fastrhymes.comAI tool

Fast rhymes

fastrhymes.com
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Detailed overview

Take your songwriting to the next level. Download the AppLanguagesLanguages currently supported in the app.🇬🇧 English🇪🇸 Spanish🇫🇷 French🇳🇴 NorwegianWhy Users Love the App«Amazing and simple app to find words that you can't think of especially when writing songs or poetry. I absolutely love how simple and not over complicated the app is to use.»App Store Review«Love using this app to help me write poetry»App Store Review«Makes poems and songwriting so much faster»Google Play Review«Top 1 app in accompanying your art to the next level»Google Play Review«This is the best app to use while writing your lyrics, I love it, and recommend it to every songwriter»Google Play Review«Would recommend this app to every writer! If it's songs, stories, poetry or whatever! Even if you're only writing as a one time thing like invitations or thank you cards! Well worth the price! Best customer support I've ever received from any app! Fast response and there to help until you are satisfied and that's at 3:00 a.m.!!!»Google Play Review«Looked at full featured as soon as I downloaded, then I purchased instantly. I love an app that gets to the point, gives you maaad features for free and makes it worth paying.»Google Play Review«Exactly what I was looking for as an artist sometimes you forget words you already knew. And then you try to find rhymes and just space out, but this app gives good rhymes and sound-a-likes Thanks for the app.»Google Play ReviewPrevious slideNext slide Download the AppProducersProducers currently featured in the app.🇺🇸 dr.awKward🇩🇰 Magknown🇳🇴 G!ZMO🇵🇷 Banlobo🇳🇴 justOLE🇳🇴 AresMeet the ProducersThe BlogDiscover tips, tricks, and insights on the art of songwriting.How to Write a Medley: Combining Multiple Songs Into One PerformanceLearn how to create engaging medleys that combine multiple songs into a seamless, cohesive performance piece.23/02/2026How to Set Songwriting Goals: Creating a Roadmap for Your Musical JourneyLearn how to set effective songwriting goals that keep you motivated, productive, and constantly improving as a songwriter.19/02/2026See all blog postsGet the AppEverything you need to write songs & poetry.Frequently asked questionsFind answers to common questions about Fast Rhymes.What is Fast Rhymes?Who is Fast Rhymes for?Is Fast Rhymes free?How can I contact you?Who is behind Fast Rhymes?Still have questions?Privacy Policy© 2026 Davoti Solutions ASTerms of Service --- ProducersThese are the producers currently featured in the app.🇺🇸 dr.awKwardit's just me, point blank🇩🇰 MagknownClassic beats inspired by J Dilla, Kanye, The Alchemist, Madlib, 9th Wonder, Pete Rock, and more. 🇳🇴 G!ZMOProducer, songwriter, mixing engineer from Norway.🇵🇷 BanloboHe was banned from the pack, no more structure, just freedom.🇳🇴 justOLEjustOLE is a music producer from Sandvika, Norway. Continuously making new beats, and working on projects with other artists. Check out his music on SoundCloud!🇳🇴 AresHobby producer from Oslo, Norway.🇳🇴 BrynjardProducer from Oslo, Norway.🇳🇴 GRD NICKVersatile producer based in Oslo, Norway.🇺🇸 OofpageA young producer born in Washington D.C. Who wants to spread his creativity and emotions through his beats.Get featuredShowcase your beats to thousands of songwriters.Apply nowPrivacy Policy© 2026 Davoti Solutions ASTerms of Service --- How to Write a Medley: Combining Multiple Songs Into One Performance A medley — a seamless combination of multiple songs into a single performance — can be one of the most exciting and creative musical experiences for both performer and audience. Whether you're combining your own original songs or arranging covers, a well-crafted medley showcases musical variety while maintaining a cohesive flow. 1. Choose Songs That Complement Each Other The songs in your medley should share some common thread — similar keys, compatible tempos, related themes, or contrasting moods that create an interesting journey. Songs that clash stylistically or tonally will make the medley feel disjointed. Look for songs that have natural connection points, whether musical or thematic. 2. Plan Your Transitions Transitions are what make or break a medley. The moment where one song becomes another should feel natural, not jarring. Common transition techniques include key modulations, tempo shifts, using a common chord as a pivot point, or letting one song's ending melody overlap with the next song's beginning. Plan each transition carefully. 3. Consider the Arc Like a single song, a medley should have an overall arc — a sense of journey from beginning to end. Start with something that establishes the mood, build through the middle sections, and end with a strong climax. The sequence of songs should create a cumulative emotional effect, not feel like a random playlist. 