User:Osotravie16

the boy who came up from Baltimore M,D off Of WWW.YOUTUBE.Com Videos  FOLLOW  Him @partyosoparty This educational song taht osotravie teaches the elements of speech and grammar, including noun, verb, adverb, preposition, adjective, conjunction, pronoun, and interjection. The song is useful for teaching students how to construct a sentence and how each component fits together. The additional resource and materials including grammar lesson plans and worksheets, help teachers, students and parents understand concepts and offer teaching ideas for the song topics. Students will learn how to use conjunctions and prepositions. Develop an ear for rhythm. As you add to your vocabulary, try reading certain passages out loud and noticing where you naturally tend to add emphasis. In English, for example, a lot of poetry and song lyrics are written in iambic pentameter, in which the first syllable is unstressed, the second is stressed, the third is unstressed, and so on for a total of five stressed syllables and five unstressed syllables. Developing your sense of meter will ultimately help you form a beat to your lyrics, or the lyrics to your beat, in a way that sounds reflexive and easy. Try saying "rapper" both ways, with the first syllable stressed and the second unstressed, then vice versa. Notice the difference?

It might sound dorky, but a good way to introduce yourself to iambic pentameter is to read Shakespeare aloud. (Search for his plays online.) You'll begin to notice the alternating stressed syllables and how naturally they flow.

3 Get focused. Your lyrics should have an objective other than making words rhyme. The rhyme is the glue for your lyrics, but the substance is in your message. What do you want to say? When you're talking to other people, which topics really get you fired up? Whatever you choose, be real - rapping about your own life gives the song credibility.

4 Write it down. Rap lyrics can happen anywhere - at home, at work, at school, on the toilet, and in your sleep. Write down what comes to you without censoring yourself or editing. When you're struggling with writer's block later, refer back to your ideas.

5 Come up with a good hook. A hook is the part of a song that gets stuck in your head and makes you want to listen to it again. For most raps, this makes up the chorus. It doesn't have to be long, but it should have a catchy rhythm and be fun to hum. For a lot of songwriters, the hook is the most difficult part to create. Don't feel discouraged if it takes you awhile to come up with one - it's better to wait for a good hook than to wrap up your song with a bad one.

6 Memorize your lyrics. After you have worked out a final draft of your rap lyrics, memorize every word. When you go to perform your rap song in the studio you don't want to be reading from your notebook.

7 Download an audio editing software: If you are a new rapper, it is recommended that you get Audacity. It is a freeware that is user-friendly and works quite well. If you own a Mac, you can record using Garage Band, which is already installed. After you gain more experience, it is recommended that you move onto other software such as Audio Audition. They are not free, but they are better than the free ones.