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.

Thursday, March 12, 2015

"10538 Overture"

Backdated, archival post

[link to original on tumblr]

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I wasn't planning on figuring out any parts yet, but…

I was thinking about the arpeggios at the beginning of "10538 Overture," and I thought I'd figured them out in my head.  I hadn't, but I was close enough that it didn't take too long to get to this, which I'm fairly confident about.  Some of the notes sound a bit weird because I had to play the same note on different strings for different arpeggios.  Otherwise, my fingers would have to be four frets and five strings apart.

I also did the French horn part (the quotation from Also Sprach Zarathustra), but it's the fake French horn setting on my keyboard.  I know a few of the cello parts, but the fake cello doesn't sound convincing, so I didn't include them.  I don't have an actual cello (and don't know how to play one), which could become a pretty big concern.

Sunday, March 8, 2015

No Answer

Backdated, archival post

[link to original on tumblr]

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I listened to No Answer yester-day to review some things before writing a post about it.  I have things to say about only three of the songs though.

"10538 Overture"

As far as I can tell, the French horn part in this (at least I think it's a French horn) has the same motif as that in Richard Strauss' Also Sprach Zarathustra - C, G, and then an-other C an octave higher than the first one.

It might just be a coincidence, but some of the cello parts near the end contain a phrase from "Frère Jacques" - the part that corresponds to "Frère Jacques" in the lyrics - C D E C.

Lyrically, there's some resemblance between "10538 Overture" and the Beatles' "A Day in the Life."  Roughly, both are about a man's death related through the news.  "A Day in the Life" starts out with "I read the news today, oh boy" where "10538 Overture" has "Did you hear the news that came across the air today?," and where "A Day in the Life" has "He blew his mind out in a car," "10538 Overture" mentions that "Someone has been found on the rocks down in the bay."

"Nellie Takes Her Bow"

In the middle section, there's a quotation and then variations on "God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen."

"Whisper in the Night"

This is the first of at least three ELO songs that contain the phrase "midnight sun."  Here, it's in the line "Face the midnight sun."  It's also in "So Fine" ("We'll find the land of the midnight sun") and "Do Ya" ("I've seen babies dancin' in the midnight sun") - both from A New World Record.

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Introduction

Backdated, archival post

[link to original on tumblr]

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I try to listen to all of my music every other year (and so far I've been successful in doing so).  While doing this in 2014, I found a similarity between the Electric Light Orchestra's "All Over the World" and Chuck Berry's "Sweet Little Sixteen" - they both have a list of places.  Since ELO have a few other connections to Chuck Berry (they covered his "Roll over Beethoven" and mention him in "Rockaria!"), I thought this was an intentional similarity.

Finding that similarity reminded me that there were a lot of elements in ELO songs that I thought were references to other musicians or to other ELO works but that I'd never actually explored.  In June, I got the box set of all of their albums (I'd been missing four of them), and in listening through them all, I took notes.  I listened through them again in November and found more things.  Because I kept finding things, I didn't think there was much of a chance of writing an exhaustive post about all of the references in their music, so I decided to try something different.

Recently, I've become sort of obsessed with the notion of learning every part to every song by a particular band.  I've been doing this with the Zombies since 2012, and in doing so I've discovered a lot of fascinating things that I'd been completely oblivious to as just a listener.  At the beginning of this year, I started doing the same type of project with the Alan Parsons Project and a few Beach Boys albums.  I considered doing ELO then, but I didn't want to try doing too much at once.  Apparently I'm not good at setting limits for myself because now I am endeavouring to do that project.  I figured that if I've found so much just by listening, there must be a lot more to discover through learning the parts.

The notes I started taking at the beginning of last year now cover a whole page, and after recently listening to all of the albums again (just before starting this project) I added an-other hand-written half-page.  To start off this project, I'm going to go by album and write a more detailed account of what I've found so far, which - along with the references to other musicians - includes other interesting musical/lyrical things.  Then I'm going to start digging into the music (which will probably be slow going at first and which will be limited by my not owning some of the instruments).

There are some things in my notes that I'll have to verify, which might take awhile, but I felt I should get started with my ELO analysis.