Sunday, April 24, 2016

"Mama"

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I listened to ELO II this morning for my Collection Audit project, and I found an-other mention of blue, which I missed when I did my initial notes on the album.  In "Mama" there's the phrase "blue horizon" in the first verse.

Especially on the early albums, I'm still having trouble making out the lyrics, so I don't know how much I'll be able to write about them.

"Wishing"

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For the last week or two, I've been really into "Wishing."  There are still some phrases in it that I want to talk about, but I feel that text isn't the best medium in which to do it (especially since the phrases in question are beyond my limited notation skills, so I would be unable to provide notated excerpts), so I'll wait on that.  I have to do some more research anyway.

In the meantime, I learned the bass part.  This isn't the complete song, but the sections are repeated, and there's at least one of each here.  I learned the guitar chords too, but the first verse has some kind of effect (I think echo) that I don't have a good way of producing, and I haven't figured out the right rhythm for the rest.

In learning the parts and playing along, I found two things that demonstrate the titular wishing, or - more specifically - the lack of fulfillment that's related to it.  There's a grammatical error in the bridge:  "I wish that everything was gold" instead of "I wish that everything were gold" (because subjunctive verb forms are weird).  So there's an imperfection there, which is similar to the lack of fulfillment the speaker/singer has because he's away from his "little darling."  (I don't know if Jeff Lynne intended that line to have an error or not, but the point stands either way.  I will say though that "I wish that everything was gold" sounds better when sung than "I wish that everything were gold," even if it is grammatically incorrect.)

While the song is in A major, the verses and bridges end with a G note in the bass, which doesn't provide a resolution, and - furthermore - is an accidental.  So there's a musical sense of that yearning.  In the verses and the bridges, the lyrics above that non-resolving, accidental G note are "I'm wishin'," which seems to emphasize that feeling even further.

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

"Wishing"

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When I listened to Discovery a couple days ago, the opening part of "Wishing" sounded like it would be pretty easy to figure out.  I'm almost certain that it's done with a Moog in the original recording, but I don't have and can't afford one, so I used some other synth voice on my keyboard.

This afternoon I was playing around with this again, and I think I learned the guitar chords too, but I'm suspicious of a few and have some other phrases in the song that I want to look into, so I recorded just the opening for now.

Monday, April 11, 2016

"The Diary of Horace Wimp"

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I listened to Discovery yester-day, and even before it got to this part in "The Diary of Horace Wimp," I was pretty sure that the tubular bell part (after "And she did" in the Sunday verse) was just a scale.  I figured out that it's a Bb major scale, although the last note is the same pitch as the first.

This is an extremely small part of the song, but at least now I can be pretty sure that the rest of the song is in Bb major too.