Tips on writing rhymes:
• Forget the vocabulary you most readily associate
with the hip hop genre. Open your mind to all vocabulary.
There is no established protocol of acceptable words in rap. Rap
is poetry and poetry is literarily infinite.
• Be patient. If there’s something you want to
express that is complex and difficult to realize, work through
it. Take it one line at a time and make it happen. Do you
want to be the rapper or the fan? The fan waits around for the
rapper to articulate what he himself cannot.
• Avoid committing to a phrase or word choice
immediately after you write it. While looking for its rhyming
counterpart, a better option may emerge. Always be willing to
revise your work, both for the sake of discovering which words sound
best together and maximizing the originality of your choice of
words. I can’t tell you how many times I wrote ‘beautiful’ for
lack of a more creative choice, then later replaced it with either a
better-sounding or more unique adjective:
Example:
Lay upon my mattress beautiful
Catholic actress (rhymes better)
Girl with the beautiful
musical face (more original)
It’s all true if it’s according to you, but you should always use a mirror look
at your reflection when you think things through (more accurate –
self-evaluation was what I really meant when I initially wrote ‘use a
mirror’)
• The punch line of a joke is more satisfying when
everything leading up to it is funny. The setup of a joke is part
of the punch line. In the same way, every word you write is part
of the rhyme. Alliteration increases the momentum of the rhyme
and makes the words sound like they belong together. Many rappers
give you one rhyme for every two bars, as in the classic, “My name is
Chris Burns and I’m here to say, I rock the microphone in a major
way.” Why waste two bars on one rhyme when you can use
alliteration to create a sea of similar sounds?
Example:
Bar 1. thank God I don’t stutter, my words are butter, a plethora
of odd
Bar 2. utterances, sentences with a penchant for senselessness,
Bar 3. it’s my sensible nature I’m sensitive and simply a hater,
Bar 4. I tend to degrade that which was meant to be greater.
• Visualize that the set of words in a line you wrote
is a city skyline. Each sound is a different-sized
building. When you write the next line, try to build an equal
skyline:
I
like
you
like like
like you like high
school
you’re bright
&cool like
white Nikes
&
ice cubes
• By no means does a rhyme need to be written
linearly. If you have a specific phrase in mind that you feel is the
perfect way to end a verse, write it down. Then go back and
decide how you can set it up to rhyme. Below, I’ve numbered the
order in which I wrote each of these rhyming phrases. Note the
contrast between the origin of the content and when it appears within
the verse:
1. lower-back tattoo
2. at or too
3. new latitudes
4. bad achoo
The eventual structure:
I resent sentences ending with at or too, bad sneeze is a disease, it’s
called ‘bad achoo,’
girls keep getting the same lower-back tattoo, I keep liking them, no,
I’m not mad at you, I breathe in and ascend to new latitudes
• The beauty of writing before you record is that you
can rhyme retroactively, and that
is truly a gift.
Tips on recorded rap:
• Resist the temptation to inform a girl* that she is
your muse or source of inspiration. If you’ve written a song for
a girl, tell her you want her to hear it and give her a copy. Let
your music do the talking. If she doesn’t realize it’s about her,
she doesn’t deserve the song, I mean, she doesn’t even know you for
gosh sakes.
*feminine gender randomly used
• Don’t release a song to your friends or fans when
you know it can be improved with a couple more days’ or weeks’ worth of
work. You want nothing more than to share your finished product
with others – the praise, the acclaim, the feedback – but it’s always
worth making it as good as it can be before you take that step.
• Be aware that listeners generally accept the
content of a rapper’s lyrics as his personality. If you can’t
beat up the biggest bully in school then don’t say you can in a rap,
because you won’t be able to back it up in reality. It’s far more
effective to acknowledge that, of course, he is physically stronger,
but you’re smart enough to destroy his credibility with your vocalized,
poetic thoughts.
• Part of the reason the rap genre is considered so
‘real,’ aside from its rough inner-city origins, is because rappers
usually express themselves in a way that is stripped of these literary
devices (such as metaphor and symbolism) so frequently found in rock
& roll lyrics. The result: as listeners we know a lot
more about Eminem’s family life than we do of U2’s Bono. Rap
lyrics are traditionally very personal. Protect yourself –
spitting 16 bars about your significant other, your parents or your
best friend is an excellent way to increase the vulnerability of those
relationships.
To hear some of my work that has been posted online, visit: www.SickabodSane.com