GuitarMikeB wrote:In a workshop you don't TEACH people how to write a song, you get them to interact and use their minds (maybe in a new way) in order to create.
It’s interesting to read how the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ writing style evolved.
Originally, they just jammed and put different parts together, whichever sounded good.
But, later…around when they recorded “One Hot Minute”, Flea went on his own.
He wrote by himself with just a bass and cassette deck. Then, he brought the songs to the band when they were nearly finished.
Then, they jammed on the songs and worked the kinks out.
Metallica still just freestyle jam. They record it all to tape and then sift through the tapes looking for different pieces to put together.
Rush decide on which key to record an album. Geddy Lee then puts something together on his computer, in MIDI, for the band to work on.
Frank Zappa & Tatsuya Yoshida (RUINS) both wrote alone, on a piece of paper. They brought the finished work to the band and the band played what was written, verbatim.
Captain Beefheart was pretty unusual. He would whistle a melody or bang it out on a piano and tell the band to interpret what he had done.
Jello Biafra (Dead Kennedys) is kinda like that. He SINGS the melody in his head to a cassette and gives it to the guitarist, who then has to interpret that with the rest of the band.
Faith No More worked more piecemeal. Each band member added their parts on a tape they traded around. But, I think Mike Bordin, Billy Gould, and Roddy Bottom started it off by jamming together without the others.
Ween believed in “quantity over quality”. EVERY DAY, from around 10 am to 6 pm the two of them recorded on their 4-track. It could be stupid garbage! It could be anything! But, they pretty much kept up that schedule from 1985-2012. Only a small percentage of what they came up with was actually used. But, they have dozens of garbage bags in their basements FULL of completed tapes. Stephen King writes kinda like that.
BTW, I’ve found that lots of caffeine and a few alcoholic drinks help loosen the creative process.
My favorite is a White Cuban with a scoop of vanilla ice cream! Mmmmm!