Saturday, August 13, 2022

"Ride My See-Saw"

This morning, I watched this live performance of "Ride My See-Saw" in France in 1969:


I realized two things about the instrumental section (which starts at ~1:50 in this performance but at ~1:40 in the studio recording).  Years ago, I figured out two of the vocal parts.  They're something like:


The higher part generally descends, and the lower part ascends.  This simultaneous up-and-down illustrates the confusion that's mentioned in the lyrics that come before and after this section.  The preceding line is "But by now that answer just ain't true," and the next lyrics are "My world is spinnin' around / Ev'rything is lost that I've found."  The vocal parts' going two different directions provides a sense of this disorientation.

Alternatively, this simultaneous up-and-down gives a musical picture of that see-saw.  It's like each vocal part is an end; as one goes up, the other comes down.

Saturday, July 23, 2022

"Eternity Road"

Years ago, I wrote about some significant vocal articulations in "Eternity Road," and recently I found an-other one:  "alone" in the line "And so very much alone" is sung with a melisma (D A G), giving a sense of degree (for the description "so very much").

Friday, July 22, 2022

"Out and In"

A few years ago, I wrote a short post about how in "Out and In," "view" in the line "Looking for total view" is sung with a melisma and that this provides a sense of the entirety of "total."  After I listened to To Our Children's Children's Children recently, I realized that there's an-other musical feature that gives a sense of this breadth.  Underneath this line, the chords are F major and D major.  Usually, those two chords would not go together, but their juxtaposition here provides a sense of tonal breadth, especially since Mike Pinder uses the pitch shift knob on the Mellotron to slide from the F major down to the D major.

Thursday, July 21, 2022

"Higher and Higher"

I listened to To Our Children's Children's Children yester-day and noticed a handful of features.

The first line of "Higher and Higher" exhibits alliteration:  "Blasting, billowing, bursting forth with the power of ten billion butterfly sneezes."  I think it's significant that the alliterative sound here is a plosive.  In a way, these plosives give the sense of a rocket's propulsion.

Saturday, June 18, 2022

"I Know You're Out There Somewhere"

I was thinking about "I Know You're Out There Somewhere" yester-day, specifically this synthesizer phrase:


The first half ascends (save for the last note), and the second half descends.  Throughout, the notes occur alternately on downbeats or upbeats.  Because of this alternating (in rising or falling and in where the beat falls), there's something of an impression of looking up and down.  This searching is also referred to later in the lyrics:  "I know I'll find you somehow."

Wednesday, April 6, 2022

"You Can Never Go Home"

Yester-day, I figured out the chords for "You Can Never Go Home" and noticed some significance with the tonic chord and note.  The song is in D major, so D is the tonic note and the musical "home."  In the two instances of the lines "Memories can never take you back home sweet home / You can never go home anymore" (at ~0:49 and ~3:43), the first "home" is sung to a G above a G major, the second to a pair of F#s above a D major, and the third to a D above a G major.  Some of these may give a hint of being musically at home either because "home" is sung above the tonic chord (the second "home") or because it's sung to the tonic note (the third "home"), but there isn't a fully realized homecoming with "home" sung to a D note above a D major.  Musically, then, there's the same sentiment that's in the lyrics:  "You can never go home."