You're probably thinking of 'Old Age'.
Just by listening to the two, I find them very, very similar. They're both slow, mostly acoustic, and Kurt sings them pretty much the same way.
Pop song structure is (intro) Verse Chorus Verse Chorus Bridge chorus (outro)
bass, guitar, or drums alone for a couple seconds in the beginning and then verse, chorus, verse, chorus, bridge, chorus. That's the basic structure but a lot of songs don't follow that (example: walking contradiction by green day, amazing song, it goes verse, verse, chorus, same verse as first one, chorus chorus).
The structure of the song Firework by Katy Perry is Verse / Pre Chorus / Chorus / Verse / Pre Chorus / Chorus / Bridge / Chorus.
Intro, Verse, pre-chorus, chorus, link, pre-chorus, Chorus, Mid, Link, Verse then outro
You are asking about form in music. One of the many classic structures of poetry and song is verse with refrain. In a song the refrain, the part that is repeated after each verse, is called the chorus. Hence the verse is often sung by a soloist and the chorus by a group. A poem or song can have many verses, but the refrain or chorus is the same. In the Broadway musical of the era 1920 to 1960, it was common for a single verse to lead into the chorus, and that was it. The solo verse was soon forgotten and the chorus became the song that everyone knew. That may be why you are not familiar with the idea of a vese in a song.
Pop song structure is (intro) Verse Chorus Verse Chorus Bridge chorus (outro)
Verse and chorus are both elements of song.
bass, guitar, or drums alone for a couple seconds in the beginning and then verse, chorus, verse, chorus, bridge, chorus. That's the basic structure but a lot of songs don't follow that (example: walking contradiction by green day, amazing song, it goes verse, verse, chorus, same verse as first one, chorus chorus).
The structure of the song Firework by Katy Perry is Verse / Pre Chorus / Chorus / Verse / Pre Chorus / Chorus / Bridge / Chorus.
Intro,verse,chorus,verse,chorus,bridge,outro. Sometimes there is a chorus before the outro.
Intro, Verse, pre-chorus, chorus, link, pre-chorus, Chorus, Mid, Link, Verse then outro
You are asking about form in music. One of the many classic structures of poetry and song is verse with refrain. In a song the refrain, the part that is repeated after each verse, is called the chorus. Hence the verse is often sung by a soloist and the chorus by a group. A poem or song can have many verses, but the refrain or chorus is the same. In the Broadway musical of the era 1920 to 1960, it was common for a single verse to lead into the chorus, and that was it. The solo verse was soon forgotten and the chorus became the song that everyone knew. That may be why you are not familiar with the idea of a vese in a song.
a chorus in a song mean the special thing about that song. it is also like the main thing about the song and it shows the point in the song and that is why the chorus is said three or more times.
like most, : verse, chorus, verse, bridge, chorus, and sometimes another chorus after that, and maybe you will repeat the first verse.
a part of a song, that is repeated after a verse
Usually you have at least three verses and a chorus. You start with the first verse and go then go to the chorus. Then you go to the second verse and have the chorus again. At the end of the song you have the last verse. The words should come to you when you right a song because you should right the song from your heart not your head. And the chorus is always the same. That is how you wright a song.
Lyrics are the words to a song, so they make up a chorus. I think the distinction you are trying to make is between the verses and the chorus of a song, in which case the pattern is usually verse 1, chorus, verse 2, chorus, and so on.