Odie Blackmon - Middle Tennessee State University
Transcription
Odie Blackmon - Middle Tennessee State University
Experiential Learning Scholars Program EXL Award Nomination Form Nominee Information: Name: Odie Blackmon M # (student): _______________ E-Mail: [email protected] Phone: 615-330-3782 Category of Award: _____ Outstanding Student Award X Outstanding Faculty Award _____ Outstanding Administrator Award _____ Outstanding Community Participant Award Nominated by: Name: Odie Blackmon Position/Title: Assistant Professor of Recording Industry/Commercial Songwriting Concentration Coordinator E-Mail: [email protected] Phone: 615-330-3782 Provide your rationale for giving and EXL award to the person nominated. Professor Blackmon deposited $ 10,000 in the Songwriting Programs account in January of 2015 from a post semester/December fundraising concert where Commercial Songwriting students had the opportunity to perform as the opening act for Country Star and MTSU alum Eric Paslay at the Listening Room in Nashville. Also in Spring 2015 he created two new experiential classes for the songwriting concentration: Songwriting Instrumentation: Guitar and Songwriting Instrumentation: Piano. Both classes are designed to increase songwriting students technical playing abilities and understanding of music theory through “playing based” instruction instead of traditional classical notation methods. Both classes have the approval of Chairperson Keel and will soon be considered by the curriculum committees to become prerequisites for the experiential class 3020 Commercial Songwriting. Professor Blackmon also recruited and hired adjunct professors with esteemed professional backgrounds. Guitar teacher Jerry Kimbrough who is a studio guitarist that can be heard on major record labels like RCA, Disney, Warner Brothers, and Sony. Melissa Taylor is a Simply Music certified piano instructor with fifteen years of experience as a music publisher on Nashville’s music row. Spring 2015 professional guests hosted by Professor Blackmon included Woody Bomar, legendary publisher associated with Sony Music and founder of Little Big Town Publishing Company, Rich Karg, former RIM student and professional songwriter for Green Hills Music. Scott Gerow, MTSU Music School alum, owner of Battery Lane Music and professional songwriter for film and tv, and Bobby Taylor, Grammy-nominated songwriter. Professor Blackmon organized a “MTSU Student Songwriter Showcase” with performing rights organization American Society of Composers and Authors at their Music Row office. Twenty major publishing companies including, Warner Chapel, Round Hill Music, Creative Nation, Sea Gayle Music, and Sony/ATV were in attendance. This is a typical “job” interview for songwriters where they play their new songs for publishers that are looking to sign new writers to a contract. MTSU students that performed were Zach Russell, Nick Carpenter, Kyle Crownover, and student group Maybe April. Working with the late George Jone’s wife Nancy on the “Life and Music of George Jones” class, Professor Blackmon learned that there was a need for summer employees at the soon to be opened George Jones Museum in late Spring 2015. He sent out emails to all RIM students and passed on over twenty names to the museum. They hired several students that had gone through the George Jones class as tour guides because they already knew his history. The first employee hired at the museum was MTSU/George Jones class student Bethany Scott who Nancy Jones drove to Murfreesboro and interview personally. Fall 2016 saw the introduction of a new experiential class, “Songwriting for Jingles, Film, and TV”, created by Professor Blackmon and adjunct professor Jerry Kimbrough who has written jingles for clients Coca-Cola, Cartoon Network, Maker’s Mark, and Warner Chapel Music Production. Students learn to diversify their income stream by learning to write songs for alternative markets using Pro Tools recording software. Warner Chapel Music VP Arron Gant was a special guest. Professor Blackmon solicited and received space at ASCAP on Music Row for the 4020 Advanced Songwriting Class to meet six times over the semester. This allowed for close proximity to working professional guests. Guests included Grammy winning artist Alison Krauss, Grammy winning songwriter R.L. Castleman, #1 hit songwriting duo/artists “John & Jacob” and their manger Mike Doyle. Mike’s company also manages Garth Brooks and Meghan Trainor. Other guests were RIM alum and hit songwriter Erin Enderlin, BMG publishing “Creative Director” Daniel Lee, #1 hit songwriter Hugh Moffat. Professor Blackmon collaborated with MFA Audio coordinator Bill Crabtree to have his audio graduate students record songwriting students songs in a professional studio with professional musicians. Blackmon hired the AFM union studio musicians, booked Omni studio, and selected the songs to be recorded. Students got to produce their own music with world class musicians at a world class studio where many gold and platinum records have been recorded. Also in Fall 2015, Professor Blackmon was awarded a grant he wrote from the Academy of Country Music’s Lifting Lives Foundation for $ 10,000. The money will fund the “Music Row in Murfreesboro” program which will pay professional songwriters, music publishers, and musicians $ 200 to $ 400 to cover their travel expenses from Nashville and to say thank you. This should help getting more experienced professionals on the MTSU campus. Blackmon is collaborating with EMC professors Todd O’Neil and Bob Gordon to allow EMC students to video the songwriting and music business pros workshop with the students and MFA Audio’s Bill Crabtree to allow