that was replaced with:
there's no more work / he's tired of hanging on
he slipped away first light of dawn
Here, although the second verse reveals that she's emotionally distraught, she understands the forces that have led him away. This helps set up the following verses, which expand on this.
The Evolution
There are multiple elements moving the song from the initial state to the final state.
Each verse adds additional information about this narrator's situation, enlarging the
scope:
- Her lover can't find work;
- Everyone else has left;
- The world around her has been destroyed by industry
As the verses progress, the language moves from factual observation to personal
feelings:
- "chill in the air", "he's tired of holding on"
- "i feel the hot tears"
- "i never dreamed", "waiting to die", "all these damned vultures"
The Ending
The verses also drive to the
ending, where she accepts she can no longer fight the forces:
- She sees her lover is gone;
- She hears the raven say she is next;
- She imagines she would stay, but can no longer believe that;
- She knows it's time to leave
Let's go back to the song's goal:
"A traditional bluegrass song with the theme of loss in realizing it's time to move on."
As the song moves through the verses, the loss becomes larger in scope, and more personal, with the need to "move on" becoming accepted. That's why -
for this song - I've taken a micro to macro approach.
So What's The Problem?
Back to the obvious: you wouldn't be making these points
if the song delivered.
While there's room for another verse - or twenty, if I'm looking at Dylan

- I don't think that's the solution.
Or perhaps that
is the problem: there's simply
too much to fit into a small song, and I've just tried to be too ambitious with the material.
Or did I miss something more fundamental?
Again, I refer to Dylan's "North Country Blues". Not as something to copy or mimic, but simply for the masterful storytelling and how it sets up the last verse to be so sad and tragic.
I won't argue that's not true!
But like I said, please follow your own instincts and write the song in the way that makes the most sense to you. I'm not saying my suggestion is completely right... it's just what feels right for me.
At the end of the day, that's exactly what I'm doing.
But... we're also having a fruitful discussion about songwriting
in general, and this song
in specific. And I really appreciate that! Thanks for being part of the beta testers.
I thought I read in another thread that you play in a church band, so it occurred to me that perhaps there's an exceptional singer in the church choir who'd be willing to record this vocal for you.
I thought this was an exceptional song, I might go that route. Or even a terrible song that I was exceptionally fond of.
And at some point in the very near future, I'll put more of my own vocals on these demos. Not because I'm particularly fond of my voice, but because AI voices are problematic.
But for the moment, I think of these as "good enough" to show the song off, and move on to the next song.
The reality is that with a good song, guitar and vocals would probably serve my purpose. But it's
fun to do all this production work - especially in comparison to writing lyrics. Sometimes I think songwriting is an excuse to use all these cool VI sounds I spend too much money on.
I realize you don't feel your house is suitable for recording, especially with a leaky roof (I'm currently battling my own roof leak issues). But maybe you could make a suitable space in just one room - it really doesn't take a lot of space to record a singer. Or if you're using a laptop for your DAW, you could record somewhere outside your house - like maybe at the church during off hours?
I appreciate the nudges. I have made do with what I've got, and it's fine... As long as it's not a rainstorm.
Just trying to think creatively to help elevate your song. If you can get a good vocal, all the other issues we've been discussing become considerably less significant. I'll listen to Alison Krauss sing anything - I don't care what she's talking about
I'll keep reminding myself about the need to have a
real vocalist.
Or maybe use the IK ReVoice. Yeah, using a
different synthetic voice will surely solve the problem!
Maybe you can just let the instruments play together like they do now, but use automation to mute one of them while the other plays for a couple of bars, then mute that one and unmute the other one and let it play for a couple of bars. Lather, rinse, repeat. This might give you a reasonably good trade-off effect.
I know exactly what you're talking about. Problematically, these voices don't
sound like they're trading off if I do that.
There are lots of solutions available to me - using other tracks, pitch stretching,
etc.
But I'm trying not to get
too deep into that, because it's always a bummer to have worked out the automation and then have to squeeze in another verse, or chop an instrumental in half because it's too long.
If an abrupt mute/unmute doesn't sound great, you can ramp the volume up or down on each track at a rate that sounds best.
Yes! Crossfades are my friend!
Good luck!!
Thanks again - I appreciate your willingness to help out here!
If anyone else wants to weigh in, have at it! That's why we've got this forum, right?
