Movie Weblog » How to Write a Rap Song – Elements of Success to Writing Solid Raps

How to Write a Rap Song – Elements of Success to Writing Solid Raps

March 8, 2011

Composing a rap song follows a similar structure as other genres: a song consists of a choir, rhymes and sometimes a bridge (a unique part of the song that follows a different format than a verse). While the structure may be similar, rap songs usually comprise more rhymes (sometimes as numerous as 32 rhymes in a standard 16 bar verse). Let’s look at the elements of a song, and how you can apply them to help you write a rap song.

Choir and Verses: Friend or Enemy? Some songwriters write the choir first and then the rhymes. Others make the other. If you need to write a rap song, the great is to strengthen the connection between the two, so every rhyme builds on the chorus’ theme. If your chorus deals with breakups, you could publish three different rhymes about breakups; the first verse would be a separation between teenagers who have fallen in love for the first time (like Slick Rick’s “Teenage Love”), the second rhyme deals with a marriage breakup and the third rhyme deals with a widow whose husband recently died of malignant neoplastic disease.

Not exactly pop material, but a great scheme for a rap song. Each rhyme sheds a various light on the idea of a breakup. It’s not three rhymes that search the pain of a teenage separation, it’s an geographic expedition of separations throughout life. Once you have these verses down, you can make on a choir that plays to these ideas- namely, that all relationships eventually come to an end.

If you need to extend on the idea of relationships coming to an end, you can add a bridge to the song. A bridge is sort of like a bonus verse, but is noticeably various due to a different verse pattern and/or beat behind it. In rap songs, the bridge may be spit double time (twice as fast as the rest of the song) or contain more or less internal verses (rhymes that occur in a line, like “I splatter battle rappers”) than the average verses.

The bridge is a great place for you to approach your song topic from a different angle. Where the three rhymes each contain a unique story of a separation, the bridge could focus on breakups in popular, or your own personal views on breakups.

These tips should help you write a rap song faster and better. Keep it up!

Want to learn to rap, then visit this site on how to freestyle rap.

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