Music or Lyrics?

General Mills

New member
So what I want to know is what is more important to you when listening to a song? The poetry and artistry of great lyrics, or a chord progression that blows you away every time. Music or Lyrics.

You could go both ways on this:
What makes a song "music" instead of poetry? The notes of course! When you're listening to a song do you jump out if your seat when that favorite guitar riff starts? Do you pee yourself when Freddy hits those high notes in Bohemian? Do you love analyzing the musical structure of a piece?

Or maybe your a lyrics person? Because after all, what's a song without a purpose? Lyrics give a song a direction. They can make a statement. Make you cry, or scream with anger. They can make you laugh out loud. Do you find yourself looking up what the hell Bohemian means? Does I am the Walrus make you scream in frusteration? Do you correct people who say coo coo cachoo instead of goo goo gajoob?

There's a fine line between music, and instruments playing all at thecsane yine for no rhyme or reason. Music should elicit emotions. Guitar riffs may be great, but they need to take the song somewhere. And there IS a point when the lyrics of a song can be so convoluted that it's just stupid. Where's that line? What songs cross it?

I'm mainly talking about music within the last 50 years here, but Mr. Mozart knew what he was doing too haha.

I just want to know what you guys think. And don't be an ssshole and say both. Because obviously they are both important. I want to know which do you relish MORE and why? Give examples :)

I personally am a Lyrics guy, but that's me.

GO!!!
 

Chi_townPhilly

Sr. Regulator
Sr. Regulator
O.K. then, Richard Strauss broached this subject in the opera Capriccio long before Hollywood gave us 'Eddie & the Cruisers' and a certain infamous "romantic comedy." How about this for a general rule-of-thumb:

The more informal the style, the greater the importance of words.

Let's walk through some examples- take the Papageno-Papagena duet near the end of Mozart's Die Zauberflöte. If spoken, it can sound absolutely banal. Add Mozart's music to it, however, and it turns into something approaching sublime. It's nearly magical how this happens.

Take something not quite as "artsy," but still semi-formal art... Lloyd-Weber's Phantom of the Opera- when you leave the theatre, reflecting on 'The Music of the Night,' are you more likely to think back on the lyrics... or the music- and that Big Tune!?

All right, a little less 'formal' now- Gilbert & Sullivan operettas. Here is where I'd say the balance starts to tip. Those of us Savoyard wanna-bes are pleased with Sullivan's music- but in our honest moments, we know they need the symbiosis of Gilbert's words in order to achieve their full impact. G&S's personal experience, too, supports this conclusion. Sullivan is a virtually fogotten figure in music, absent his collaboration with Gilbert. Further support for this conclusion can be found in the fact that when Gilbert and Sullivan split for a time, it was Gilbert who proved the more successful of the two, in the realm of Musical Theatre & Operetta.

From here, we move to the popular genres, e.g.: Jazz vocals, Folk, Rock & Pop. Woody Guthrie's 'agit-Folk' would be a near nullity, were it not for his lyrics. Commentators occasionally speak of 'anthemic' Rock... well, it's impossible for a Rock hit to be 'anthemic' without lyrics that broadly resonate with the target audience. So, in this genre, a good case can be made for the primacy of lyrics.

Disclaimer- I said that my conjectural rule was a 'rule-of-thumb,' and don't discount that occasional exceptions to the general run can be found. I'm still inclined to believe that the overarching hypothesis can withstand scrutiny, generally speaking.
 
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veronica98

New member
I think music and lyrics are both the same. Because music cannot be a song if there are no lyrics? And the lyrics cannot be known if there would be no music. That is ny opinion!
 

Montefalco

New member
Depends what makes the song a good song. If it has mediocre words but a great tune/chord progression, then the music. However, if it has stirring words but a very average tune, then the lyrics are more important.
 

wljmrbill

Member
I would have to say the music whether it be the melodic line(themes) or a rthymic pattern. I am opera fan and organist as well as alot of voice work so either of the two above mentioned thoughts play into my overall enjoyment of musical forms. To some extend I agree with Strauss's explainatin that Chi-townphilly mentioned.
 

