Sergei Prokofiev | Violin Concerto No. 2 in G minor

“Sergei Prokofiev’s Violin Concerto No. 2 in G minor begins with a lonely, lamenting statement in the solo violin,” (The Listeners Club). “It’s a strangely solitary voice which opens the door to an unsettling drama filled with chilly anxiety and occasional raw terror. In his program notes, the American violinist Stefan Jackiw … provides the following descriptive analysis of this opening:

‘Prokofiev puts the listener ill at ease right from the start. The piece opens with the solo violin alone, playing a foreboding melody in G minor that is based on a 5‐beat motive. We are used to hearing musical ideas that fall neatly into 2, 3, 4, or 6‐beat patterns. Five beats don’t feel comfortable. Furthermore, since the violin is alone, the orchestra gives the listener no additional context to find his bearings. When the orchestra finally comes in several bars later, it enters in a completely different tonality, further throwing the listener off balance and compounding the sense of unease. The movement closes with one of the most nihilistic statements in music I know: two short, dry pizzicati thuds from the entire orchestra, like a falling guillotine.’

Prokofiev wrote this music in 1935 as he was preparing to resettle in his native Russia after years abroad in Paris and the United States. In order to be repatriated, he needed to appease Stalin and his restrictive artistic ideals of ‘Soviet Realism.’ For Prokofiev, this meant abandoning the “decadent formalism” of his earlier enfant terrible years.”

Beginning in G minor, the first movement progresses through several phrases before shifting to C# minor at 0:57. Many other shifts in tonality follow, as this score-based video shows!

Mama’s Gun | Cheap Hotel

Cheap Hotel (2014) is UK band Mama’s Gun third album,” (Soul&Jazz&Funk). “The Andy Platts-fronted outfit debuted with Routes To Riches and its pleasing, soul-slanted pop won underground acclaim, though the set went to 3 in the Japanese album charts! The band’s second LP, The Life And Soul, was (as the name might imply) a much more soulful affair and one of the tracks, ‘Pots Of Gold’ won the affection of real soul fans worldwide. For Cheap Hotel, the band … have reunited with their first producer – Julian Simmons (who’s recently worked with Ed Sheeran and the Guillemots) and not surprisingly the overall sound of the set reverts back to a poppier flavor, albeit a very classy kind of pop with, yes, a touch of soul still about it.

Group leader Platts, we’re told, has eclectic tastes. He cites Motown and funk as amongst his formative influences, but he admits to a huge passion for ELO (Electric Light Orchestra) — and it’s that Brummie based outfit’s sound that dominates Cheap Hotel … Dip in almost anywhere here and you’ll be reminded of ELO – maybe garnished with a hint of the Beatles or the sounds of a little gentleman called Prince, but it’s almost all that slick, polished ELO pop sound … Cheap Hotel is a great pop album with just a touch of soul about it.”

The title track begins like a particularly funky day on Sesame Street, complete with a hook doubled between whistles and a tinny toy xylophone. But after the verse starts at 0:18, occasional extra beats and a Prince-like high lead vocal on the chorus confirm that this isn’t a theme from a children’s TV show. At 0:53, the second verse brings an upward half-step key change, but at 1:09, the tonality deflates back to the original key. It’s tempting to wait for another key change at some point during the tune, but other than some quick shifts during an instrumental break (1:29 – 1:53), it never arrives!

Zager + Evans | In the Year 2525

It’s 2025, and our AI overlords have just begun their domination of the human species. What will life be like five hundred years hence?

Zager and Evans, a duo who met as students at Nebraska Wesleyan University, explained the consequences of technological change run amok with their only hit, “In the Year 2525 (Exordium + Terminus),” a Billboard #1 hit in 1969. Each verse increments the year described by 1010 years, so we have the sequence 2525, 3535, 4545, and so on, up to 9595. 1010 is not necessarily the most logical interval, but makes for a handy piece of songwriting.

There are upward half-step modulations at 1:34 and 2:12. The fan-made video is cut together from excerpts derived from Fritz Lang’s 1927 sci-fi classic film Metropolis, in all of its retro-futuristic splendor.

Kestrel | The Acrobat

“(A Newcastle, UK band,) Kestrel, debuted in 1975 … a symphonic rock quintet that were doing the London college circuit when they caught the attention of producer John Worth, who signed them and released their one album in 1975 (Background Magazine) … The (self-titled) original album was almost 45 minutes long and contained eight tracks.

