The Great Songwriters
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Tom T. Hall
Otis Blackwell
Felice and Boudleaux Bryant
Merle Haggard
Smokey Robinson -
I think that both @George-K and @Doctor-Phibes are correct.
From what I have read before, the Beatles were kind of the first group to write all their own songs. Before, there were songwriters to do it.
Now, most people and groups think it is a "badge" to write their own songs.
The best songwriters may not be good singers and good singers may not be good songwriters.
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One or more of the Beatles wrote all but 25 of them, according to my secret internet sauce.
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@doctor-phibes said in The Great Songwriters:
One or more of the Beatles wrote all but 25 of them, according to my secret internet sauce.
Thus proving the Beatles did not write all of their songs.
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@doctor-phibes said in The Great Songwriters:
One or more of the Beatles wrote all but 25 of them, according to my secret internet sauce.
Sauce? You have internet sauce?
Well, no wonder so much of the stuff I see online gets boring. It needs the sauce!
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@george-k said in The Great Songwriters:
(Schubert wrote more than 600 songs and he was dead before he reached age 32)
In general, it's fair to say that the output, training and knowledge of classical composers puts the current generation of characters to shame.
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@doctor-phibes said in The Great Songwriters:
@george-k said in The Great Songwriters:
(Schubert wrote more than 600 songs and he was dead before he reached age 32)
In general, it's fair to say that the output, training and knowledge of classical composers puts the current generation of characters to shame.
If you're talking about today's pop music, I agree.