SONGWRITING
About song writing Paul Simon said, “It’s very helpful to start with something that’s true. If you start with something that’s false, you’re always covering your tracks. Something simple and true, that has a lot of possibilities, is a nice way to begin.”
As a person who tends to write songs about what I know to be true, here are some truths I’d like to share…
- I have been writing songs since about the age of 15 and it is a craft that I deeply love.
- For every one song you share with the world, there are a dozen or more others that will forever lay hidden in the pages of a journal, or a recording app on your phone.
- Songwriting has been at the centre of my self-expression, emotional processing, and mental well-being; it has also, undeniably, made it possible to connect and relate to the emotional spaces of other people, which is the most beautiful thing.
- Even if no one listened, I would write songs. Songs have the ability to commemorate thought and feeling through words and music. This is unlike any other form of expression I have come across.
- EVERYONE and ANYONE can write songs.
For a long time, songwriting was a very personal process to me. Early on, it was something that I would do when trying to make sense of experiences and the way I was growing to understand the world.
While it has been a pillar of expression in my own life, I have been learning about and witnessing the power of songwriting with patients in my work as a music therapist at hospice and in my private practice. Since working at hospice, I have had the chance to write songs with several patients, using their own words, experiences, and outlook on the world, to craft a song together.
Here is a small example of a poem written together with a patient about their spiritual beliefs, which I then put to music:
It’s different every morning
opening your eyes
The green of the trees,
the blue of the skies
It draws you in like a good friend
beckoning you near,
And blesses you with the beauty
of nature, sweet and clear
I thank the man up in the Big House
wonder if he ever gets to rest
Watching over all of us,
doing His best
A capacity for loving
like I’ve never seen
Shows us how to be kind
and live out our dreams
With songwriting, the possibilities are endless.
I have been fortunate enough to be able care for and nurture the songwriting seeds in my brain – I only hope to be able to help others at hospice do the same for their own!
One final truth: There is no right or wrong in songwriting. If you’re stuck, just start with what you know to be true.
Thanks for reading,
Sarah