Friday, December 26, 2025

"Cast Your Spell Uranus"

I was thinking about "Cast Your Spell Uranus" a couple days ago and realized that a number of features differentiates "the princess of the moon" from the narrator in the lines "She had the cars, the clothes, and the scenes / I had my long hair and my jeans."

Most obviously, she possesses three items while he has only two, but these possessions also differ in quality:  "my long hair" and "my jeans" are both tangible, but "the cars, the clothes, and the scenes" is a mix of concrete and abstract nouns.  Along with a larger amount, there's a greater variety in type here.

When I referenced the song again to confirm all of this, I realized that the melodies for the two lines also demonstrate these differences.  The line "She had the cars, the clothes, and the scenes" repeats a sequential pitch only once ("clothes" and "and" are both sung to F notes), but "I had my long hair and my jeans" is sung almost entirety to a single pitch (all Eb notes, aside from "jeans," which is sung to an F).

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

"Knowing You"

In the line "And after all the loneliness to know that you are near" in "Knowing You," "all" is doubled by a second voice, lending a slight sense of this entirety.

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

"Blue"

The last section of "Blue" exhibits anaphora:
Blue the rainbow, blue the trees
Blue the raindrops, blue the seas
Blue is ev'rything around me
The repetition here indicates this entirety ("ev'rything around me").

Monday, December 22, 2025

"Heaven's Gate"

I listened to New World last week and noticed a handful of small features that I'm finally getting around to writing about.

Unlike the other verses, which have perfect rhymes ("place" with "face" and "fast" with "last") or at least assonance ("safe" and "way"), the first verse of "Heaven's Gate" doesn't rhyme:
It took so long to see it
Perhaps I looked too hard
Sometimes it was just easier
To take another path
In a way, this lack of poetic cohesion matches the divergence that the lyrics describe.

Sunday, December 21, 2025

"It's Not Easy"

I was thinking about "It's Not Easy" a couple days ago and had a realization about the syntax in the lines "It's not easy / Lovin' you, baby / It's not easy / Wanting you so."  The sentiments here could be simplified as "Lovin' you isn't easy" and "Wanting you so isn't easy," but the sort of circumlocution (the inversion and pleonastic "it") matches the difficulty that the narrator is describing.

When I referenced the song, I also noticed that "heart" in the line "When you take this old heart and tear it in two" is sung with a melisma (G# F# E), giving a sense of being torn.

Monday, December 8, 2025

"Love Left a Long Time Ago"

The line "And all of those words, they didn't mean a thing" in "Love Left a Long Time Ago" contains a pleonasm, and while this redundant "they" isn't necessary grammatically, it does provide a sense of amount (for "all").

Sunday, December 7, 2025

"Memphis"

I'd long suspected that the line "Changing my life with its freedom ring" in "Memphis" contained an allusion to something, and I finally placed it.  Ultimately, it seems to refer to the last line of the first stanza of "My Country, 'Tis of Thee":
My country, 'tis of thee,
Sweet land of liberty,
Of thee I sing;
Land where my fathers died,
Land of the pilgrims' pride,
From every mountainside
Let freedom ring.

Saturday, December 6, 2025

"What Becomes of the Broken Hearted"

I recently listened to Colin Blunstone's Collected again.  I have many notes (some from previous times I listened to the album) that I'm going to wait to write about until I've become more familiar with those songs, but over the next few days, I'll have some posts about small features I noticed in the songs I already know fairly well.

Significantly, "What Becomes of the Broken Hearted" doesn't resolve.  The version on Collected just fades out, and even the live versions by the Zombies (on Odessey and Oracle {Revisited} and Live at Metropolis Studios) don't end on the tonic.  (I'm pretty sure the song is in Ab major but the live versions end with a C note.)  This lack of a definite musical conclusion matches the open-ended nature of the titular question.