Pockets of Pop Rock

I’ve read the description and gone back over my experiences of pop rock as it emanated from radio but still haven’t grasped what it is. Or what pop is. So in the time-tested tradition for this blog, let’s wing it

I Want To Make It Happen

Each word that occurred 
absurd as the bird who can't sing or fly
yet you're asking me why
is it reason or treason that still makes us try
I want to make it happen baby

I want to make it happen dearest one 
So I've tried and applied on every side
to coin a phrase this coincides
with down at heel or a done deal
[CHORUS]

I've shredded and shedded past proclivities
axed exactly  those other activities
I've still stilts to stall guilt  
 billed as built
 
Each voicing of choice in the matter
exempt from attempts to be flattered
I shoulder this responsibility
selling a solar powered soliloquy 
[CHORUS]

A test of my metal

I’ve been putting off heavy metal as you can probably tell by my jumping to glam rock and blaming it on Wikipedia. The trouble with HM is that there isn’t a metal that I’m not mostly ignorant of. Apart from the few exceptions that had the speed and cogency of punk or some quirk that took my fancy, there were a thousand denim clad disciples better placed than I

That’s the theory though and this is a writing praxis. I’ll apply the following rules to conform to the dictates of metal: it will be menacing or dark in some way, it will contain some of the rebellion or displeasure that defines the very real cod metal. We’ll still just have to see..

Stop You in Your Tracks

The fuddling of the feat to make it here 
the full intent to disappear
for you were sent and scent alone
overthrown where it's overgrown
I'm going to stop you in your tracks

Since the prints were washed away
a war on watershed  display
Broken branches of banking threat
reach for the usual rite of regret
stop you in your tracks
stop you in your tracks

The wending con they're sending COD
the distance dusting up 'tween you and me
The forks at which we talk
 as having taken this walk
 
The bullies fully loaded the pipes of peace corroded
ringbarked or railroaded
though you thought to make it out of this
even an avenue to ally with alleys thus 
[CHORUS]

 

Invasion inversion

As I’m neither British nor have I been to the US, I feel spectacularly unqualified to invoke the British invasion. The other issue is that it is a bit of a catch-all in that not only was it ‘coals to Newcastle’ with the rhythm’n’blues and rock’n’roll but the bands who crossed the pond were caught up in(stigating) the change so is there anything not covered in our other sixties ruminations? Possibly not. The pressure’s off then

Billionaire’s Ballast

The name on the building
the sinkhole  filled in
or flying over your own isle
always go in what you call style

Your ship is surely equipped 
with the happier happening to be hip
Payment methods in mythic arraignment
the evanescent path to attainment
We're pleased you've thought us plutocrats
worthy of those stupid caps

The countries you court and the c#nts you control
 how you feel as you fill a hole
The steps the stops the stipulations
 leading to adulterated adulation
 search and destroy each situation

The inner circle jerk of innovation
rockets and sockets racked up salvation
it's another corner of the cornucopia
every magnate in their own utopia


A hint of the garage

The thing about garage rock is that it wasn’t named that until a decade later so adolescents wanting to get together and bash out songs could do so without worrying about genre. Some retrospective assessment has it that these teens cranked out simple ‘she done me wrong’ lyrics but I think we can adhere to the broader directive to keep the song simple and easy to sing.

Our roots rock merely had to be authentic so I told the story of my father leaving the farmhouse he’d lived in for twenty-five years. In the process, the blues is evident in both the mournful tone and, well you can’t get more blues than have to leave my happy home                                                                                                                                     The folk feel is evident in the plain speaking, in the unvarnished setting and the gathering of family.                                                                                                                   Country? It’s a rural setting and populated with machinery, with rust and dust.

Roots rock can still facilitate that line in the chorus which is both long and a bit of a tongue twister. It’s also confronting for the narrator to make declarations about their ‘frail familiar frame’ whether they have one or not. So it’s not as though it’s not challenging for a fellow with a semi-acoustic but does fit the classification. This is where, when we move over to the garage, we’d need to either break up the line or dispense with it altogether.

There’s a Hitch

I saw you on the side of the road
I said do you want a ride
You nodded and you climbed inside
You smiled as you climbed inside
CHORUS: Oh there's a hitch there's a hitch
          There's always a hitch
f
I was the driving force
arriving in due course
at the hop at the shop at the stop
keep this from the cops
(C)
I clutch this close to me
Brake for the sake of repartee
The gear to appear carefree

My reverse and my rearview 
I can't get enough of you 
How mad the mode a lad with his load
(C)



On the Rocks

Let’s clumsily switch hats to reviewer or critic for a moment. When we talk about rock, there’s the rock writers as well. Who knows how much influence is wielded by Rolling Stone or Creem when they’re supposedly just covering the music scene.

