24
Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies

in the Music of Queen

Nick BraaeUniversity of Waikato

CUNY Graduate Centre5 November 2015

Page 2: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Background

• Idiolect analysis of Queen, 1973-80 (90 songs, Queen to The Game)

• Style — refers to common musical traits across a range of artists/composers (e.g. 1980s pop, High Classical)

• Idiolect — refers to common musical traits of a single artist

• Easily identifiable recurring traits: vocal harmonies, guitar arrangements, harmonic fragments

• But, nagging problem of ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’

• Two strands of an idiolect (compositional strategies and sonic patterns)

Page 3: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Unique Structural Identities of the Rock Ballads

• Queen’s rock ballads: ‘In the Lap of the Gods…Revisited’, ‘Teo Torriatte’, ‘We are the Champions’, ‘Sail Away Sweet Sister’, ‘Save Me’, etc.

• Most standardized song type in Queen’s output: stock instrumentation and textural changes, verse-chorus(-bridge) form, plus other idiolect traits (close-position vocal and guitar arrangements, drum fills, etc.)

• But different modulation patterns and techniques

Page 4: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015
Page 5: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015
Page 6: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015
Page 7: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Queen’s Idiolect as a Sonic Watermark: ‘Mustapha’

• ‘Mustapha’ (1978), Jazz

• ‘Persian rock’ style; consistent with the pastiche compositional strategy

• Consistent in terms of sonic patterns (sudden textural change, overdriven rhythm guitar doubling the bass line, guitar harmonies, vocal arrangement)

• Queen’s individual take on the Persian rock style

Page 8: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Queen in the 1980s

• Queen’s struggles in the 1980s: intra-band conflicts, Sun City, mixed critical reviews

• From ‘Save Me’, The Game (1980) — to ‘Staying Power’, Hot Space (1982)

• Mixed fortunes thereafter: ‘If you're a fan who's been hankering for years to hear Queen get back to the bombast of its heyday, replace your old copy of A Night at the Opera or News of the World instead. But don't give up hope. At least The Miracle offers little snippets of Queen's former majesty’ (Neely, Rolling Stone, 1989)

• Redemption with Innuendo: ‘The album is a homecoming of sorts for Queen, a return to the mid-'70s glory days of such tunes as the infamous “Bohemian Rhapsody”’ (People Weekly, 1991)

Page 9: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Queen’s Idiolect in the 1980s

• ‘Staying Power’ and American R&B/funk, e.g. Skyy’s ‘Call Me’ (1981)

• Congruous with compositional strategy, but few sonic patterns

• ‘Tear It Up’ (1984), ‘Hammer to Fall’ (1984), ‘Friends Will Be Friends’ (1986), ‘Breakthru’ (1989), ‘I Want It All’ (1989)

• Clear sonic patterns (namely, vocal arrangements), but lack of compositional strategies

Page 10: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Queen’s Idiolect and Innuendo (1991)

• Queen’s struggles in the 1980s: intra-band conflicts, Sun City, mixed critical reviews

• Redemption with Innuendo: ‘The album is a homecoming of sorts for Queen, a return to the mid-'70s glory days of such tunes as the infamous “Bohemian Rhapsody”’ (People Weekly, 1991)

Page 11: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015
Page 12: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Levels of Relationship

Style

IdiolectIdiolect

Compositional Strategies

Compositional Strategies

Compositional Strategies

Compositional Strategies

Sonic PatternsSonic

PatternsSonic

PatternsSonic

Patterns

Compositional Strategies

Compositional Strategies

Sonic PatternsSonic

Patterns

Page 13: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Progressive Rock and the Classical Connection

• Classical music influences/borrowing key to progressive rock (Macan 1997; Covach 1997; Holm-Hudson; Anderton 2010, etc.)

• ‘Cadenza’ figuration in Yes’ ‘Roundabout’ (Sheinbaum 2002)

• Canon in Gentle Giant’s ‘As Old As You’re Young’ (Lundberg 2014)

• ‘Classical’ piano in Styx’ ‘Come Sail Away’ (Holm-Hudson 2005)

• Pastiche in Queen’s ‘Millionaire Waltz’ (Braae forthcoming)

Page 14: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015
Page 15: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Progressive Rock and the Classical Connection

• Classical music influences/borrowing key to progressive rock (Macan 1997; Covach 1997; Holm-Hudson; Anderton 2010, etc.)

• ‘Cadenza’ figuration in Yes’ ‘Roundabout’ (Sheinbaum 2002)

• Canon in Gentle Giant’s ‘As Old As You’re Young’ (Lundberg 2014)

• ‘Classical’ piano in Styx’ ‘Come Sail Away’ (Holm-Hudson 2005)

• Pastiche in Queen’s ‘Millionaire Waltz’ (Braae forthcoming)

• Structural and thematic design in Yes and Genesis (Covach 1997, Palmer 2001, Spicer 2008)

• Different influences/borrowing practices, but recognised as related = compositional strategy

Page 16: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Glam/Glitter Rock

• From Moore (2012) and Auslander (2003), exaggeration of 1950s/1960s pop: Roy Wood (‘See My Baby Jive’) and Phil Spector; David Bowie (‘The Prettiest Star’, ‘Drive-In Saturday’) and doo-wop; Queen (harmonic language) and the Beatles

