Showing posts with label She's Leaving Home. Show all posts
Showing posts with label She's Leaving Home. Show all posts
Sunday, January 21, 2018
"She's Leaving Home"
I was thinking about "She's Leaving Home" yester-day, and I realized that it's in 3/4. I'm not sure if there's really anything to this, but there might be a connection between the time signature (three beats in each measure) and the three characters in the song: the titular "she" and her father and mother. The song does also mention "a man from the motor trade," but he's not a main character and doesn't even do anything in the narrative.
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She's Leaving Home
Tuesday, July 28, 2015
"She's Leaving Home"
Backdated, archival post
[link to original on tumblr]
When I listened to a few Sgt. Pepper songs about a week ago, I also listened to "She's Leaving Home." I noticed that the first and third verses start with the same structure ("Wednesday morning at five o'clock..." and "Friday morning at nine o'clock…"). Both mention the day of the week and the time. I didn't think too much about that at the time, but this morning I got thinking about this again, and I realized that it's not significant that those two are the same, rather that the second verse doesn't follow that structure. Instead of talking about the titular "she," the second verse deals with the parents when they realize that the girl has gone.
If that structure were followed in the second verse, it'd be "Thursday morning at [some number] o'clock" and go on to tell about the girl. Instead, it starts with "Father snores as his wife gets into her dressing gown." The girl isn't physically present anymore, which is reflected in both A) her absence in the verse and B) Thursday's being skipped over.
I listened to the whole album (and noticed some other things, about which some more posts are queued) to finish off my transcription of "She's Leaving Home," and - in doing so - I noticed something else I'd never noticed: the lines before each chorus all end with a homophone ("buy" or "by"), which - after the proper chorus - are recalled with "bye." So, the first chorus:
[link to original on tumblr]
---&---
If that structure were followed in the second verse, it'd be "Thursday morning at [some number] o'clock" and go on to tell about the girl. Instead, it starts with "Father snores as his wife gets into her dressing gown." The girl isn't physically present anymore, which is reflected in both A) her absence in the verse and B) Thursday's being skipped over.
I listened to the whole album (and noticed some other things, about which some more posts are queued) to finish off my transcription of "She's Leaving Home," and - in doing so - I noticed something else I'd never noticed: the lines before each chorus all end with a homophone ("buy" or "by"), which - after the proper chorus - are recalled with "bye." So, the first chorus:
(She) We gave her most of our lives
(Is leaving) Sacrificed most of our lives
(Home) We gave her everything money could buy
She's leaving homeThe second:
After living alone
(Bye bye) For so many years
(She) We never thought of ourselves
(Is leaving) Never a thought for ourselves
(Home) We struggled hard all our lives to get by
She's leaving homeAnd the third:
After living alone
(Bye bye) For so many years
(She) What did we do that was wrong
(Is having) We didn't know it was wrong
(Fun) Fun is the one thing that money can't buy
Something insideI'm not sure if there's anything to this other than just a poetic effect, but it's a great effect.
That was always denied
(Bye bye) For so many years
Labels:
She's Leaving Home
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