Courtney Pine · Back in the Day
Lady Day and (John Coltrane)
Table of contents
Dynamics
- No Crescendos and diminuendo but more abrupt changes from mp to mf bar 8
Rhythm / Tempo / Metre
- 4/4 with one 2/4 bar in bar 122
- Fast tempo (116) provides a driving feel.
- Prominent/Constant use of syncopation in accompaniment, sax solos and vocals
- Dotted rhythm in the riff
- Cross rhythmic effect at bar 80 arising from two consecutive dotted quavers
- Stop-Time effect in bar 28,82 - creates excitement and variation
- Scotch Snap
- Cross-rhythms, triplets used in the saxophone solo - creates rhythmic complexity.
Texture
- Melody Dominated homophony with lead vocal or alto saxophone over accompaniment
- Antiphonal / Call and Response where Saxophone plays short responding phrases(”fills”) between vocal lines
- Monophonic trill at close
Structure
- Based on a 12-bar blues progression but extended and varied (8 bars of tonic C7 before moving to the subdominant).
- Structure:
- Repeated introduction (Bars 1–4): Features vocal "babble," turntable effects, and a news report sample.
- Verse 1 (Bars 5–32): Long section containing eight bars of static C7(#9) harmony.
- Link section (Bars 33–36): Connects the first two verses.
- Verse 2 (Bars 5–28 repeat, then 37–44): Further development of the lyrical theme.
- Instrumental Sax Solo (Bars 44–76): Virtuosic section that avoids the basic blues progression for more complex jazz chords.
- Extended Coda (Bar 77–end)
Melody
- Heavy use of “Blue Notes” - Specifically flattened 3rds, 5ths, and 7ths in both the vocal and sax lines.
- Balanced Phrasing(4 bars)
- Saxophone
- Very Disjunct
- Highly Ornamented(trills, acciaccaturas, rapid chromatic scales)
- Virtuosic Range of 3 Octaves(low register to altisimo)
- Descending chromatic scale (Bar 75): Ends the saxophone solo with a rapid flourish.
- Voice
- Pentatonic Scale with added Notes
- largely conjunct (stepwise) with occasional expressive melismas at phrase endings.
- Mostly syllabic however there is some melisma
- Starts on the blue scale with melisma
Instrumentation(sonority)
- Jazz-fusion instrumentation: Combines live instruments (Sax, Vocals, Keys) with music technology (Drum program, Turntable effects(scratching).
- Male Vocalist(Lynden David Hall)
- Backing Vocalist
- Music technology effects:
- reversed voices
- artificial crowd noise
- newsreader sample (Stephen Lawrence report).
- Hammond B3 Organ which Features a Leslie Speaker for a distinct tremolo/vibrato effect.
- Keyboard programmed to sound like Hammond organ (nostalgic)
- Alto Saxophone with techniques
- Scoop(Glissando)
- Fall Off
- Ghosts Notes
- Slides between notes
- Controlled Vibrato
- Multiphonics (Bar 127):
- Key clicks (Bar 130)
- Altissimo register: Playing extremely high notes outside the normal range.
Tonality
- C minor established by the A pedal in the bass.
Harmony
- Static Vamped harmony in the verses with Eight-bar blocks on the tonic C7(#9).
- Heavy use of extended chords (7ths, 9ths, 11ths, and 13ths) - typical of jazz
- False relations produced by the C7(#9) chord (E against Eb,) - creating a "Hendrix chord" dissonance.
- Augmented chords