• ‘Glitter stomp’ drum groove

Page 17: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015
Page 18: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Glam/Glitter Rock

• From Moore (2012) and Auslander (2003), exaggeration of 1950s/1960s pop: Roy Wood (‘See My Baby Jive’) and Phil Spector; David Bowie (‘The Prettiest Star’, ‘Drive-In Saturday’) and doo-wop; Queen (harmonic language) and the Beatles

• ‘Glitter stomp’ drum groove in Gary Glitter’s ‘Rock and Roll’; ‘Leader of the Gang’; ‘Dynamite’ (Mud); ‘Hell Raiser’ (Sweet’)

• Plus, ‘Do You Wanna Touch?’ (Gary Glitter); ‘Tiger Feet’ (Mud); ‘Block Buster!’, ‘Teenage Rampage’ (Sweet); ‘Can the Can’, Suzi Quatro, etc.

• Commercial imperatives (sonic patterns) vs. artistic prestige (compositional strategies)?

Page 19: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Further Reading

Progressive Rock and the Classical Connection

John Covach, 'Progressive Rock, 'Close to the Edge,' and the Boundaries of Style'. In Understanding Rock: Essays in Musical Analysis, eds. John

Covach and Graeme M. Boone. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997. 3-31.

Kevin Holm-Hudson, '"Come Sail Away" and the Commodification of "Prog Lite"'. American Music 23/3 (2005): 377-394.

Nors S. Josephson, 'Bach Meets Liszt: Traditional Formal Structures and Performance Practices in Progressive Rock'. The Musical Quarterly 76/1

(1992): 67-92.

Mattias Lundberg, 'Motivic cohesion and parsimony in three songs from Gentle Giant's Acquiring the Taste (1971)'. Popular Music 33/2 (2014):

292-292.

———. '“To Let it Be Without Pretense”: Canon, Fugue, and Imitation in Progressive Rock 1968–1979'. Music Theory Online 20.3 (2014).

<http://www.mtosmt.org/issues/mto.14.20.3/mto.14.20.3.lundberg.php> (accessed 14 October 2014).

Edward Macan, Rocking the Classics: English Progressive Rock and the Counterculture. New York, Oxford University Press, 1997.

John R. Palmer, 'Yes, 'Awaken', and the Progressive Rock Style'. Popular Music 20/2 (2001): 243-261.

John J. Sheinbaum, 'Progressive Rock and the Inversion of Musical Values'. In Progressive Rock Reconsidered, ed. Kevin Holm-Hudson. New York:

Routledge, 2002. 21-42.

Mark Spicer, 'Large-Scale Strategy and Compositional Design in the Early Music of Genesis'. In Expression in Pop-Rock Music: Critical and Analytical

Essays, ed. Walter Everett. New York: Routledge, 2008. 313-344.

Glam Rock

Allan F. Moore, Song Means: Analysing and Interpreting Recorded Popular Song. Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate, 2012.

Philip Auslander, 'Good Old Rock and Roll: Performing the 1950s in the 1970s'. Journal of Popular Music Studies 15/2 (2003): 166-194.

———. Performing Glam Rock: Gender and Theatricality in Popular Music. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2006.

Page 20: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

The ‘Opera’ Section of ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’

• Famous sixty-second episode

• Influences? Mercury: ’I did some research…’ (cf. Peraino, McLeod 2001, Long)

• Likely allusion to Gilbert and Sullivan (e.g. H.M.S. Pinafore or The Pirates of Penzance)

Page 21: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Queen’s Stylistic Voyages

Queen1970s rock

Queen1970s rock

19th-C Vienna‘Millionaire Waltz’

1960s folk‘Long Away’

1930s jazz‘Dreamer’s Ball’

Rockabilly‘Crazy Little Thing

Called Love’

Music hall‘Lazing on a

Sunday Afternoon’

Page 22: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Also in the Opera Section

• Vocal arrangement: close-position upper parts plus octave/fifth below

• Standard arrangement for Queen

• Common-tone diminished chord built on local tonic

• Movement of inner/lower voices under upper pedal

• Antiphonal dialogue across the sound-box

Page 23: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Issues with Queen

• Easily identifiable recurring traits: vocal harmonies, guitar arrangements, harmonic fragments

• But, nagging problem of ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’

• ‘One last attribute that is part of Queen's sonic-fingerprint is their stylistic eclecticism’ (de Boer 1999); ‘It is the unpredictability of the band’s recordings that is arguably the only real constant . . . it is in this respect that Radiohead problematizes the specification of idiolect’ (Moore and Ibrahim 2009)

Page 24: Sonic Patterns and Compositional Strategies in the Music of Queen Nick Braae University of Waikato CUNY Graduate Centre 5 November 2015

Compositional Strategies and Sonic Patterns

• Two strands of an idiolect

• Sonic Patterns: gestures or musical details ‘articulated’ in the same ‘manner’ from song to song

• Compositional Strategies: gestures or musical details that are ‘articulated’ in a different ‘manner’ from song to song, but shared musical kinship or identity

• Any category (style, idiolect, sonic pattern, compositional strategy, etc.) simply ‘tells us something different about how we organize the sequence of sounds issuing from instruments or speakers’ (Moore 2001, 441)

• Richness of the method from different forms of commonality within single temporal span