sept15-http-www.youtube.comwatch-v=4wrx3O1hYuQ&feature=related

Once an intro includes shooting a blank wall and someone tripping on stage you know that you have the potential for something great. Once the singing starts though I thought it was going to pan out to be a little too good. But that Caucasian-spiked arrangement I talk about a lot that so many school chorale groups follow with all the “hey hey heys”, new harmonies and rhythms straightened out to be so on the beat that the funk gets thrown out like an old piece of fish, is alive and well here. The fun really starts at 1:43 when someone steps out to solo. That’s when I am certain that whoever wrote this arrangement was drinking. I don’t know where they got the melody from – literally not one note of is right for that point in the song as it jumps from the lead vocal to a bizarre background note. And then there’s that wrong lyric that constantly drives me nuts that, because someone was too lazy to get the sheet music from the publisher and thought they were hearing it correctly from the record, went with it in their arrangement, perpetuating the inaccuracy forever.  It’s also fantastic how the mic is handed off to a second soloist who then steps out front with it dangling at his side and continues singing backgrounds as if only a lead vocal needed a mic. The vocal that finally comes left me speechless. Only to be capped off by that funky little ending the aforementioned arranger, who I’m certain only listens to theater music, wrote.

One Response to “Allee Willis’ “The 365 Days Of September” – Day 15”

  1. Carrie

    Every missed opportunity to syncopate had me falling-over laughing!

    There is another possibility vs. lazy and/or drunk: i.e., the long arm of the church. If the Texas Board of Ed can set textbook standards for the rest of the country, I’m not so sure vocal arrangements are immune and this lyric wasn’t altered deliberately. Nefarious!

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