Category: Blog

Comparing My Love and ET

In my recent blog post Lydian Beatles we covered the characteristic sound of the Lydian mode and its use in countless Sci-Fi films, to the extent that it is also called “the Hollywood mode”. The main point to bear in mind about the Lydian mode is the use of...

Delaying the Tonic – a McCartney Songwriting Trait

In the art of songwriting, it’s often advisable to not show all your cards too early in the game. This involves concealing the home, or tonic key, until the end of the first verse. When the tonic finally arrives, the listener feels a real sense of arrival, after a...

McCartney’s Chromatic Chordal Ascents

The word “chromatic” comes from the Greek noun χρῶμα (khrṓma), which means “complexion” or “color”. For a musician chromatic means the notes, or tones, that lie outside the key signature of a song. In layman’s terms, you can think of playing a tune on the white keys of a...

Update – Two Weeks In

This website/blog was launched on the 6th April 2020. After almost two weeks I am pleased to announce that posts have been viewed nearly 20,000 times! The most viewed blog entry was The Art of Deception: Paul McCartney and the Interrupted Cadence, which was viewed 6,000 times on the...

Lydian Beatles!

Another musical device that McCartney and The Beatles draws upon in his compositions is the concept of modality. Modality or modalism involves music that is based on a scale formed from a different set of intervals (the distances between notes) on a normal Western major scale. You know the...

McCartney’s Musical Deception: Part 2

In part one we looked at the art of the interrupted or “deceptive” cadence in The Beatles with the examples of I Will (1968) and Here, There and Everywhere (1966). If you recall, an interrupted cadence involves taking the listener on a musical detour – we expect to arrive...

McCartney and the Magical Flattened Sixth

As I mention in Volume Two of Paul McCartney After The Beatles: A Musical Appreciation, the chord of the flattened sixth represents a daring excursion within a song. The chord of the flattened sixth is a true imposter chord. It is not a part of the song’s key centre....

The Art of Deception – McCartney and the Interrupted Cadence

In Volume Two of Paul McCartney After The Beatles: A Musical Appreciation I quoted Clive James on McCartney’s songwriting. Here is what he has to say: The key phrase is “he has the precious knack of making the unexpected sound inevitable”. But what does this mean in practice? We...

How Does McCartney Use Diminished Chords?

Diminshed, like augmented chords, have their own particular flavour. If we could describe the sound of diminished in a single word, we might use a word such as “astringent”. Not quite jarring, but definitely a slightly “edgy” sound. So let’s start off by identifying what diminished chords sound like....

The Oboe in McCartney’s Songs After 1970

My books set out to prove how McCartney’s musical imagination consitently pushes the composer outside the norms of three-minute pop song. This been facilitatated by the input of number of skilled orchestrators and arrangers. Although the oboe is a classically-based instrument that is on the periphery of pop music,...