If you want to stand out as a rapper today, good lyrics are not enough. You need memorable concepts, honest emotions, strong flows and lines that stick in people’s heads long after the beat stops. The good news: rap songwriting is a skill you can train — just like flow, breath control or performance.
In this guide, you’ll get 10 detailed rap songwriting exercises you can use to level up your lyrics step by step. These exercises are designed so you can apply them directly to any beat you’re working on, whether you’re writing over motivational, dark, epic or lo-fi vibes from platforms like Tellingbeatzz.com.
If you want a deeper, structured system after this article, make sure you also check out the Free Rap Songwriting Guide, where you’ll find additional worksheets and techniques that go even further.
Before we jump into the exercises, it’s important to understand what mastery actually looks like for a rap songwriter.
It doesn’t necessarily mean having the most complicated multisyllabic rhymes or the craziest double-time patterns. Mastery means you can:
Take any beat, from soulful boom bap to dark trap or cinematic NF-style instrumentals, and quickly find a strong idea.
Tell stories that feel real and relatable, even if they are fictional.
Switch between different moods and styles — from angry to inspiring, from confident to vulnerable — without sounding fake.
Write consistently. Not one good verse every six months, but solid songs week after week.
The following 10 exercises are built to train exactly these abilities. Don’t just read them — pick one or two, and do them today over a beat you like from the Rap & Hip-Hop beats section or Hip-Hop instrumentals on Tellingbeatzz.
One of the biggest problems for many rappers is overthinking. You hear a beat, you love it, and then you stare at a blank page for an hour because you want the first line to be perfect. This exercise kills that pressure.
Pick a beat — for example something motivational or inspiring from the Mood Beats section — and play it on loop. Set a timer for ten minutes. During these ten minutes you write non-stop. No editing, no deleting, no rhyming pressure. You simply dump whatever comes to your mind that fits the mood of the instrumental.
If the beat feels epic or cinematic, let your writing be dramatic. If the beat is more introspective and emotional, write about memories, fears, regrets or dreams. The goal is not to create a finished verse. The goal is to build a raw pool of ideas, images and phrases that you can later shape into structured lyrics.
After your timer goes off, take a short break. Then go back to your freewrite and highlight the strongest lines, concepts or word combinations. Very often, the core hook or main metaphor of the song is already hidden in this chaos.
You can deepen this technique with the Free Rap Songwriting Guide, which shows you how to develop this raw material into full verses and hooks.
Great rap songs usually have a clear central idea: a struggle, a celebration, a message, a story. This exercise helps you move from a vague feeling to a focused concept.
Choose a beat from Tellingbeatzz.com that inspires you. Let’s say you pick a dark, dramatic instrumental from the Dark mood section. Take a blank page and write the main feeling of the beat in the center — for example: “paranoia” or “betrayal”.
From that word, draw branches like a mind map. On each branch, write related ideas: people, situations, images, questions. For “betrayal”, you might have branches like “friends”, “money”, “trust”, “family”, “music industry”, “relationships”. Under each branch, note down specific moments or scenes: a friend who switched up, a label that played you, a partner who lied.
Once your mind map is full, choose one angle that feels the most powerful. That angle becomes your song concept. Maybe instead of a generic “people betrayed me” track, your song becomes a story about a day where you realized your whole circle was fake. That clarity will make your lyrics stronger and more focused.
Use this exercise regularly and you’ll notice that it becomes much easier to write over any instrumental, whether it’s soul, synthwave, lo-fi or classic Hip-Hop beats.
Many new rappers write everything from the same perspective: “I”. While that’s important, it can make songs feel repetitive. This exercise pushes you to see your topic from different angles.
Take a simple situation, like struggling to make it as an independent artist, and write three short eight-bar sections over a beat from the Inspiring mood section:
Eight bars from your perspective (“I”).
Eight bars from the perspective of someone else, for example your parents, your partner or a hater.
Eight bars from the perspective of the city, the mic or even the beat itself.
When you write from these different angles, your creativity explodes. You start to see new metaphors, new conflicts and new lines that you would never find if you stay stuck inside your own head. Rappers like NF or Eminem often play with perspective and inner voices. Studying their styles — for example by listening to beats in the NF Type or Eminem Type sections — can give you even more ideas for this exercise.
Punchy rap lyrics often come from a strong sense of sound: internal rhymes, multisyllabic patterns and tight flows. This exercise trains your ability to create long chains of rhymes from a single word or phrase.
Pick one key word from your concept. Let’s say your track is about “legacy” over a motivational, epic beat from the Epic mood section. Write the word “legacy” at the top of the page. Underneath it, start building a list of words and phrases that rhyme with it or share a similar rhythm:
Legacy
Energy
Enemy
Therapy
Melody
Weaponry
Memory
Then go deeper. Try to create multi-syllable combinations:
“Heavy energy”
“Bless the recipe”
“Bury my enemies”
“Mental therapy”
Next step: write four-bar chunks where you force yourself to use at least two or three of these rhymes naturally. Don’t just spam them; build meaning around them. This way you train your brain to see rhyme possibilities everywhere while still saying something real.
You can repeat this exercise using different moods: try it over angry beats from the Angry section, over soul beats from the Soul genre, or over more relaxed lo-fi instrumentals from the Lo-Fi genre.
Sometimes the best way to unlock better lyrics is to stop thinking about lyrics for a moment and focus only on flow and rhythm, like artists such as J. Cole or Jadakiss often do when they ride a beat with ease.
Choose a beat you like from the Beats & Instrumentals catalog. Press play and record yourself “mumbling” flows over the beat for a few minutes. You don’t need real words — just syllables, melodies, rhythm patterns and small fragments of language.
