Read Songwriting Without Boundaries Online
Authors: Pat Pattison
The cookies were crumbling and tumbling fast
His teeth bit right through them like cold breaking glass
The avalanche sputtered with each bite he took
Pieces of cookies peppered his book
Caught in the story right through the big quake
Chocolate and sugar covered the page
Little desperate crumbs in the side of his mouth
Like a dozen spring skiers holding their ground
Clinging for safety like small chocolate chips
In the mustache like tree limbs losing their grip
As usual, set a timer and respond to the following prompts for exactly the time allotted. Use only tetrameter lines, creating couplets by
rhyming lines in pairs
. And this time, feel free to vary your rhythms with both duple and triple feel. Remember,
Mary had a little lamb
is a duple feel.
Mary, she had the littlest lamb
is a triple feel.
But stay with four stresses per line.
Sight Sound Taste Touch Smell Body Motion
10 minutes: Mountain
GILLIAN WELCH
I remember as a child I was looking at the mountain
At the penny bright leaves and the river dark fountain
And the brushy willow bending and the granite all a-shiver
And the quiet pine a-standing by the sudden laughing river
And I looked at the sky and I looked at the ground
And I wondered at the mountain that could bring the night down
In a silent creeping shadow like a vapor like a stain
Spreading out and deepening and emptying the vein
Spilling down into the valley from the lee side to the plain
And there it cast a shadow like a place with out a bottom
There was summer in the meadow but on the mountain it was autumn
Made a worry in your bones just to pass beneath the pall
With a lonesome kind of empty like a cupboard on the wall
And a withered kind of purple like the fruit upon the ground
That’s the color of the mountain that could bring the night down
KEPPIE COUTTS
Rising up like a bicep curl
Ridges and rims unfold and unfurl
The earth like the face of an ancient man
Twisting his smile and making the land
Houses sprout in Los Angeles
In places you never think they would be
Nestled into the crust and folds
Of the mountains that frame the glittering gold
The Hollywood sign is an acne scar
From a teenage romance that went too far
The boulevard is a magazine
With pages torn out and glutting the streets
The mountains behind must sigh as they watch
The pimples swell until they pop
The metaphors and similes are wonderful. Go ahead and underline them. Can you feel the triple meter in both? The rhymes are mixtures of perfect and other assorted rhyme types. Remember when you’re doing yours that the whole rhyming panoply is available. Use them, especially when you’re on the hunt for a rhyme match.
Now, try it.
5 minutes: Snowstorm
CHANELLE DAVIS
I hear her rattling the kitchen door
Whipping the roof and chilling the floor
Her breath is angry and restless tonight
Screaming through the huddled pines
The streets are devoured in clouds of snow
And the stars shiver with nowhere to go
BLEU
Blurry and furious blusterous wind
Stinging your face like millions of pins
You can’t feel your fingers or find your direction
The road disappeared in a coat of confection
This stuff is so frigid you can’t call it snow
It’s more like the sky is just dropping small stones
You trudge through the white at significant angle
And pray that the storm is too weak to strangle
You struggle and stumble and crash to your knees
And feel your throat squeeze as your vocal chords freeze
Again, the metaphors are lovely. Also note the personification in Chanelle’s and the use of second person in Bleu’s. Some nice rhyming with tonight/pines, wind/pins, snow/stones. Notice especially how they “open” the couplets and make them move. That’s what creates instability, which can be very expressive in itself, like a film score enhancing the meanings of the words.
Your turn.
DAY #4
TETRAMETER COUPLETS
Keep your writing sense-bound, and keep your eyes open for metaphor. As usual, set a timer and respond to the following prompts for exactly the time allotted. Use only tetrameter lines, creating couplets by rhyming lines in pairs. Feel free to vary your rhythms with both duple and triple feel.
Sight Sound Taste Touch Smell Body Motion
10 minutes: Train
GILLIAN WELCH
Slowly with a puffing and a pulling and a chugging
It is moving like a mountain with a hundred horses tugging
Now just a little faster you can see the wheels a-turning
You can hear the steam a-hissing you can smell the diesel burning
In the silent sliding window see the wishers who are waving
Into daylight as we jettison the platform and the paving
Then the scrappy city fences and the blur of the trees
And then the old conductor will be taking tickets please
BLEU
Like African drums way off in jungle
Calling to you with a rippling rumble
You slip out the window and into the black
Feeling your way to the rusty old track
A faint star appears too close to the ground
And you know that it’s coming, no stopping it now
Then comes the whistle, changing in pitch
From lower to higher, your heart starts to twitch
And now you can feel the wood shaking in time
And smell the coal burning, and see the smoke rise
As the iron rushes forward you raise up your fists
And scream at the engine and the world in the mist
You stare down that killer, and don’t move an inch
’Til it’s one breath away, and you’re laughing in the ditch
Note Gillian’s use of all feminine rhymes, until the last couplet, which ends nicely with the one-syllable masculine rhyme trees/please. They are all perfect rhymes. Look at Bleu’s rhymes and try to name the different rhyme types. Both use triple rhythms well, making the train really move.
Your turn.
5 minutes: Sleeping Late
KEPPIE COUTTS