Showing posts with label The Kinks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Kinks. Show all posts

Monday, July 11, 2016

The Kinks' "Something Better Beginning"

For my Collection Audit project, I recently listened to the deluxe edition of Kinda Kinks.  The opening guitar figure in "Something Better Beginning" (which also recurs later in the song) sounded interesting to me, so I figured out how to play it.  I was wondering if it involved an interval of a fourth or a fifth, but it's actually just a second.  Simplified, it's a modulation from D major to Dsus2.  Specifically, it's this:

E|---2-0-
B|---3---
G|---2---
D|---0---
A|-0-----
E|-------


Once I had that, I started figuring out the rest of the chords and eventually got the whole chord progression:

|: D major / Dsus2 :|
D major / C major
E minor / A major / E minor / A major / D major

D major / D7 / G major
G major / D major / A major / G major
G major / D major / A major
|: D major / Dsus2 :|

Bb major / D major / Bb major / D major
F major / C major / Bb major / A major

D major / C major
E minor / A major / E minor / A major / D major

D major / D7 / G major
G major / D major / A major / G major
G major / D major / A major
|: D major / Dsus2 :|

Where I have "|: D major / Dsus2 :|" in the chord progression, it's more accurately the tab I have written out above.

Once I had the chords, I started thinking about the lyrics, and I found a couple instances where the tonality of the chords emphasizes the lyrics.

While the song's in D major (two sharps), the bridge is (with some accidentals) in F major (one flat).  The first two lines in the bridge mirror this unexpected tonality with unexpected love:  "I never thought I'd love like this until I met you / I found something I thought I'd never have."

The song ends with that D major to Dsus2 transition, so it doesn't really resolve.  Similarly, the singer/speaker's question ("Is this the start of another heartbreaker / Or something better beginning") is left open.  There isn't an answer.

Monday, March 23, 2015

The Kinks' "Get Back in Line"

For Christmas, I got a bunch of the early Kinks albums, and after listening to them, I listened to the other Kinks albums I had.  Even before I got around to listening to Lola vs. the Powerman & the Money-Go-Round, Pt. 1, I started thinking about "Get Back in Line."  In particular the line "He's the man who decides if I live or I die, if I starve or I eat."

The order of the last part of that line is interesting - "if I live or I die, if I starve or I eat."  In the first pair, the optimistic option (living) is first, but in the second pair, it's second (eating).  And it's reversed for the other pair - the negative outcome is second in the first pair (dying), and first in the second pair (starving).

I think that shift in the order is a subtle indication of the unpredictability of the union man; neither is consistent.