Week 9 - Song Mapping Compressed
Week 9 - Song Mapping Compressed
Week 9 - Song Mapping Compressed
Week 9
Come to Hawaii
Come to Hawaii
SONG MAPPING
What is Song Mapping?
Song Mapping is a technique for laying out/analysing the plot, or
development of ideas, section by section.
It allows you to see/plan where the song will start, develop, and
end.
It also ensures that each section focuses on one main idea.
It also allows you to see/plan how your sections will relate to
the central idea contained in the hook/chorus/refrain.
Song Listening
One More Dollar, Gillian Welch
The Neighbor Song, Lake Street Dive
Extra:
The Bed Song, Amanda Palmer
When I Lay Down, I Lied, Janis Ian
You
Me
Us
Verse 1 - YOU
You were gone in a flash
With a boom and a crash
The dust filling up the air
You were standing in the frontline
Living and breathing
You had been standing right there
CHORUS
CHORUS
CHORUS
Ashes to ashes, dust to dust,
We all fall down
Past
2.
Present
3.
Future
As in:
One More Dollar, by Gillian Welch
The River, by Bruce Springsteen
2.
3.
2.
3.
As in:
See The World, by Gomez;
The Day Before the Day, by Dido.
2. Parasitic Titles
Cherry Lane
Lost and Found
Here Comes the Hurricane
Sugar High
Mixed Tape
Song form
Song mapping
Hook placement and development
Other observations about how language is used
NB: Not what the song is about.
4.
5.
Not just analysis of Parent song, but specific reference to Original songs.
Refer to specific techniques covered in class, for each category: Lyrics, Melody, Harmony,
as well as Song Form and Structure.
Not just overall analysis of song, but refer to development techniques (ie, how does the
songwriter achieve contrast between sections, or spotlight important moments or
ideas).
Focus on what is important and characteristic to the particular song.
The best feedback I could give you is: I can clearly hear or perceive the tools and
techniques used from the Parent Song, to create a work that is original and creative in its
own right.
Homework
1. Pick your own song choice for the End Tri assessment.
2. Create a Song Map analysis.
3. Sketch out some lyric ideas that use the Song Map
techniques of the Parent to help guide your own lyric
development.
4. Bring to class next week for review.