Definition. A section of a song with new lyrics each time, typically alternating with the refrain or chorus.
In song form, the verse is a section with new lyrics each time it appears, typically alternating with the refrain (chorus) which has the same lyrics each time. Verses tell the song’s story; choruses provide the memorable hook.
Verse-chorus form is the most common structure in popular and folk music. A typical structure might be: verse 1 — chorus — verse 2 — chorus — bridge — chorus. The verses develop the narrative; the chorus delivers the emotional core. The form is so universal it is essentially the default architecture of song.
In Classical music the term has different meanings — in liturgical and Renaissance music, ‘verse’ can refer to a soloist passage between choral statements. But in modern usage, ‘verse’ almost always refers to the variable lyrical section of a song.
Latin versus (‘turn, line of poetry’), from vertere (‘to turn’).
Verses tell the story. Phrasing should support the lyric’s meaning; dynamics should respond to the emotional arc of the words. Each verse should feel slightly different — same melody, but new content.
A section of a song with new lyrics each time, typically alternating with the refrain or chorus.
Latin versus (‘turn, line of poetry’), from vertere (‘to turn’).
Verses tell the story. Phrasing should support the lyric’s meaning; dynamics should respond to the emotional arc of the words. Each verse should feel slightly different — same melody, but new content.
Related terms include: Refrain, Bridge.
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