| alan w. pollack's notes on ... |
Notes on "She Loves You" |
| Notes on ... Series #5.0 (SLY.0) | |
| by Alan W. Pollack | |
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Key: G Major
Meter: 4/4
CD: "Past Masters", Volume 1, Track 4 (Parlophone CDP 90043-2)
Recorded: 1st July 1963, Abbey Road 2
UK-release: 23rd August 1963 (A Single / "I'll Get You")
US-release: 16th September 1963 (A Single / "I'll Get You")
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Intro | Verse | Verse | Refrain | Verse | Refrain | Coda
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| And yet, the song contains a musical vocabulary and arrangement which is shot through with details and nuances that were soon to develop into trademarks; the special "sound" is already apparent. | |
Intro |
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e -» A7 -» C -» G (with added sixth!)
G: vi V-of-V IV I
[Figure 5.1]
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| The use of the V-of-V moving to the IV (with the inevitable cross relation) is an early example of what we hear in "Eight Days A Week". The opening chord progression which doesn't start on I and takes four somewhat disorienting chords to finally get there shows up again in "Help!". | |
| On a theoretical basis, that added sixth is called a "free" (in the sense of gratuitous, or non-functional) dissonance. In most tonal music until the twentieth century, any note appearing in a chord that was not part of the chord's root triad was considered a dissonance. As such, it was expected to be well behaved by "resolving", typically stepwise downward, to a note that is part of the triad either during the current chord or on the very next chord. The most classic example of this is the way in which the (flat) "7" (seventh) of the V7 chord resolves to the "3" (third) of the I chord: | |
F (flat-7) -» E (3)
D (5) -» C (1)
B (3) -» G (5)
G (1) -» C (1)
C: V I
[Figure 5.2]
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| By the end of the nineteenth century, this strict treatment of dissonance broke down even within the so-called classical domain though not without many raised eyebrows; the free ninth and eleventh chords of Debussy for example were quite the talk of music theory classes eighty years ago. | |
Verse |
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| The fact that this sort of syncopation is used so sparingly within this song makes this instance the more powerful. Indeed, there are two additional reasons for the powerful effect here yet again teaching us how "less is more": | |
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| [Technical background on] | |
| Not to be confused with the concept of relative Major/minor keys, parallel Major/minor (PMM) keys are simply the Major and minor modes of the same tonic root; e.g. G Major and g minor. PMM's posses a paradoxical quality — they have different key signatures (and hence a slightly different set of chords) yet they don't really sound at all like remote keys from each other because of the common root of the tonic (I / i). Going way back into the classical period, composers frequently have borrowed chords from the parallel minor when in a Major key for effect. The particular favorites choices in this regard are the iv and vi which contain the flattened sixth degree of the scale; that flat sixth has a very strong melodic pull downward toward the fifth degree of the scale. | |
| [Technical background off] | |
| In spite of all of the scholarly verbiage used here, the minor iv chord is quite a garden variety effect. Think of the line in "Home On The Range" which goes "where seldom is heard a discouraging word"; a typical harmonization of this line puts the Major IV under the word "discouraging" and then changes it to a minor iv for the word "word". If you're in the key of G, you're moving in this example from C-Major to c-minor and you can hear that E slide down to E-flat in the inner voice; you can even hear the E-flat slide down to D in the next line of the song. This sort of barbershop harmony is quite sentimental in effect. | |
| In "She Loves You", the effect is more exotic than sentimental mainly because the iv chord is jumped into instead of being set up as it more usually is by the Major IV. But it's nothing to get hung about. | |
Refrain |
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The Vocal Parts |
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| For some reason, the sparking variety seems to particularly show when they sing open fifths. It's a wonder that they ever stumbled onto this. Open fifths in most Western music sounds like an archaic allusion to Medieval times; thirds and sixths being the typical means of harmonization. | |
| Nonetheless, they went out of their way to sing open fifths and though it's an incidental detail, it is also a tell tale signature of their early sound. In "She Loves You", there's a sparkling open fifth on every occurrence of the word "bad" as in the phrase "and you know that can't be bad." There's not much more your learned astronomer can say about this one; the theoretician stands in awe of a natural phenomenon. "Sie denkt, ja, nur an dich, und du sollte zu ihr gehen." | |
| Regards, | |
| Alan (062889#5.0) | |
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Copyright © 1989 by Alan W. Pollack. All Rights Reserved. This article may be reproduced, retransmitted, redistributed and otherwise propagated at will, provided that this notice remains intact and in place. |
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