Note: While this blog does it's best to lay things out in layman's terms, it still requires a small amount of prior music theory knowledge. If you find yourself over your head, try out a few helpful sites:

* A quick refresher of basic concepts here.
* A better organized source that goes more in-depth here.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Elizabeth Cotten- "Freight Train"

Not all songs need to be complex to be analyzed. Case in Point: "Freight Train."

Elizabeth Cotten was discovered in her sixties by the Seeger family, as she worked for them as their cleaning lady. She hadn't played in forty years, because the Holiness preachers of the time condemned folk music, including anything with guitars, banjos, and fiddles, as devil music. She wrote this song when she was eleven or twelve years old, hearing the freight train pass by her window as she fell asleep.

For you guitar players, take a look at her string positions. She's playing the guitar upside down.


Click on the picture for a link to the video on youtube. My recommendation is to watch the entire clip, just for personal well-being. But the actual song doesn't come in until the last three minutes.

A Few Terms:
  1. Blue Notes: using b3 and b5 in a major key.
  2. Deceptive Motion: instead of letting a V chord lead to Major I (or a minor i), it diverts to minor vi (or major VI), creating an unexpected motion.

Form

Strophic (built on a single verse structure)

Melodic structure: a a' b c
Chord Progression:
C G G C
E7 F C G C

Sometimes Cotten will add an extra instrumental tag onto the progression, which is the last four bars (the second line of the progression, as written).

Rotation Chart:
(each number represents a cycle through the chord progression)
1- Instrumental + tag
2- Verse 1
3- Verse 2 + tag
4- Verse 3
5- Verse 1 + tag
6- Instrumental + tag

Text



Freight train, freight train, going so fast

Freight train, freight train, going so fast

Please don’t tell which train I’m on

They won’t know which route I’m gone.


When I am dead and in my grave

No more good times ere I crave

Place the stones by my head and feet

Tell them all that I’ve gone to sleep.


When I die, Lord, bury me deep

Way down on old Chestnut street

Then I can hear old Number nine

As she goes passing by.


Freight train, freight train, going so fast

Freight train, freight train, going so fast

Please don’t tell which train I’m on

They won’t know which route I’m gone.


Such a beautiful song. It's hard to believe that she wrote this when she was just eleven years old. Her views of death are so wonderfully peaceful, rooted not necessarily in Christian theology, but in Christian faith. Any thing else from me will sound like preacher-talk, so let's move on.


Blue Notes


One of the reasons I chose this recording for the analysis is her treatment of blue notes. Quick History lesson: Long before the West caught on, some African tribes would use the major 3rd and the minor 3rd interchangeably in their music. This concept came with them when they came over to America on slave ships, and started adding new notes to their masters' scales. The term "blue notes" come from the Blues, one of the most important forms of music invented by the black population in America at the end of the nineteenth century.


Blue notes are usually (in scale degrees) flat 3, flat 5, and sometimes flat 7. Depending on context, they can either refer to scale degrees in the key, or the notes in any triad of the song. Cotten uses both.


In the third phrase of each verse (the words "Please don't tell which train I'm on"), she scoops when she sings "Please don't tell." She's dancing the line between Eb and E-- the third of C major.


A good example of the other kind comes in her guitar playing, in the same section. Whenever she plays an instrumental rotation, or a tag, she adds a little A - Ab flourish to the F chord. If you look closely at her right hand, she's actually bending the string out to get the A natural. It's the major and minor third of F major. So in this case, the blue note refers to the third of the specific chord, instead of the third of the general key.


Deceptive Motion


One glaring error I've seen in many tabs of this song on the internet is using an A minor chord instead of the F major in the third phrase. This would certainly be a more simple, and understandable motion in theory-- E7 should lead to A minor, when you're in C. E7 is the V chord of A. (If you're unfamiliar with the concept of secondary dominants, go here.)