After you record two or three takes, listen back and note the parts where the flow feels natural and exciting. These spots are gold. Transcribe the rhythm using nonsense syllables or slashes to mark the pattern. Then start filling in real words that match both the pattern and your song concept.
This way, your lyrics grow directly out of the natural groove of the instrumental, instead of forcing words onto the beat. The result often feels much more musical and professional.
If you want more exercises like this that connect flow and content, you’ll find plenty of them in the Free Rap Songwriting Guide.
Every rapper you admire has studied other artists. The key is to learn from them without copying them. This exercise helps you absorb structure, emotion and storytelling techniques from your favorite MCs while keeping your own voice.
Pick a verse you love from an artist whose honesty and delivery you respect — maybe NF, J. Cole, Nipsey Hussle or Kanye West. Then grab a beat that has a similar energy from the NF, J. Cole, Nipsey Hussle or Kanye West style sections.
Listen carefully to the verse and analyze:
How many bars does it have?
Where does the rapper change his flow?
Where are the emotional peaks?
What kind of images and details do they use?
Now write your own verse with the same structure, but completely different content. Use your life, your city, your struggles and dreams. Keep the emotional curve and flow changes similar, but make every line yours.
This will give you a deeper understanding of how great verses are built, and over time you’ll internalize these patterns and create your own unique ways of structuring songs.
A lot of songs fail because they are emotionally confused. One moment you’re angry, then suddenly motivational, then sad, all over a beat that doesn’t really match any of it. This exercise teaches you to commit to one mood fully.
Go to the mood-based beat sections on Tellingbeatzz and choose one category:
Pick a beat and decide that your entire song will stay inside this one emotional world. If it’s an angry beat, write only from places of frustration, conflict and raw energy. If it’s an inspiring instrumental, focus on growth, hope and resilience.
As you write, constantly ask yourself: “Does this line support the mood?” If a bar feels off, rewrite it until it fits. By doing this, you learn to build songs that feel cohesive and powerful from start to finish.
Later, you can combine moods more consciously. But first, mastering the one mood, one song approach will make your writing much stronger.
Punchlines are not just for battle rap. Clever lines, unexpected twists and hard-hitting metaphors make your lyrics replayable and quotable. This exercise trains your ability to create high-density punchline sections without sacrificing meaning.
Choose a section of a beat — for example, the second verse of a confident or aggressive track from the Angry or Confident categories. Decide that in these 8 or 16 bars, you want a punchline almost every second bar.
Start by writing a list of topics: competition, your skill, your growth, the industry, fake friends. For each topic, brainstorm metaphors and comparisons. Think visually and concretely so your punchlines feel fresh, not generic.
Then write your verse, making sure that every couple of lines contains a twist, a wordplay, an image or a strong statement. After your first draft, go through each punchline and ask: “Have I seen this type of line a thousand times before?” If yes, push yourself to find a more original angle.
You can repeat this exercise over different types of beats — from hard rap instrumentals in the Rap genre section to more melodic with-hooks beats in the With Hooks category.
Storytelling is one of the most powerful tools in rap songwriting. Verses from artists like J. Cole, Eminem or NF feel like short movies because they move scene by scene, not only emotion by emotion.
Pick a beat that feels cinematic or reflective — for example a soulful or lo-fi instrumental from the Soul or Lo-Fi sections. Think of one story you want to tell. It could be:
The first time you performed on stage.
A night where everything went wrong.
A turning point where you decided to take music seriously.
Divide your verse into three scenes:
Setup – time, place, who’s there, what’s happening.
Conflict – the problem, the tension, the decision.
Outcome – how it ended, what changed, what you learned.
Write each scene in detail. Describe what you see, hear, smell, feel. Use concrete images: the color of the lights, the sound of the crowd, the message on your phone. When you read your verse back, you should be able to “watch” it in your head like a short film.
This exercise not only makes your lyrics more vivid, it also helps listeners connect with you on a deeper level, because they can actually picture your world.
Mastery doesn’t come from one big exercise, but from consistent practice. The last exercise is not a technique — it’s a habit that will transform your writing if you stick to it.
Commit to writing at least 16 bars every day for the next 30 days. It doesn’t matter if you feel inspired or not. It doesn’t matter if the bars are good or bad. The only rule is: you finish your 16.
To keep it interesting, rotate between different types of beats from Tellingbeatzz:
One day you write over motivational rap.
The next day over dark trap.
Then a lo-fi storytelling instrumental.
Another day a with-hooks beat where you focus on catchy choruses.
You can even use a Custom Beat Pack tailored to your style, so you always have new instrumentals that fit your sound.
At the end of the month, you’ll have hundreds of bars. Some will be weak, some will be decent, and some will be the foundation of your next single. More importantly, your writing muscles will be much stronger, and starting new songs will feel natural instead of intimidating.
For structure and tracking, you can combine this habit with the templates in the Free Rap Songwriting Guide, which helps you organize your ideas, hooks and verses.
You don’t have to do all ten exercises at once. Instead, think of them as a toolbox you can pull from at different stages of your songwriting:
When you feel blocked at the beginning, use the 10-Minute Freewrite or Concept & Mind Map.
When your verses feel flat, use the Rhyme Expansion Chain or Punchline Density Drill.
When your songs feel unfocused, use One Mood, One Song.
When you want to become a more complete artist, build the 16-Bars-a-Day Habit.
Over time, you’ll naturally combine these techniques and create your own methods. That’s when you move from simply “writing lyrics” to truly mastering rap songwriting.
If you’re serious about taking your pen game to the next level, your next step is clear:
Grab the Free Rap Songwriting Guide and use it together with these 10 exercises.
Then pick a beat you like from the Beats & Instrumentals catalog and start applying what you’ve learned today.
Your best verses haven’t been written yet — but with focused practice, they’re closer than you think.
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