How the Song Came to Be Podcast

Anne Heaton

Welcome to the “How the Song Came to Be” Podcast where soulful songwriters share the stories behind their songs as well as tools and creative practices you can use to bring your best songs or other creative works to life.

  1. 10/15/2020

    How the Song Came to Be with Jonatha Brooke - Episode 26

    In today's conversation with singer-songwriter Jonatha Brooke, we talk about how songs can evolve over time in terms of production, meaning, feel etc. (she even plays us an example!) We also chat about the "rules" of musical theater songwriting, Taylor Swift, Bob Dylan, Taio Cruz and giving yourself song assignments! Join us for this uplifting conversation where Jonatha shares a little about her new album The Sweetwater Sessions as well as her revelations around songwriting, life and building community online. Jonatha Brooke has co-written songs with Katy Perry and The Courtyard Hounds among others. She's also written for Disney films and numerous television shows including composing/performing the theme song for Dollhouse. In 2014, Brooke debuted her one woman musical and companion album My Mother Has Four Noses at the Duke Theater in New York City. The show ran for three months to rave reviews and was a critic's pick in the New York Times who called it "both funny and wrenching.”Formerly of the New England-based folk-rock duo The Story with Jennifer Kimball, Jonatha Brooke has been writing songs, making records, and touring since the early 90's. After four major label releases, she started her own independent label in 1999 and has since released nine more albums including her most recent The Sweetwater Sessions. If you like today's episode, check out my conversation a few years back with Jonatha in Episode 6. In it, we talk about using songwriting as a survival tool in hard times, leaving some mystery in your lyrics and what you can learn about singing and melody writing from the way you speak.

    43 min
  2. 10/01/2020

    How the Song Came to Be with Liam Davis, Justin Roberts and Laura Doherty - Episode 25

    Join us for this beautiful conversation between Liam Davis, Laura Doherty, Justin Roberts and myself about telling the truth to children, making music that kids and adults both enjoy, introversion, and much much more.   Some of the things we chat about include...   - Maurice Sendak (Where the Wild Things Are)'s approach to creativity (telling children the truth!) - Ways of teaching music and songwriting to children - How children are our teachers - How children can always sniff out dishonesty - Songs that connect on many levels   We recorded this heart-warming conversation right before Covid-19 and after it hit, I serendipitously ended up working with children more regularly. I'm so grateful for this reflective time with these bright musical souls. If you're someone who writes for children, works with children, someone who would like to work with or write for children, or simply someone who wants to tune into your own inner child, join us!   Liam Davis is a Chicago-based singer-songwriter and 3-time GRAMMY-nominated producer who creates music as a solo artist, in numerous musical groups and produces many artists' music.   Justin Roberts is a 3-time GRAMMY-nominated songwriter who records and performs songs for families throughout the US.   Laura Doherty is an award-winning songwriter who has an intense passion for creating sweet, folk-inspired songs for children and families.   https://www.justinrobertsmusic.com/ http://liamdavis.com https://www.lauradohertymusic.com/

    1h 19m
  3. 07/29/2020

    How the Song Came to Be with Melissa Ferrick - Episode 21

    Melissa Ferrick was an Associate Professor at Berklee College of Music, the Artistic Director of the Performing Songwriter Division for Berklee’s Five Week Program, and holds an Ed. M at Harvard University Graduate School of Education with a concentration in Arts in Education and management of nonprofit organizations.   Signed to Atlantic Records in 1992 at the age of 21, after opening up for Morrissey in the US and UK, she released her debut and sophomore albums on Atlantic before moving on to Independent label W.A.R. Records between 1996-1999. In 2000 Ms. Ferrick launched her nationally distributed independent record label Right On Records; her publishing catalog is represented worldwide by Raleigh Music Group. Melissa has released 17 albums over the last 24 years.   Regarded in the industry and by her peers as one of the most prolific and hardworking artists in the business, Ferrick still tours regularly playing throughout North America. She has shared the stage with Morrissey, Marc Cohn, Paul Westerberg, John Hiatt, Joan Armatrading, Weezer, Tegan and Sara, G-Love & Special Sauce, Bob Dylan, Dan Bern, Ani DiFranco, k.d. Lang, Suzanne Vega, Shawn Colvin, and many others.   In our conversation from 2017, Melissa shares: Why she does not have a daily creative practice (Why she can't "will it" to happen) How writing short stories led to writing songs Why judging can keep us locked away Keeping the door open to our songs

    59 min
  4. 07/16/2020

    How the Song Came to Be with Mona Tavakoli - Episode 20

    Mona Tavakoli is a Los Angeles-based drummer, singer and performer who believes in making music that unites, elevates and connects. While Mona is equally comfortable performing as a drummer and a percussionist, she is especially known for adapting the cajón to unexpected genres such as rock and pop. She began playing the Peruvian percussion instrument as a college student taking a flamenco dance class. She’s since designed a signature instrument called The MT Box. She began her professional musical career in 1999 at UCLA as a founding member of Raining Jane, an all-female rock band. Raining Jane co-wrote and recorded YES! (Atlantic Records) with Jason Mraz. Mona and Mraz have been collaborating for nearly a decade. They've performed as a duo on The Today Show, The David Letterman Show, Ellen and many others. Mona has also performed as a percussionist on A&E's Private Sessions with Pat Benatar and Spyder Giraldo. She has been the featured percussionist with the Pasadena muse/ique orchestra (led by maestra Rachel Worby), and played with musicians such as Andy Grammer, Colbie Caillat, Keaton Simons, Lindsay Mac, Lucy Schwartz, Natalia Zukerman, Sara Bareilles, Tristan Prettyman and Willy Porter. Mona is a co-founder and co-director of the Rock n’ Roll Camp For Girls Los Angeles and also has traveled to Africa on behalf of the U.S. State Department as a cultural diplomat. When she’s not banging on drums or corralling day campers, she's listening to Pema Chodron audiobooks or making creative collages. In our conversation from 2017, Mona shares about: Gentle leadership Co-writing with Jason Mraz & her band Raining Jane Why it's more important to be interested than interesting and How one person can change your whole life

    48 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

Welcome to the “How the Song Came to Be” Podcast where soulful songwriters share the stories behind their songs as well as tools and creative practices you can use to bring your best songs or other creative works to life.