Right from the start you hear you’re dealing with a progressive rock outfit. Not so strange when you do know that (guitarist/vocalist Dave) Black was influenced at the time by acts such as Gentle Giant, Jethro Tull, Emerson, Lake and Palmer, Camel, Yes, and Genesis. However, don’t expect that kind of music on this release. The songs the band recorded for their album were more radio-friendly than most of the bands that had influenced them … They were great in the lead and harmony vocals and could shine on their instruments as well. At the same time, they mixed their complex compositions with rather catchy sounding three-minute songs … which gave them a couple of hits in their own country. Unfortunately, the lack of promotion of by their record company at the time made it impossible that Kestrel would receive the same international success … the band had certainly everything to make it bigger.”

On “The Acrobat,” after a quiet rubato intro, the groove kicks in for the first verse in A major at 0:35. A rangy, often highly syncopated vocal melody, kept front and center in the mix, is very much the focus from there on. The tune touches on C major around the 1:00 mark, A major at 1:06, C minor at 1:11, etc., etc. At that point, we’re more or less harmonically unmoored. 2:58 brings a Fender Rhodes-led jazz interlude which decays into something resembling self-parody before we return to more familiar territory at 3:41. At 4:35, we circle back to a new verse at last. Light in the Attic called the album “(an) unsung prog-rock gem … boasting an abundance of technical musicianship and inhabiting a space somewhere between golden-age prog and AOR.” Whether or not you agree, we hope you packed a lunch!

Sonny + Cher | I Got You Babe

“When it came out (1965), ‘I Got You Babe’ also bridged a divide that should’ve been unbridgeable,” (Stereogum). “It’s a hammy little earworm, a simplistic example of pop-music showmanship at work. It’s the product of experienced studio hands, and its got some of its era’s greatest session musicians playing on it. But it’s also an example of the vaguely psychedelic, starry-eyed folk rock that was starting to take over in one of those big generation-divide moments. It’s got Cher reassuring Sonny Bono that his hair’s not too long. It’s not Bob Dylan, exactly, but it was pitched directly to the same young people who were buying Dylan records. And, because it’s a great song, they bought it.

… Sonny wrote ‘I Got You Babe’ one night … Sonny woke (Cher) up, she said what she didn’t like about it, and then he rewrote it after she went back to sleep. They recorded it with the members of the Wrecking Crew, the LA hired-gun studio musicians who’d played on so many of (Phil) Spector’s records … Bono produced it, and he did a nice job making it sound as much like a Spector track as possible. The arrangement … is lush and gorgeous, with those chiming guitars, those tinkling bells, and that tootling wind instrument (It was either an ocarina or an oboe, depending on who you ask). But the real discovery, of course, was Cher, who belted out all of her lines with tremendous gusto. On the bridge — ‘I got you to taaaalk to me’ — she’s a force of nature.”

The mid-tempo 6/8 track ambles along in F major through the first two verses and choruses, and then into the bridge, before a half-step key change shifts upward to F# major at 1:30 (about halfway through the tune). Many thanks to Amy C. for this contribution to MotD — her third submission!

Brian Wilson | Your Imagination

“Few musicians, if any, have contributed as much to the American myth of summer as Beach Boys leader Wilson,” (TheSecondDisc). “Years after galvanizing popular music with albums like 1966’s much-reissued Pet Sounds and singles such as the same year’s psychedelic ‘Good Vibrations,’ Wilson embarked on a solo career in 1988 … the music produced by Wilson between 1988 and 2000 over the course of five albums, one of which remains unreleased to this day, is startlingly ripe for rediscovery.” Imagination was released in 1998.

“… Album opener ‘Your Imagination,’ co-written with Joe Thomas and Chicago radio personality Steve Dahl, shimmers with the buoyant charm of Wilson’s most effervescent compositions … Certainly many fans would like to see Brian’s vocal tracks stripped of Joe Thomas’ glossy production, but it’s difficult to dislike Imagination even in its existing mix.  Recently, Wilson has embraced the distinct sound he pioneered so many years ago … his sound refined Phil Spector’s Wall of Sound and is instantly identifiable for trademarks such as sleigh bells, clip-clopping percussion, and densely layered harmonies. Imagination represents a final attempt to marry Brian Wilson’s style with (somewhat) modern production … it remains a great and breezy listen for a summer afternoon.”

The track’s varied instrumentation, from classic rock combo to small orchestral groupings, keeps things moving throughout. A textbook whole-step unprepared key change hits at 2:11, followed by a sparkling instrumental break. Unexpectedly, another key change (this one only a half-step) appears at 2:40 after a grand pause.

Kylie Minogue | Better the Devil You Know

“In the nearly four decades since Kylie Minogue’s debut, the Australian soap actress turned international pop star has released 16 studio albums and, thanks to the recent success of “Padam Padam,” racked up an impressive 35 Top 10 hits in the U.K. Her career trajectory, however, wasn’t always assured,” (Slant Magazine).

