Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles this excerpt from the public television program the piano guy is brought to you by the Roland Corporation I'm here with my good friend David Benoit we're just chatting a little bit about song writing and how you personally go about the process of song writing for the tunes that you have written and recorded. Hi Scott. Kei's Song is a beautiful song that you have written. I love that song. obviously pretty well-known why don't you play a couple measures so that we will know what we're talking about here. I'd love to just chat with you about how you compose songs. That really is a lovely song. thanks Give us the backstory on that one. well it is does have kind of a funny story actually. It was right when my wife and I first got married. my wife is from Japan her name is Kay spelled K E I and I was actually writing a song an R&B song for this group which the name I can't right now recall and I can't remember their name The names was something like three ladies that sing R&B . They were very big however many years ago that was probably twenty four years ago and i was thinking this song ... and so I was that is kind of similar but I couldn't get this part ... I only had this ... and I'm working on it and Kei walks over and says why don't you write a song about me Ohhhh ... That's kind of how it worked. well, that's official. she was a muse on that one. Yeah she really was. we talk to a lot of people asking about writing and how you get started we get a lot of viewers asking questions about composing. How do you write a song? what's the connection to the melody to the chords and all that ... I always kind of laugh as I think there are a million different ways that people approach it. do you you typically write something melodically first or do you do the chord changes first? A lot of times I start with the chords first well I a lot of times I start with the chords especially if it is a rhythm song. something kind of funky like "watermelon man" which I did not write but I'm sure that probably he came up with the rhythm lick first and then added the melody. well actually probably when I wrote the bridge first I think started the ... but didn't start that way. It was again it was that kinda How can I make that ...Then okay if I do this ... It just kind of evolves. i mean a lot of it is just trial and error. back and forth and then come up with something David how do you approach the... You do a lot of working, you know, writing. People hire you to either write an arrangement or you are writing for the next album things like that do you really approach it as a gee, it is a job that I need to sit down and and hammer away at every day or I've heard a story about Henry Mancini who is so prolific obviously a fantastic composer, but he had a routine of coming in and sitting in my office so that when his creative moment happens he would insure that he was at his piano he had this routine of coming in and X number of hours a day and he would spend those hours sitting at a piano whether he was sitting there dozing off for not doing anything eventually it would come. How do you do it? do you wait for it to hit you or do you really feel like you need to be spending time seat time I think seat time is really important I think most composers believe there is a discipline to it cole porter was once asked, how do you get your inspiration? He answered, a call from a producer. there's nothing like having a deadline and seat time thank you! Having that deadline. he wrote from nine to one that's a great period of time that's my favorite writing time. in the morning until about lunchtime Once I have lunch and then the day is kind of gone. so that's a precious time and that is the time to close the door to my office we also talked off camera about the fact that it would only take that one song, like Moon River that's right-think about it if that all you ever wrote in your whole career that would be more than enough but ... that's it. It's just discipline time. it is funny it so intriguing sometimes when you think of the marriage of the business end of it with the muse end of it. where does this come from? what what strikes you out of the blue and try to somehow ... interesting to hear so I appreciate you sharing your thoughts on it one more thought and that is in fact many times I like to take walks, and so when I'm on a walk a lot of ideas come to me. it may not necessarily be a melody but it could be imagining the song with strings or an orchestration or an idea of how I can put it together with a certain group. so that is important I think a a balance of time just sitting at the piano but also being away from it and letting your thoughts go free and thinking about imagining how it would sound with the symphony orchestra or vocals ... that's an important process too. Can you play this now? I'd love to hear a full performance of Kei's Song now that we know the back story. alright, okay here it is. it's beautiful thanks. thank you appreciate it all right this excerpt from the public television program the piano guy has been brought to you by the Roland Corporation international manufacturer of the finest keyboard organs and digital pianos. to find out more log on to www.Roland US.com
A2 piano writing roland write melody sitting How to Compose a Song - Piano Lessons 20 6 songwen8778 posted on 2016/07/27 More Share Save Report Video vocabulary