Step
One: Touch Somebody
© 1999 Harriet Schock
Think back to the first time you wrote a song for someone
and then played it for that person. Did it have an effect
on him or her? And wasn't that a thrill? At that moment,
you may have realized that the whole thing is about communication.
And if it was real enough to make someone smile, or cry
or say "thank you," then who knows? It might be real enough
to move millions of other people.
I
live in a duplex. My only contact with the upstairs neighbors
had been when I discovered my music room was directly under
one of their bedrooms. Being quite elderly, they go to bed
at about 9:30, so I moved my music studio to another room,
directly under their spare room. They were very grateful
and sweet about it. Last week, I called them to ask them
something about the television antenna. They invited me
up for fruit. I spent an hour and a half hearing them speak
of their life, their many pets through the years, their
children and grandchildren. I was so moved by the experience,
I couldn't stop thinking and feeling about it.
So I started writing..."The television looks like it's from
the fifties...except that there's a cable in the back...He
sits in his special chair...half awake and half aware...that
she is in the room somewhere...that is his pivotal fact..."
I realized that in the middle of a million things I was
supposed to be doing, I was writing a song about my upstairs
neighbors. Not knowing them very well, I didn't know how
they would feel about having their love story immortalized
by the night owl below them, but I knew I was hooked and
couldn't stop.
I called them up and told the wife I had written a song
of tribute to her relationship with her husband. She then
said one of those things that will forever stay in my memory,
not only as a comment, but as a life's lesson. She said,
"Well it certainly can't harm the relationship. Everything
only makes it better." I knew, at that point, here was a
lady who had made some sane decisions. I really wanted her
to like the song.
They came down this morning and I played it for them. They
smiled and thanked me. Then she asked me to read the lyric
to her. I did. We had a nice visit and they left. They had
asked me for a copy of the lyric, which I gave them. But
I made them promise when their children and grandchildren
heard it, they'd let me play it with the melody, not just
read the lyric. They agreed. Ten minutes after they left,
the wife called me and told me that after she read the lyric,
she realized what it said, how moved she was and that her
husband had tears in his eyes as well. They just couldn't
hear quite well enough to make out the words without reading
them. Then she said she didn't know how she could ever thank
me enough for what I had done. And I thought to myself,
I should be thanking them for the inspiration. What a rare
couple it is who can instill that kind of feeling in someone.
My point here is that, yes, it's exciting when I hear a
song of mine on the radio or in a film for the first time.
But that's sort of a wild excitement that's directed outward.
I've actually been known to go up to bikers in restaurants
and tell them my song was playing, only to be too thrilled
that they were actually familiar with it and equally pleased
that they weren't offended I had spoken to them. But the
kind of reward I'm talking about is of a deeper, more inward
nature. It comes from playing a personal communication to
someone
It's such a wonderful gift to be able to put something into
music and words in the first place. And to offer it to someone
as a validation of something he or she did--that's really
quite a gift also. And if you've never done it, you're really
missing something. On my second album, I had a song called
"Mama," which was covered by Helen Reddy, after sheąd had
a hit with "Ainąt No Way To Treat A Lady.". When Helen was
touring she went through Dallas, and my mother went to see
her. Afterward, my mother proudly announced that she was
the "Mama" the song was written about. Looking back now,
I'm so happy I had the foresight to write that song when
I did.
So, as I tell every class I teach and every seminar I give,
there are many reasons to write songs. Getting on the charts
is just one of them, and usually not a very inspiring goal.
Money is cold and generally doesn't get the kind of juices
flowing that inspire art. But there are many lives to be
touched by the gifts we have as songwriters. You might find
that giving one of these gifts is as rewarding to you as
to the recipient, if not moreso.
C Harriet Schock
Harriet Schock wrote the Grammy-nominated standard, "Ain't
No Way To Treat A Lady," and co-wrote "First Time On A Ferris
Wheel," plus many other songs for records and films. She
offers private consultation, a one-on-one consultation and
correspondence courses. Her fifth album, "Rosebud," is in
national release along with the book this article was taken
from, Becoming Remarkable.
Harriet
Schock is a multi-platinum songwriter/recording artist whose
songs have been recorded my numerous artists, nominated
for a Grammy and used in films. Her fifth CD, Rosebud, has
recently been nationally released. This article is excerpted
from her new book, BECOMING REMARKABLE, published by Blue
Dolphin, available nationwide. For further information about
her book, CDs or consultation, go to http://harrietschock.com
or call (323) 934-5691. |