Showing posts with label Just out of Reach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Just out of Reach. Show all posts

Friday, April 22, 2016

"Just out of Reach"

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[link to original on tumblr]

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I didn't realize this until recording this to-day, but the radio version of "Just out of Reach" omits the guitar phrases from the studio version.  It has only guitar chords.

I think I've figured out the bass part for the solo.  There's the A G D E phrase that's in the backing vocals of the studio version, but the second phrase is the same A C D E phrase from the verses, just an octave higher.

Bunny Lake Is Missing

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According to Russo's Collector's Guide, fifty years ago to-day (22 April 1966), the Bunny Lake Is Missing soundtrack (RCA RD 7791) was released, including the Zombies' "Nothing's Changed," "Just out of Reach," and "Remember You."

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

"Just out of Reach"

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[link to original on tumblr]

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After I figured out the bass part for "I'll Call You Mine" last night, I decided I needed to focus on the radio session that the Zombies did on 20 April 1965 (broadcast on 1 May) because that comes before the 4 May 1966 session (I still need to get started on recording my annual Odessey and Oracle too, which I'd like to have finished by 19 April, the original release date).  I referenced the four tracks from the radio session and discovered a lot about "Just out of Reach," specifically about a four-note phrase in the verses.

First, I have to correct what I've said earlier:  I'd thought that this four-note phrase was played on organ, but it's actually part of the backing vocals.  I took the studio version from The Decca Stereo Anthology and split the two channels, and it's clearly audible on both channels.  If it were an organ part, it would be on only one.

So I can notate that in the proper clef now:


While I'm writing about that four-note phrase, I should finally get around to mentioning something I noticed in the autumn.  In the Beatles' "Every Little Thing," there's a similar phrase at the end of each verse.  It's played in octaves on piano (so this held a bit more credence when I thought that the four-note phrase in "Just out of Reach" was on organ), but while it's also four notes, it's only three pitches:


The melodic arc that both phrases describe is roughly the same:  a two-note descent and then a two-note ascent.  The rhythms are about the same too.

I don't think this is enough evidence to assert that "Just out of Reach" was inspired by "Every Little Thing" (although it's possible); I just thought it was interesting.

Anyway, last night I discovered something else interesting about this phrase:  in that live version for radio, that four-note phrase shows up in the bass part during the organ solo (although the rhythm is still that from the verses).  The bass part during the verses is slightly different too (there's an extra note and a different rhythm), but I thought it very exciting that that four-note phrase shows up during the organ solo.

I haven't yet learned the entirety of the bass part for that live version, but that's an-other part I'd like to notate so that I can more easily see the differences between the studio version and the live version.  I feel I should note that there's only about two months between the two recordings.  The studio version was recorded 2 March, and this radio version was recorded on 20 April.

(If I remember correctly, the live version from Live at the Bloomsbury Theatre, London features different guitar chords too, so it seems that "Just out of Reach" has evolved quite a bit since first being recorded.)

Friday, March 4, 2016

"Just out of Reach"

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[link to original on tumblr]

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Really, the only thing I have to say about this is that I'm surprised I did the keyboard glissando at the end of the solo (of which I still know only a phrase or two).  I'm always worried I'm going to break a key or injure my hand or something, so I'm apprehensive of doing it, especially since the keyboard I've been using for the last three or four years is one I have on extensive loan from my dad.  The Nord keyboard that I've been (hopelessly) looking at getting has keys that are more solid, so maybe my fears would be assuaged with that.

Thursday, January 21, 2016

"Remember You" b/w "Just out of Reach"

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According to Russo's Collector's Guide and the Zombie Heaven liner notes, fifty years ago to-day (21 January 1966) the Zombies' "Remember You" b/w "Just out of Reach" (F.12322) was released in the U.K.

Monday, October 26, 2015

"Just out of Reach"

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[link to original on tumblr]

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When I listened to "Just out of Reach" yester-day, I noticed a four-note organ phrase during the last two-thirds of each verse.  There's more to the rest of the organ part than just chords, but that's what I have for now, along with that phrase and the first few bars of the solo (!).  I think this is the first keyboard solo I know a part of.

I also discovered that I was playing one of the guitar phrases in the wrong octave.

The guitar and bass aren't totally in sync during the middle of the organ solo (or rather, the place where the organ solo should be), and I was having some interference problems with my keyboard (I tried to cut out most of the excess noise, but there might still be some), so this isn't the best recording, but I do know more of the song now.

Sunday, October 25, 2015

"Just out of Reach" and "I Love You"

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A few days ago, I realized that the bass parts for the verses of "Just out of Reach" and "I Love You" are quite similar: 
 
Standard disclaimer that the notation might be wrong since I did it myself.  I guessed at the keys, although I'm more confident that "Just out of Reach" is in A major (that's what it resolves to at the end) than I am that "I Love You" is in A minor.  I should also note that the phrases repeat*, but I've included only four bars of each.  The phrase for the verses in "Just out of Reach" is only two bars, so that one's there twice. 
Both phrases are comprised of the same four notes in the same order (A C D E), save for a C at the end of the phrases in "Just out of Reach."  I didn't realize this until I notated them, but each measure starts with the same rhythm too - a dotted quarter note and then an eighth note. 
I looked up the recording dates to get the chronology right:  "Just out of Reach" was recorded on 2 March 1965, and "I Love You" on 8 July 1965.  "Just out of Reach" is a Blunstone song, so I'm unsure how involved Chris White was in coming up with that bass part.  It seems that either that bass part may have provided some inspiration for him to write "I Love You" (since the bass part for the verses of "I Love You" is basically an expanded version of that in "Just out of Reach") or both bass parts just illustrate his style of bass playing really well. 

