I'm not positive, but I believe the song, "The wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" is a freeverse poem structure.
Some examples of free verse in songs include "Like a Rolling Stone" by Bob Dylan, "Crazy in Love" by BeyoncΓ©, and "Stan" by Eminem. These songs do not follow a specific rhyme scheme or meter, allowing the lyrics to flow in a more natural and conversational way.
no...some songs only have verse-refraina famous example is the Bohemian rhapsody..another good example is Dashboard Confessional's Hell on the throat. Lyrics can be found in: hell-on-the-throat
Free-Verse can be synonymous with stream of consciousness. The beat generation were not the first, but were pioneers in this genre. Look at works such as "On The Road" by Kerouac or "Naked Lunch" by Ginsberg. Gertrude Stein is also an earlier eXample of free verse.
She preferred writing in free verse because it allowed her the freedom to express her thoughts without worrying about strict rhyme or meter constraints.
No, but some podcasts are free.
"The Light-Keeper"
some are free some are not
The Cranberries Free to Decide
One may find some free "oldies" songs from the site "Last FM". They have a streaming service with many "oldies" songs as well as some free MP3 files for download.
Cinquains , Tanka and free verse.
Haiku, sonnet, free form/free verse, epic, couplet, narrative...
only for some tracks but if you go on to free tracks you can get some ok songs for free!
iSing Karaoke App is a good choice to try... you can access unlimited karaoke songs for free including Hindi songs, English songs, Chinese songs, Japanese songs, Thai songs, and Portuguese songs.