ters DID YOU KNOW? î Banjo Paterson was one of our most famous playwrights but he also gave Australia its most famous song, Waltzing Matilda. It was written in collaboration with amateur musician Christina Macpherson, who reworked a Scottish folk tune she heard played at the Warrnambool races. The lyrics were later altered and different tunes used, but Paterson is the person most often credited as the songwriter. î The Greeks are thought to have devised a method of musical notation as early as the 4th century BC, but the oldest known complete composition was found carved on a tombstone dating to the second or third century BC in what was once a Greek colony in Turkey. The composer seems to have been a man named Seikilos who possibly dedicated the song to his wife Euterpe. î The most successful songwriter in history — according to SOME GREAT SONGWRITERS COLE PORTER Born in Indiana in 1891, Porter had composed music and lyrics for more than 800 songs by his death in 1964. He learned to play violin and piano as a child and wrote his first song at age 11. Many of his hits, such as Night And Day and I’ve Got You Under My Skin, were written for Broadway musicals and later Hollywood films. In 1937 a horse fell on him, leaving him in great pain and unable to walk. PAUL KELLY Bob Dylan (top), and (inset) the original autographed lyrics for The Times They Are A-Changin’, and (below) American songwriter Cole Porter, circa 1910. The Australian rock music singer-songwriter, guitarist and harmonica player was born in Adelaide in 1955. His hits include From Little Things Big Things Grow in 1991, Before Too Long, performed with his band the Coloured Girls in 1986, and To Her Door from 1987, which Kelly told an interviewer took him seven years to write. “I sing little melodies into a tape recorder and every now and then I go through the tapes and have a listen,” he explained. “I heard that and I thought it would be good to put words to that, it’s a good tune.” WHILE a large proportion of songs are written with simple lyrics, many of them talking about the person they love or used to love and now hate, some songwriters have far more literary merit and can stand alone as poets, storytellers and even philosophers. Leonard Cohen was a struggling poet before he turned his hand to writing songs. Bob Dylan is often acknowledged as one of the great lyricists, often appropriating great literature to weave into his works and writing cogent social commentary or using poignant images that are often quoted as poetry. Some songwriters have even won literary prizes for their words while the American Pulitzer Prize has a category for songwriters. V1 - NTNE01Z01MA Music: Counch-tlovUedseveIn nt within Music: Count Us In is a mu w in its eighth the national school calendar. No was held on year, this huge school initiative ing more than October 30 at 12.30pm, featur than 2100 schools 500,000 students from more same song, at the across the country singing the same time. Doo to Hobart, From Perth to Penrith, Humpty s were busily school kids of all ages and abilitie r’s Music: Count learning and rehearsing this yea Us In song, Paint You A Song. ts, including This year, five talented studen re selected to Kaelyn Girao, 13 (pictured), we Paint You A Song. write the words and music for the Cat The students were mentored by ran the o Empire’s Harry James Angus, wh ’s inner west. songwriting workshop in Sydney PETER ALLEN Born Peter Woolnough at Tenterfield in northern NSW in 1944, he had a talent for playing piano by ear. By the age of 11 he was working part-time, entertaining locals at the New England Hotel in Armidale. At 15 he met Chris Bell and performed as the Allen Brothers, a clean-cut duo styled on the Everly Brothers, winning a national audience on TV variety show Bandstand. He met singer Judy Garland in Hong Kong in 1962 and married her daughter, Liza Minnelli, in 1967. His hits include I Honestly Love You, Tenterfield Saddler, written about his grandfather, I Still Call Australia Home and I Go To Rio. He died in 1992. Other great songwriters include Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen (poet turned songwriter), John Lennon and Paul McCartney. SONGWRITING AS LITERATURE the Guinness Book Of Records — is Sir Paul McCartney, who has written 188 songs that have made it on to the pop charts. Of those, 91 have reached the top 10. WRITING A SONG THERE are probably as many ways to write a song as there are songwriters. Perhaps the major division between styles of writing a song is those who write melody first, those who first work on the lyrics and those who work on both simultaneously. Some songwriters argue it is impossible to write a decent song without first knowing how it will sound, and that the words, the meter of the words and length of the lines will depend on the music, as will much of the mood of the song. Many other songwriters say they need an idea and words before they can shape the melody around them, which will affect the key, the rhythm and other basic musical elements. Most songs are written to a familiar format of verses alternating with a repeated chorus or refrain, with perhaps a contrasting interlude section (also called the “bridge” if it is used to transition the song toward the end, or the “middle eight” if it is eight bars of music in the middle of the song), but some songs avoid this obvious format. Some forms of songwriting involve complete improvisation, spontaneously making up words and melody. SOURCES AND FURTHER STUDY: BOOKS Oxford Companion To Music edited by Alison Latham (Oxford) Songwriting by Dick Weissman (ePub) WEBSITES Australian Performing Rights Association www.apraamcos.com.au Australian Songwriters Assocation www.asai.org.au Encyclopedia Britannica EVERY TUESDAY Editor: Troy Lennon Phone: 9288 2542 Email: troy.lennon@news.com.au Design: Jack Tanner
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