*I'm a bit unsure whether the phrases in the verses of "I Love You" really repeat or not because I can't tell if there are two verses of eight lines or four verses (in pairs) of four lines each.
I just played through the guitar parts for "Just out of Reach" and "Remember You" because - according to Russo's Collector's Guide - they were released to-day in 1965, and as soon as I started playing "Just out of Reach," I realized that it's in A minor, not A major like I said a few weeks ago.  According to the book of Zombies music notation by Alfred Music, "I Love You" is in A minor too, so these two bass parts are more similar than I thought (because I stupidly remembered the key wrong for "Just out of Reach").

"Just out of Reach" b/w "Remember You"

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[link to original on tumblr]

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According to Russo's Collector's Guide, fifty years ago to-day (25 October 1965), the Zombies' "Just out of Reach" b/w "Remember You" was released in the U.S. and Canada (PAR 9797). 

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

"Just out of Reach" and "I Love You"

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A few days ago, I realized that the bass parts for the verses of "Just out of Reach" and "I Love You" are quite similar:


Standard disclaimer that the notation might be wrong since I did it myself.  I guessed at the keys, although I'm more confident that "Just out of Reach" is in A major (that's what it resolves to at the end) than I am that "I Love You" is in A minor.  I should also note that the phrases repeat*, but I've included only four bars of each.  The phrase for the verses in "Just out of Reach" is only two bars, so that one's there twice.

Both phrases are comprised of the same four notes in the same order (A C D E), save for a C at the end of the phrases in "Just out of Reach."  I didn't realize this until I notated them, but each measure starts with the same rhythm too - a dotted quarter note and then an eighth note.

I looked up the recording dates to get the chronology right:  "Just out of Reach" was recorded on 2 March 1965, and "I Love You" on 8 July 1965.  "Just out of Reach" is a Blunstone song, so I'm unsure how involved Chris White was in coming up with that bass part.  It seems that either that bass part may have provided some inspiration for him to write "I Love You" (since the bass part for the verses of "I Love You" is basically an expanded version of that in "Just out of Reach") or both bass parts just illustrate his style of bass playing really well.

*I'm a bit unsure whether the phrases in the verses of "I Love You" really repeat or not because I can't tell if there are two verses of eight lines or four verses (in pairs) of four lines each.

Friday, May 1, 2015

Saturday Club

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According to the Zombie Heaven liner notes, fifty years ago to-day (20 April 1965) the Zombies recorded an appearance on the Saturday Club radio show performing "You Must Believe Me," "She's Coming Home," "I Must Move," and "Just out of Reach" (tracks 13-16 on the fourth disc of Zombie Heaven).  The show was broadcast on 1 May 1965.

Monday, April 20, 2015

Saturday Club

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[link to original on tumblr]

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According to the Zombie Heaven liner notes, fifty years ago to-day (20 April 1965) the Zombies recorded an appearance on the Saturday Club radio show performing "You Must Believe Me," "She's Coming Home," "I Must Move," and "Just out of Reach" (tracks 13-16 on the fourth disc of Zombie Heaven).  The show was broadcast on 1 May 1965.

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

"Just out of Reach"

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[link to original on tumblr]

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After listening to it yester-day, I learned the bass part for "Just out of Reach."  I hadn't done any work on it since September 2013, so it was past due.  I also figured out one phrase in the organ solo (pretty much just an arpeggio of A minor), but I didn't include it here.

I think there might be some connection between this and "Soulville," which the Zombies performed on the BBC.  In both bridges, one phrase of the melody is almost entirely one note.  In "Just out of Reach," it's "Time will show that I mean what I say, you'll see," and in "Soulville," it's "I'm gonna see all the folks and know all the tricks, oh yeah."  (Little Richard's "Long Tall Sally" is an-other song with a mostly one-note phrase: "Gonna tell Aunt Mary about Uncle John / He claims he has the misery, but he has a lot of fun, oh, baby," and - as I've mentioned before - I think the Beatles' "I'm Down" and Argent's "He's a Dynamo" have this feature too.)

According to the Zombie Heaven liner notes, the Zombies performed "Soulville" on 26 January 1965 (for eventual broadcast on 6 February), and I'm assuming that it was in their repertoire for awhile before that.  There's at least a full month between that BBC performance of "Soulville" and recording "Just out of Reach" (2 March 1965), so it's possible that Colin Blunstone took some inspiration from that, but - again - it's just a conjectured influence.

Monday, March 2, 2015

Recording Session

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According to the liner notes from both Zombie Heaven and The Decca Stereo Anthology, fifty years ago to-day (2 March 1965), the Zombies recorded "I Want You Back Again" (the single version with the working title "Somebody Help Me"), "I Must Move" (with the working title "I Believe in You"), "She's Coming Home" (with the working title "I Cry No More"), and "Just out of Reach."

Sunday, September 22, 2013

"Just out of Reach"

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[link to original on tumblr]

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I included a bit of the bass part even though I don't think it's also played on guitar in the original.

Saturday, March 30, 2013

"Just out of Reach"

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[link to original on tumblr]

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I just listened to Live at the Bloomsbury Theatre, London, and I was getting a bit bored of just sitting there, so I was trying to figure out some stuff.  I thought I'd figured out the rest of the chords for "Just out of Reach," but then I listened to the original version, and I think they're different.

The recorded version is just Am C D E over and over again, but the Bloomsbury version is Am C D E twice and then Am G F#m F or something like that.

Why is it different!?