Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Jimmy Cliff - You
Can Get It If You
Really Want
- Period & Genre
- Transcripted
- Orally passed down
- Rare for anything other
than British or American
music to appear in the
charts in the 1960s
- Rock Steady
- Early version of Reggae
- Lyrics allude to a
struggle against
poverty but set to
irresistably tuneful
dance music
- Instrumentation
- Lead Vocal
- Backing Vocals
- Reeds/Brass (Trumpets)
- Guitar 1
- Guitar 2
- Electric Organ
- Typical of
Jamacian Ska,
Rock Steady
and Reggae
- Bass
- Drums
- Percussion
- Harmony
- Close harmony between all vocal parts
- 1950s doo-wop styler
- Mainly chords I & IV
- Harmonic surprise
- E Major
- 37
- Occassionally
supplemented with other
closely-related chords
near the ends of verses
and refrains
- Dominant 7th - Ab7
- Whole tone scale descending
- 39
- Tonality
- Db Major
- Chords I & IV
- Whole tone scale
- 39
- No modulations
- One unrelated chord
- E Major
- 37
- Rhythm & Metre
- Tight rhythms
- Latin American feel
- Picked semiquaver patterns
- Calypso feel
- Prominant backbeat on drums
- Cross-stick creates
'click' on drum kit
- Structure
- Rock Steady
- Verse-chorus
- Intro
Refrain
Verse
Refrain
Instrumental
Refrain
Outtro Fade
- Melody &
Wordsetting
- Lyrics about poverty
set to irresistably
tuneful dance music
- Mainly syllabic
- A few moments of melisma
- Melody based on a
pentatonic scale
- High trumpet riffs - Cuba
- Lead vocal
opens on a
title hook
- Falsetto
- 25, 43 & 56
- Backing vocals
have a narrow
range
- Texture
- Heterophonic
- Moments of homophony