Showing posts with label The Beatles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Beatles. Show all posts

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Songwriting: sometimes it's easy

About 40 years ago, someone asked Paul McCartney how the world's most successful songwriting team approached writing a song. He gave this cheeky answer:
There are two things John and I always do when we're going to sit down and write a song. First of all we sit down. Then we think about writing a song.

And some of The Beatles' most well-known songs came very easily, as this website reveals.

John David's account of the composition of his beautiful song You Are The New Day shows how easy it can sometimes be.

The inspiration for New Day was quite simple; I had just had a major blow in my personal life, and was sitting alone late at night on the settee feeling very low, and watching an ominous story on the news about the very real possibility of nuclear war.

I started singing to the (hopefully) soon-to arrive New Day like it was an entity, that would rescue me from the depths. If the sun came up and the birds started singing as usual then I could believe that it really was the new day in which life would go on, and in which hope would survive.

The tune and the words popped into my head at the same time, and it was all written in about 10 minutes, which is why (to me at least) it's not perfect. But I didn't feel I had the right to change anything.

The best performance of this song is undoubtedly by the group who made it famous - The King's Singers. But the video below has 2 minutes and 10 seconds of chat before the fun begins.



This very good performance by Marchmont St Giles' Church choir begins immediately.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

The one thing better than one guitar ...

Peter and Marion Constant
... is Two Guitars, according to Frederic Chopin.

And on Sunday, 14th August, 2011, at 3 PM you can prove this for yourself at a concert at Mitchell Conservatorium, in the west wing of Bathurst Court House, in Russell St.

Peter Constant learnt guitar through Mitchell Conservatorium in the 80s, as a student at St Stanislaus College (Stannies). He later joined Guitar Trek, Canberra's terrific ensemble, modelled on the string quartet.

In this clip, Peter plays a bass classical guitar, while Marion plays an octave guitar, crafted by Australian luthier, Graham Caldersmith.

Bach's well-known Bourrée in E Minor inspired Paul McCartney's song Blackbird, featured on The Beatles white double album.



Watching videos on Youtube is enjoyable, but is a pale reflection of a live music concert. And Mitchell Conservatorium's Orchard Room is a great intimate venue for live musical performances.

See you there!