Thursday, May 30, 2019

"Whistle In"

When I listened to 1967: Sunshine tomorrow, I noticed a merism in the alternate versions of "All Day All Night (Whistle In)":
Remember the day (Day)
Remember the night (Night)
Both "day" and "night" are mentioned, but the sense is really "all of the time," as in the next line:  "All day long."

When I referenced the final version of "Whistle In" on Smiley Smile, I found that is also has melismas to give a sense of duration.  "Day" is sung to the notes B G# B, and "long" to the notes A# G# F#.

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

"Here Comes the Night"

I found a couple things to write about in these lines from "Here Comes the Night":
Every morning my love is reborn, and it lives me with all day long
When things start to change, it takes a little rearranging, but our love goes on and on
"Every" is sung with three syllables, giving a sense of number.

"Long" and the second "on" are sung with melismas (I think both are C C A G), and these give a musical sense of duration or continuation.

Tuesday, May 28, 2019

"Darlin'"

At ~1:41 in "Darlin'," there's the stand-alone line "Every night, oh, darlin'."  The "every" here is sung with three syllables, giving a sense of number.

Monday, May 27, 2019

"Wild Honey"

I listened to 1967: Sunshine tomorrow yester-day and noticed a few things.

In the line "The girl's got my heart, and my love's comin' down on me" in "Wild Honey," the "comin' down on me" descends (G G E D C), so while it's used more metaphorically (I think), there's a musical sense of that "comin' down."

Sunday, May 26, 2019

"Wouldn't It Be Nice"

I was thinking about "Wouldn't It Be Nice" this morning, and I realized a small thing about the line "Hold each other close the whole night through."  "Through" is sung with a melisma (D C Bb), musically giving a sense of duration.

Thursday, May 23, 2019

"Heads You Win - Tails I Lose"

This morning I was thinking about "Heads You Win - Tails I Lose" and realized something about the chorus.  For the repeated "Heads you win / Tails I lose" (or the later "Heads I win / Tails you lose"), there are only two chords, and each line is sung with only a single pitch (in the lead vocal, anyway).  "Heads you win" is sung entirely to F# notes above an F# minor, and "Tails I lose" is sung entirely to E notes above an E major.  That there are only two notes and two chords for these two lines musically illustrates the two possible outcomes of the coin flip (although, as the lyrics explain, the outcome of the coin flip really has no bearing on what actually happens).