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Notes on "Good Morning, Good ..."

 





Notes on ... Series #116 (GMGM)
  by Alan W. Pollack
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  Next note Not so fast! We've got unfinished business to deal with ...
 

Rita's Outro Revisited

  Next note An uncommonly serious and thoughtful reader of these notes sent email asking why the previous note on "Lovely Rita"; gave what he considered to be unfairly short shrift to the song's climactic outro. No, I responded, you shouldn't chalk this up to my necessarily being bored or tired of working on the series :-) But his underlying question forced me to carefully re-consider why, indeed, I had failed to remark, even in passing, on the rather blatantly sexual overtones of the song's closing section.
  Next note If I have it to do it over again, I will at least acknowledge that the voluble, wordy rest of the song is capped by a virtually wordless outro that provides a modicum of release to the heretofore only "nearly" consummated build up of horny energy accumulated along the way. Indeed, I suppose most people have, at one time or other, come home for a "date" feeling "frustrated" and in need of some ultimate relief however solitary or makeshift. Fine, as far as it goes.
  Next note I split paths with my reader though when he goes on to chide me for not appreciating what he considers to be the Beethovenian and realistic passion of this song's climax. (Hey, for a change it was someone else other than me who mentioned LVB :-)).
  Next note Put simply, if the outro of "Lovely Rita" was intended to convey a sense of raw, overwhelming and inescapable climax, then I believe it is undermined by its own attempt to be simultaneously cute and realistic. "Less is more," I'd advise Paul. Beethoven manages with chord changes and harmonic rhythm, alone; no need to weaken it by making it so obvious with the moaning and heavily breathed vocal effects. On grounds of strictly musical technique, the use of i -» iv -» i (instead of the more kinetic V chord) plus the rather flaccid application of harmonic rhythm in this song's outro work at cross-purposes with whatever build up of tension is happening elsewhere in the musical fabric.
  Next note Let's try and state it positively though. I more strongly suspect that, in keeping with the comic subtext of what precedes the outro, this climax here is intended in much the same arch spirit. No seed is literally spilt here, you should pardon the expression; no heart races wildly; we're just kidding around for shits and grins. "Playing tigers," Anthony Blanche called it. It's not that I personally believe there's no room for fun or humor in the midst of sharing sex, but I do believe that getting all the way there requires shifting ones focus to some level of serious concentration. (Oh, momma — I can't believe I'm saying any of this, and on the Internet, no less!! :-)
  Look it: if you cannot rely on personal experience in this regard, then at least consider the bridge section of "Day Tripper" as an object lesson.
  At any rate, then, let us move onto the song which gives a whole new dimension of meaning to the phrase "rude awakening"? (Clear the throat, and wipe clean the slate ...)
 
 
alan w. pollack's
notes on ...

Notes on "Good Morning, Good Morning"

Notes on ... Series #116 (GMGM)
  by Alan W. Pollack
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       Key: A Major
     Meter: 4/4 in intro, bridge and outro;
            anything but predictable in verse
      Form: Intro | Verse | Verse' | Bridge |
                  | Verse | Verse' (guitar solo) | Bridge |
                  | Verse | Outro (fade-out)
        CD: "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band",
            Track 11 (Parlophone CDP7 46442-2)
  Recorded: 8th February 1967, Abbey Road 2;
            16th February 1967, Abbey Road 3;
            13th, 28th, 29th March 1967, Abbey Road 2
UK-release: 1st June 1967 (LP "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band")
US-release: 2nd June 1967 (LP "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band")
 
1

General Points of Interest

 

Style and Form

  Next note This is truly, truly, one of the great songs; with its uneven meter, blisters-on-fingers drumming, washed out horns and silver saxophones, and rapid-fire verbal slide-show imagery; inspired by no less than a mass media commercial effort on behalf of Kellogg's Corn Flakes; "the best to you each morning," indeed. (Doesn't your alarm radio ever trip off on a Blue Monday Morning in the middle of some piece of equally insipid and insidiously cheerily bit of nonsense?)
  Next note And yet, for all its (you say you want a) revolutionary gestures, you must acknowledge how, at the same time, well grounded it is on a classic-pop/rock formal design.
 

