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Saturday, December 21, 2024

The heart of music: TIDES songwriting class reveals creative possibilities

What is it about the interplay of music, rhythm and words that creates a compelling song that draws in the listener? Mark Carson,  adjunct lecturer, has been writing songs and playing music  professionally for 30 years and has used his vast experience to teach  students, every fall since 2008, in the Tulane Interdisciplinary  Experience Seminar (TIDES) course Songwriting for an Audience.

“It’s said that the best way to relearn anything is to teach it, and  every fall I get to see some new bright-faced students who are  enthusiastic about wanting to do this. … I try to use as many genres as  possible and give them a background on how people who do this for a  living analyze and put songs together. But the only real way to teach  students, for them to learn how to write songs, is to write songs,” said  Carson.

Carson, who has collaborated on and written songs for numerous  musicians, such as New Orleans’ John “Papa” Gros, knows the importance  of firsthand experience. Carson’s students got a real treat when the  country group Chapel Hart stopped by on Oct. 11 to talk about their history, musical influences and their songwriting process.

Originally from Poplarville, Mississippi, but now based in New  Orleans, the group Chapel Hart made it to the finals and placed in the  top five of this season’s “America’s Got Talent.” In addition to their  stellar competition performances, Chapel Hart has received high praise  from many notable performers, including the queen of country music  herself, Dolly Parton, who commented on the group’s song “You Can Have  Him Jolene” inspired by her classic hit “Jolene.”

Carson met sisters Danica and Devynn Hart and their cousin Trea  Swindle in 2018 during a mini musical showcase that featured both Chapel  Hart and his band, Carson Station.  Carson has been working with the group since that time and contributed  two songs, “Angel” and “4 Mississippi,” to their newly released album,  “The Girls Are Back in Town.”

Collaboration is critically important in today’s musical landscape,  Carson said. Most hit songs are a product of more than just one  musician’s inspiration.

“The students get to interact with many different people — there may  be someone who is really into hiphop, and maybe there is somebody else  that’s really into folk or rock, and they are collaborating. That’s the  thing that excites me about teaching students at Tulane, and I think  makes it exciting for them: they put all those influences in the pot and  hopefully come up with something totally different.”

         

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    Chapel Hart members     

Chapel Hart members Trea Swindel (left) and Devynn Hart speak to Mark Carson’s students. (Photo by Rusty Costanza)

Original source can be found here.

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