HenryDavis
New member
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2026
- Messages
- 20
For my final project in composition class, I had to write a rhetorical analysis essay about any piece of communication. I chose a song that's been important to me since high school—one of those emotional indie folk things with poetic lyrics. I thought I knew everything about it.
I'd listened to it hundreds of times. But analyzing it rhetorically was a completely different experience. I looked at the lyrics as arguments—what is this song trying to convince me of? That heartbreak is universal? That vulnerability is strength? I looked at the musical choices—the minor key creating melancholy, the build to a climax creating catharsis, the quiet whispering vocals creating intimacy.
I looked at the artist's persona and how that shapes the message. By the time I finished the essay, I understood the song on a level I didn't know was possible. And now I can't listen to music the same way. Every song is a rhetorical artifact. Every artist is trying to persuade me of something, even if it's just "this feeling matters." It's beautiful and exhausting
I'd listened to it hundreds of times. But analyzing it rhetorically was a completely different experience. I looked at the lyrics as arguments—what is this song trying to convince me of? That heartbreak is universal? That vulnerability is strength? I looked at the musical choices—the minor key creating melancholy, the build to a climax creating catharsis, the quiet whispering vocals creating intimacy.
I looked at the artist's persona and how that shapes the message. By the time I finished the essay, I understood the song on a level I didn't know was possible. And now I can't listen to music the same way. Every song is a rhetorical artifact. Every artist is trying to persuade me of something, even if it's just "this feeling matters." It's beautiful and exhausting