PolloGuitar wrote:
DeathTide wrote:
Sure, if you’re talking about covers or adaptations. But what about original songs composed for a surf band?
Yes, definitely much harder to find examples of surf songs that made their way into other genres. But, a song is just melody and chords. A decent melody is all you need, the rest is just arrangement.
I posted this 17 years ago. the references are dated, but I stand by the rest of it: https://surfguitar101.com/news/story/31/
It would be hard to imagine Mr. Moto as a Country, Jazz or Delta Blues song, but not at all hard to imagine a Country, Jazz or Delta Blues song being used for Surf.
A couple of the things you posted to the Yahoo groups really caught my interest and I’d like to quote them here.
“A good song should be able to be arranged for a variety of genres.”
Very true. In at least some cases, I think that the word treatment works well to describe what we frequently call genres. A good song is a good song. Dean Martin was a crooner, but he recorded some Country tunes and they sold well. I could imagine one of those songs, Houston, as a Surf tune if you played it with a Surf beat, plenty of reverb and all the trimmings of Surf.
“But to start out the song writing process by saying, well I'm
going to have a glissando going into a reverb kick followed by
the drum lick to Wipe Out and then the bassline to Pipeline with some pingy
notes on top, will create a completely unoriginal, paint by numbers
surf song. And, to my ear, there is lot of that happening in surf music these
days. Arrangements are the wrapping for the present, but don't
skimp on the gift for fancy paper and bows.”
You said a mouthful there. I’ve heard some wonderful music in modern day Surf, but I’ve also heard some Surf offering which were nothing more than cliches strung together. The same thing happens in Rockabilly, BTW. The Rockabilly revival has a lot of cookie cutter songs.
There’s a cautionary tale here for songwriters. It’s easy to copy the obvious and that will get you a song which you can call a Surf tune. But it might not make for a good song. Just because a song has a Surf beat, lots of drip and is written in a minor key, that doesn’t mean it’s truly an original Surf song. Even in the early sixties, there were more than a few songs which were little more than copies of Surf cliches. But there were some stunning originals.
Pipeline, the National Anthem of Surf, is simple, but highly effective. The way the second verse segues into the bridge breaks all the rules, but it works and works beautifully. It’s a great song.
Penetration is another example. The verses are dead simple, just a I and a IV, then back to the I. The chorus is a take on the Andalusian Cadence, but using strictly Major triads. At a theoretical level, the song is almost as simple as a nursery rhyme, but it’s effective. I think it’s the most evocative of all the First Wave Surf tunes. Whenever I hear it, I instantly have a mental picture of a lonely stretch of the beach with grayish-blue clouds and pounding waves. IMHO, it’s probably the best of the original songs. Writing something like that is an artistic triumph.
“A great exercise is to take apart your favorite songs. I don't mean to just
learn how to play it, but to really examine where the melody starts
in relation to the key of the song, and how the melody shifts as chords change.
Really, look at it note by note against the chords.”
The best learning tool I’ve ever had has been copying from songs. It forces you to think in terms of scales, chord progressions and how a song fits all of its pieces together. A lot of songs, Surf, Country, Rock, even Standards, state a phrase against the I chord, then repeat it a 4th higher, against the IV chord. It’s a cliche, and not necessarily bad in and of itself, but it can draw you into cookie cutter land.
Classical music handles voicings somewhat differently and could be a good source of ideas. Many classical tunes utilize simple chords, but they lead into one another in complex ways. For example:
C / / / G7/B / / / Am / / / C7/G / / / F / / / D7/F# / / / G7 / / / C / G7 / There are only a few chords, but they mesh very tightly and drive the melody. I’ve seen this sort of chord sequence in more modern music, but it’s roots are in Classical music.
Where that’s concerned, classical music is a great source of material and almost certainly public domain. I’ve always thought the Mozart’s 40th Symphony would make a dandy Surf tune. The Baronics did wonders with Moonlight Sonata. I’m sure that there are plenty more great Surf tunes in the world of Classical music, and all sorts of ideas you can freely utilize in your own compositions.
One last thought when it comes to writing Surf would be that of genres. I guess it’s only natural that there are different genres, but the boundaries are yet another matter, altogether. I’ve heard late sixties and seventies Rock that was essentially Jazz with a rock beat. Country and Rock have changed their common boundary almost ceaselessly throughout my lifetime.
PolloGuitar wrote:
I hesitate to wade in these waters, but, may I suggest that there is no such thing as a surf song, just a song arranged for a surf combo?
This makes a lot of sense. Not every song can be adapted to a Surf treatment, but many songs can be. Just playing songs mentally and imagining them as Surf suggests to me that songs with straightforward changes and a straightforward beat can make the hop pretty easily. OTOH, a song with +11 chords on the IV and Major 7ths for the I might be more of a challenge. Think of Johnny Rivers’ Poor Side of Town, which is twangy as heck roughy out of the gate, but uses Maj 7 chords extensively. You could play it as Surf, but my guess is that it would sound schmaltzy. If you were trying to write for Surf, I guess that any and all experience would be helpful in avoiding song structure, especially chords which don’t translate well into Surf music.
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The artist formerly known as: Synchro
When Surf Guitar is outlawed only outlaws will play Surf Guitar.