AlderonFrederic

New member
That really depends.
If we are talking about something involving words into, that for sure the both, no music could survive while the poetry is useless, and visa versa.
If talking about instrumental music, that's obviously out of the question.
Then goes the rap, which is also the music, and here is where the music is on the top, just because you can't "read" rap without the proper bit
That's pretty much it I think
 

Ella Beck

Member
Well, of course it is both - but if I had to choose, it would be the music that comes first.
And I mean the melody, not the chord progression or harmonies.

After all, you can always write different lyrics yourself, or just hum the tune.

An example?

Steeleye Span's surprise Christmas hit, Gaudete. I learned Latin at school, and as a Christian, I value the sentiment - but of course it's the tune and the wonderful timbre of Maddy Prior's voice, both for me and for the people who bought the record, that makes it special.

 

Fretless

Member
Music above all else 95% of the time. My brain doesn't even hear the lyrics, just vocalized syllables. I can listen to a song a hundred times and have no idea what it's about, and my wife and kids can listen a couple of times and know a verse. Of course, they can't analyze the form, phrases, key, chords, etc. which is where my ear goes. I have to sit down with the lyric sheet to know what's going on lyrically, and sometimes it adds a new layer for me. Often it's a toss-away and I go back to not caring. I also have no use for poetry. If I were more attuned to poetics I would probably get more out of the verbal portion of songs.
 

Fretless

Member
Music above all else 95% of the time. My brain doesn't even hear the lyrics, just vocalized syllables. I can listen to a song a hundred times and have no idea what it's about, and my wife and kids can listen a couple of times and know a verse. Of course, they can't analyze the form, phrases, key, chords, etc. which is where my ear goes. I have to sit down with the lyric sheet to know what's going on lyrically, and sometimes it adds a new layer for me. Often it's a toss-away and I go back to not caring. I also have no use for poetry. If I were more attuned to poetics I would probably get more out of the verbal portion of songs.
 

John Watt

Member
According to the American Federation of Musicians Union, singers aren't musicians. They don't have to pay union dues.
You have to be playing a musical instrument to be a musician.
So far, I'm only seeing comments as listeners, not as dancers. You don't need vocals to be a dance band.
Drumming is the most primal instrument, I'm sure we can all agree with that. No notes and no words.

Words fill a song melody, secondary compared to the band playing and the singer singing.
If you are a singing poet the words are most important.
If you're a former stripper who stops rapping-singing and starts putting on a show, that's a newer genre.
I see a blend of all three as being the best kind of live entertainment.

It's now apparent to me that being fretless is next to being fontless.
 
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Ella Beck

Member
Music above all else 95% of the time. My brain doesn't even hear the lyrics, just vocalized syllables. I can listen to a song a hundred times and have no idea what it's about, and my wife and kids can listen a couple of times and know a verse. Of course, they can't analyze the form, phrases, key, chords, etc. which is where my ear goes. I have to sit down with the lyric sheet to know what's going on lyrically, and sometimes it adds a new layer for me. Often it's a toss-away and I go back to not caring. I also have no use for poetry. If I were more attuned to poetics I would probably get more out of the verbal portion of songs.

I do have a use for poetry, and for me the perfect song has meaningful lyrics that are given life and intensity by music that fits it.

Still, I agree - in the last resort, it's music, music, music. :)
 

John Watt

Member
Does anyone have any comments about Biblical verses being used as lyrics?

I laugh at "Christian rock bands" that use "the instruments of the devil",
even if I'm not sure they're being more proud than loud or loud than proud.
And I know what cometh after pride. No.. no.. not Charlie Pride.
His house up on the hill wasn't a place of worship... okay... it was for money.
 
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