How to Choose a Song Title – Berklee Online Take Note (2024)

The following article on how to choose a song title is excerpted from the Berklee Online course Lyric Writing: Writing From the Title authored by Pat Pattison.

As a songwriter, finding a song title is the big question, and the hard one, because a title is only as good as your imagination—your ability to do something interesting with it. You could take a DNA title like “Tangled Up in Blue” and take it nowhere. You could take a parasitic title like “All of Me” and move the audience to laughter or tears. In general, however, effective titles seem to have some of the following characteristics. They:

  • Distill and embody the central idea of the song.
  • Define a foundation that all the sections of the lyric move toward and develop from.
  • Are able to be developed over a series of sections, maintaining interest and focus as the song evolves.
  • Are engaging and interesting, either in themselves or in the ideas they are able to provoke.

How to Make a Song Title Interesting

Song titles often have features that make them interesting. Any listing of these features is doomed to be incomplete and arbitrary, arrived at inductively by looking at lots of titles. The list is as varied as your imagination. I could say, for example, that titles sometimes contain colors, and point to “Blue Monday,” “The Purple People Eater,” and “Tie a Yellow Ribbon.” Does that mean you should get out the big box of crayons and start browsing? Maybe. But it’s still a crap shoot.

Get Specific

What makes these titles effective could be that they provoke a sense response. They are specific rather than general.Does that mean that “The End of the Innocence” isn’t a good song title? Hardly. But looking at categories like “one-word titles,” or “names of states,” or “people’s names” can be stimulating. So can seeing a good movie or eavesdropping on a conversation in a bar. An introduction and the subsequent “How do you do” might stimulate “How do you do what you do to me?”

Transform Clichés

Perhaps your friend says they can’t stand the ups and downs in their relationship, and you think “They’re on a real roller-coaster ride. Well, they bought the ticket to ride when they proposed.” So now you see that sometimes titles can suggest or contain metaphor or simile. (“Wind Beneath My Wings,” “Train in the Distance,” “Your Body is a Wonderland,” “Hard Candy Christmas,” “Cleaning Out My Closet”)

Should you now tune your title-sniffer to the land of comparative language, browsing through Eudora Welty’s short stories for the gold mine of similes contained therein? Absolutely. Should you take note when the businessperson at the bar raises their glass to the server and says “Nurse?” Maybe. Anything to stimulate your own creativity.

Use a Clever Twist on Words

Then you get the email containing the 25 worst country music titles and read “She Got the Gold Mine, I Got the Shaft.” It’s like watching a car crash. You don’t really want to look, but you can’t look away. Should you start looking for titles containing a clever twist on words, like “Don’t It Make My Brown Eyes Blue?”

Again, the answer is yes.

Should I now start looking in Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations? Couldn’t hurt.

Components of Good Titles

And how about those wonderful titles that sound so nifty? You notice that they contain some sonic relationships, or sonic bonding, either with vowels (assonance) or consonants (alliteration), or both. (“Ain’t Misbehavin’,” “Bewitched, Bothered, and Bewildered,” “Blue Moon,” “Feeling I’m Falling,” “The Right Time of the Night,” “Help Yourself.”)

Should you start listening, using your rhyming dictionary, or perhaps a dictionary of alliteration? Great ideas!

  • Opposites (wrong, right; sun, moon; dark, light; in, out; up, down, etc.)
  • Repetition (“Turn, Turn, Turn,” “On and On”)
  • Repetition with Variation (“Already Ready”)
  • Double meanings (“Mean to Me,” “Night Moves,” “Just about Now”)

Where Titles Can Be Found

There are so many places to stimulate your imagination. If you pay attention, you can often find effective titles in places like these:

  • Billboard signs
  • Product slogans
  • Book and movie titles
  • Interesting things people say
  • Songs, especially lines you misunderstand
  • Thesaurus
  • Dictionaries of phrases
  • Rhyming dictionary
  • Dictionary of alliteration

But remember, no matter where you find your title, or how good it is, you are still responsible for developing it effectively and imaginatively. “Who, what, when, where, why, and how” are among the most effective focusing devices. But make sure that you explore a plethora of possibilities. Don’t jump at the first development idea that presents itself. That’s the one that would come to most everybody first, and that most people would write. Songwriter Gary Burr always goes, “Four or five angles down the road, to the one most people wouldn’t get to.” That’s the one he writes. You should too, only stopping when you find an interesting and natural angle to work from.

Once you commit to the concept of seeing the song title as the centerpiece of the song—as the concept from which everything else will flow, you will be on your way to more efficient and effective songwriting. The entire process will open up, and your creativity and imagination will have a launching pad it can rely on.

