Hit Songs That Started as Scribbles on Napkins
Several major hits trace their origins to brief, handwritten ideas, from napkins to kitchen tables, highlighting how songwriting can start with minimal materials. The story begins with Elton John’s “Your Song,” whose early lyric was written rapidly on a piece of exercise paper at the home of Elton’s mother in Northwood Hills, London, according to remarks from Bernie Taupin. Another example is “(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (to Party)” by the Beastie Boys, described by Mike D as written in about five minutes on napkins at the Palladium, during time spent near Rick Rubin. For Garth Brooks, “Friends in Low Places” was prompted by a phrase formed after songwriters Dewayne Blackwell and Earl Bud Lee couldn’t pay a restaurant tab, later scribbling much of the idea on a napkin. Collectively, the accounts connect creativity with everyday circumstances.