Melody and Harmony

  Next note Both tune and chord changes are frugally funded here, as is John's wont; I am tempted to assign this to an type of "impatience" on his part in wanting to get out a strongly felt message with such urgency that it overwhelms whatever counter balancing desire he might have to linger over the design of certain musical details.
  Next note The tune contains an uncanny number of phrases that span a fourth that is then subdivided into a third and a second, or vice versa. An unexhaustive list of examples (collect them all!):
 
   - Nothing to do               A  - F# - B
   - To save his life            E  - G  - A  - E
   - Call his wife in            G  - A  - F# - A
   - I've got nothing            D  - C# - A  - A
   - (nothing) to say            A  - A  - F# - B
   - Everybody knows             C# - C# - C# - A  - D
   - Good morning                A  - F# - E

   [Figure 116.1]
  Next note The chord set is limited to I, IV, V, and flat-VII. For a small set, it packs a surprisingly piquant punch in the cross-relation that recurs between V and flat-VII, and you might say this is a favorite progression of John's; "You've Got To Hide Your Love Away" of all things is an example of an earlier song written to the same harmonic spec.
 

Arrangement

  Next note The basic backing track with single-tracked lead vocal recently released on the second "Anthology" CD underscores with textbook example-like clarity everything we've read over the years about how they would build up the several overdubbed layers of a complex track. As busy as the finished piece is, you can see how the backing vocals, brass instruments, and animal effects were each modularly applied to the basic outline.
  Next note This is John's most extreme attempt at craziness with meter since "She Said She Said". In spite of whatever superficial similarities exist between them, however, these two songs bear as much contrast with each other in this regard as they do comparison. In "She Said She Said" the metrical hijinks are saved for the contrasting "off" sections, whereas here in "Good Morning, Good Morning", the pranks are featured prominently in the main verse section which gives them more airplay as well more share of your attention. You might also note that the metrical shifting of the earlier song is rather passively wobbly in effect, while our current example is more aggressively agitated.
  By the way, did you ever notice how both these song titles share the unusual trait of repeating themselves?
2

Section-by-Section Walkthrough

 

Intro

  Next note The opening rooster call would seem arbitrary if not for the return of it with a whole menagerie in the song's coda. I wonder if the scratchy sound underlying the rooster is intended to be a "Honey Pie"-like conjuring of 78 rpm era surface noise, birds chirping, or perhaps both.
  Next note The intro is four measures in length. In spite of its four-square dimensions, the first and last measures place the intermediate chord change on a strongly syncopated off-beat. While it doesn't literally start off with an uneven meter, the opening surely hints at what is to come before much longer:
 
                       ------ 2X ------
       1   2 & 3   4   1   2   3   4    1  & 2   3   4
      |A     D        |A       D       |A (E)            |
   A:  I     IV        I       IV       I (V)

   [Figure 116.2]
  Next note And that sung title phrase, coming after the call of the cock, sure seems relentless and cheerlessly unsympathetic.
 

Verse

  Next note The primary verse is a traditional four phrases long, but each phrase is of an anti-traditionally different length; your own parsing of the bar lines may differ from mine, but I do think the number of beats per phrase will come out the same: 10 for the first, 12 for the second, 9 for the third, and 14 for the fourth phrase.
 
    1   2 &   3     1   2   3   4   1    2     3
                                               boom!
   |A     E        |G              |-    A    (E)   |
    I     V         flat-VII             I    (V)

    1   2 &   3     1   2   3   4   5    1   2   &   3   &   4   &  |
                                         dum dum-  d'dum-dum dum-dum
   |A     E        |G                   |A
    I     V         flat-VII             I

    1   2   3   4   5    1   2    3    4
   |D                   |E                 |
    IV                   V

    1   2 &   3     1   2   3     1   2     3   4     1   2   3   4
                                  dum dum'd dum dum'd dum
   |A     E        |G            |A         D        |E             |
    I     V         flat-VII      I         IV        V

   [Figure 116.3]
  Next note This would, indeed, be much more easily documented on music paper, though if necessary, you can apply directly to me for a scanning of the words across this metrical analysis; maybe. I mean, for crying out loud, "Have you no natural resources of yer own?" :-)
  Next note At the very end, like a chronic headache, the title phrase reprises.
 