MFA student’s to record the pros. This small amount of money will provide experiential education opportunities for students of several disciplines. Professor Blackmon also applied for and received a grant of $ 1,500 from the EXL Advisory Committee to pay for travel expenses associated with EXL teaching certification training offered Spring 2016 from the NSEE’s Experiential Education Academy. In November, songwriting students from Griffith University Queensland Conservatorium in Australia collaborated with MTSU songwriting students. Some of the songs were chosen to be recorded with professional players at RCA/Victor Studio A in Nashville. This is the second year that Professor Blackmon has collaborated with Griffith University. Currently, Blackmon is creating a practicum course for songwriters that should be available Fall 2016. ** Nominees will be asked to submit documentation supporting their nomination. February 10, 2016 Carol Swayze University College Administration, EXL Scholars Program Middle Tennessee State University I offer my wholehearted thanks as a nominee for the Outstanding EXL Faculty Member Award. I accept the nomination and wish to be considered for the award. It has been my goal, since becoming a faculty member at Middle Tennessee State University, to craft experiences for my students that will not only offer them the opportunity to learn practical skills in the Recording Industry field but to take them to settings where they will attain first-hand knowledge of the music business by talking to and working with industry professionals. In order to provide first-hand experience and practical skills for my students, I introduced an experiential course, entitled “Songwriting for Jingles, Film, and TV,” with the assistance of Jerry Kimbrough, adjunct professor at MTSU and a commercial songwriter for Coca-Cola and the Cartoon Network. Additional experiential classes in song instrumentation – for guitar and for piano. The purpose of these courses is to encourage students to diversify their songwriting abilities in order to meet the demands of a complex and ever-changing music market. While working directly with ASCAP (the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers), I took my “Advanced Songwriting” students from an MTSU classroom to meeting on Music Row in Nashville, bringing them into contact with Grammy Awardwinning artists and songwriters (Alison Krauss and R. L. Castleman), artist management (Mike Doyle/Major Bob Music), and industry publishers, such as BMG Muisc Publishing. Through these efforts, undergraduate students were able to collaborate with world-class artists and record their own music in a top ranked studio with professionals from the American Federation of Musicians. Added to this one-of-a-kind exposure, I established and organized the “MTSU Student Songwriter Showcase,” during which MTSU students were able to perform their original compositions for over twenty major publishing companies, including Sony/ATV, Round Hill Music, Warner Chapel, and many others, to give them experience for their future ventures in the job market. The culmination of these endeavors was a fundraising concert that saw MTSU’s “Commercial Songwriting” students performing as an opening act for country music star (and MTSU alum) Eric Paslay at the Listening Room in Nashville. This fundraiser brought $10,000 to MTSU’s Songwriting program in order to continue bringing students experience, skill-building, and opportunities that only MTSU can provide. I am currently organizing a new practicum class that will use the ACM Lifting Lives grant I received for $ 10,000.00. This grant will pay professional to drive to Murfreesboro and work with my students. I have also solicited involvement from the Professor Bill Crabtree and the MFA Audio Production program as well as Bob Gorman and the EMC’s multi-camera classes. The grant that I wrote will fund experiential learning for songwriting students by working with pro writers, MFA Audio students by recording the sessions, and EMC students by capturing the sessions on video. I’m including a link to the “MTSU Songwriting” Facebook page for details on all of our experiential activities. https://www.facebook.com/MTSU-Songwriting-852327314845931/ Thank you again for your nomination, and I appreciate your consideration. Odie Blackmon Advanced Commercial Songwriting Course Syllabus RIM 4020-001 Fall Semester 2015 Classroom: Ezell 120 Office: Ezell 106A Email: [email protected] Class Hours: 4020-001: 1:00 pm - 2:20 pm T/TR Office Hours: 2:30pm - 3:30pm Tuesday, 12:00pm - 3:00pm Friday Course Description: This course will push the songwriter to find his/her voice/style through the constraints and structure of specific writing assignments. Lectures will be based upon the needs of the class, current trends in hit songs, and timeless examples in classic songs. This course is an experiential learning course. This course includes a hands-on learning project (applied learning, service learning, creative activity, teacher education, laboratory, co-op, or internship). MTSU wants to provide relevant real-world learning opportunities that will benefit students. This course will count toward completion of the designation, EXL Scholars Program. For more information about the EXL Scholars Program, check the website: http://www.mtsu.edu/exl/. It is strongly recommended that your retain copies of all coursework as it will be helpful if you wish to pursue the EXL Scholars designation. Course Outcomes: - The ability to dissect hit and classic songs and learn from them - Start to identify traits of your own voice/style as a songwriter - Solo, Co, and Three-way writing and discussion of process and