Notes on "Hey Jude" (HJ.1)

KEY	F Major
METER	4/4
FORM	Verse -> Verse -> Bridge -> Verse -> Bridge -> Verse ->
                ----- 19X ----
                Jamming Phrase (fadeout)

GENERAL POINTS OF INTEREST


Style and Form

- "Hey Jude" is such a monumental favorite, I'm almost dissuaded from touching it because of the pressure to say something profound. I'll go for it nonetheless, even if I do get everything wrong, because it's such a good illustration of two compositional lessons -- how to fill a large canvas with simple means, and how to use diverse elements such as harmony, bassline, and orchestration to articulate form and contrast.

- There's also the subtle matter of the way that time in this song is divided into classically proportional durations, but more on all of this to come.


The Long Form

- Much has been made of the unusual length of this song (7:07), particularly for a single, but it's the means by which this length is sustained (not the length per se) that's of interest.

- There are many other songs by contemporaneous artists which break the 3-to-4 minute length barrier, though the examples which come immediately to mind use a variety of techniques, *none* of which is used in HJ: an extended improvisational break in the middle ("Light My Fire"), the stringing together of several shorter songs, medley-style ("Macarthur Park"), or simply a long series of verse/refrain couples ("Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands").

- The Beatles opt here instead for an unusual binary form that combines a fully developed, hymn-like song together with an extended, mantra-like jam on a simple chord progression. It will become clear from a detailed examination of HJ just how neatly the two halves complement each other, and from what simple musical materials they are constructed.

- The song-like half of the track is cast in the standard two-bridge model with one verse intervening, albeit without an intro. The lyrics of each section are different, even for the two bridges; most unusual! Even the final verse, which comes close to reiterating the words of the first section significantly substitutes "under your skin" for "into your heart." The melody of all sections here begins with a pickup before the down beat. In the case of the bridges that pickup anticipates the downbeat by close to a full measure.

- The jam-like half of the song presents no less than nineteen repetitions of the same phrase, slowly fading out to eventual silence in the middle of the final repeat. The main "lyrics" are scat sung to the syllable "na-na" and start right on the downbeat of the phrase. Superimposed against that background we get half-sung/half-screamed interjectory phrases from Paul.


The Classical Style

- A number of factors lend a four-square, almost classical flavor to the song half:

- We'll discover below that both verse and bridge sections both subtle means with which to counter what would be an otherwise unrelieved squared-off feeling.


The Alternative Versions

- The Anthology included one early take of the song from July 29, 1969, choosing to fade it out in mid-jam. A couple other outtakes from the following day's sessions, that were filmed for partial inclusion in a TV show, have been unofficially available as well.

- The technical common denominator of all these alternates is the lack of orchestra in the jam session, and an extremely diminished (in some cases, non-existent) role for George. Interpretively, all of these alternates present the song with much less "solemnity," and with quite a bit more hard-rocking edge and horsing-around sense of humor than the official version.


Melody and Harmony

- The verse tune has nice multiple arches, and very casually-yet-artfully includes both unique high and low points. The bridge tune is more simply downward in gesture. The jam session tune is a nicely lopsided arch, skewed toward its upper end.

- The song-like half uses the garden variety chords of I, ii, IV, and V. The jam-like half opts for the so-called double plagal cadence.


Arrangement

- When we turn to the arrangement, we find not so much a source of contrast, as we do one of formal articulation.

- In the song-like half, in particular, we have an excellent, fairly late example of the progressive layering technique that appears as a Beatles trademark almost from the beginning. A simple, section-by-section narrative reveals both how the texture is increasingly thickened over the first three sections, and how the final two verses continue to present deft touches of variation on what has come before:

- The arrangement and the recording of the jam section also contain some interesting strategic details. Most notably, in addition to all the instruments used in the first half (with the exception of the bass guitar, according to Lewisohn), the repeated ground bassline of the jam is underscored by sustained doubling of a small orchestra of 36 players; the session documentation lists a full variety of strings, woodwinds, and brass, but what you hear mostly on the finished recording are bowed strings and trumpets. In general, this technique lends an overall feel of weightiness and measured motion to the music, curiously in contrast to the otherwise bustling, rocking foreground texture of the piano, drums, and screaming Macca.

