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Same song, different journeysSame song, different journeys

From Perth, Australia’s weekend seminar, May 2009, here is Rachel Dillon’s original opening structure of verse, verse, chorus:

We grew up together in the same small town a
Standing watching summer storms coming down a
You with hair of gold and a will so strong b
I hardly said boo but my heart was full of song b
You chased the ducks I ran from the drake c
We skipped rocks on the dam and swam in the lake c
Pretended to drive ‘cross the state in an abandoned old van d
And we ran, and we ran d
Hell for leather, hell for leather
Hell for leather, down Bellbird Hill

Let’s start with the 2nd line image to strengthen the whole journey:

Standing watching summer storms coming down a
Growing up together in the same small town a
You with hair of gold and a will so strong b
I hardly said boo but my heart was full of song b
You chased the ducks I ran from the drake c
We skipped rocks on the dam and swam in the lake c
Pretended to drive ‘cross the state in an abandoned old van d
And we ran, and we ran d
Hell for leather, hell for leather
Hell for leather, down Bellbird Hill

Try turning the verses into an abab rhyme scheme to create a smoother journey. That way, we don’t stop every 2 lines, and will create two units of 4 lines rather than, with the couplets (aabb), four units of 2 lines:

Standing watching summer storms coming down a
You with hair of gold and a will so strong b
Growing up together in the same small town a
I hardly said boo but my heart was full of song b
You chased the ducks I ran from the drake c
Pretended to drive ‘cross the state in an abandoned old van d
We skipped rocks on the dam and swam in the lake c
And we ran, and we ran d
Hell for leather, hell for leather
Hell for leather, down Bellbird Hill

Instead, we could try unrhyming the first couplet to create a less stable journey, ending with a surprise rhyme at the 4th lines. I especially like the feel of the 2nd verse this way:

Standing watching summer storms rolling by x
Growing up together in the same small town x
You with hair of gold and a will so strong a
I hardly said boo but my heart was full of song a
You chased the ducks I ran from the goose x
We skipped rocks on the dam and swam in the lake x
Pretended to drive ‘cross the state in an abandoned old van b
And we ran, and we ran b
Hell for leather, hell for leather
Hell for leather, down Bellbird Hill

Again, looking for an unstable structure to create a more wistful feeling, let’s try an abba rhyme scheme, which opens the structure, while using the rhyme scheme to throw things off balance. I like the effect of the internal rhymes van/dam/swam in blurring the motion, helping to create a floating, nostalgic feel:

Standing watching summer storms coming down a
You with hair of gold and a will so strong b
I hardly said boo but my heart was full of song b
Growing up together in the same small town a
Pretended to ‘cross the state in an abandoned old van c
We skipped rocks on the dam and swam in the lake d
You chased the ducks I chased the drake d
And we ran, and we ran c
Hell for leather, hell for leather
Hell for leather, down Bellbird Hill

These are all different journeys. It’s nice to be able to lay out the choices – to know what choices you have and how each one makes you feel. Then you can choose the one that feels best.

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Leave a comment
T Alden Calvert
Alabama
Tuesday, Jan 5 04:15 AM
Very good...no, great! to point out re arranging verse lines to create an entirely different feel. Careful not to get chronology out of order, however.
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