[identity profile] dubdobdee.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] poptimists
i. ok so out of "scholarly diligence" i watched the repeated omnibus about syd b last night
ii. and confirmed that barrett-era PF = post-barrett PF = post-PF barrett = ALL AS USELESS AS ONE ANOTHER
iii. except then i slept and dremt ALL NIGHT dreams soundtracked by barrett songs >:(

so this raises the deep poptimist question: is a tune that sticks in yr mind GOOD even if you HATE IT -- isn't the craft of melody a kind of nerve-glue to attach you to a ahem "work" so that yr feelings of some particular moment get externalised into it and there replayed?

anyway i am quite happy to grant that SB had an unusual facility with oddly shaped song-flow, burden and refrain* -- except i think i would also argue that the collective direction of the outfit he founded was increasingly at odds with this gift (cf also curtis and JD-NO)... they were fashioning a monumental high-volume drone juggernaut; his gift was quirkily quaint'Nquiet little broke-back ditties -- and that the split (as with joy div) was inevitable on musical grounds; the psycho-chemical context a pretext for sentimentalists and clueless romantics

ps the documentary itself was incredibly lame and lazy in almost every regard

Date: 2006-07-28 11:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mippy.livejournal.com
I Do Not Do Floyd, but I quite like the Barret era. I was discussing Robyn Hitchcock (whom I heart) with a friend who compared him to Barrett: 'manufactured whimsy'. I'm a big fan of unusually-shaped songs, and will forever be fond of Bike after a Bash Street Kids cartoon showed the teacher going mad in the last frame and reciting the lyrics from it.

Songs that always get stuck in my head FOREVER:
1. Teardrops by Womack and Womack
2. One Nation Under A Groove
3. Automatic by The Pointer Sisters
4. Love is Contaaaaaaaa-jus by Taja Sevelle

It's easy (well, not easy, but you know what I mean) enough to write a catchy melody. Advertisers do it all the time. But as much as they tend to stick in my head afterwards, they don't tend to come to mean anything to me. Songs are different, I know, because generally they're not extolling the virtues of Charnock Richard Cycles but something a bit closer to the human condition, but catchiness is the work of the artisan and not the artist.

I think.

Date: 2006-07-28 11:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mippy.livejournal.com
There are a lot of fairly obscure records that are catchy as hell and didn't seem to enter the public consciousness, though - Thames Valley Leather Club, From A to B by Octopus. There are so many records I hear and think 'Why wasn't this a hit and yet x or y was?' Not necessarily because I think they're brilliant and should be No 1 for 16 weeks, but because they sound like hits. So the idea of technique is very interesting. But then it's been done before with musicologists, and I think once you take a tune and start picking it apart you can find the skeleton and the nervous system but the life's gone out of it. You Don't Have To Say You Love Me was written in ten minutes in the back of a taxi - it still seems to mean something.

I think Denim might have something to do with all this. At least one of the albums seemed to be a contrived effort to make a dumb glam pop album (probably not the one with Tampax Ad on it, though) and for me it just doesn't work. Because it's pastiche, or because it's too tongue in cheek and I sometimes lose patience with that kind of archness? I haven't worked it out.

I was actually bought the Womack and Womack album with Teardrops on once as a joke present. That record haunts my life...

Date: 2006-07-28 12:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mippy.livejournal.com
I might be slightly wrong then - perhaps I'm thinking of those perennial lyric-analysis features in supplements. There was a Radio 2 doc a while back where they were going into production techniques (specifially autotune on the bit I heard) so I'd be surprised if it was largely uncovered. I've been out of touch with that world a bit for the past couple of years so I'd like to know.

Perhaps you're right, but...pop#s all about the je ne sais quoi, I reckon. Otherwise there would be so many records that are better than they actually are.

Date: 2006-07-29 06:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] blue-russian.livejournal.com
Ages and ages ago I read something about Motown and someone talked about how Smokey Robinson taught him how to write a hook. The details are totally fuzzy now, but i remember it because it has forever left me with the impression that there are some "rules," or perhaps "tricks" is a better word. Naturally said writing did not reveal said rules, but always imagined it working the same way I-IV-Vmaj7 demands I again. (If I'm remembering my music theory correctly.)

I think this is actually a great GREAT article idea, although I might pull a few more pro's in, such as someone from Motown, perhaps Elton John, and maybe some of those hired guns that were always being brought in to work with bands in the late 80s and early 90s (Holly Knight, Desmond Child, Diane Warren, et al).

Date: 2006-07-31 11:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anatol-merklich.livejournal.com
if you can point me to ANY musicology which explores this i will be (1) excited and (2) surprised -- "why melodies work" is the great unspoken in musical analysis, in my experience

Mark, I read something about that in this otherwise at times pretty unbearably fawning book (http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/0711981671/026-0054579-5973262?v=glance&n=266239) once -- not Real Scholarly Musicology though, more like The Rules that blue russian mentions. It's back at the library now, otherwise I'd post them.

Date: 2006-07-28 12:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/xyzzzz__/
Coincidentally earlier this morning I read an interview w/composer Julian Anderson and at one point he asked why colleges do not run any classes on melody.

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