- Contrary to popular belief, the ad-lib choral singing of "na-na-na" was done by the same session musicians who played the orchestral overdub. Unlike "All You Need Is Love" (with which it is perhaps sometimes confused), the chorus here is NOT made up of the Beatles "closest hundred friends."

- The doubling of the bassline is progressively layered over the course of several repetitions of the mantra-like phrase:

- The curious thing about the recording of this jam is the extremely long fade-out that begins as early as the tenth repetition of the mantra-like phrase, at a point where there are still a full two minutes of music left to come.

- This gambit, combined with the sensation created by the sustained-note doubling of the bassline, creates an astonishingly transcendental effect. I stumble for metaphors to describe it, but the sorts of things which come to mind are "the music of the spheres", "the long caravan which passes slowly by", or perhaps, a painting in which the perspective is so deep that the vanishing point of singularity seems to approach the infinite. (Get this guy out of here, would ya', please!)

SECTION-BY-SECTION WALKTHROUGH


Verse

- The verse is a standard eight measures long, and is built out of four phrases that are through-composed; i.e. they add up to one long mega-phrase that contains no internal repeat structure. The verses sections that are followed by a bridge have one measure rhetorically added:

        |F		|C		|-		|F		|
F:	 I		 V                               I
        |Bb           |F           |C           |F          -7          |
         IV            I            V            I           (V-of-IV)

- The harmonic shape is closed, though the final chord is subtly turned into a V-of-IV which leads us directly into the bridge.


Bridge

- The bridge is an unusual 11 and a half measures long, in spite of what appears on the surface to be its AA parallel phrasing:

chords	|Bb           |g           |C           |F         |-7          |
bassline|Bb     A     |G     F	   |E	  C	|F	   |		|
         IV            ii           V            I          (V-of-IV)
        |Bb        |g        |C        |F        |-7  |C7     |-       |
         IV         ii        V         I              V

- The first phrase is rhetorically extended to five measures so that its connection to the second phrase mimics the lead-in from the verse to the start of the bridge.

- The second phrase starts off in parallel to the first one, but it shortens the measure with the F7 chord in it by half, and tacks on a short, twomeasure "na-na" phrase that leads back around to the following verse, and provides a foreshadowing, associative link with the jam section.

- The harmonic shape of this section is open at both ends. Some pedants would insist of spelling the Eb on top of the F7 chord in measure 9 as D# because of its melodic resolution upward to E natural in the C chord.


The Jamming Phrase

- The second half of the song is built on no less than eighteen and a half repetitions of the following four measure phrase whose harmonic shape is closed:

        |F		|E-flat		|B-flat		|F		|
         I               flat-VII	 IV		 I

- Not only does the repetitive nature of this section create an obvious contrast with the symmetrical form of the first half, but there are two other, more subtle sources of contrast:

SOME FINAL THOUGHTS


The Time

- If you chart out the durations of the major sections of HJ, you find that, as a rule, they divide up the time into not-quite symmetrical, golden-mean proportions, with the jam turning out to be the longer of the two major sections:

minutes:0	1	2	3	4	5	6	7
        |-------- song ---------|--------- jam section ---------|
                                                |-- fade out ---|

- I would dare to suggest that on top of everything else we've discussed, this proportional division of time is yet another source of the satisfaction, relaxation, and feeling of having encountered something somehow "classic" or "epic" one experiences in this song.


So, What's It All About ?

- I've never been quite sure, myself. The fact that the song was written by Paul to Julian Lennon during the breakup of John and Julian's mom, Cynthia, adds a new dimension to your appreciation of it but, as I've observed with respect to the fact of John's having written "Julia" in honor of his own mother, the affect that each song has upon you would be hardly diminished if for some reason you were to remain oblivious to the biographical background of either. So my question stands.

- The jam section taken alone would seem to point in the thematic direction of "spiritual enlightenment", obviously something of a preoccupation of some of the Beatles during the era in which this song was composed.

- But the older I get, the more convinced I am that the main message here is to be found in the first half -- the "imperative" to now pursue one's destined love the minute either you have found her, or she has found you. Yes, I do believe that once you internalize that much, the transcendent, blissful joy of the second half falls right into place.

Regards,
Alan ([email protected])
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"Control yourself or you'll spurt."                         082700#14.1
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Revision History
010590 14.0 Original release; H.B., Ms. Campey 082700 14.1 Revise, expand and adapt to series template Copyright (c) 1990, 2000 by Alan W. Pollack All Rights Reserved
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