Music can
have a large impact on an audience. It can play a crucial role in
telling a story. But lyrics are different from music. Lyrics are
just words. They are not tempo, rhythm, tune, or—especially—sound.
At least, not when written down.
Lyrics in
text have no sound to them, which means they can be interpreted as
sounding any way the reader wants. One could risk spending many,
many paragraphs on each syllable to make sure the reader doesn’t,
or assume that using lyrics to a popular song would mean that
everyone would know the song you quote.
The first
way is a quick way to lose most of your readers—or at the very
least their memory of what was happening during the music in your
story. The second way… have you ever heard ‘Born this way’ by
Lady Gaga? She’s so popular these days everyone’s trying to cash
in on her fame. You have to have heard it. I haven’t, but surely
you have.
Still,
it’s worth the risk, right? I mean, the lyrics convey the mood,
making your work as an author so much easier. It’s worth that
break to also lose readers who find it hard to be immersed in the
story and concentrate on the actual action when the story keeps
skipping to lyrics, right? Your story will be up for years after the
song falls into obscurity, some event makes the artist unpopular, a
new musical fad shows up, or even a new generation with new tastes
appears. People will still understand the point of the story, won’t
they? They won’t find it lazy to use lyrics to replace actual
work, even though spending time on telling the reader by yourself,
you can create suspense and tension, or make the reader relax. It’s
obviously much better to rush through that with a few lyrics by
someone else.
Heck, you
can even use lyrics to develop characters and plot. Everyone will
know exactly who the lyrics are referring to. Even if they’ve
never hear the tune, or forgot the tempo, or if they read at a pace
that doesn’t match up with the lyrics perfectly.
If music
can do all that for you, then the more you use, the less risk there
is. The music is just that good. You know it. If ninety percent of
your story is lyrics, then you’re just using it to its full
potential, not accenting something you didn’t make with a scant
amount of your own work which you didn’t put much effort into.
It’s
worth the risk to alienate people with making the music distracting,
doing the work for you, and interrupting what little work you’ve
done, isn’t it? Much more worth it than doing your own work or
writing for a medium that can actually incorporate sound.
Right?
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It's Marvel's favorite and most useless vampire. It's Morbius in the Marvel Rebooted Universe.
The MRU could always use more readers and writers.
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