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Thanks!
Steve
I should explain why I'm asking. I'm trying to develop a model of the current practice (particularly in pop songs) of where lyrical rhymes (and musical rhymes, including resolutions) tend to go with respect to time units. Getting a proper understanding of (the hierarchy of) time units themselves is of course critical to this, and I'm not sure I'm even there, yet. But in looking closely at a bunch of songs, I am glimpsing vague patterns that these "crises", or inflection points, occur at 0%, 50%, and 75& of the way through what I believe to be a "phrase" (a musical phrase; not necessarily a lyrical one). I've also been looking into prosody with little success, but I used the limerick form in my question because it seems to nicely span both worlds.
I don't know how this fits in, but I hear the limeric as an AABA in 12/8
four measures long with the 3 As and 1 B measure. with the B measure being two phrases each one half the length of the A phrase rhythmically.
Beat Beat Rime Rest,
Beat Beat Rime Rest,
beat rime, beat rime,
beat beat Rime Rest.
If I understand why, you are doing this to create a model for longer phrases in pop tunes or various other lengths of phrases and different rhyme patterns so I think that a method of describing the phrases has to be universal both to compound and complex meter as well as to fit into different phrase lenght etc.
That is why I am going to the basic elementary ways of describing the rhythm with Long/short but adding the Rhyme (shortened to Rime as its the same number of characters as beat and rest)
I don't know how my three elements will work or if it will work for all forms you may find but I think some sort of basic simple organization is the best way to attack the rhyming patterns at least until you start to see regular patterns. I think that you will find recurring and logical patterns although I also think you will have some songs that have unique logical patterns and maybe even a few more art song type of patterns.
As you get more samples, I think that it might be easier to test organizational notation that might work better.
To arrive at my model, I started with
Short short long----
short short long ----
and then it fell apart when the rhyming pattern was cut into half the number of beats.
Then I decided to add the Beat and rhyme words for the third phrase and came up with
beat rime beat rime
and then put it into the final model.
I don't know if this is any help at all, but as I understand more precisely what you are working with, I hope to do better! lol
LJS
element7music.com
Thank you, LJ, your simplification into landmarks such as beats, rimes, rests, and so on is a good one. I'll use that going forward to analyze examples.
beat beat rime beat
beat beat rime rest
beat rime beat rime
beat beat rime rest
[*draw the *queen of ][*diamonds, boy * she'll][*beat you *if she's ][*able; * you know the]
[*queen of *hearts is ][*always * your best][*bet. * ][* * Now it]
[*seems to *me some ][*fine things * have been][*laid up-*on your ][*table. * But you]
[*only *want the][*ones that *you can't][*get *][*Des- *]
A (beat beat beat rimeA) rime at 75%
B (beat beat rimeB beat) rime at 50%
A (beat beat beat rimeA) rime at 75%
B (beat beat rimeB beat) rime at 50%
Exiting that chunk of music with a rhyme at the halfway mark sounds correct, and balanced. Ending with a 75% rhyme, I don't know if it would, yet if you consider A and B to be one long unit, then the 75% rhymes come close to 50% of the composite unit. On the other hand, if A and B really are one unit then the rimeB rhymes are appearing at 75%. Anyway, I was just curious to know if anyone knew the "rules" (aka the common practice and what patterns have been found to work). Understanding the psychology is not crucial, but would be nice. :)
I'll keep looking at examples as I come across them. But FWIW, a lot of pop songs seem to rhyme right at the border between the end of one phrase and the start of another. That's where my 0% value came from.
Thanks!
Steve
In my music classes when the kids are mostly beginners especially at upper elementary and higher, I would teach them to SolFa on the pentatonic scale and Ta-TiTi Kodaly rhythmic or 1+2+3+4+ notation (depending on the students and how far along in my elementary studies I were at the time. And I usually taught them music as if they were a composer once they developed basic skills
I had many variations but in general I would have them either individually or in groups, have them select a poem and recite it to a beat. They were free to put the emphasis where they liked but they had to syl-la-bi-cate the poem first and then practice saying the lyrics as a chant (or a rap depending upon the demographic and student interests.
Then when they knew it, one or some of the students would draw a line over the syllable that landed on the beat. And you can probably figure out the rest. As they did this I also had them put a wavy line or a "Z" when there was a beat without a syllable. (the wavy line would eventually turn out to be a rest and the Z is just the way the Kodaly kids learn to represent a quarter rest.