experiences - A realistic knowledge of the songwriting marketplace - The ability to journal consistently and use as a tool to generate ideas Required Text: “Hit Songs Deconstructed” internet subscription service. Students can buy a semester subscription on-line at the discounted rate of $ 30.00 at www.HitSongsDeconstructed.com/MTSU. Hit Songs Deconstructed provides in-depth analysis of the craft and trends shaping TODAY'S hits. The reports spotlight what makes a contemporary song a hit and provides actionable insight and best practices to help prime songwriters, producers and music industry professionals for success in a very competitive, fast changing musical landscape - while remaining true to their unique artistic vision. Class Materials: Access to a MP3 recording device or phone recording app for recording class assignments. Composition notebook for Journal Access to a computer for turning in lyrics, mp3 files and other assignments. Attendance Policy: Attendance is required in order for students to be successful in this class. Because this is an experiential class, absences will not be excused for any reason. After two absences in Maymester, the student will fail the class. Homework and quizzes may be made up with a doctor’s note stating why the student was sick and that they should not attend class. If a student is late or leaves early they will receive a tardy grade. Two tardy grades result in one absence. It is the student’s responsibility to get any class notes or information missed from classmates. Class Participation: Class participation is an essential part of this course and discussions will be held regularly on course and current popular music topics. Class participation will be factored into the final grade. Outside of Class: Students will be required to write or co-write at least four to six hours outside of class each week. Class Behavior: Students are expected to behave in a professional manner at all times. Unprofessional behavior will result in expulsion from class and will negatively affect your grade. Withdrawal from class: Students who cease attendance but do not officially drop or withdraw will receive a grade of "F". The University withdrawal policy for this semester is listed on this page: http:// www.mtsu.edu/withdraw/ Repeated Courses: No course may be attempted more than twice (i.e. Repeated more than once), except upon the advice of the faculty advisor. (University policy, catalog, p.46.) Reasonable Accommodations For Students With Disabilities: If you have a disability that may require assistance or accommodations or you have a question related to any accommodations for testing, note takers, reader, etc., please speak with me as soon as possible. Students with a disability must register with the Disabled Student Services office. (KUC #120, 898-2783). Do you have a lottery scholarship? To retain Tennessee Education Lottery Scholarship eligibility, you must earn a cumulative TELS GPA of 2.75 after 24 and 48 attempted hours and a cumulative TELS GPA of 3.0 thereafter. You may qualify with a 2.75 cumulative GPA after 72 attempted hours (and subsequent semesters), if you are enrolled full-time and maintain a semester GPA of at least 3.0. A grade of C, D, F, FA, or I in this class may negatively impact TELS eligibility. Dropping or stopping attendance in a class may also impact eligibility; if you withdraw from or stop attending this class and it results in an enrollment status of less than full time, you may lose eligibility for your lottery scholarship. Lottery recipients are eligible to receive the scholarship for a maximum of five years from the date of initial enrollment, or until reaching 120 TELS attempted hours or earning a bachelor degree. For additional Lottery rules, please refer to your Lottery Statement of Understanding form (http:// www.mtsu.edu/financial-aid/forms/LOTFOD.pdf) or contact your MT One Stop Enrollment Counselor (http://www.mtsu.edu/onestop/counselor.php). Mobile devices- All cell phones, laptops, and tablets must be put away during class. Anyone texting during class will be asked to leave and given a tardy. Diversity Statement- This class celebrates the unique ways that people from varying social intersections have contributed to American media institutions. Please choose your words carefully and be mindful of difference in this classroom. Grading: Songs will be graded solely on fulfilling the assigned task, effort shown in presentation, and the ability to show an understanding of subjects covered. I do not grades songs based on my opinion of what a “hit” song may or may not be. A=90% - 100 % B=80% - 89% C=70% - 79% D=60% - 69% F=59% or below Testing and Assignments Acitivity Credit Weight Description/Purpose Class Assignments/ Quizzes 40% Class presentations, quizzes, submissions, and exercises. Song Assignments (6) 40% Original songs written with specific requirements to be completed outside of class and turned in via email by a specific date. Journal 10% Two pages per day for duration of semester/weekends included. Must be numbered and dated in upper right corner of a composition notebook. Journal will be checked randomly and turned in at the end of the semester. Class Participation 10% Class participation and conduct will be graded by instructor. I RESERVE THE RIGHT TO CHANGE THIS SYLLABUS AT ANYTIME DURING THE SEMESTER. Odie Blackmon Examples of Experiential Assignments 1) Daily Journal Entries- Songwriting students are required to write one page a day in a journal for the entire semester. The guidelines are from the “Morning Pages” chapter in “The Artist’s Way” by Julia Cameron. Students are required to have their journal every class for random checks and then a final grade for the whole body of work at the end of the semester. Journaling teaches the student to write uninhibitedly and turn off their inner editor, an important skill for songwriters. It’s also a great resource for song ideas later. 