However, E7 -> F still makes sense, as deceptive motion. In a deceptive cadence, the dominant leads to the VI chord instead of the tonic. In this case, F major is the VI chord of A minor. The same holds true for movement inside a progression.

The interesting thing here is that the F chord has two functions. When thinking about it from E7 to F, it's deceptive motion in A minor. But when thinking about it in the larger phrase, F functions as the predominant. The switch happens almost instantaneously, to the point where I don't hear the deceptive motion; the predominant is too strong for me. Speak up if you hear something different. Therefore, to summarize:


  • The chord progression jumps out on a limb, to E7-- a distantly related chord to C
  • It resolves incompletely to F major
  • F major shares functions between resolving the E7 and becoming predominant, leading to the cadence.


Closing


As you can see, even a little folk song like this can yield quite a few surprises. Something doesn't have to be complicated to analyze it. If it sounds good, it's worthy of analyzation.


Sunday, May 30, 2010

My Brightest Diamond-- "Goodbye Forever"

From her sophomore album A Thousand Shark's Teeth, "Goodbye Forever" is packed full of interesting things to talk about musically. I don't have the time to really dig in as I should, but hopefully I can touch on some of the most eye-popping parts of this composition.


Note: this recording is uploaded in the spirit of educational advancement, as found in Title 17, Section 107, United States Code. Please email if it is still found to be in violation of copywright.

Music can be bought on the Asthmatic Kitty site, here.



First, some preliminary definitions for non-music majors:

  1. Higher Tertian: "Tertian" means built in thirds; the basic building blocks used in a vast majority of music are triads, which are tertian. If you place another third on a triad, you get a seventh chord (four notes). Five notes becomes a ninth chord, and so on. These are higher tertian.
  2. Neotonality: An approach to music that mimicks tonality of the common practice period (read: normal music) without using some of the same relationships and functionalities of that style. Many times, it uses a reference pitch that is repeated or droned to simulate a tonic, or 'do' (solfege).
  3. Modal Mixture: (see below for a more in depth look) A Mode is a scale, a collection of pitches arranged together with a certain pitch being considered the tonic, or root note. We'll be dealing with Major and Minor modes, and the church modes. Modal Mixture means combining or splicing features of various modes together.


Now, let's take a look at Dr. Alice Hanson's style features:


  1. Harmony: Neotonal (based on pedal points), Extreme Modal Mixture, Higher tertian chords
  2. Melody: Characterized by leaps, repeated notes on higher tertian tones, irregular phrasing
  3. Rhythm: Fluctuating between out of time and 4/4
  4. Texture: Thick, at times contrapuntal

Form: Intro A B A' B Outro
(This could be seen as a large rounded binary form; however, I have to disagree, just because the Outro sounds too much like a return to A. I didn't call it A" because of its short length and it's quick transition into an ending cadence.)

Text
As text is the driving force in most popular music, we will go to it first.


Oh to lose by fire by flame this old feeling
Insignificance


Then I can hear you brighter than the stars
Your voice is a razor blade
I can see you shining through the sun
You’re so mysterious


Lose the hold as I throw this with a goodbye forever
Fear of exposure


Then I can hear you brighter than the stars
Your touch is light’ning

I can feel you prickling like a thousand shark teeth
Prickling like a thousand shark teeth closer to me


Come closer to me
Come closer to me
Come closer to me
Come closer to me still


On several readings, I still have trouble divining meaning from the thick poetry of words. If it's a love song, it uses some odd and painful metaphors (voice is a razor blade, prickling like shark's teeth). It's filled with celestial, and possibly divine imagery, which would lead me to think of it as a song towards God. But despite how much sense it would make with references to baptism and prayer, this isn't what the song is about.

Her site gives some leads, talking about "things lost in a fire, literally and figuratively, exploring both beauty and danger in a shark’s kiss." In an interview with Chris Walker, she described it as being about "the things that prevent us from giving and receiving love and if, say, one could be free of the blockages, then one could hear the singing of the stars more vividly, feel the light of the sun, like the warmth of love, prickling all over your skin, like a thousand tiny shark teeth." It's about shedding our doubts and imperfections to find something more beautiful than what we've been able to experience thus far.