Most of their poems wound up to be combinations of quarters and eights so then I went to long/short to get the regular quarter and 8th rhythms in the pboem. WIth the line above the beats, if there was no short/short, that already was the Kodaly symbol for a Ta or quarter note. and if there was a short short, then they drew a line over the second note and connected the tops and that was the symbol for the TiTi or two eight notes.
The ones that had triplet meters, or syncopation, gave me an excuse to teach them how to vary it to show how to notate it and it worked great. It also allowed me to progress to FORM when they looked at where the rhymes landed and I had them start to group the phrases into measures and the measures into an actual form chart.
Then for the more advanced students or higher level grades, I would sometimes have them sing pentatonic melodies to the words and notate them in SolFa. I enjoyed it and most of the time, so did the kids.
Your examples just reminded me of that so I thought I would remember and share it with you.
Mary had a little lamb,
Its Fleece was white as SNOW.
Every where that Mary went,
Her lamb was sure to GO.
Most poems seem to follow this same pattern as it has to do with couplets. So I am thinking that couplets might be the center of your investigating how the lyrics are put together.
One thing that I notices when I did the same thing as above with a Blues theme, is that the couplet is the basis of the Blues tunes but the first part of the Couplet is used twice, AA then the second part is the Rhyme that completes the B part of the couplet. with the A being the question, and the B is the answer and it is in an AAB form for the lyrics and thus the music.
Which brings up the lyrics of the Blues genre. Which are usually AAB but can also have other models as well. Had you thought to put the Blues form and rhyming scheme into your study?
Talk to you more about it later.
LJS
Yes, couplets, good point. So if we say that "Mary" is a two-phrase couplet (instead of four lines of text), which I like btw, then here's how I hear it with just the landmarks shown:
[beat][beat] [beat][beat] [beat][beat] [rime][rest]
[beat][beat] [beat][beat] [beat][beat] [rime][rest]
So that puts the stress spotlight (the lyrical rhyme) at the three-quarter mark through the phrase. That matches Desperado, and Desperado uses same-length phrases, but interleaved couplets. But it doesn't match the limerick (which puts rhymes at the halfway mark, in two different-length types of phrase). Very interesting. This is what I'd seen, though: 50% and 75% (and 0%) placements. Still don't know why, but I'm happy with the additional examples, and chance to process. :) Btw, I'm also seeing a tendency in songs to put the musical resolution in the same place as the lyrical rhyme. That may be an obvious practice.
Also, that's very interesting about the Blues form. On my TODO list was an item to do a "detour" analysis of some Blues forms (incl 12-bar). Btw, I don't know what the proper term nor theory is for a "detour", I'm sure there is one, but I just made that word up. Lemme do a bit of that analysis here, and that should serve to illustrate what I mean by a detour:
So, let's say you've just composed this little bit of music (which, to use the term that you reminded me of, is a couplet):
I
[I] hate to see that [I] evening sun go [I] down. [I] It
[V] makes me think I'm [IV7] on my last go [I] round [I]
It's great, it works. It should: it's just the primary chords in common cadence. But let's say that you now want it to be longer. This is true of lots of songs, you just find that you're resolving, giving up the goods, too early. You want to hold onto that lovely suspense a bit longer for the enjoyment of the listener. So, you insert a detour (you insert it into the chain so that it fits front and back). And, having added a detour, you rinse and repeat until the music is long and/or suspenseful enough. In this case, we could begin by adding 8 bars in anticipation of the result being more "even" and balanced, or we could try just adding 4 bars to begin with just to see how that feels.
So let's say we insert a 4-bar detour right at the end of the first line. We can then tweak that last I to an I7 if we like, and a couple other tweaks. And you get this (notice how what we spliced in fits without needing major surgery to what was already there).
I
[I] hate to see that [I] evening sun go [I] down. [I7] I
[IV] hate to see that [IV] evening sun go [I] down. [I] It
[V] makes me think I'm [IV7] on my last go [I] round [V7]
And that works of course, too, b/c it's a variant of 12-bar blues. The fact that the first two lines share the same melody and lyrics is ok: they have different harmony. The false lyrical rhyme between "down" and "down" doesn't spoil things, because of that (and because we eventually get a true rhyme). If we make the first two lines identical in harmony, melody, AND lyrics, then that doesn't sound anywhere near as artful (although you'd get away with it if you performed it with enough soul).
So, really, my mental model is that the Blues form example is actually a regular old couplet extended with a 4-bar detour.
-Steve