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From Verse to Hook: Kasey Phillips Breaks Down Soca’s Magic Structure

By Published October 15, 2025

This post first appeared on Sokah2Soca, where Caribbean music meets wit, rhythm, and real talk. Island Vybe Radio spins the tunes—we decode the culture.

 
I have long wondered about song structure and the "magic formula" that leads to properly structured songs. This post answers that inquiry: This blog entry is our follow-up from our previous post on Corrie Sheppard’s interview with Kasey Phillips of Precision Productions. I was especially intrigued when Kasey called out today’s producers for overlooking the foundational structure of songwriting—verse, chorus, hook, and bridge—the very elements that give a production its chance at longevity. His insights remind us that memorable music isn’t just about vibes; it’s about architecture.
 
That “magic structure” Kasey referenced is foundational to songwriting across genres—including Soca—and understanding each part helps decode why some tracks stick while others fade. 
 
Inspired by Kasey Phillips’ insights on songwriting structure… We took the essence of his conversation, dug deeper into the craft, and distilled the fundamentals into a breakdown that speaks directly to your musical lens. Whether you're producing, curating, or simply vibing with Soca’s evolution, here’s a clear look at the building blocks that give a song its staying power.
 
? Verse
  • Purpose: tells the story or sets the scene.
  • Structure: Typically varies lyrically with each repetition, providing new details or progression.
  • In Soca: Verses often build the narrative—whether it’s Carnival anticipation, romantic tension, or social commentary.
? Chorus
  • Purpose: This section serves as the emotional and musical climax, featuring the part that everyone remembers.
  • Structure: The same lyrics and melody are repeated each time.
  • In Soca: This is where the energy peaks—crowd chants, jump-and-wave moments, and the anthem-like feel.
? Hook
  • Purpose: The catchiest line or musical phrase that grabs attention.
  • Structure: Can be part of the chorus or a standalone phrase.
  • In Soca: Consider the chant that DJs repeatedly loop or that fans enthusiastically shout—“Famalay lay lay!” or “Like ah boss!” It’s the branding moment.
? Bridge
  • Purpose: Offers contrast—musically or lyrically—to break the repetition and add depth.
  • Structure: Usually appears once, often before the final chorus.
  • In Soca: Might introduce a tempo shift, a chant, or a moment of reflection before the final hype.
Kasey's assertion about producers disregarding structure resonates profoundly, particularly considering that Soca's reputation is based on enduring, expertly crafted compositions. That, dear reader, is the key and one only has to ask this question of any ardent Soca music follower: Can you name 12 songs from the hundreds released two years ago?  Need we say more?
 
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Production Notes/Music Credits:
Podcast Episode: The Corie Sheppard Podcast: Episode #256/Kasey Phillips - Song Structure
Podcaster/Guest: Corrie Sheppard/Kasey Phillips
Origin: Trinidad, Republic of Trinidad & Tobago
Genre: Soca ?
 
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