Songwriting Without Boundaries (49 page)

BOOK: Songwriting Without Boundaries
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Pungent sickly crackling smoke
of frantic frying ants
Floated up from the beam that shone
through deathly convex glass
I stood and smoothed my wrinkled dress
and kicked the sand a bit
A stain on the concrete was all that was left
that summer my parents split
SUSAN CATTANEO
Giant spider legs wiggle
Eyes the size of boulders
Mary Whitman starts to giggle
Her science teacher scolds her
Petrie glasses growing mold
A skeleton hangs from a hook
Johnny Duncan picks his nose
While he doodles faces in his book
The tang of sulfur, boiling beakers
Test tubes in a row
Pencils scribbling, untied sneakers
Hair wrapped in a bow

I love Andrea’s punch line, especially after the cruel, macabre picture she paints. The ants are a wonderful metaphor for the anger and pain inside the child. Susan, as usual, draws the reader in with strong sense-bound language. I was back in Mr. Conroy’s science class instantly.

Both handle the tighter rhyme constraints with aplomb.

Now, you try.

DAY #10

COMMON METER

Keep your writing sense-bound, and keep your eyes open for metaphor. As usual, set a timer and respond to the following prompts for exactly the time allotted. Use the whole time, whether you complete your final four-line section or not. Use common meter, again rhyming both your tetrameter and trimeter lines (abab).

Sight Sound Taste Touch Smell Body Motion

10 minutes: Slot Machine

STAN SWINIARSKI
The land of the smokers’ last revenge
Lights flash, bells are ringing
Like a siren that calls my last dime to its death
Let me hear that temptress singing
My arm’s getting weary with every pull
Buttons have no hold on me
The lights flash and give me its promising thrill
I will have my victory
Blue-hairs and blue-collars standing in line
Hoping for a loose machine
I gallantly give up my space this time, so
Someone else could live this dream
SUSAN CATTANEO
She’s parked at the one armed bandit
Her quarters in a plastic cup
Sipping her fifth gin and tonic
Hoping for lady luck
Her hair’s a hornet’s nest of blue
Eyes rheumy with the smoke
She’s humming a dirty little tune
A cross gleaming at her throat
The jangle of the coins is heaven falling
And silence is hell on earth
She lives for the thrill that fortune’s calling
Her winnings define her worth
The carousel music enfolds her
She’s drunk on neon light
This jackpot hope will hold her
Till day runs into night

Both of these take me to the casino. I especially like Stan’s use of the organic (body) sense: “My arm’s getting weary with every pull.” Note also the consonance rhyme pull/thrill. Susan’s bandit/tonic is interesting—dit/ic is a weak syllable family rhyme, and ban/ton is a consonance rhyme. They also match shapes, moving stressed to unstressed.

You try.

5 minutes: Deep-Sea Diver

ADRIANA DUARTE
You’re a lonely deep sea diver
Always wanting more
Just another tipsy driver
Serve another pour
CHANELLE DAVIS
My flashlight is a lonely moon
Shining in the dark
The ocean sings a silent tune
A night without its stars
Maybe they are buried here
Somewhere in the sand
Slow your breathing, lose the fear
Underwater man

I love Adriana’s metaphor: a drunk, diving deep into a sea of alcohol. In second person, Chanelle puts you immediately underwater with “my flashlight is a lonely moon.” Metaphors abound. Her last two lines are commands, turning first person into second person—making it feel like he’s talking to himself.

Your turn.

DAY #11

TETRAMETER AND PENTAMETER

Today you’ll work in an extended form, in six-line units rhyming aabccb, with tetrameter couplets and pentameter following lines.

As you’ve already seen, tetrameter couplets subdivide into units of two, creating an unrelenting march of the smallest sections possible. This time, create a section that doesn’t end until the final line. It’ll feel better; more interesting.

Start here:

Tumbling and tumbling, boulders and rocks
Fallen away from the red mountain top

But now try throwing the tetrameter couplet off balance by inserting a five-stress (pentameter) line:

Tumbling and tumbling, boulders and rocks
4-stress
Fallen away from the red mountain top
4-stress
Dúst on the hórses, spréading all óver the town
5-stress

You can feel the IOU. The five-stress pentameter line creates a push forward, not only because it creates an odd number of lines, but because it doesn’t rhyme either. Now add another tetrameter couplet:

Tumbling and tumbling, boulders and rocks
Fallen away from the red mountain top
Dust on the horses, spreading all over the town
Color of blood, the color of pain
Some of these children won’t breathe again

You can feel the urgency. The structure is asking you to match line line 3, both in length (pentameter) and rhyme.

Like this:

Tumbling and tumbling, boulders and rocks
Fallen away from the red mountain top
Dust on the horses, spreading all over the town
Color of blood, the color of pain
Some of these children won’t breathe again
Dúst like a ghóst cloud swírling and púlling you dówn

Of course, there are rhyme variations possible. What if the tetrameter lines didn’t rhyme?

Tumbling and tumbling, boulders and shale
Fallen away from the red mountain top
Dust on the horses, spreading all over the town
Color of blood, the color of soot
Some of these children won’t breathe again
Dust like a ghost cloud swirling and pulling you down

Now the structure feels more relaxed. The push forward is milder, generated only by line length, since the first rhyme doesn’t occur until the very last syllable.

Today you’ll rhyme your ten-minute piece aabccb, and your five-minute piece xxaxxa, following the model:

Tetrameter
a
Tetrameter
a
Pentameter
b
Tetrameter
c
Tetrameter
c
Pentameter
b

Keep your writing sense-bound, and keep your eyes open for metaphor. As usual, set a timer and respond to the following prompts for exactly the time allotted. Use the whole time, whether or not you complete your final section. Don’t panic. It’ll be challenging, but fun.

Sight    Sound     Taste     Touch     Smell     Body     Motion

10 minutes: War Zone (aabccb)

SUSAN CATTANEO

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