Courtney Pine · Back in the Day
Inner State (of Mind)
Table of contents
Dynamics
Rhythm / Tempo / Metre
- Steady 4/4 metre:
- Moderate tempo (♩=90):
- Heavy use of syncopation (Present in the "Summertime" guitar riff and the rap delivery.)
- Dotted rhythms and triplets used in sax solo
- Hip-hop "Boom-Bap" drum pattern: Strong emphasis on the (backbeat).
Texture
- Primarily melody-dominated homophony
- Layered texture built from samples(Drum loops, bass riffs, and synth pads stacked together.)
- Occasional polyphonic moments in the Coda where sax and vocals improvise at the same time.
- Stop-time used (Bar 51) - to mark the start of the solo.
Structure
- Modified Verse-Chorus structure:
- Intro (Bars 1–10):
- Verse 1 (Bars 11–26):
- Chorus 1 (Bars 27–42):
- Verse 2 (Bars 43–58):
- Instrumental Sax Solo (Bars 75–90):
- Bridge (Bars 91–106):
- Coda (Bar 123–end):
Melody
- Fragmentary vocal motifs: Specifically the "Inner State" hook which uses a falling minor third.
- Blue notes used constantly(Flattened 3rds, 5ths, and 7ths in the sax and sung parts.)
- Syllabic rap delivery (The verses focus on rhythm and rhyme rather than pitch.)
- Vocal melody is highly syncopated and follows a "speech-like" rhythm.
- Chorus hook is repetitive and conjunct
- Saxophone
- Wide Disjunct Leaps
- Rapid scalic runs and arpeggio figures
- Vocals
- Melisma used on key words
- Scat Singing (Bar 112) - Vocalist improvises nonsense syllables to mimic the saxophone
- highly syncopated and follows a "speech-like" rhythm.
Instrumentation(sonority)
- Hip-hop/Jazz Fusion line-up:
- Rap Vocals(Blak Twang and MC Mello)
- Female Jazz Vocals (Eska Mtungwezi)
- Tenor Sax
- Turntables
- Whistle
- Flute
- Acapella voices
- Distorted Guitar Sample
- Turntable Scratches
- Programmed drum-beat (hip-hop)
- Fairlight CMI used to sample the iconic "Summertime" guitar riff (George Gershwin).
- Saxophone techniques:
- Altissimo register (e.g., Bar 10).
- Bending and Glissandi - Used for expressive "vocal" quality.
- Growling - a "dirty" tone.
Tonality
- Dorion C minor
- No modulation
Harmony
- Static "vamping" harmony: Long sections stay on a two-chord loop to allow for improvisation.
- Parallel chord movement used in the bridge (shifting between Bb, Ab, and Gm).
- No traditional V-I cadences: Moves from IV (Fm7) back to i (Cm7) in a Plagal-style loop.
- Substitution chords used (Eg., F7 instead of the expected Fm (Major IV in a minor key).)
- Extensive use of 7th and 9th chords - to provide a "jazzy" harmonic color.