Serve the Song: How Becca Stevens Transformed Her Songwriting by Silencing Her Inner Critic
PodcastThe Battle Every Songwriter Faces
Every songwriter knows the feeling: you're in the middle of creating something beautiful when that voice in your head starts whispering doubts. This isn't good enough. People won't like this. You've heard this chord progression a million times before.
For Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter Becca Stevens, learning to work with this inner critic—rather than against it—became the key to unlocking her most authentic and powerful songwriting. In a recent conversation, Stevens shared insights that could transform how you approach your own creative process.
Reframing Your Inner Critic as a Collaborator
Most songwriting advice tells you to silence your inner critic during the creative process. Stevens takes a different approach: she's learned to distinguish between the critic's helpful editing voice and its fearful, sabotaging tendencies.
"If the words that are coming out are general, then it's a protective mechanism," Stevens explains. When your critic says something vague like "this isn't good enough" or "people won't like this," it's operating from fear, not genuine critique.
The solution? Get specific. Instead of accepting a general criticism, Stevens trains herself to ask: "What part of it makes you feel that way?" This transforms a paralyzing critique into actionable feedback.
A Practical Exercise for Working With Your Critic
Try this approach in your next writing session:
- Notice general criticisms: "This sounds cliché" or "Nobody will like this"
- Get specific: Ask yourself exactly what feels cliché—is it the chord progression? A particular lyric?
- Find solutions: Once you identify the specific issue, you can address it constructively
- Remember your job: You're serving the song, not an imaginary audience
The "Serve the Song" Philosophy
Perhaps Stevens' most powerful insight is her philosophy of serving the song rather than the audience. This mindset shift can liberate songwriters from the paralyzing fear of judgment.
"Your job is not to be in service to those people. Your job is to be in service to the song," Stevens emphasizes. "I think the worst case scenario is that if you write something that you don't believe in and they like it... then you're stuck playing that for the rest of your life."
This approach creates a win-win scenario: if you write authentically and people connect with it, you've created something meaningful you can stand behind. If they don't connect with it, you've still honored your artistic integrity and learned something in the process.
The Dance Between Receiving and Sculpting
Stevens describes songwriting as a continuous flow between two modes: receiving inspiration and sculpting it through critical editing. Unlike the common advice to separate these phases completely, she embraces their interplay.
"Songwriting is a mixture of the two," she says. "You receive and sculpt and receive and sculpt, and it can happen a hundred times within the course of a song."
This approach acknowledges that creativity isn't linear—it's a dynamic conversation between your intuitive and analytical minds.
Processing Deep Emotions Through Music
Stevens' album "Maple to Paper" emerged from processing her mother's death and the birth of her daughters. Initially, she thought the material was too personal to share, but trusted advisors helped her recognize the universal nature of her experience.
"Everyone has parents that they either are close to or have never met," she reflects. "And everyone outlives their parents unless they don't, and then they're not here anymore. So people can relate."
Permission to Be Vulnerable
Stevens found inspiration in Sufjan Stevens' "Carrie & Lowell," which gave her permission to share difficult material without "tying things up in a pretty bow." This highlights an important lesson for songwriters: your most personal struggles often contain the seeds of universal connection.
Practical Takeaways for Guitar Players and Songwriters
Create Containers for Your Projects
Stevens uses conceptual "containers" for each album to provide focus and direction. These might be:
- Thematic concepts (like exploring the word "queen" in different contexts)
- Musical constraints (starting with drum loops instead of guitar)
- Personal frameworks (processing specific life experiences)
Use Alternate Tunings as Creative Catalysts
Stevens frequently uses alternate tunings and partial capos to "take the guitar out of a known realm into an unknown kind of playground realm." This forces you to think in shapes and sounds rather than familiar patterns, often leading to unexpected discoveries.
Embrace the Muse and the Edit
Don't fight the natural rhythm between inspiration and refinement. When you feel that initial spark of an idea, capture it fully before moving into editing mode. Then allow yourself to move fluidly between receiving new ideas and sculpting existing ones.
The Long Game of Authentic Artistry
Stevens' career demonstrates the power of prioritizing authenticity over marketability. While this path may feel scarier in the short term, it creates sustainable artistry that you can stand behind for decades.
Her advice for the next generation of artists? "I hope to have inspired people to reach for authenticity rather than marketability, which can be the scarier and longer path, but I believe that each time I do that, it makes for a more enjoyable path."
Your Creative Practice Starts Now
The next time you sit down with your guitar, try approaching your songwriting as a collaboration between your intuitive and critical minds. Notice when your inner critic speaks in generalities, and gently guide it toward specific, constructive feedback. Most importantly, remember that your primary job isn't to please an imaginary audience—it's to serve the song that's trying to come through you.
As Stevens demonstrates through her work with artists like David Crosby and Jacob Collier, the most meaningful music emerges when we create space for authenticity, vulnerability, and genuine creative exploration. Your songs—and your audience—will be better for it.