After her initial breakout success on both sides of the Atlantic with a cover of Little Eva’s ‘The Loco-Motion,’ Minogue released Rhythm of Love in 1990 … With ‘Better the Devil You Know,’ the singer had begun to shed her girl-next-door image, but the album also saw producers Stock Aitken Waterman developing their signature sound, which, by the end of the ’80s, had reached peak saturation on both sides of the pond.” The “SAW” production team was responsible for the sound of Dead or Alive’s “You Spin Me Round” and Rick Astley’s “Never Gonna Give You Up,” among many others.

“Better the Devil You Know” was the lead single from the album. It reached the top 5 in Australia, Belgium, Ireland, and the UK, and top 20 in seven other nations. After a harmonically wandering intro, the verse enters in Bb at 0:36. The chorus shifts to Db major at 0:59. The pattern continues from there.

Off Course | Yes-No

“Off Course … enjoyed a 25-year career run … but its influence is still felt in later acts such as Yuzu or Kobukuro. The group was formed in 1964 by a bunch of high schoolers … who teamed up to play at a local festival,” (AllMusic). They continued playing on the festival circuit during their college years, debuted live as headliners in 1972, and released their first LP in 1973. They released several Japanese top ten singles in 1980 and 1981; “We Are (1980), their eighth album, was the band’s first full-length to top the Oricon charts, followed by three more in the next two years. The group played in Los Angeles and Japanese TV featured them in documentaries.” The band played at Live Aid in 1986 and broke up in 1989.

A track from We Are, “Yes-No,” is now considered something of a classic within the distinctive Japanese “City Pop” genre. Beginning in Ab minor, the track makes an early shift to A minor before the vocal makes its appearance (0:34).

Many thanks to our Brazilian listener/reader Julianna A. for suggesting this track — her sixth submission to MotD!

Toad the Wet Sprocket | I Will Not Take These Things for Granted

“Toad was in the house last week — that’s Santa Barbara’s beloved (and probably most famous) homegrown rock band, Toad the Wet Sprocket, to those of you who are new to town,” (Santa Barbara Independent, 9/4/2024). “And as we’ve come to count on, they came … bearing gifts of lovely vocals, powerful chord progressions, familiar tunes, enthusiastic friends, family, and fans, plus a strong supply of feel-good vibes. 

With the seemingly ageless vocals of founding band members Glen Phillips, harmonizing with bass player/vocalist Dean Dinning, and guitarist/vocalist Todd Nichols, now backed by drummer Carl Thompson and Jon Sosin on keyboards, mandolin, accordion, and more, it was a solid evening of mostly well-known tunes … It’s hard not to think of Santa Barbara when you hear Toad sing ‘Walk on the Ocean,’ which Dinning told me was his favorite Toad song to play live.”

“I Will Not Take These Things for Granted” is the closing track of the 1991 album Fear, which opens with “Walk On the Ocean,” a single which reached #18 on the US pop charts. The track is built in A major overall, with a prominent bVII-I vamp making up much of the chorus. At 1:24, an alternate verse/pre-chorus(?) shifts to a purely diatonic F# major. 1:36 brings the first chorus and a return to A major. The pattern continues from there, with the exception of the alternate verse/pre-chorus, which returns at 2:52 which a longer duration than before. The tune ends with a long run in A major.

Dusty Springfield | Just One Smile

“Despite its status as a classic record, Dusty in Memphis (1969) had less than auspicious beginnings,” (BBC). “By 1968, Springfield had scored a string of chart successes with what she called ‘big ballady things’ and her decision to make an album in Memphis, home of hard edged R’n’B grooves, was viewed with puzzlement by many.” The distance from Springfield’s native UK to Memphis was large, both in miles and in sonic difference.

“Teaming up with the crack production/arrangement team of Jerry Wexler, Tom Dowd and Arif Mardin (responsible for Aretha Franklin’s Atlantic classics) also proved a bit much initially for Springfield, whose confidence in her vocal abilities was never very high … Springfield unsurprisingly resists any temptation to do an Aretha, instead relying on understatement, timing and delivery rather than vocal firepower. The songs (all by Brill building denizens) are all top notch, and Springfield’s interpretation of them is peerless … Mardin’s sensitive blend of Bacharach poise and Memphis funk provides the perfect frame for Dusty’s blue-eyed soul.”

Written by Randy Newman, “Just One Smile” was previously recorded by Gene Pitney. The tune starts in Eb minor, with plenty of harmonic sidesteps, a la the above mentioned Bachrachian influence. The tune then shifts to Bb major for the chorus (0:49 – 1:10) before reverting to the original key.