Writing Rap Lyrics
Master rhythm and poetry to create professional-sounding rap with proper flow, structure, and timing.
Quick Start
Most common mistake: Focusing only on rhymes without understanding rhythm. Solution: Learn to be a musical instrument by mastering bars, beats, and cadences using table format.
Basic bar structure in 16-column table:
| 1 | e | & | a | 2 | e | & | a | 3 | e | & | a | 4 | e | & | a |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kick | Snare | Kick | Snare |
- •Columns 1, 5, 9, 13 = Beats 1, 2, 3, 4
- •Kick drums on beats 1 and 3 (columns 1 and 9)
- •Snare drums on beats 2 and 4 (columns 5 and 13)
Core Concepts
Bars and Beats
Bar: A set length of time used to measure rap distance. Like a mile or kilometer for music.
- •Producers ask for "16-bar verses," not "1 minute of rapping"
- •Every bar contains 4 beats in most rap music
Tempo/BPM: Speed at which bars move (Beats Per Minute)
- •High BPM = faster movement through bars
- •Low BPM = slower movement through bars
Drum pattern reference:
- •Kick drum: Usually on beats 1 and 3
- •Snare drum: Usually on beats 2 and 4
The Three Rhythm Counts
Quarter Notes (4 Count):
- •One syllable per beat
- •Practice: "1, 2, 3, 4"
- •Foundation of rhythm
Eighth Notes (8 Count):
- •Two syllables per beat (beat divided in half)
- •Practice: "1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and"
- •The "and" is the half-beat
Sixteenth Notes (16 Count):
- •Four syllables per beat (most common in rap)
- •Practice: "One-you-better, Two-you-better, Three-you-better, Four-you-better"
- •Each word is one sixteenth note
See rhythm-reference.md for advanced note patterns and timing.
Lyric Formatting Rules
Critical: Always format lyrics in table format for precise timing and visual rhythm patterns.
Table Format System
16-Column Table (Standard):
- •Each column = one sixteenth note
- •One bar = 16 columns (4 beats × 4 sixteenth notes per beat)
- •Use for: Most rap songs, standard timing
32-Column Table (Double-time):
- •Each column = one thirty-second note
- •One bar = 32 columns
- •Use for: Very fast rap, technical flows, detailed timing
Basic 16-Column Structure
Each bar is one row. Columns represent sixteenth note positions:
| 1 | e | & | a | 2 | e | & | a | 3 | e | & | a | 4 | e | & | a |
|---|
Beat markers:
- •Columns 1, 5, 9, 13 = On-beat (downbeats)
- •Columns 3, 7, 11, 15 = Eighth note positions (&)
- •Columns 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16 = Off-beat sixteenth notes
Why Table Format?
- •Visual rhythm: See exactly where syllables land
- •Rhyme patterns: Rhymes in same columns are obvious
- •Beat alignment: Ensure words hit on correct beats
- •Producer friendly: Easier to develop beats around lyrics
- •Pattern recognition: Repeating flows become clear
Formatting Rules
- •One syllable per cell (or merge cells for held notes)
- •Empty cells = silence/rest
- •Bold text = emphasis/loud delivery
- •Italics = soft/whisper delivery
- •Use
|for breath marks - •Group rows in sets of 4 bars for readability
Creating Flow with Cadences
Cadence: A pattern of notes and pauses (like "dance moves" for rappers)
Using the Scatting Technique
- •Make random sounds over the beat instead of words
- •Focus purely on rhythm without worrying about meaning
- •Find a rhythm you like through experimentation
- •Fit your lyrics into that rhythm pattern
- •Adjust words to match the cadence perfectly
Why scatting works: You become a musical instrument, discovering flows naturally.
Making Your Rap Catchy
Human ears love patterns. Create catchiness through three layers:
1. Cadence Patterns
- •Repeat rhythm patterns across 2-4 bars
- •Don't make every bar exactly the same
- •Keep parts of the rhythm similar
2. Rhyme Scheme Patterns
- •Internal rhymes: Rhymes inside a bar
- •End rhymes: Rhymes at end of bar
- •Place rhymes in same spot for at least 2 bars
3. Delivery Patterns
- •Emotion and tone variations
- •Example: Relaxed tone with louder emphasis on rhyming words
- •Creates "3D effect" that makes rhymes "pop"
Best Practices
Even Numbers Rule: Keep patterns for 2, 4, or 8 bars
- •Odd numbers feel unfinished to listeners
Start Simple: Master 8-count and 16-count before complex flows
Practice Daily: Work on counts and patterns consistently
Don't Rush: Build from quarter notes → eighth notes → sixteenth notes
Workflow for Writing a Verse
- •Choose your beat and identify the tempo
- •Decide format: 16-column (standard) or 32-column (double-time/technical)
- •Count along: Practice "1, 2, 3, 4" to find the kicks and snares
- •Scat over the beat to discover natural rhythms
- •Lock in a cadence pattern you like (2-4 bars)
- •Create table: Set up 16 or 32 columns with header row
- •Fill in syllables: Place each syllable in correct column
- •Mark emphasis: Use bold for loud delivery, italics for soft
- •Check patterns: Ensure rhymes and rhythms repeat in same columns
- •Practice delivery: Rap along with the table to verify timing
Common Issues and Solutions
Issue: "My lyrics sound off when I rap them" Solution: You're only focusing on rhymes. Learn the rhythm counts first and use table format.
