Showing posts with label Mr. Radio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mr. Radio. Show all posts

Sunday, May 6, 2018

"Mr. Radio"

I listened to No Answer to-day (because I'm close to knowing at least a little bit of each song and wanted to suss out some easy parts to figure out), and I realized something about "Mr. Radio."  One of the lines is "The weatherman has lied," and I think this might take something from Buddy Holly's "Raining in My Heart," specifically the second verse:
The weatherman says clear today
He doesn't know you've gone away
And it's raining
Raining in my heart
This verse of "Raining in My Heart" also mentions a weatherman, and the situation as a whole is the same as what's in "Mr. Radio."  As the second section of "Mr. Radio" explains: "My wife, she ran away / She left her home."  In both songs, a man's lover has left him, which has affected his mood so much that he's a bit indignant at the weatherman's forecast of clear weather.

Sunday, March 29, 2015

"Mr. Radio"

Backdated, archival post

[link to original on tumblr]

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A thing I forgot to mention in my post about No Answer is that the famous motif from Beethoven's Symphony No. 5 seems to be hidden in "Mr. Radio."  At about 2:15, the cellos (and I think also the bass part of the piano) has a phrase that isn't too dissimilar.  While the intervals don't match Beethoven's ("Mr. Radio" has Ab to F and then F to D where Beethoven's motif is G to Eb and then F to D), the rhythm is roughly the same.  (I tried notating it, but I'm still not good at figuring out the rhythms for notation.)

Considering that ELO used that motif in other songs (near the beginning of "Roll over Beethoven" and after "I think she'd die for Beethoven" in "Rockaria!"), it wouldn't be too surprising if the similarity here were intentional.  And actually, in referencing "Roll over Beethoven" and "Rockaria!," I found that they didn't use the motif exactly as Beethoven wrote it anyway.  "Roll over Beethoven" has it half a step higher (G# E F# D#), and "Rockaria!," which has only two notes of the motif, has it as G and E, not G and Eb.  They all have roughly the same rhythm though.