Modal Mixture
(note: to those not handy with the church modes, a supplementary site can be found here. The guy's a little kooky, but he's got resources to use for both brush-ups and beginners)

One of My Brightest Diamond's most interesting style features is her use of modal mixture. Many references to modal mixture come in reference to major and minor keys, perhaps trading one chord quality for another that may be found in a different mode (one of the earliest examples is the Piccardy Third, a major I chord used at the end of a minor piece.)

Quick History lesson: Church modes originate from Medieval Chant, used in Christian Worship. From the original modes we get our diatonic major and minor modes. At the turn of the 20th Century, the French Impressionists (Debussy and Ravel) revived the modes, adjusting them to be used as we have come to use scales over the centuries.

However, in this case, she shifts from church mode to church mode within a single pitch collection. Most of the song is in the Diatonic collection of no sharps or flats-- if starting on C, it would be C major.

The song begins with piano (and perhaps kalimba?) lightly touching on E and B. Out of time arpeggios slowly start to shape into what will be the theme for the verse, adding rhythmic interest, and an F to hint at the motive of the song. However, as soon as the piano and guitar come in full, it's hard to pick out where the tonic is. The piano is playing a pedal on D, the vocal line tends to hang out on an E, and the guitar is repeating the riff B - E - A - F. All of these elements combined can give the impression of D Dorian, A Aeolian, E Phrygian, or B Locrean (if you're feeling really funky). I believe that Shara Worden simply enjoys the ambiguity of mixed modes, and the uncomfortable nature of it.

For simplicity's sake, I will say the A section (verse) is in D Dorian, partly because the pedal tone is more reliable in other of her compositions, and partly because the outro very clearly ends on a D (much as the final would function as a defining factor in medieval chant).

Now the B section (at about 1:13) finally lays out what we've been longing for all along-- a clear harmonic progression. Although it's densely packed, and the melody may be centered on a B, it's a i chord alright. But it's based on... an A? What the heck? The five chord after it cements our suspicion-- It's an E7, with the melody looping around a G#-- a note that shouldn't be in the no accidentals collection. We've switched, rather strongly, into A minor for the chorus. So not only does the song combine various modes within a pitch collection, but it also modulates to different pitch collections, introducing new notes. Trippy.



The other interesting thing I'll mention for this song (although many other worthy topics abound) is her use of scale degree 2. In the verses, she tends to hang around an E when the mode is D Dorian. In the chorus, she hits the top at a B, the second scale degree of A minor. If we considered the main riff of the verse in E Phrygian, we've got the F there to add that extra amount of tension and wonder. It's this that gives her ninth chords such resonance, and that gives her voice such a yearning as she sings "Then I can hear you brighter than the stars..."

That's all for My Brightest Diamond's "Goodbye Forever" (Track 9 of A Thousand Shark's Teeth). Again, buy it HERE if you haven't! This album is amazing, both on an aural level and an analytical one. I may update this post as I see fit. Please comment with questions, answers, corrections, suggestions and comments!

Jharms

What I'm Working Towards

Here’s an in-depth analysis of Grizzly Bear’s “Ready, Able” from their album VeckatimestThe analysis does things like key, meter, and phrasing, and shows what sets Grizzly Bear's style apart.  They have an example of the recording (unfortunately not the score), and try to explain broader concepts that may be unclear to some readers.

It's difficult to do the dance between writing for others and writing for theorists.  However, I'm afraid I may not reach many theorists out here, at the edge of the interwebs, so I'll do my best to keep things academic while at the same time understandable.

If you couldn't tell by my writing style, it's mostly what I do anyways.

Anyways, please enjoy the link!  Fix Your Mix also has an analysis of Beyonce’s “Single Ladies” on the site, if that’s more your bag.