2) Song Assignments- Student are given specific direction that reflect the lecture and put the skills learned into action. For example a set of parameters set for a song assignment could look like this: Song Assignment Guidelines 1) Co-written with assigned partner 2) Up-tempo (no ballads/radio and concert promoters want it up!) 3) Use “Direct Address” point of view (DA is the most intimate and commercial) 4) Use a “one word title.” (They are very popular, easy to remember, and work great as album titles and on tour t-shirts!) 5) Use the popular 1/5/6-/4 chord progression we’ve studied as a main section in some part of the song. 6) Any topic besides love. (Get outside your box!) 7) Use a three to four note reoccurring melodic motif in the chorus. Students play their new songs for the class and professor who then discuss strengths and weakness with the writer(s). The professor then gives an edit assignment just as a pro music publisher would have a signed songwriter edit their work. Co-writers are also asked to share their experience with the class. Sometimes matches not made in heaven offer the best learning experiences. 3) Pro writer visits- Students are given a class participation grade according to their engagement with professional guests. Pro guests offer advice and song critique to the students. 4) Studio Recording of Songs- Students are graded on how well they work with others during the recording process. A songwriter learns the nonclassroom skills that the studio provides where the student must balance their creative and business needs while directing a band of professional musicians, a tracking studio engineer, a vocal/overdub engineer, professional singers or background singers, and a mix engineer towards the same goal. This is done during a limited amount of time due to the American Federation of Musicians pay scale, studio costs, and normal budgetary limitations that all publishers and songwriters face. BMG Music Publishing Creative Director Daniel Lee at ASCAP on Music Row with students Adjunct professor Jerry Kimbrough is a pro studio session musician and international jingle writer whose credits include Coca-Cola and Cartoon Network. Aaron Gant, VP of Production at WarnerChappell Production Music, was guest lecturer in the Jingle class on Dec 2nd. It was fun and highly informative, as he generously critiqued students writing projects, fairly but frankly. Even Jerry Kimbrough, teacher of the class and a writer for Aaron for 15 years, learned a thing or two! Grammy Winners Alison Krauss and R.L. Castleman working with MTSU students Grammy Winners Alison Krauss and R.L. Castleman with MTSU students Grammy Winners Alison Krauss and R.L. Castleman with MTSU students George Jones last duet partner and backup singer Brittany Allyn stopped by the "George Jones Life & Music" class at MTSU. It was great to hear what she learned about singing from George! RIM student JessiLynn Kidd at her internship working with country music stars Carrie Underwood and Sam Hunt. The internship class is Melissa Wald’s program. Student Performing Original Songs Students Performing Original Songs Students recording their Original Songs Students recording their Original Songs Songwriting students from Griffith UniversityQueensland Conservatorium in Australia working with Middle Tennessee State University (MTSU) students on Tuesday! We got some great songs that will be recorded soon RCA Victor Studios Nashville in Nashville. The Academy of Country Music Lifting Lives Foundation just funded a grant of $10,000 for the MTSU Songwriting “Music Row In Murfreesboro” program starting next semester! chris https://www.facebook.com/852327314845931/photos/a.852331788178817.1073741828.852327314845931/970944929650835/?type=3&theat er Page 1 of 1 Coming Soon Music Row in Murfreesboro Sponsored by ACADEMY of COUNTRY MUSIC ~ cX'/t;1jcX'w~ Hit songwriters and music business pros share with MTSU songwriting students https://scontent.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xpt1/v/t1.0-9/12119160_970944929650835_709806... 2/25/2016 From: To: Subject: Date: Odie Blackmon [email protected] New from MTSU: MTSU songwriting classes get a "lift" from ACM grant for visiting pros Wednesday, December 16, 2015 12:46:50 PM FOR RELEASE: Dec. 16, 2015 EDITORIAL CONTACT: Gina E. Fann, 615-898-5385 o, 615-713-6267 c, or [email protected] MTSU songwriting classes get a ‘lift’ from ACM grant for visiting pros MURFREESBORO — MTSU songwriting students will have more opportunities to learn from visiting professionals in the first phase of a new “Music Row in Murfreesboro” project funded by a $10,000 grant from an arm of the Academy of Country Music. The ACM’s “Lifting Lives Foundation” made the donation to support the Department of Recording Industry’s ongoing Commercial Songwriting Program expansion, program director Odie Blackmon said. “We’ve had several of our Advanced Songwriting classes up at the ASCAP headquarters in Nashville so we can be close to professionals,” the professor said, “and even with the kindness of ASCAP letting us use space, we still had a lot of obstacles for our students.” Those obstacles involved both time and money, Blackmon said, when students who had other classes or off-campus work had to add a twohour round-trip, with gas and parking costs, to a three-hour class. Music business professionals regularly visit MTSU recording industry classes on campus to offer advice, share war stories and even