Rebecca Blackâs âFridayâ: There are a million good reasons you canât get it out of your head
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When responses such as âabominationâ and âworst song everâ are the most printable comments about a hit record like Rebecca Blackâs âFriday,â you know itâs fully entered the realm of pop phenomenon.
But for anyone whoâs surprised that this simple ditty has connected in a big way â the 13-year-oldâs relentlessly chipper YouTube video is about to cross the threshold of 66 million hits â donât be.
Patrice Wilson, the entrepreneurial musician who wrote and produced Blackâs record and created the video that quickly went viral, has been both praised as a pop genius and villified as the worst sort of exploiter of youthful dreams for charging Black and her family $2,000 for the whole package.
But if nothing else, this tune demonstrates unequivocal songwriting savvy: He tapped a song structure thatâs embedded in our collective DNA, one thatâs been the foundation of dozens, even hundreds of hit records over the last half a century.
âFriday,â you see, is âHeart and Soulâ revisited. It uses that fundamental four-chord progression almost anyone whoâs ever touched a piano keyboard has learned. Itâs the basis of the most-played pop radio hit of all time, the Righteous Brothersâ âUnchained Melody.â
Itâs the same progression that Sam Cooke used in âYou Send Me.â And âChain Gang.â And âTwistinâ The Night Away.â
Itâs also the cornerstone of the Penguinsâ âEarth Angelâ from 1955, Frankie Lymon & the Teenagersâ 1956 classic âWhy Do Fools Fall In Love,â Skip & Flipâs 1960 hit âCherry Pieâ and countless other doo-wop, R&B, pop and rock hits that surfaced in the 1950s and â60s â before a couple of fellows from Liverpool came along and knocked down the fences hemming in pop musicâs structural vocabulary. And even the Beatles werenât immune to its pull: Ringo Starrâs contribution to the âAbbey Roadâ album, âOctopusâs Garden,â used the same formula.
Itâs resurfaced regularly since â sometimes with just the slightest variations â in the chorus to Don McLeanâs 1972 anthem âAmerican Pie,â in Alicia Keysâ 2007 megahit âNo One,â and weâve heard it somewhere in nearly every season of âAmerican Idol.â
Wilson surely knows how easy it is to apply the simplest of melodies over that sure-fire progression, and thatâs exactly what he did for Black, giving her a lead line that requires the barest minimum of a vocal range to handle. You can sing a single note over this progression â which is what Black does with her limited voice for most of the song â and it still sounds musical.
It spans hardly more than half an octave. Anyone can sing this in the shower â and millions undoubtedly have been of late. Itâs also easy to play on any keyboard (hereâs an online tutorial some enterprising guy has already posted) or guitar.
Thousands of songs have been written using the basic three-chord blues progression, in musical terms referred to as the I-IV-V progression, based on the spot on the conventional Western musical scale where youâll find the root notes of each of those chords. The reason itâs so ubiquitous is because of the palpable sense of resolution created when the progression returns to that home chord.
Celebrated country songwriter Harlan Howard famously defined a great country song as one consisting of âthree chords and the truth,â a phrase Bono latched onto in one of U2âs most celebrated songs. Howard, the composer of thousands of songs, showed how successful that combination could be on a red, white, blue, yellow or black guitar.
The âHeart and Soulâ/âFridayâ variation on that progression simply drops a minor chord into the mix after the opening major chord, an addition that creates an extra measure of tension and drama that heightens the rounding-third-and-coming-into-home feeling of satisfaction when the entire I-vi-IV-V chord cycle finishes. The triangle becomes a self-contained, geometrically perfect square.
Lyrically speaking, âFridayâ carries the illusion of simplicity in giving voice to one teenagerâs big dilemma: whether to kick it with her friends in the front seat or the back seat.
Even those who abhor âFridayâ â and there are plenty of them â will probably have to confess that they have a hard time getting it out of their heads. Itâs stuck there for good reason.
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Patrice Wilson of Ark Music: âFridayâ is on his mind
-- Randy Lewis