Song poem explained

Song poems are songs with lyrics by usually non-professional writers that have been set to music by commercial companies for a fee. This practice, which has long been disparaged in the established music industry, was also known as song sharking and was conducted by several businesses throughout the 20th century in North America.

Production and promotion

From the early 20th century, the business of recording song poems was promoted through small display ads in popular magazines, comic books, tabloids, men's adventure journals, and similar publications, soliciting lyrics for songs.[1] Those who sent their poetry to one of the production companies usually received notice by mail that their work was worthy of recording by professional musicians, along with a proposal to do so in exchange for a fee. The early 20th century versions of this business involved setting the words to music and printing up sheet music from inexpensively engraved plates.

In producing the recordings, musicians often recorded dozens of songs per recording session using minimal resources. Using a method called "sight-singing," they wrote the music as they read the lyrics and played along, sometimes finishing a song in just one take.[2] Some of the companies recorded new vocals over pre-recorded music backing tracks, using the same music tracks hundreds of times. The recordings were then duplicated on 45 RPM vinyl singles or on individual cassette tapes, or released on compilation LPs with other song poems. Copies of the recording were sent to the customer; promises that they would also be sent to radio stations or music industry executives were rarely, if ever, kept.

Song poem writers

Noted examples of those who have used the song poem approach include:

In media

In 2003, the documentary Off The Charts: The Song-Poem Story was aired on PBS. Gene Merlino, who claims to have sung on more than 10,000 song poems, was featured in the documentary. It has since been released on DVD, and the soundtrack was released on CD.

The 2007 Craig Zobel drama Great World of Sound depicts a modern-day version of "song sharking," and featured scenes where real unsigned musicians audition for the actors portraying the ersatz music producers; these artists ultimately had their songs properly licensed and featured in the finished film.

Tom Ardolino of NRBQ curated an LP and several compilation CDs of material taken from his personal collection (The Beat of The Traps, The Makers of Smooth Music, The Human Breakdown of Absurdity, & I'm Just The Other Woman). His work, along with the efforts of others such as Phil Milstein, musicologist Irwin Chusid of WFMU radio, Mark Mothersbaugh of Devo, Bob Purse, James Lindbloom, and Penn Jillette, has allowed song poems to reach a level of notoriety unthinkable in their own time.[9]

Discography

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: What is this "song-poem"? . 2023-09-14 . www.songpoemmusic.com.
  2. News: Carpenter . Susan . So Bad It’s Good . 16 January 2002 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230205163858/https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2002-jan-16-lv-outsider16-story.html . 5 February 2023 . Milstein is a collector and historian of song-poems--songs that are written by amateurs but performed by professional musicians who “sight-sing,” improvising a melody on first read and recording it in a single take..
  3. The Wonderful and the Obscure Volume 1: Rodd Keith . Rodd . Keith . 7 April 2013 .
  4. https://wfmu.org/LCD/18/rodd.html Ellery Eskelin, "Rodd Keith Revealed", WFMU, 1996
  5. https://gawker.com/5731655/caglar-juan-singletary-the-future-of-blossoming-song-poem-industry Leah Beckmann, "Caglar Juan Singletary, the Future of Blossoming Song-Poem Industry", Gawker.com, January 12, 2011
  6. http://www.songpoemmusic.com/labels/mayhams.htm Phil Milstein, "Mayhams / Mayhams Collegiate", American Song-Poem Music Archives
  7. http://www.songpoemmusic.com/guygax.htm Phil Milstein, "Our Man Guygax: Avant-Garde Linguistic Genius, or Merely a Recent Immigrant?", American Song-Poem Music Archives
  8. http://www.songpoemmusic.com/trubee.htm Phil Milstein, "John Trubee: Peace & Love (Blind Man's Penis)", American Song-Poem Music Archives
  9. http://www.nerdist.com/2011/10/nerdist-podcast-130-penn-teller/ NERDIST Podcast Episode 130: Penn & Teller