Ode
It refers to a lyrical verse.
An alcaic is a poetic verse form, a four-line stanza supposedly invented by the Greek lyrical poet Alcaeus.
The chorus of a song can usually be identified by listening for a lyrical phrase or melodic being repeated. Normally the Chorus will follow the verse.
The verse is the main lyrical part of the song, contrasted with the usually shorter chorus. Wikipedia's explanation is perhaps easiest to follow: "When two or more sections of the song have basically identical music and different lyrics, each section is considered one verse."
stinkybad verse
A long verse is called an "epos" which is greek for "epic poem."
i think well from what my teacher told me is that there called black verse that's my best guess. Ah-oh-ho! Not "black " verse! It is called "blank" Blank verse is different from free verse. Look at difference. verse!. THere is also "free "verse or u-nrhymed poetry.
lyrical ballads
Lyrical goes by Professor Lyrical.
Approximately 50 of music does not rhyme, as many songs use free verse or other forms of lyrical structure that do not rely on rhyme schemes.
The form of the song is called Verse-Chorus-Verse-Chorus-Bridge-Verse-Chorus.
Ini Kamoze - Here come the hotstepperAnd its called lyrical gangster you flop