I was voracious in fact, and was as likely to devour roneod magazines that had found their way from the underground to the cool kid shop. Rock’s half century is also a product of every garage band in the land; the luck or quirk directing some to greater heights and for longer or shorter periods. It is this fascination amongst the rowdy and unpolished that keeps the movement going as much as any superannuated or swapped rock star. Rock reaches mythic status and it sags under the weight of a dozen groups with no spark to make them special. It isn’t everything but it will pretty much have a go at everything.

With that in mind

You Could Have Told Me is more straightforward than More tally it’s true and this may come from the conscious attempt to ‘look more like a lyric’. More tally doesn’t have a hook and sixties songs, for all their experimentation, had hooks. It travels from the early Liverpool scene, even referencing “I Wanna Hold Your Hand” while ‘mirrored in the myre/pirrhouetting to the pyre’ is a nod to the Jims who round out the decade.

It’s all very well to tell you this but if you were to sit down and deliberately try for gimmickry or the aforementioned referencing that we swore would be naff, I fear the result would show all that and hurt the structure and the conceit. So am I saying that you should stumble on this, as if it can just happen? Yep, you need a fair dose of intuition.

What else is going on behind You Could Have Told Me you ask. The narrative decouples from classic boy meets girl as it presupposes that, in addition to casting some kind of spell on [the narrator] – standard fare for the time – this also means that she can foresee what will happen between them. There is no way otherwise that she could be expected to know how things would turn out.

Possessing those powers makes sense of that ‘mire/pyre’ line while conjuring off the cuff reference to the darker parts of history. There’s a sordid subtext of sacrifice on both sides with him declaring what he surrenders or no longer contemplates.

While it casts too much of a knowing wink to have come from the sixties, it captures some of the spirit that bands have been reviving from the seventies on.

Our seventies rock song is a perfect example of that aforementioned intuition. Having just noted how using a contemporary reference to write a song in a bygone style doesn’t work, here we go again. Only this time, the 60s and 70s fascination with 3D, though taking a different form, offers a perfect segue to looking at the 3D printing that is possible now. I will go out on a limb (a 3D printed one, natch) and declare this one a success.

So what else to say about Some Day My Prints Will Come: given my own penchant for puns, I found the only way to footnote that this one was plagiarised was to declare it upfront. That way we could get on with our seventies rock number.
By chance, the subject matter lends itself to copying so declaring the pun – and someone else’s pun what’s more – is acceptable in this rare instance.

It has a nice build on it too in the three verses, each doing its job well. This despite there being no chorus or other repeated element; the hook we mention above! I think that some sprawling epics that saw rise in that era can excuse the grandiose ‘referents you’ll just have to get’

The eighties rock number sounds like it could have actually made its appearance a decade later but since the nineties seemed like the first decade where all was a postmodern mishmash of existing styles, what does that say?
I think pheromones are a good thing to write about, especially when the subject’s just laying around waiting to be used. It’s quite long though so not suitable for all 80s rock.

Recursive could have been from the nineties but this doesn’t tell us much. Whereas Pheromones keeps to simple repetition of sound and pattern, Recursive is dense, as if, my having already covered the subject of repetition, doing another called Recursive requires a quite different approach. The song is about repetition but doesn’t display any itself.

As I get older, I’m winging it more as I just don’t listen to the same volume of stuff. There are situations and concepts that are perennial
and then there are the references to search engines that date If I Could Have Your Attention Please both on the millenium and during the next ten years. Do rock songs from 2001 or 2002 display this pattern of poetry (if I’m to be honest) where the subjects are reintroduced but in a changed scenario? It doesn’t matter because this whole situation of being able to stream anything we want does speak to this cry for attention that could be even necessary in a crowded marketplace and a distracted populace.
Why not write a song about it?

The fact that it requires a close reading to understand the force of the loudhailer when it’s reintroduced is a test of both the audience and the singer. It asks of the more than casual listener that they do indeed pay attention.

Which brings us to this decade we’re in. I don’t plan any of this, as the lyricist instruction component of this blog is at pains to point out. But one could rap this. A catalogue of spent convictions is not treading on thin ice or anyone with Ice in their name or who takes ice. The listener will bring in their own reading according to their circumstance, their expectations and their musical background but that is not usually our concern.

Follies fully followed til the fellows flew

Like the act of projecting that you’re stealing a stranger’s stuff in using the line ‘Some day my prints will come’ by stating such in the first verse but qualifying its useage; we’re now talking about something bigger.

Here we signal that the patois is of some toffee-nosed git whatever misdemeanours he may or may not have committed, just so you don’t read “could rap it” with the catalogue of spent convictions and think we’re going into dangerous territory. Again, this is the fortuitousness of doing nothing more than sticking to the subject and covering the angle while using arresting language.