4. Edit Ruthlessly You don't need to include entire songs in your medley. Use the strongest sections — a memorable chorus, a powerful verse, a signature riff — and move on. A medley that lingers too long on any single song loses its momentum. The excitement of a medley comes from the variety and the surprise of what comes next. 5. Find Common Musical Ground Look for musical elements that bridge different songs — a chord progression that works in both, a rhythmic pattern that transfers, or a tempo that accommodates multiple songs with slight adjustments. These common elements make transitions smoother and help the medley feel like a unified piece rather than a collection of fragments. 6. Rehearse Until It Flows A medley that doesn't flow smoothly sounds like a series of false starts. Rehearse your medley until every transition is seamless and every section feels intentional. The goal is for the audience to be swept along by the continuous musical journey, barely noticing where one song ends and another begins. Conclusion Creating a medley is an exercise in musical curation and arrangement. By choosing complementary songs, crafting smooth transitions, and maintaining a compelling arc, you can create a performance piece that showcases your musical range and keeps audiences engaged from start to finish. For help writing original songs worthy of your next medley, Fast Rhymes provides songwriting tools to help you create memorable, versatile music.23/02/2026Get the AppEverything you need to write songs & poetry.Continue readingHow to Set Songwriting Goals: Creating a Roadmap for Your Musical JourneyLearn how to set effective songwriting goals that keep you motivated, productive, and constantly improving as a songwriter.19/02/2026Privacy Policy© 2026 Davoti Solutions ASTerms of Service --- How to Set Songwriting Goals: Creating a Roadmap for Your Musical Journey Goals give your songwriting direction, motivation, and a way to measure progress. Without them, it's easy to drift — writing sporadically, never quite finishing songs, or staying in your comfort zone. Thoughtful goal-setting transforms songwriting from a hobby into a practice with purpose. Here's how to set goals that work. 1. Set Output Goals Output goals focus on quantity — how many songs you'll write, how often you'll write, or how many hours you'll dedicate to songwriting each week. Examples: "Write one complete song per week," "Spend 30 minutes writing every morning," or "Complete 52 songs this year." Output goals build consistency and discipline, which are the foundation of growth. 2. Set Craft Goals Craft goals focus on improving specific skills. Examples: "Write a song in a genre I've never tried," "Master writing bridges," "Improve my rhyme vocabulary," or "Write three songs that use minor keys." Craft goals push you out of your comfort zone and address specific weaknesses in your songwriting. 3. Set Career Goals If songwriting is more than a hobby, set career goals that move you toward professional milestones. Examples: "Submit songs to three publishers this quarter," "Perform at five open mics this month," "Record demos of my ten best songs," or "Build a songwriting portfolio." Career goals connect your creative practice to concrete outcomes. 4. Make Goals Specific and Measurable "Get better at songwriting" isn't a useful goal because you can't measure it. "Write one song per week using a different rhyme scheme each time" is specific and measurable. You can track your progress, evaluate your results, and know definitively whether you've achieved the goal. 5. Set Short-Term and Long-Term Goals Combine weekly or monthly goals (short-term) with yearly goals (long-term). Short-term goals provide immediate motivation and structure. Long-term goals provide direction and ambition. The short-term goals should collectively contribute to the long-term vision. 6. Review and Adjust Regularly Goals aren't permanent. Review your goals monthly or quarterly. Are they still relevant? Are they too easy or too ambitious? Have your priorities changed? Adjusting your goals based on what you've learned keeps them useful and motivating rather than rigid and discouraging. Conclusion Setting songwriting goals transforms vague creative aspiration into a concrete plan for growth. By combining output, craft, and career goals, keeping them specific, and reviewing them regularly, you create a roadmap that keeps you motivated and constantly improving. For support in reaching your songwriting goals, Fast Rhymes provides tools that help you write more efficiently and creatively every day.19/02/2026Get the AppEverything you need to write songs & poetry.Continue readingHow to Create Harmonic Movement in Your SongsLearn techniques for creating chord progressions with forward motion, tension, and satisfying resolution in your songwriting.16/02/2026Privacy Policy© 2026 Davoti Solutions ASTerms of Service