
Originally Posted by
JCamilo
Let's no judge vallue (if it is good or not).
The writen words, the lyrics of anything, can be regarded as literature.
His question is however another, if they can be poetry or prose.
Poetry, if we ignore those using the synounimous that means nothing (as poems) is the use of language, born before the writen text. You do not need to write anything down to use poetry - so the lyrics use poetic devices, they are poetry. They are not poems because poems is a writen form of text, without doubt derivated from oral form, but once put in a paper they are a writen work.
You can even call the lyrics alone a poem, but that is misleading. First, one musician works his words to be sung, they are mixed with the tunes, etc. They are complete as a song, just like the pictures of movie, despite a movie being pictures in sequence, are not a movie. Other thing, music happened before the literature, if you get a art with her own power (Music) and call the work of this art (the song, which lyrics is a part) and his artist (the musician) as another literature, you are causing an inversion of vallue - A musician must be reggarded with all his power as musician. It is status enough.
Jikan, I do not disagree that a good lyric, some of them, are exceptional and have strong literary vallues - I am saying they have also musical vallues because they are complete as songs. I would never think novels are more substance than anything (I mean, Code Da Vince or Dom Quixote ?). And basically, the theme of a music, of a statue, a painting, etc, all have potential to inspire a text.
P.s. Leonardo Cohen is a great example, since he is a rare case of good poet and great music writer - He keeps saying that writing a poem is different from writing for a song. Yet, if I listen to So Long Marianne, the "field green lilac park" is just alive within my head. Great poetry, great song.