Last week, I notated the bass part for Colin Blunstone's "Exclusively for Me" from Ennismore. While notating it, I figured out the rhythm for the part in the middle. I knew it was all E notes, but I hadn't figured out the rhythm. I had a feeling it would be too difficult to remember anyway and that I'd have to write it out before I could actually play it with the right rhythm.
The section at the end is repeated only once (so that the phrase is played twice), and I would have had enough room on my paper to notate it (I cropped out a whole empty line to save space), but it was only after I'd written in the repeat signs that I realized that it's repeated only once.
When I recorded this a few years ago, I noted the falling interval of a fifth (E to A), which is the same interval that "She's Not There" starts with, but I don't think I realized then that both songs start with an upbeat too.
While notating this, I also discovered that the string part (I'm still not sure whether it's cello or bass) isn't exactly the same as the last section of the bass part. After it reaches the low E, there's an E an octave higher before it starts the descent from the A again.