Thanks for the listens and for those kind comments, friends. The ambiance is likely owing to the fact of listening to as many old recordings as I can find online. There are more than one might expect.
What an interesting hobby, Bud and Janice. That would make a great web project.
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Well, bluage, I'll be as brief as I can. The hymns I have been writing usually are finished in a few days. This one goes back almost to the end of May. There were times I was ready to throw up my hands. In the meanwhile, I'm doing some summer remodeling, between heat waves.
What kept me going was the possibility of working up a workflow, so to speak, or a method that would work for me. I say "for me" because, really, each of us seem to have different ways of working. First, I had a fairly good idea of the lyrics, meaning mostly 4/4 meter,
4 lines verse and 4 lines chorus. What I am doing here is trying to improve on my shotgun approach, every song different method. I mocked it up in NCH Crescendo, staffs, bars, and chords above the staff. Printed it.
Now, I have a fairly good idea that somehow the timing of the lyrics is going to fit the verse/chorus chord structure. While this may seem elementary to most users here, it addresses what has been a constant problem for me; namely, matching the melody to the key and chord changes. OK, so now the backing track has been loaded on to two of the recorder tracks. I start laying in some landing notes and noodling with the guitar. Next thing you know, I'm noodling the vocals, in a kind of jazz singers' fashion, doing a bit of marking and erasing, with the object of having the lead melody all but finalized. So this is what I meant by a learning experience. I'm just tired of winging it, wasting time with dead ends and duplications. Next, lay in the lyrics and tweak both the lyrics and the melody. At the same time, work on what has been a perennial
problem for me, walkups and fills. The featured piano verse or chorus has already been chosen. That leaves 4 or 8 bars for my instrumental, the easy part.
So, now I hope I have a method that will allow this fusion of early southern church styles to move along. I was starting to run out of steam. Hope that was informative and not too long-winded. smile






Last edited by edshaw; 08/21/21 02:59 PM.

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