the chorus carries the verdict
A chorus is not a hook. It is the verdict the verses argued for.
If your chorus could attach to a different song, it is not earned. Most amateur songwriting fails at the chorus because the chorus was written first as a clever phrase, and the verses got bent around it. Real chorus-writing is the opposite: verses build a case, chorus delivers the verdict. We walk through the Maven verdict test, the rewrite that finds the heart of the song, and a sharp little exercise that tells you whether your chorus is doing the work or just rhyming for company.
Hook · verdict
| Hook | Verdict |
|---|---|
| Clever phrase | Emotional inevitability |
| Attaches to any song | Belongs to this song only |
| Rhymes for company | Lands the case the verses built |
| Forgettable in week | Lives in your head for years |
The verdict test
- Strip your chorus to its core line.
- Could that line attach to a different song? If yes, fail.
- Does the verse build a case for that line? If no, rewrite verse.
- Sing the chorus without the verses. Does it feel weightless? Rewrite.
- Sing the chorus right after the second verse. Does it feel inevitable? Pass.
A chorus you can move to another song was never the right one. Earn the verdict. Sing it like a courtroom finally finished arguing.
— L.A. Walton, The Book Maven
From the Maven Catalog
- Master Course — Earn Your Chorus
- eBook — Verdict, Not Hook
- Toolkit — Songwriter's Toolkit
- Planner — Songwriting Sprint Planner
Strip the chorus. Test the verdict. Rewrite the verse. The song becomes inevitable. You'll know when it does. So will the listener.