Showing posts with label Songwriting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Songwriting. Show all posts

Thursday, November 12, 2015

November Broadjam Releases

Releases on Broadjam
Compiled by Roy Elkins

Choose You by Tiffany Sinko
Betterman by Nick Fuse and Jim Pearson
Guitar Man by Greg Lambert

 
Tiffany Sinko
Song Title: Choose You
Songwriter: Tiffany Sinko
Tiffany Sinko is from Los Alamitos, California and has a Broadjam member since 2013.
She has posted 16 songs with the most popular being Haunting Me.

She is a musician, singer, song writer, and artist. Tiffany has been pursuing a life in music since 15, when she started her own band, wrote and released 2 independent albums and played many successful shows.


Nice Fuse
Song Title: Betterman
Songwriters: Nick Fuse and Jim Pearson

Nick Fuse is from Austin, Texas and has been a member of Broadjam since 2010. He has posted 77 songs on the Broadjam site with the most popular being The Angels.

Nick Fuse is known for songs that are brutally honest, simple and real. Devoted to Urban Folk, he spins tales of the Modern Age through the ancient role of Muse with soft strings and endearing voice, gifts he does not claim as his own.




Jim Pearson
Jim Pearson is from the United Kingdom and has been a member of Broadjam since 2005. He has posted 18 songs on the Broadjam site with the most popular being Where Did Out Time Go?

A truly original singer-songwriter with a quirky, sensitive, witty, quintessencially British sound that grows on one with each listen. And lurking behind the eccentric trappings are some highly infectious grooves, amber guitar tones, and wickedly clever arrangements that George Martin would be proud of.





Greg Lambert
Song Title: Guitar Man
Songwriter: Greg Lambert

Greg is from Tampa, Florida and has been a member of Broadjam since 2013. He has posted 77 songs on Broadjam to date.  His most popular song among Broadjam listeners is Hiding In The Dark.

Greg says, "I try to put words and music together in a way that is musically pleasing, and even exciting at times! Thanks for listening!"







Roy Elkins
Additional links & good organizations – Willywash, ASCAP 2012, Dallas Songwriters Association – Grand Prize Judge Roy Elkins Comments, Getting Your Music Into Film, Bloomberg, Rotary Club of Madison, Madison Area Music Association, Yellowphone, Max Ink Radio, Madison Hip Hop Awards, ASCAP 2011

Friday, August 15, 2014

The Odds of Writing A Hit Song

The Odds of Writing A Hit Song by Roy Elkins

I recently reviewed a list of the current Top 100 songs. Every once in a while I do this just to see how many solo writers appear on the charts. And I am always curious to see how many writers were involved in creating those songs. On the list I was viewing from a pop list in the third week of July, only 94 songs had writers listed, 6 of the songs, the writer field was blank. Of those 94, 359 writers were listed as collaborators. That is just about 4 writers per song. Only 8 songs listed 1 writer. Of those 8 songs, all were written by the artist who performed them.

Of the 359 writers, 281 were unique. Of the 281, 235 only contributed to just 1 song. 46 had more than one song on the chart. Two writers, Lukasz Gottwald & Henry Walter both contributed to 7 songs.

So the first statistic: A solo writer has a 0% chance of getting a song on the charts if they are not the performer. Now remember, that's just the odds. Although no one has ever played in all 4 professional major sports leagues, it's still possible. If you're a solo writer and not the performer. you still have a chance, but it's a very slim one.

Of those 94 songs, 9 main genres were represented.  For this blog, I took the liberty and combined some similar genres.  Here is the breakdown by genre:
Country - 25 songs on the chart (2.96 writers per song)
Pop - 22 (3.5)
Electronic Dance - 18 (5.5)
Hip Hop - 13 (4)
R & B - 9 (3.33)
Rock - 5 (4)
Folk - 1 (1)
Reggae 1 (5)

Second stat - If you are writing Country or Pop, you have a 50% chance of getting a song on the charts, if you are willing to collaborate with at least 2 other writers.

Years ago, I worked for a company and was an artist rep with numerous successful artists and songwriters.  One guy, who is now in the Rock N' Roll Hall of Fame, said that he didn't feel he had written a good one until he had composed over 100 songs. It was clear that the more successful he became, the more critical he was of his work. Most great writers believe that their next song is going to be the best they have ever written. But more importantly, most understand that their best work is a collaboration with others.

My point with this. If you are writing by yourself, remember the odds are very slim. Remember that collaborating and listening to other perspectives, always makes a project better. It makes us stretch and hear things differently.  And finally, it increases our chances for success.

Press & educational links – Hangout June 6, 2014, “Blanket” Music Licensing, Examiner, Isthmus Rock The Vote, Broadjam 6-Pack, Celebrating Sonic Foundry, Some Of The Best, More Of The Best, Getting Your Music Into Film, Project Famous – Great Photographer, Models of Opportunity: How Entrepreneurs Design Firms