critique student projects. Blackmon wrote the grant request in hopes of getting extra funds to reimburse the pros’ expenses for their MTSU songwritingclass visits. “The Lifting Lives Foundation apparently liked the fact that 30 percent of our students at MTSU are first-generation college students,” he said, “and then they saw that we have 16 full-time music business professors, 14 audio professors and one full-time songwriting professor, so I think they felt it would be a good opportunity for us to bring some real industry pros and even more diversity to our students.” The foundation is the philanthropic arm of the Academy of Country Music and develops and funds music-related therapy and education programs. It uses donations from artists and fans to fund programs ranging from disaster relief to music camps and music therapy for people with disabilities and military veterans. MTSU’s program is one of 11 new beneficiaries of the ACM Lifting Lives Foundation’s fall grants totaling $180,000. Other grant recipients included Alive Hospice, CreatiVets, Musicians on Call, Nashville’s W.O. Smith Music School and the Vanderbilt Kennedy Center. “We owe a huge debt of gratitude to the artists and volunteer board members that donate their time and efforts to ACM Lifting Lives,” said Debbie Carroll, ACM Lifting Lives vice president. “It’s because of their kindness we’re able to give back and be a part of continuing the impact made through the power of music in these communities.” Blackmon, who expressed his gratitude to MTSU colleagues Dr. Samantha Cantrell, proposal development specialist in the Office of Research Services, and Pat Branam, director of development in the Office of Development and Advancement Services, for their help with the grant, said he intends to expand the “Music Row in Murfreesboro” project as interest, time and funds allow. Students in the Department of Electronic Media Communication have already mentioned videotaping the visiting songwriter sessions, both for their own project proficiency and to archive for future songwriting students to view. “These visits are so beneficial to our students,” he said. “I’ve seen repeatedly how much affected our students are by these professionals sitting down and talking with them.” You can see a brief thank-you video from the Commercial Songwriting Program students to the ACM Lifting Lives Foundation at http://ow.ly/VVq6Y. For more information about MTSU’s Commercial Songwriting Program, visit http://www.mtsu.edu/programs/commercial-songwriting. More details on the Department of Recording Industry are available at http://www.mtsu.edu/recording-industry. —30— MTSU is committed to developing a community devoted to learning, growth and service. We hold these values dear, and there’s a simple phrase that conveys them: “I am True Blue.” Learn more at www.mtsu.edu/trueblue. For MTSU news anytime, visit www.MTSUNews.com. MTSU Music Row in Murfreesboro.jpg - MTSU assistant professor Odie Blackmon, standing, discusses songwriting techniques with commercial songwriting students in his Ezell Hall classroom in this file photo. The Academy of Country Music's Lifting Lives Foundation recently gave the program $10,000 for the new "Music Row in Murfreesboro" project to bring more music industry professionals to songwriting classes at MTSU. (MTSU file photo by Andy Heidt) From: To: Subject: Date: Odie Blackmon Carol Swayze Songwriting students recording their original songs at OMNI Sound in Nashville Wednesday, December 02, 2015 12:20:18 PM Here’s a link to see how famous this studio is: http://www.omnisoundstudios.com/ From: To: Subject: Date: Attachments: Charles Blackmon Carol Swayze Grammy Winning songwriter today Friday, February 19, 2016 6:36:59 AM 01 All Kinds of Kinds.m4a ATT00001.htm ATT00002.htm Carol, If it is possible, please add this week’s events to my application for the EXL award. Thanks, Odie On Tuesday, I lectured on “Songs of Social Commentary” to my Advanced Songwriting (RIM 4020) class. Today I followed up with a visit from Grammy winning songwriter Don Henry. http://www.donhenry.com Before Don came to visit the students had to listen to three of his “socially conscious” songs, read his bio, and write a one page response. This ensure that they are engaged with the visitor and ready to discuss his song craft and strategies. Don is known for being a songwriter’s songwriter and famous for songs such as “Beautiful Fool” about Martin Luther King Jr. and JFK, All Kinds of Kinds by Miranda Lambert, and Grammy song of the year “We’re Have You’ve Been” by Kathy Mattea. Students asked questions about Don’s approach to melody and specifically he talked about how he tries to write songs of social conciseness without alienating his audience. Henry also talked about the business of a professional songwriter. Next week we will look at our notes of Don’s comments of how he crafted Miranda Lambert’s top 15 hit “All Kinds of Kinds” while listening to her recording and then dissect what we learned from Don’s comments. MTSU songwriting students are learning the craft of songwriting from some of the actual hit writers. To have the person that wrote the song tell them exactly what they were thinking during the creative process and why they made the decisions they made during the process is proving to be an invaluable experience. Don Henry’s visit was made possible through a grant funded by the ACM’s Lifting Lives Foundation. From: To: Subject: Date: Odie Blackmon Alton Dellinger; Amy Macy; Beverly Keel; Charlie Dahan; Chris Haseleu; Cosette Collier; Dale Brown; Dan Pfeifer; Dana Potter; Daniel C. Rowland; Darryl Leach; Daudi Fletcher; Deborah Wagnon; Frank C. Baird; Ernest F. Cannon; Gloria