Sunday, November 4, 2012

Songs I Like - Set The Prairie On Fire

I discovered Shawn Colvin in the early 90's when I myself was out performing quite a bit.  I remember listening to her CD "Fat City" at first because a friend of mine thought we had similar voices, and I played it in my car as I was travelling around.  The fact that my friend thought our voices were alike was a compliment, of course, because Shawn is a far better vocalist than I'll ever be.  But beyond that, I fell in love with her songs long before "Sunny Came Home" was a hit.

I was in my 40's then, and you know what they say about ladies in the 40's.  Okay, if you don't, then look it up :-)  And when I first really listened to "Set The Prairie On Fire", it pretty much blew me away.  It was not the first or second listen, I'm sure, but as I heard it again and again, the lyrics found their way into my psyche and it became like a slow, seductive reveal.

Shawn is a great guitar player and I love her percussive flatpicking, and this song and its accompanying recording really demonstrates her playing ability.  The chords jump from what I think is an Am to G, back and forth in the verses, but the way she plays them keeps the repeated chord progression hard driving and never boring!  It's a slow song, with a wailing organ snaking its way all throughout, giving it a lonely, longing feeling which compliments the lyrics perfectly.  It feels like a prairie, it feels wide open and wanting.

Full full moon and that same sad nature
I wanna cover every inch of you
Like ink on paper
Like the blind parade of souls
Consumed by religion
I can't wait 'til I get you 
In that defenseless position

CHORUS:
When we set the prairie on fire
Oh we go down to the water
Naked and slow
You and me
And the heart of desire
We set the prairie on fire
How hard will the wind blow
How far will it go

When the feeling burns down
To one solitary colour
The velocity of longing
Melting into each other
It's a song our fingers play
All at once and together
You can bet we never learned it
But we've known it forever

Oh I dreamed that we were flying
Carried up from the ashes
Black silhouettes of velvet
Against the crimson of passion
We can almost hear the echoes
From the smouldering meadow
It's the rapture of the angels
And the rage of the devil

[REPEAT CHORUS]

BRIDGE:

In the cool dusk of horses
Through the rusted wires of sleep
With our arms around midnight
We're headed for release
We go riding in the wind
We go riding in the dark
Go riding, riding


[REPEAT CHORUS]

Read along with the lyrics as you listen to one of my favourite songs by Shawn Colvin available in the video below.
Sigh...

~ IJ


Friday, November 2, 2012

Open Tunings

The "open tuning" queen herself, Joni Mitchell

I recently began to coach a local songwriter on a weekly basis, and he has inadvertently re-introduced me to open tunings on the guitar. He writes some interesting songs, and part of what makes them interesting is his penchant for all kinds of alternate tunings that cause lots of broken strings, but plenty of fascinating compositions! Obviously, this post will apply more to those of you who write on guitar :-).

If you've never heard of open or alternate tunings, I'll give you a bit of a run down first. Most of you know that when a guitar is in "standard" tuning, the notes from the 6th string down are E, A, D, G, B and E. The first tuning I will explain is "alternate standard", which, in most cases, means tuning each string down 1/2 a step or more. The first time I came across this was with the band Nirvana, although I'm sure there were those who did it earlier than they did. Nirvana's guitars were almost always tuned down 1/2 step, making their songs sound deeper. They were a pain to figure out unless you had your guitar in this alternate standard tuning. This has become a common tuning for a number of bands, mostly in the rock, metal or alternative genre.

Open tunings are a retuning of a guitar to a chord. One of the more common open tunings is to a D chord, where the strings are tuned as followed: 6th becomes D, 5th stays as A, 4th stays as D, 3rd is tuned down to F#, 2nd string is tuned down to A and the first string is tuned down to D. Listing them together, they are D,A,D,F#,A,D. If you look up a D chord, these are those notes contained within that chord.

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Songs I Like - Enough To Be On Your Way

I recently watched James Taylor perform at the DNC on television and it reminded me of one of my favourite songs of his. I've mentioned it before in my blog article My 10 All Time Favourite Songs but I think I'd like to go into more depth here about what I like so much about this song.

What I think I first fell in love with in this song was the melody and chord progression and the instrumentation...it's a sad song and a powerful one.  I didn't find out until later that James wrote it about his brother who passed away.

James changed the gender of the main character in the song (good idea to do that when you're writing about something or someone personal to you!), and I'm sure he changed some other details for the sake of the song.  When I found out it was really about his brother, it explained a lot to me.  First of all, songwriters are always told "write what you know".  I'm sure this applies to other types of writing, but the truth is that when a lyric is real, people feel it.  When you're really writing from the heart, it connects a lot better than something totally made up.  Now, I'm not advocating the idea of making your songwriting a diary of your life, but the more truthiness there is to it (I know, borrowed word and not in the dictionary!), the more your audience can relate.

Here are some of the lyrics:

The sun shines on this funeral
The same as on a birth
The way it shines on everything
That happens here on earth

It rolls across the western sky
And back into the sea
And spends the day’s last rays
Upon this fucked up family
So long old gal

The last time I saw Alice
She was leaving Santa Fe
With a bunch of round-eyed Buddhists
In a killer Chevrolet
Said they turned her out of Texas
Yeah she burned `em down back home
Now she`s wild with expectation
On the edge of the unknown

CHORUS:
Oh it`s enough to be on your way
It`s enough just to cover ground
It`s enough to be moving on
Home, build it behind your eyes
Carry it in your heart
Safe among your own

The chord progression in the verses is sentimental and soft, beginning with a Gmaj7 to an A/B (all relative to the capo on the 3rd fret).  Major 7th chords have always been some of my favourites, as was evidenced in the first few songs I wrote once I discovered them.  They are often used in jazz, but are not as difficult to play as some jazz chords.  The A/B chord is simply an A with the added B bass note, which gives a kind of anticipatory feel to the lines.  He plays those two chords once each in the first two lines, then starts the third line, which is twice as long, with the same two chords, progressing to F#m7, Bm7, Em9, A, D/A, A. James likes to keep his bass lines moving which make his guitar progressions intricate and interesting.

My favourite progression, however, is in the chorus. It starts with Bm7 to Em7 to F#m7 and back to Bm7, but the second line takes a twist.  It picks up at the Em7 to F#m7 again, but then it moves to a Gmaj7...a major 7th chord, giving it that emotional punch just at the right time.  His melody moves eloquently over top, with the melodic and lyrical repetition of "it's enough" at the beginning of the first three lines.  It's enough to be on your way, it's enough just to cover ground, it's enough to be moving on.

When I first discovered James Taylor back in the 70's, what impressed me most were his chord progressions and melodies.  I didn't even think about or pay attention to his lyrics until later.  But I have to say I've never heard him swear in a song :-).  In the first verse of this song, he opens with the idea of how the sun shines on the funeral, as it shines on everything, implying a kind of indifference to the drama that's going on beneath it.  The last line hits home with "and spends the days' last rays upon this fucked up family."  I wonder if James ever wondered whether or not he should use that word!  On the other hand, there's an element of "real" to it, isn't there?  Don't we all feel that way about our families sometimes?  I think he was bringing his real life into that line.

Have a listen to Enough To Be On Your Way in the YouTube video below.  

I love this song...when I bought the album, it was one of those songs that grew on me the more I listened to it.  For me these days, that is rare.  It may be only because I am unable to find artists that appeal to me in order to discover those gems, and the places where I might hear them on a regular basis (like radio used to) don't exist.  But there is nothing more beautiful than a song that reveals itself more and more over time.

~ IJ