DVD Talk Forum

DVD Talk Forum (https://forum.dvdtalk.com/)
-   Music Talk (https://forum.dvdtalk.com/music-talk-28/)
-   -   Memorable transitions within songs (https://forum.dvdtalk.com/music-talk/639610-memorable-transitions-within-songs.html)

Norm de Plume 04-04-17 06:18 PM

Memorable transitions within songs
 
Just happened to be listening to "Don't Stop Believin'" on Spotify, and was struck by how much I like the keyboard-driven transition between 1:22 and 1:28:



An even more powerful one is the transition between 2:22 and 2:27 in "Baba O'Riley", between Townsend's whiny "Teenage Wasteland" bridge and the beginning of the second verse, with the drums and Daltrey's raspily resonant voice resuming:



Normally, one doesn't notice these things until one is actually listening to a song, so I can't think of any others offhand.

Anyone have any personal faves?

Edit: I tried to have the vids start at the relevant times, but it isn't cooperating. Please advise if there's a way.

creekdipper 04-04-17 07:48 PM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
Not sure if this is what you're talking about, Norm, but there are quite a few memorable transitions that immediately leap to mind in changing tempos, keys, etc.

Some of the obvious suspects include All Along the Watchtower (Hendrix version), A Day in the Life, Layla, Stairway to Heaven, Behind Blue Eyes, Won't Get Fooled Again, Whipping Post, Bohemian Rhapsody, Paradise By the Dashboard Light, An American Trilogy, Madman Across the Water.

Tori Amos built a career on mid-song transitions since her early days. Crucify, Precious Things, Little Earthquakes, Silent All These Years...even her earliest stuff (not counting her stab at pop before beginning her acclaimed solo career) contained lots of wonderful transitions that shift the mood intensely and become much-anticipated for the listener.

A lot of prog-rock (ELP, Yes, Marillion, even Jethro Tull, etc.) had lots of transitions that abruptly switched the tone of the song. Then again, when one song runs for an entire side, that's not unexpected. Welcome back my friends, to the show that never ends....

Am I way off base with your basic premise?


Let me sleep on it, Baby, Baby....

Drexl 04-04-17 09:17 PM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
Yeah, I'm not quite sure what it is either.

Is it like in Tracy Chapman's "Fast Car" when the band comes in and the song speeds up, or like in Phil Collins' "In the Air Tonight" when the real drums kick in?

Nick Danger 04-04-17 09:56 PM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
What about collage songs, like Strawberry Fields Forever or Good Vibrations?

Nick Danger 04-04-17 10:08 PM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
<iframe width="640" height="360" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/NGaVUApDVuY" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Norm de Plume 04-04-17 11:45 PM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
I guess I should have described what I mean more clearly, though I thought my examples would be sufficient: Any specific moment (no longer than a few seconds) in a song when you find a transition especially impactful, moving, or thrilling. It could be because the instruments sound especially impressive when going from a verse to a chorus, or vice versa; or from a bridge to a verse. Or someone with impressive vocals joins the song.
Drexl, the band joining in in "Fast Car" at 2:02 and 2:59 are pretty good examples of what I mean. It's partly subjective, of course. Some transitions will have a great effect on some, but not on others.

The instrumentally full-bodied moment (especially the keyboard "twirl", for want of a better term, at 1:25-1:28) I indicated above in "Don't Stop Believin'" is what inspired me to start the thread.

Hazel Motes 04-05-17 02:09 AM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
:50



JZ1276 04-05-17 04:07 AM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
In the Air Tonight when the drums kick in

Spiderbite 04-05-17 09:14 AM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
How about "Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey" and all of its trasitions/tempo changes? I loved that song as a kid because of it and still enjoy it. Same for "Band On The Run."

rbrown498 04-05-17 09:50 AM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
This one from ELO's "Evil Woman" came immediately to mind:


(If the clip doesn't start right before the transition, it's around the 2:56 mark.)

The cool thing about that transition is that it's the same transition from a different ELO song from the same album, but played backwards. Here's the original one, from "Nightrider." If the clip doesn't start right around the transition, it's at the 3:15 mark:


Perkinsun Dzees 04-05-17 10:14 AM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 

Originally Posted by rbrown498 (Post 13047131)
This one from ELO's "Evil Woman" came immediately to mind:

(If the clip doesn't start right before the transition, it's around the 2:56 mark.)

Not sure I'd call that a transition. Maybe more like a brief interlude since the song basically stays the same before and after that short piece.

rbrown498 04-05-17 10:16 AM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 

Originally Posted by Perkinsun Dzees (Post 13047153)
Not sure I'd call that a transition. Maybe more like a brief interlude since the song basically stays the same before and after that short piece.

You're probably right, but it's a memorable interlude.

The Bus 04-05-17 10:45 AM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 

Originally Posted by Nick Danger (Post 13046885)
What about collage songs, like Strawberry Fields Forever or Good Vibrations?

Nick! We all know "A Day in the Life" is the true Beatles pocket symphony.

The Bus 04-05-17 10:46 AM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
Do Bacharach modulations count?

Phodg 04-05-17 11:09 AM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
Not a tempo change, but the chord change at 0:45 and 1:41 always gets me :

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/1J11IpgVG2I" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

rw2516 04-05-17 03:27 PM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
CSN&Y-Carry On

Jason 04-05-17 04:09 PM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/7-iRf9AWoyE" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

The transition between the guitar solos at 3:04 to 3:15

Spiderbite 04-05-17 05:11 PM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 

Originally Posted by rw2516 (Post 13047401)
CSN&Y-Carry On

My favorite of theirs with a great transition/tempo change is Suite: Judy Blue Eyes.

gmanca 04-05-17 05:42 PM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
Will think of more but two that jump out at me are Journey's Stone in Love and Magic by Mick Smiley; the latter we all know from Ghostbusters but the beginning to the song is much different.

hdnmickey 04-05-17 07:08 PM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
Triumph's "Hold On". Or it could be one of those pocket symphony songs. Multiple transitions during those 6 minutes.

GuessWho 04-06-17 01:24 PM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
I believe a word the OP may have been looking for is "fill"

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fill_(music)
In popular music, a fill is a short musical passage, riff, or rhythmic sound which helps to sustain the listener's attention during a break between the phrases of a melody. "The terms riff and fill are sometimes used interchangeably by musicians, but [while] the term riff usually refers to an exact musical phrase repeated throughout a song", a fill is an improvised phrase played during a section where nothing else is happening in the music

Norm de Plume 04-06-17 07:43 PM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
^Sure, why not? I prefer transition, though, because what I'm thinking of is not something to "sustain the listener's attention during a break between the phrases of a melody", which is kind of a dismissive description, but passages that are actually so integral to a song that they become favourite parts of songs. The two I posted are my favourite individual segments of those particular songs.

creekdipper 04-06-17 10:56 PM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
Two favorite moments are largely drum solos.

Ringo's transitional segue between "Carry That Weight" and "The End" on Abbey Road.

Moonie's great drum fills over Johns or Townsend syth at the end of "Won't Get Fooled Again" leading into Daltrey's iconic scream from Who's Next.

Norm de Plume 03-04-18 02:35 PM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
I just came across another transition I like a lot. The muscular instrumentation that is introduced at 2:10 in Hall & Oates's "Downtown Life". It's a rather long transition, lasting more than 30 seconds:

DaveWadding 03-04-18 07:37 PM

Re: Memorable transitions within songs
 
The bassline change in The Chain by Fleetwood Mac.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 05:09 PM.


Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.