How to write legendary lyrics like John Lennon.

My friend, you are great at learning new skills.

Pull anyone away from their phone and give them guitar lessons a few times a week, and within a month, they WILL know how to play the riff to Smoke On The Water, Sweet Child O’ Mine, or 99 Problems.

So why isn't learning how to write lyrics this easy?

Well, it is!

How?

It's called LYRIC COPY.

LYRIC COPY is a discipline used to teach people how to write song lyrics.

So, how does it work?

Simple: you copy, using your own handwriting, other songwriters' work.

In doing so, you learn great songwriters' patterns, rhymes, structure, and habits.

You don't learn a new musical instrument by writing your own songs.

You learn other people's songs.

The same goes for lyric writing.

Then, after mastering and finding what you like, you develop your own voice using the patterns you noticed in copying others.

This is precisely how LYRIC COPY helps you become a better songwriter.

Before his death, John Lennon was quoted as saying, “In the early years, I’d often carry around someone else’s song in my head. And only when I’d put it down on tape — because I can’t write music — would I consciously change it to my own because I knew that otherwise, somebody would sue me.”

How to be a great lyric writer

In this course, I'll send you 1 song lyric a day for 10 days.

I'll explain the elements of each lyric, why they work, and what you can learn from them.

You'll then spend 20-30 minutes writing the song lyrics by hand.

At the end of this, you'll know what makes a lyric memorable and how to improve your songwriting.