Green; Grant Greene; Jared S. Reynolds; Jeffrey Izzo; Jerry Kimbrough; Jewly Hight; James Piekarski; John M. Dougan; John Hill; John Merchant; Joseph Akins; Matt Foglia; Matthew O"Brien; Megan F. Salladay; Melissa Taylor ([email protected]); Melissa Wald; Michael S. Fleming; Michael L. Hanson; Mike Alleyne; Natasha Branch; Odie Blackmon; Olivia K. Young; Paul Allen; Paul Fischer; Rich Barnet; Sarah Bailey; Stacy L. Merida; Tammy R. Donham; Tisha J. Simeral; Ken Paulson; Zeny Panol; Rachel R. Helms; Lisa McCann; Gregory N. Reish; Yvonne Elliott; Abby C. White; Val Hoeppner; Andrew Oppmann; John M. Goodwin; Rob Janson; Trevor O. deClercq; Bill Crabtree; Zak Denham; Todd O"Neill; Jimmy W. Hart; Billy Pittard; Gina Fann; Carol Swayze Sunday Brunch Saturday, November 14, 2015 9:32:37 AM Friends, Tomorrow, MTSU Songwriting students Merideth Oswald, Corey Fisher, Caitlin Spencer, and Jordan Peffley will be performing at 11:30 for The Listening Room Cafe’s Sunday brunch in downtown Nashville. Reservations are suggested. I’m attaching a brunch menu. Hope to see you there! Best, Odie http://www.listeningroomcafe.com/brunch-weekend/ From: To: Subject: Date: Attachments: Charles O Blackmon Carol Swayze slide show for committee Monday, February 15, 2016 1:45:21 PM Song Titles.pdf ATT00001.txt Carol, I use Keynote slideshows for all of my classes. It provides great visual learning and doesn’t use up trees! I’m sending you an example of a lecture on “Song Titles and Plot Devices” designed to help young songwriters come up with ideas and not just wait for inspiration. That’s what professionals have to do! As you will see, I give a description, show examples of popular songs (new and old from different genres), and then give some pre-writing instructions. The student will have an assignment where they come in with several ideas for each category. I then incorporate these into my songwriting assignments for practical use. Song Titles Song titles suggest a story, convey a mood, and establish a flavor. Good titles capture the essence of the entire song in just a few words. Most of all, intriguing song titles attract people. Coming up with a good title is an important skill needed for writing hit songs. Coming up with a fresh title has been long considered a smart way to start a song. “The public buys songs, not because it knows the song, but because it knows and likes the title idea.” Irving Berlin “I write titles and work backwards from there.” Sting “If you start out with a tangible, then the whole song stays more focused. I almost have to do it that way.” Jimmy Webb Strategies for Song Titles 1) Color Title Helps you think in concrete images rather than in abstractions and to utilize a time-honored device with built-in memorability that makes for a distinctive title. Purple Haze Purple People Eater Purple Sky Purple Rain Deep Purple Purple Heart Green Onions Green Tambourine Green River Green Light Bein' Green Little Green Apples Green Eyed Lady White Wedding White Christmas Nights in White Satin White Flag White Room White Horse Paint The White House Black Pink Houses Pink Bedroom Pink Cadillac Pink Pretty In Pink Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots Black Hole Sun Back In Black Long Black Train Little Black Dress Black Dog Black Widow Black or White Blackbird Paint It Black Tie a Ribbon 'Round the Ole Oak Tree Yellow Raincoat Yellow My Old Yellow Car Mellow Yellow Yellow Submarine Yellow Ledbetter Goodbye Yellow Brick Road Don’t Eat The Yellow Snow Blue Turns To Grey When The Stars Go Blue Blue Moon Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain Blue Blue Bayou Baby Blue Angel In Blue Jeans Blue Suede Shoes Red Something in Red Little Red Corvette The Lady in Red Bleed Red Red Solo Cup Red Lipstick Little Red Wagon Don’t It Make My Brown Eyes Blue Mr. Brownstone Bad, Bad Leroy Brown Brown Eyed Girl Old Brown Shoe Sweet Georgia Brown Brown Sugar Charlie Brown Touch of Grey Grey Street Grey Cloudy Lies Greyhound Best I Ever Had (Grey Sky Morning) Grey Day Mother Grey 2) A City, State or Foreign Place Title Like color titles, place titles exert the appeal of the concrete and specific. And of course it's the specific (rather than the general) that leads to the universal.” State Titles Texas Flood Mississippi Queen Rainy Night In Georgia Kentucky Rain Sweet Home Alabama Hotel California Deep In The Heart Of Texas California Girls Jersey Girl Leaving Louisiana North To Alaska City Titles Angel From Montgomery Does Ft. Worth Ever Cross Your Mind A Baltimore Love Thing That’s How I Got To Memphis NEW ORLEANS LADY Detroit Rock City New York Minute Jesus Just Left Chicago Angel of Harlem Foreign Place Titles Back in the U.S.S.R. April In Paris China Girl Bombs Over Baghdad Blame It On Mexico Werewolves In London Diamonds From Sierra Leone Prewriting Suggestions The plot of most place songs seems to break down into three major categories: 1) Remembering the place with either joy (“Moonlight in Vermont”) or regret (“Galveston”); 2) Heading to, or back to, the place (“New York, New York,” “California, Here I Come”); 3) Singing its praises (“Chicago”). One way to go about the title hunt would be to pick one of those plot lines and work from there. Another would be to get out an atlas and choose a place that hasn't been overmusicalized and perhaps link the name alliteratively; for example, “Nantucket Nights,” or “Meet Me in Monterey” 3) A Day, Month or Number Title This strategy draws again upon the appeal of the specific. Day Titles Saturday Night Fever Manic Monday Ruby Tuesday SUNDAY BLOODY SUNDAY Wednesday Girl Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.) Thursday’s Child Sunday Morning Coming Down Tuesday’s Gone Month Titles End of May November Rain Sometimes It Snows In April Fourth of July Waiting On June If We Make It Through December Wake Me Up When September Ends Number Titles Three Times a Lady 9 to 5 Heaven on the Seventh Floor Five O’Clock Somewhere Sweet Little Sixteen Give Me Three Steps One Love Eight Days A Week 8-6-7-5-3-0-9 These Four Walls Prewriting Suggestions You could begin by writing down in the middle of a blank page a day or month that hasn't produced a well-known song and see what connections you make. Just as with place names, alliteration links well to days months.