Saturday, April 28, 2018

"Add Some Music to Your Day"

Yester-day I learned the chords for "Add Some Music to Your Day" and noticed something interesting about them.  For the first three verses, all of the chords are major chords, but the bridge starts with a C# minor.  After almost two whole minutes of major chords, that one minor chord completely changes the mood and (to some degree) provides a musical sense of the desolation and loneliness mentioned in the bridge ("Music... Is like a companion / For your lonely soul").

I feel it also worth mentioning that when I listened to the album a couple weeks ago, I realized I had part of my transcription wrong.  I'd thought a line in the third verse was "Your preacher adds it to his songs" (although I thought this didn't make much sense).  I realized recently that the line is actually "Your preacher adds it to his psalms" (rhyming with "calm" from the previous line).  Along with making a lot more sense, this is actually true.  In four of my hymnals, there are chant tones to which the Psalms can be sung.

Thursday, April 19, 2018

"Don't Talk (Put Your Head on My Shoulder)"

I listened to the last disc of The Pet Sounds Sessions on Monday, and I discovered that my post about the melisma'd "sighs" in "Don't Talk (Put Your Head on My Shoulder)" was incomplete.  I neglected to notice that the following line has a similar feature.  The "eyes" in "And I can see so much in your eyes" is also sung with a melisma (Bb Ab Gb), so there's a musical sense of "so much" in the "eyes."

When I transcribed some of the song on Monday, I also discovered a couple things about the chorus.  In the first iteration, the last line is "Don't talk, take my hand, and let me hear your heart beat," but when the chorus is repeated, this becomes "Don't talk, take my hand, and listen to my heart beat."  There's a sort of parallelism between "let me hear your heart beat" and "listen to my heart beat."  Additionally, "heart beat" could be understood as two separate words (a noun with a verb) or a single word (a noun).

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

"This Whole World"

On Sunday I listened to Sunflower and noticed a small thing about "This Whole World." "Ev'rywhere" in the line "Lots of different people ev'rywhere" is sung with a melisma (D E F# E D C#, I think), giving a musical sense of breadth.

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

"Fun, Fun, Fun"

On Saturday, "Fun, Fun, Fun" popped into my head, and I realized something about the rhyme scheme.

Each verse has the rhyme scheme AAAB.  The first three lines all end with "now" too.  Here's the first verse:
Well, she got her daddy's car and she cruised through the hamburger stand now
Seems she forgot all about the library like she told her old man now
And with the radio blastin' goes cruisin' just as fast as she can now
And she'll have fun, fun, fun till her daddy takes the T-bird away
That the fourth line doesn't rhyme with the first three and doesn't end in "now" could demonstrate breaking away from a set pattern (like a daily routine) and "hav[ing] fun, fun, fun."  Alternatively, because the fourth line doesn't rhyme with the preceding three, there's the notion of something in the structure having been taken away, just like the T-bird in the lyrics.

Monday, April 16, 2018

"Caroline, No"

An-other thing I noticed when I listened to the stack-o-vocals Pet Sounds tracks recently is the articulation of some words in "Caroline, No."  "Go" in the line "Where did your long hair go" and "away" in the line "Who took that look away" are both sung with melismas (A G F and D A G F respectively).  This gives a musical sense of movement or distance.

When I transcribed some of the lyrics to-day in order to write this post, I noticed something else.  The first verse has a rhyme scheme of AAAA:
Where did your long hair go
Where is the girl I used to know
How could you lose that happy glow
Oh, Caroline, no
But the other verses don't follow this.  In the other two verses, the first two lines rhyme, but the third breaks the pattern, and the content of the that third line is significant with regard to this structural change.  In the second verse, the rhyme scheme is broken with "You'd never change, but that's not true," and in the third with "Could we ever bring 'em back once they have gone."  The rhyme scheme has changed from the first verse and it's not brought back.

Sunday, April 15, 2018

"Don't Talk (Put Your Head on My Shoulder)"

An-other thing I noticed when I listened to the stack-o-vocals Pet Sounds tracks a couple days ago is that "sighs" in the line "I can hear so much in your sighs" in "Don't Talk (Put Your Head on My Shoulder)" is sung with a melisma (C Bb A).  Because "sighs" is sung to three notes, there's a musical sense of the one word's having "so much" in it.

Additional note:  I learned the bass part for "Don't Talk (Put Your Head on My Shoulder)" two years ago, but - of course - I didn't write it down and forgot it.  On Friday night (when I wrote this post), I relearned it and made sure to write it down.  In my notation, I wrote the key as Eb minor (so the C# and G# notes I mentioned in my original post are actually Db and Ab notes), but I'm not very confident that that's right.  The song doesn't really resolve, and there are a slew of accidentals (the bass part has every pitch but G), both of which make it difficult to identify the key.

Saturday, April 14, 2018

"Wouldn't It Be Nice"

When I listened to the stack-o-vocals version of "Wouldn't It Be Nice" yester-day, I noticed that "long" in the line "Then we wouldn't have to wait so long" is sung with a melisma (D C Bb), musically giving a sense of that length of time.  Similarly, "never-ending" in the line "I wish that ev'ry kiss was never-ending" is sung with an extra syllable (although only in the backing vocals), also giving a sense of elongated time (if not exactly "never-ending").

Friday, April 13, 2018

"You Still Believe in Me"

I've been listening to The Pet Sounds Sessions box set again, and I discovered a couple things about the vocal melodies.  While listening to the first disc a couple days ago, I noticed that the end of the line "I try hard to be strong, but sometimes I fail myself" in "You Still Believe in Me" descends.  The "myself" is sung to a melisma (D# D# C# C), so the speaker/singer is literally letting himself down ("fail[ing] myself") in terms of musical pitch.  Additionally, "You Still Believe in Me" is in B major, so that C natural is an accidental.  The foreign tonality there almost represents that "fail[ing]."

Monday, April 2, 2018

"Bluebirds over the Mountain"

I listened to the Friends/20/20 two-albums-re-issued-on-one-CD this morning because I'm not as familiar with either as I'd like to be (I think I've listened to this re-issue only a few times).  "Bluebirds over the Mountain" got stuck in my head, and because of that, I realized something about the title line.  The melody is such that "bluebirds" (sung to C# notes) really are "over the mountain" as far as musical pitch ("the mountain" is sung to the phrase B B A A).  Likewise, "seagulls" (sung to D notes) are "over the sea" ("the sea" is sung to the phrase C# C# B A B).