Exploring the Songwriting Secrets of The Beatles
- Robguitaruk
- Posts: 5
- Joined: Tue Feb 10, 2026 8:30 am
Exploring the Songwriting Secrets of The Beatles
I swear every one of their songs has like 2 or 3 little moments where they do something unique but the rest is super straightforward. Whether it’s a moment of harmonic/tonal ambiguity, borrowing from the parallel minor, a secondary dominant, weird phrasing on a melody, a key change, whatever. The songwriting never overwhelmingly strange but their songs so consistently have these little moments where they’re breaking from standard diatonic pop songwriting. It’s so cool.
Re: Exploring the Songwriting Secrets of The Beatles
I really want to get more into analysing music and seeing what makes the songs tick. And like you say, The Beatles have such and extensive catalogue of interesting songs that move away from standard diatonics I think this might be the perfect place to start!
Exploring the Songwriting Secrets of The Beatles
Someone recommended “The Songwriting Secrets of the Beatles” by Dominic Pedler to me a few years ago and it was the single most helpful book I have ever read in understanding practical music theory.
Exploring the Songwriting Secrets of The Beatles
My undergrad theory teacher was a mega Beatles nerd. It seemed like any basic theory concept he could pull a passage from a Beatles piece out of thin air. I credit with him connecting a lot of theoretical concepts to me actually hearing them / knowing them in songs I had heard.
- MetalPlayer
- Guitar hero
- Posts: 65
- Joined: Mon Jan 26, 2026 5:49 pm
Exploring the Songwriting Secrets of The Beatles
I think the thing that made them so special regarding songwriting is that they really weren’t able to convey why things sounded good the way they did. Yet they made songs that way anyway. It’s why I always describe music theory as descriptive, and not as a set of rules.
Re: Exploring the Songwriting Secrets of The Beatles
Just checking out this book now. It looks like something that would be really interesting and useful and right up my street!GearNerd wrote: Mon Feb 16, 2026 6:24 pm Someone recommended “The Songwriting Secrets of the Beatles” by Dominic Pedler to me a few years ago and it was the single most helpful book I have ever read in understanding practical music theory.