“(“Mine Till Monday,” “See You in September”). It might prove fruitful to think of categories that contain numbers; for example, addresses, phone numbers, ID's, license plates, ages, and so on. 4) Female Name Title Of all the ways to be specific, using a woman's name in a title seems to be the one songwriters have chosen the most in every genre—pop, rock, country and theater. Female Name Titles Hey There Delilah Sunny Came Home Angie Sweet Caroline Rosanna Jenny Was A Friend Of Mine Gloria Billie Jean Elanor Rigby My Maria Beth Last Dance With Mary Jane Consider viewpoint as a design device: You might want to treat your title as the one being addressed (in second-person) as in “Georgy Girl,” or the one talked about (in third person) as in “Lulu's Back in Town.” Still another approach would be to pick a vogue name that hasn't yet been immortalized—Debbie, Hilary, Wendy—and thus aim for a classic. 5) Male Name Title STAN Jessie’s Girl Johnny B. Goode Jumpin’ Jack Flash Hey Joe Goodbye Earl Sam’s Town 6) The Famous Name Title Springsteen Christian Dior Denim Flow Tim McGraw Willie, Waylon, & Me Hemingway’s Whiskey The Ballad Of Billy The Kid Betty Davis Eyes Buddy Holly 7) A Title With a Top-Ten Word: “Heart, Night, If” A virtual instant cure for the “I've got no ideas” syndrome. Using a “top-ten” keyword—especially when it's heart, or night, or if—three of the most popular in songdom. Innovative writers seem never to run out of fresh ways to treat these ordinary words.” Heart Titles Heartbreaker Heart’s On Fire Half A Heart Put a Little Love in Your Heart Heartbreak Hotel Heart of Glass Always There… In Our Hearts Un-break My Heart Heart of Stone Give Your Heart A Break Night Titles The Night We Called It a Day Nightshift Stay the Night Help Me Make It Through the Night The Way You Look Tonight Because The Night Dance The Night Away A Hard Day’s Night If Titles If I Could Put Time in a Bottle If I Were A Boy If Ever You're in My Arms Again If I Could Fly (If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don’t Want To Be Right If I Fell If It Makes You Happy Even If It Breaks Your Heart If I Never See Your Face Again Prewriting Suggestions Write the word heart on the first line of your page and just keep writing in short phrases rapidly one after another. Let random connections occur. If rhymes pop out, let them. Keep your pen or pencil on the paper—and free write. If you find you're pausing, it's because your left-brain editor is interfering. Do the same for “Night.” “The foregoing examples illustrate that an “if”concept can express various attitudes—rueful, hopeful, playful, and so on. To connect you with your own significant “if,” the brainstorming process will generally do the trick. Or, you could work from specific viewpoints; for example, try three columns headed “Mine,” “Yours,” “The World's.” The first would naturally emphasize personal “ifs,” the second, interpersonal, and the third, social/global.” 8) Antonym Title (OPPOSITES) An antonym is a word opposite in meaning to another: hot is an antonym of cold. Antonyms make for memorability; that's why they're a favorite device of advertising copywriters. “Tide's in, dirt's out” Oldsmobile’s “This is the new generation of Olds” Motorola's “The way we put things together sets us apart” Antonym Titles Hot N Cold Ebony & Ivory Sleeping Single in a Double Bed Easy Come, Easy Go Full Moon and Empty Arms Hello Goodbye The Night We Called It a Day Dead Or Alive 9) “Idiom, Axiom or Paragram Title” idioms informal expressions “beyond belief, take it or leave it, no problem” axioms also called a maxim or proverb—is a self-evident truth based on common sense, widely accepted on its intrinsic merit: finders keepers—losers weepers or a stitch in time saves nine. Idiom Song Titles Dark Horse True Blue Another Thing Coming Good Thing Going Shake It Off CHANGE THE WORLD In A New York Minute Axioms Song Titles All That Glitters Isn't Gold Every Rose Has It’s Thorn (What Doesn’t Kill You Makes You) STRONGER All You Need Is Love Too Close for Comfort Love Will Find a Way Easy Come, Easy Go Every Picture Tells A Story Prewriting Suggestions To produce idiomatic and axiomatic titles requires an alert ear for natural dialogue, an alert eye for signs and billboards—and a handy pen and paper for saving what you find. When a title strikes, mull over the potential plot treatments. Explore all the possibilities. Ask yourself: What might the situation be? Who is thinking it or saying it to whom? And why? What other possible meanings might it have? Paragram A paragram is a play on words made by altering a word, or sometimes only a letter, in a common expression Very common in Country music. Paragram Song Titles We've Got to Start Meeting Like This Friends in Low Places Can't Teach My Old Heart New Tricks Two Hearts Are Better Than One I Meant Every Word He Said The High Cost of Loving 10) “And” Song Titles And…” offers a means to thrust your character into the middle of something, into the heat of the action, the debate, the emotion.