STUDY SONGWRITING AT BERKLEE ONLINE

Published February 7, 2022

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How to Choose a Song Title – Berklee Online Take Note (2024)

FAQs

How do you choose a song title? ›

If you pay attention, you can often find effective titles in places like these:
  • Billboard signs.
  • Product slogans.
  • Book and movie titles.
  • Interesting things people say.
  • Songs, especially lines you misunderstand.
  • Thesaurus.
  • Dictionaries of phrases.
  • Rhyming dictionary.
Feb 7, 2022

Are song titles italicized or in quotes? ›

Generally and grammatically speaking, put titles of shorter works in quotation marks but italicize titles of longer works. For example, put a “song title” in quotation marks but italicize the title of the album it appears on.

How to pick a key when writing a song? ›

Find Your Vocal Range

Similar to a melody having a top and bottom note. When choosing a key for a song, it's essential to know the singer's vocal range. Once you know the vocal range, find a key that includes the highest and lowest notes the vocalist can sing without straining.

How do you write a song name? ›

Song titles are always surrounded by quotation marks, like *NSYNC's “Bye Bye Bye,” or “A Whole New World” from Disney's Aladdin. Anytime you write out the title of a song, you'll put that song title in quotation marks according to standard grammar rules. Think of a song as a shorter work like a short story.

How do I get the title of a song? ›

Below are some tools you can use to figure out the name of a song.
  1. Shazam. Shazam is a popular song-identifier app that works on most smartphones and even has an extension for web browsers. ...
  2. SoundHound. ...
  3. MusixMatch. ...
  4. Genius. ...
  5. Google Assistant. ...
  6. Siri & Alexa.

How do you come up with a song name? ›

Choose a topic you are interested in writing a song about. Proceed to write some free flowing text inspired by that topic. Explore any emotions and emotional perspectives, scenarios and conclusions that the story implies. Use that text to then create phrases and word pairs to use as a seed idea for creating a title.

How do I know when to italicize or quote a title? ›

The general rule is to use quotation marks for titles of short works such as articles, poems, songs, essays, or short stories. By contrast, use italics for larger works such as books, movies, and the names of periodicals.

How to write song titles in APA? ›

General Format:

Artist, A. A. (Year). Title of song [Song]. On Title of album [Album]. Record label.

Are song titles capitalized? ›

According to most style guides, nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs are capitalized in titles of books, articles, and songs. You'd also capitalize the first word and (according to most guides) the last word of a title, regardless of what part of speech they are.

How do I find the perfect key for A song? ›

The first thing to consider when choosing a key is how it fits your vocal range. To do this, you need to determine the highest and lowest notes in the original key. You also want to ensure that the tessitura, or the part of the song you'll be singing the most, is in a sweet spot in your range.

What key are most songs written in? ›

C (and its relative minor, A) are the most common by far. After that there is a general trend favoring key signatures with less sharps and flats but this is not universal.

What is the easiest key to write music in? ›

Obviously, C major is the easiest to write in. That does not necessarily mean it's the easiest key to play in. That varies, instrument to instrument.

How to choose a good song title? ›

Write a Memorable Song Title
  1. Keep it brief. A strong song title easy to remember and gets to the point, so consider keeping it short. ...
  2. Make a statement. ...
  3. Use an Intriguing phrase. ...
  4. Try an evocative image. ...
  5. Action words add drama and energy. ...
  6. Try It Now.

What is the easiest way to write a song? ›

Here's our simple step-by-step for how to write a song:
  • Choose a title or decide on your song topic.
  • Write a hook/chorus on your main instrument.
  • Choose a song structure.
  • Write the verses.
  • Write a bridge (if you want one) and consider modulating, or a breakdown.
  • Write lyrics.
  • Record a demo version.

Is a song name in quotes? ›

Song titles will be placed inside quote marks. Though they are in many ways standalone "sources" by themselves, they are relatively short and usually are parts of a larger whole (i.e. the overall music album, which does get italicized).

What should the title of a song be? ›

The hook is almost always the song title and it needs to fully encompass your song's main ideas. Some pop genres will also state that each line of the verse should be able to seamlessly flow into your hook, and therefore, your song's title.

Do song titles need to be underlined? ›

NOTE The titles of poems, songs, short stories, essays, and articles are not underlined or italicized. These titles are set off in quotation marks.

What does a title of a song look like? ›

A book title is written in italics, as is the title of a musical album. Chapter names and songs are set between quotation marks.

What is the most common name in song titles? ›

However, in 2023, Music Industry How To conducted a study which analysed 2,262,292 songs, finding that, while 'John' is the most used male name, 'Mary' is the most popular female name used in song titles.

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