Issue: "I can't remember my timing" Solution: Use table format. Seeing syllables in columns makes timing visual and memorable.
Issue: "My flow sounds random and messy" Solution: Create patterns. In table format, repeat syllable placement in same columns across 2-4 bars.
Issue: "I don't know where to place my words" Solution: Practice the three counts (4, 8, 16) and fill in the table columns systematically.
Issue: "The table format looks overwhelming" Solution: Start with 16-column format and only fill eighth note positions (columns 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15). Progress to all 16 columns as you improve.
Examples
Example 1: Basic 8-Count Flow (16-Column Table)
Input: "Write a simple 4-bar verse with basic flow" Output:
| 1 | e | & | a | 2 | e | & | a | 3 | e | & | a | 4 | e | & | a |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ev | ery | beat | I'm | count | ing | one | to | four | |||||||
| Learn | ing | how | to | rap | and | so | much | more | |||||||
| Sim | ple | eight | count | flow | is | where | I | start | |||||||
| Mas | ter | ing | the | fun | da | men | tal | art |
Analysis:
- •Eighth note rhythm (every other column used)
- •Rhymes "more/start/art" align in columns 13-14
- •Emphasis on rhyming words (bold)
Example 2: Dense 16-Count Flow with Internal Rhymes
Input: "Write 2 bars with fast 16-count flow and internal rhymes" Output:
| 1 | e | & | a | 2 | e | & | a | 3 | e | & | a | 4 | e | & | a |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I'm | hit | ting | ev | ery | six | teenth | note | with | pre | ci | sion | ex | act | ||
| Rhy | thm | and | the | rhymes | in | ter | twined | and | that's | a | fact |
Analysis:
- •Full 16-count pattern (most columns filled)
- •Internal rhymes: "hit/six" (columns 2-6), "rhymes/twined" (columns 5-8)
- •End rhymes: "exact/fact" (column 13)
- •Pattern repeats across both bars
Example 3: 32-Column Table for Technical Flow
Input: "Show a very fast technical verse in 32-column format" Output:
| 1 | e | & | a | 2 | e | & | a | 3 | e | & | a | 4 | e | & | a | 1 | e | & | a | 2 | e | & | a | 3 | e | & | a | 4 | e | & | a |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | can | rap | at | dou | ble | speed | with | tech | ni | cal | flow | that's | pre | cise | and | ev | ery | syl | la | ble | lands | ex | act | ly | where | I | de | signed | it | to | go |
Analysis:
- •32 columns for very fast delivery
- •Almost every position filled
- •Use for showing extremely technical, rapid-fire flows
Example 4: Visualizing Rhythm Patterns
Input: "Show how to see repeating patterns in table format" Output:
| 1 | e | & | a | 2 | e | & | a | 3 | e | & | a | 4 | e | & | a |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mon | ey | in | my | pock | et | yeah | I | got | it | go | ing | fast | |||
| Run | ning | to | the | top | and | I | ain't | stop | ping | for | no | cast |
Analysis:
- •Identical rhythm pattern in both bars
- •Syllables land in exact same columns
- •Rhyme scheme visible: "pocket/top" (column 5), "got/stop" (column 9), "fast/cast" (column 13)
- •Shows how patterns create catchiness
When to Use This Skill
Activate this skill when:
- •"Help me write rap lyrics"
- •"How do I structure a verse"
- •"Explain bars and beats"
- •"My flow sounds off"
- •"What's a cadence"
- •"How do rappers count rhythm"
- •"Format my rap lyrics"
- •"Improve my rap flow"
- •"Teach me to rap"
- •"Understand sixteenth notes in rap"
Advanced Topics
For detailed information on:
- •Complex rhythm patterns and polyrhythms
- •Advanced cadence combinations
- •Triplet flows and off-beat patterns
- •Double-time and half-time switching
Remember
Rap = Rhythm + Poetry
You must master both. Most beginners focus only on poetry (rhymes and stories). The musical side (bars, beats, cadences) is what makes good lyrics sound professional.