… That single word might also prompt a more personal, or more original lyric than you may yet have written. “And” Song Titles And We Danced And I Love Her And I’m Not Telling You I’m Not Going And Winter Came And The Beat Goes On And Still And So It Goes And The Cradle Will Rock 11) Metaphor as Design Device A metaphor is a figure of comparison that implies some likeness in two disparate realms thus making a verbal equation: “All the world's a stage and all the men and women merely players” (Shakespeare). That statement claims, in effect: Life = a play. This metaphor reflects one of our core concepts as heard in such expressions as “My role as teacher,”and “She was upstaged by her sister.” Thinking metaphorically draws upon the right brain's ability to visualize, note similarities, and synthesize Simile: A Tentative Metaphor A simile is the most common subtype of metaphor. It makes a direct comparison using the words like, as or than. A simile feels tentative because it lacks the metaphor's assertiveness. For example, compare the relative power of the statement “All the world's a stage” to “All the world is like a stage,” or “I Am a Rock” to “I Am Like a Rock.” The essential meaning is the same, but the “like” considerably lessens its impact.” The Verbal Equation of Metaphor It's been observed that it's virtually impossible for anyone to talk for more than three consecutive minutes without recourse to a metaphor. That's because we envision so many basic aspects of life, quite unconsciously, in terms of something else. As a consequence, when we use certain phrases we're often unaware that we're not being literal. For example, the following phrases may not immediately strike you as metaphoric. Yet each embodies a verbal equation: This Metaphoric Phrase Implies This Verbal Equation “You won that round” arguments = prizefights “Jumpstart the economy” economy = engine “That's hard to swallow” ideas = substances Titles That Embody Four Basic Metaphoric Concepts Rain = trouble/hard times Stormy Weather I Made It Through the Rain Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head Rainy Day Woman Let a Smile Be Your Umbrella Sun = happiness/good times You Are My Sunshine Sunny Side of the Street When the Sun Comes Out You Are the Sunshine of My Life Life = a road journey Somewhere Down the Road Two for the Road Merrily We Roll Along Boulevard of Broken Dreams Music = romantic feelings With a Song in My Heart The Song Is You How Do You Keep the Music Playing The Song Is Ended, But the Melody Lingers On The Song Remembers When Titles That Reflect Fresh Metaphor/Simile Concepts You Ain't Nothin' But a Hound Dog (Like a) Bridge Over Troubled Water Everything's Coming Up Roses Running on Empty You Can't Be a Beacon If Your Light Don't Shine I Don't Mind the Thorns When You're the Rose You Are the Wind Beneath My Wings Like A Rolling Stone Prewriting Suggestions Any of the foregoing metaphors may suggest a fresh approach, or you might consider some other mainstream concepts: Relationships are a gamble Love is magic Troubles are burdens Silence is a wall Feelings are temperatures Infidelity is a crime After you pick one, or come up with an original one, then comes the free associating process. Let spontaneous phrases tumble out. If you picked “relationships are a gamble,” start out with that phrase, suspend your left-brain's critical judgments and let your right's randomness come out to play. Freely jot down any related words or phrases that spring to mind– roulette wheel, game of chance, place my bet, stakes are high. Stay in that “flow” mode letting random thoughts connect, rhymes spill out–wheel/ deal/steal/appeal/conceal…. The longer you sustain the flow, the richer will be the source material from which you begin to write. So keep going and going and going. Suddenly, a phrase may come out that makes you say, “Hey, that's it–a title.” 12) Personification as Design Device “Personification, a subtype of metaphor, is a figure of speech attributing human characteristics to abstractions or inanimate objects: “The sun smiled on the Memorial Day parade” “Illiteracy is robbing us of future leaders” “Inflation is eating up the profits” Personification Titles The House That Built Me Rock-n-Roll Never Forgets Hungry Heart Highway Don’t Care Lyin’ Eyes Love Bites Brother Jukebox Blame It On The Sun The Wind Cries Mary 13) The Question Title Questions catch the ear. Questions make for strong opening lines, strong song titles, and they can supply a strong framing device for your plot. Question Titles Do Ya Think I'm Sexy? Where Is the Love? How Much A Dollar Cost? Are You Gonna Be My Girl When Will I Be Loved? Is That All There Is? What Do You Mean? Whataya Want From Me? How Am I Supposed to Live Without You? 14) The Phone Call Title (Letter, E-mail, Text) Letting the audience act as eavesdropper on one end of a conversation offers a unique opportunity to both move a plot forward and reveal aspects of character. Phone Titles I Just Called to Say I Love You Payphone Hello, It's Me Operator Telephone Hello Kiss Me Through The Phone The Call Don’t Hang Up Letter, E-mail, Text Titles Dear Future Husband P.S. I Love You If You’re Reading This Dear John Dear Dad Prewriting Suggestions Let your audience know at the opening of the first verse that it's overhearing a phone conversation. That enables the listener to experience the song, rather than have to decode it. There's a big difference between surprising your audience and baffling them; the phone call device should not be treated as a means to “surprise.” Every word should sound as if it's being spoken now, rather than being thought later. 15) The One Word Title Breathe Radioactive Roar Faith Iris Royals Kryptonite Changes Smooth Works great on T-shirts!