Verse

  Next note What I label as Verse' opens exactly like the primary verse, but it's second phrase cuts way to the end of what is the fourth phrase of the primary verse (with its tell-tale title phrase chord progression), nicely setting up a direct segue into the bridge:
 
    1   2 &   3     1   2   3   4   1    2     3
                                               boom!
   |A     E        |G              |-    A    (E)   |
    I     V         flat-VII             I    (V)

    1   2 &   3     1   2   3   4   5    1     2     3     4
                                         dum   dum-d dum   dum'd
   |A     E        |G                   |A           D            |
    I     V         flat-VII             I           IV

   [Figure 116.4]
 

Bridge

  Next note The bridge momentarily regularizes both the meter and the chord progression (a bit of respite is needed by this point, no?); it is only in the rhetorically motivated section length of five measures that "irregularity" persists:
 
   |A    D    |A    D    |A    D    |A    D    |A         |
    I    IV    I    IV    I    IV    I    IV    I

   [Figure 116.5]
  Next note This here is a right ironically optimistic little Rock March, rather in the same spirit of "Fixing A Hole"'s own break section; the ironic difference between the two being one of sincerity versus mordant irony.
  Next note The middle section of the song is nicely put together from a guitar solo (for the repeat of Verse'), followed by a repeat of the bridge in which the lead guitar continues to make his conversational point long after the return of the vocalists would have seem to cut him off.
 

Outro

  Next note The outro grows directly out of a seemingly endless repeat of the title phrase into the fade-out. There is a point, after about the sixth repeat of this phrase, where the musical backing can still be heard though the animal sound effects are dominant. The last few second of the track present the last animals "a capella".
  Next note The common wisdom says that the animal sounds are placed in increasing order of size-of-beast. I'm not so sure about that; besides, for my money, the image suggested by this collage is an Orwellian allegory of "people running round"; or, if you wish, I can quote the earlier, "running everywhere at such a speed."
3

Some Final Thoughts

  Next note In muckle-mouthed enthusiasm, I offer the following laundry list of free associations, several of which, in all humility, are worth a good term paper if not a modest Master's thesis :-)
  Next note The song promotes a wonderfully agonizing blend of feelings that are incongruously both cheerful and sinister. I'm reminded of the old MAD magazine parody of a once popular Kool-Aid ad (way before Jim Jones' Jonestown Guyana stand of 1978), in which the mindlessly smiley face painted by a child's finger on the frosty body of the pitcher is replaced by a poisonous-warning skull and cross bones.
  Next note This is "Nowhere Man" without the preachies; an equally worthy successor to "And Your Bird Can Sing" and warm up for "A Day In The Life". A landmark decision in the art of offering commentary without making direct comment.
  Next noteThe Maureen Cleavian irony that in a life whose ups and downs are as unpredictable as the measure lengths of this song's verse, one can still feel boredom and jadedness as a predominating emotion.
  Next note No matter how "satisfied" you are with your life, oh my brothers, — and take your pick: say you've done it professionally, avocationally, spiritually, intellectually, epicurially, or even sexually [!! :-)] — is there anyone among you who can listen to this song without an uneasy prick of the conscience; and an against-one's-will peer over the side into that deep, deep, existential abyss?
  Next note The hidden, and ultimately encouraging, comforting truth — that in a world where I'm told that Dilbert's upward bending necktie symbolizes his inability to exert a personal influence his work environment, no less his Life, that if you really want to make it happen, according to John, then "it's up to you." That simple, really.
  Regards,
  Alan (052696#116)
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Copyright © 1996 by Alan W. Pollack. All Rights Reserved. This article may be reproduced, retransmitted, redistributed and otherwise propagated at will, provided that this notice remains intact and in place.