There’s lines here that lightly touch on the gaolbird theme but not so you’d notice and it’s possible to see that this is just exactly what it says it is. It’s up to the audience or the band members to make out what nationality or cultural background the narrator is but I don’t think it matters. This could even be reportage with a voice different to that of the perp.

Six teas

I don’t know about the people of my parents’ generation, now in their eighties, but I can’t sympathetically go back earlier than as a child mis-singing “Hey Buffalo Bill, what did you kill”. I doubt I’d have heard of bungalows at that stage but news of Mister Cody had traveled far.

In discussion on communication of any kind, we should never forget there was a time when radio, television and newspapers were mediated and parents and their circle of friends and associates were of a mind to impart some things more than others. Yet still we had this treasure trove of lore.

This applies as much to the song lyric as any other mode of communication; whether you subscribe to the opinion that the true intent or feeling doesn’t become apparent until you hear it sung or you think that songpoetry will be apparent on the page. If the latter, there is still the more easily parodied second stringers who tried their hardest with a seemingly cosmic sweep but end saying little.

This is common to every era, just as there is fine music being created and performed. It’s useful to those interested in the craft, as another string in their bow. I remember reading this in a totally unrelated paper on writing (as opposed to writing on paper),

Now I say this as a person who has had a man crush on The Stranglers and adored The Fall and worshipped Elvis Costello. Someone who enjoys the heck out of Ray Davies without writing like him. And of course likes and appreciates the differences in all the great and successful songwriters such as Paul Simon (I know, it’s slim picking for Aryans) and so on and so on and doobie doobie doobie

My Olympus is populated by such legendary writers and performers as Willie Dixon. Both Captain Beefheart and Tom Waits. I like The Doors so much more than I should. And regardless of all this, the passing of one true master of the song lyric as art, as poetry, is monumental to me as someone working in that field (or even if I’d only ever listened while writing assignments or during my break). And twilight recognition to a writer who, at his best, was both universal and transmuted. Even if he couldn’t sing. A couple of people have come out and said that it should have been Cohen, not Dylan, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature. Was Dylan the sympathetic favourite because he’d had the bigger impact, or because of Blonde on Blonde and Highway 61 Revisited? For me, I saw them both live in thoroughly enjoyable concerts and my record collection is bristling, even our bookshelves have the stray work.

Despite all this, I don’t take my main cues from either, other than to give service to the power of the words to project or convey meaning once they are assembled (and this applies to knights in white satin and climbing the stairway to heaven as it does to more or less esoteric work).

Start to Rock

First: a disclaimer. I tried to figure out how to migrate From the Sound of It to my other website, Wellwrought, but can’t do it so I’m back here.

Why I ever thought it would be good to have a Belay Bob hosting a lyricist blog is anyone’s guess. Now that that’s out of the way..

The antecedents of rock are principally in the fifties: rock’n’roll, rockabilly, rhythm’n’blues but generic rock begins in the fabled 1960’s

Sure, you can point out all the pop and country and big bands with crooners but the foment of the sixties encapsulates much of what we take from the music. This is not to pretend that there is a sixties rock that can represent all the subgenres that began then: heavy metal, hard rock, acid rock

More tally 

This year death has barely drawn a breath
Hardly idle with our idols 
Quakes and shakes soon am I tidal
 measured end and mass incendiary

This time of engaging in gauging crime
from somewhere subhuman to somehow sublime
The devil his due
divulge and you die

Plan it and see if it's spinning through space
the grounds may confound but you still found the place
with pursed lips and pursestrings
groundbreaking discovery

You might think this a trifling peculiar considering how much I have let go through the net in terms of ‘authenticity’ but I’m going to say the above does not meet our criterion; it’s not sixties rock, it’s a poem. There were plenty of poems being written then, some even being performed on stage to muted background music, but we are attempting to encapsulate everything from the bikers to the mods, a stray Ted. We want to keep the hippies happy, prop and prepare protester fare, drag haut cauture and drug culture into the innocent mix

So if we can’t write our song that is secretly about two thousand and sixteen and pass it off as sixties, what next? Besides actually grabbing icons and images from the era and bunging them in and then, when questioned, claim that this represents the chaos and confusion, brother.

The solution is to not indulge in caged metaphor and describe some real incident or place or person, no small irony in doing that considering how much the sixties was hellbent on breaking tradition.

You Could Have Told Me 

You're the consequence of all my recompense
You're patchouli flavoured and Heaven sense
The way I had things planned
 I'd only take your hand
For one more whirl of boy meets girl
You could have told me
How I'd fall for you How I'd call to you
You could have told me
Now I see it's true I need to be with you

You're the destiny and distilled desire
Mirrored in the mire pirrhouetting to the pyre
The things I cherished then
I declared perish them
Since this better plan a woman and a man

(C)
You're the circumstance of when I circled chance
I'll never leave for love or roam for romance
I was sure of something else
Why, while I keep this to myself