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Dig It
Composer(s) : Lennon and McCartney
Year : 1968
Chords/Tabs: Dig It
Notes on "Dig It" (DI)
KEY F Major
METER 3/4 (surprise!)
FORM (fade in) Refrain -> Refrain' -> Refrain''... (fade out) + spoken bit
GENERAL POINTS OF INTEREST
Style and Form
- Given the sometimes seemingly endless hours and even days on end
of the Beatles drifting out of one loosely coupled but extended
jam session into another during the Get Back month of January '69,
our snippet of a song here, "Dig It (DI)," would appear to bear an
unfair and awesome burden, serving as the sole remnant of such musical
horseplay to make the cut for the official LIB album.
- But DI also demonstrates once again how even humblest of Beatles
recordings bears examination and provokes thought. No matter that
the specific musical content here is arguably slight. It's the exploitation
of the recorded medium for its own sake that creates value in this case.
And more irony: it doesn't really matter if it was genuinely Phil
Spector's own idea to handle it in this manner. The upside credit
for just about anything good on the LIB album acrues to the group
themselves, with Spector left holding the bag for what's wrong with
it. So much for the Beatles as nature intended.
- The official release of this song on the _Let It Be_ album is a
scant minute-long choice cut excerpted from a much longer performance
of it in the studio, with a spoken bit from an entirely different
arrangement of the same number tacked on to the ending. This simple
yet deft act of audio retouching uncannily elevates an otherwise half
baked, improvisationally executed idea (as evidenced by the film clips and
unedited audio tape) into a recorded "gesture," at once both inspired
for wild zaniness and presciently apt in the way it sets up Paul's big
anthem which follows. But no offence intended: anyone who has ever
goofily jammed with friends at a home party must listen to this track and
think on some level, "gee, I can do just as well as this."
- In spite of its comparable brevity, DI's gesture should not be confused
with what I've described elsewhere as the complete-but-miniature "bonsai
song form;" see Notes on "Wild Honey Pie"
and "... In the Road." DI is
different, both in its circular, undifferentiated form, and the extent
to which the fade-in tips you off that what you're listening to is
taken out of context from something much longer. Actually, the circular
form only goes to add to the illusion of open ended duration.
Melody and Harmony
- The tune is rivited around the tonic note of the home key in the manner
of the talking blues style, but there are also noticeable flashes of
the bluesy flat 3rd and flat 7th scale degrees.
- The chords are your old, elementary friends: I, IV, and V.
Arrangement
- The backing track is a muddy kitchen sink kind of production
with organ, piano, and drums playing prominent roles.
- The backbeat of the complete performance of DI varies over the long
run, but our excerpt for the official release is clearly in a
syncopated 3/4.
SECTION-BY-SECTION WALKTHROUGH
Refrain
- The entire musical fabric is based on a simple four measure pattern
which I believe tends to repeat itself in pairs:
--------------- 2X --------------
|F |Bb |C |Bb |
F: I IV V IV
Spoken Bit
- John's falsetto spoken bit is neatly (and not at all randomly)
spliced in so that the start of it overlaps with the fadeout
of the base track, but with the ending of it left fully exposed.
SOME FINAL THOUGHTS
- The carefully cropped and retouched fragment of DI on the LIB album
presents the song as if it were something that is all John's, and
John's only. I believe this is a distortian of reality, but you
need to hear the complete recording and its associated alternates to
get the broader perspective.
- I trace the origin of the song to at least as far back to the 1/9
session at Twickenham where the infamous "Commonwealth Song" is followed
by another improvisation entitled "Get Off!" The latter features
John and Paul antiphonally shouting a free association stream of
people's names (some obscure as well as those of celebrities) over
a 12-bar blues vamp, and the frequent refraining phrase, "can you dig it?"
- The rest of the extant performances are from the sessions at Apple.
1/24 is the date of what you might call the the pair of "spastic"
versions of the song in which the arrangement is characterized by
comically sloppy slide guitar work and an equally unreliable
tempo. The vamp is still 12-bar, and John and Paul continue to spar
verbally with wicked case of the sillies. The second take from this
day has a complete ending built out of the classically Beatlesque
gambit of three-times-you're-out.
- The ending of this take also happens to be from where "Hark the angels"
comes from, though you need to check two bootlegs (SFTP volumes 1 and 2)
in order to hear the entire thing. Trailing the spoken bit you're
familiar with, John, on the source tape, actually mock sings a line of
"Hark ..."
- 1/26 is the date on which the official recording was made. The longest
excerpt of this unofficially available grinds on for 8:23 with the
following points of interest:
minute 1 -2: Someone is playing kazoo, and some of the backing
vocals come from George. Lyrics contain the time-of-day
motif. Ensemble almost breaks down at one point.
minute 3: "Can you give it? Well I can take it."
minute 4: Paul joins the background vocals. John makes his
predictable "Fer Christ' sake" remark, pretty much
disqualifying this part of the track from appearing
on the album, though it does appear on GB! "Are you big
enough to get it? I can hardly keep my hands still."
minute 5: "Like a rolling stone/FBI/CIA/BBC/BB King/Doris Day/
Matt Busby/Dig it ..."
minute 6: Meter wobbles toward more of a 4/4 march beat.
minute 7: Piano becomes more prominent in the mix. "All you
got to do is ask for it, say pretty please ..."
minute 8: Complete but relatively rough ending, as though
having run out of steam.
- The LIB album version of ~50 seconds is taken from around minute 5,
with the 1/24 spoken bit tacked on. The version slated for the _Get Back_
album is ~4 minutes in length and contains roughly the second half of
the 8 minute recording. It also has the same partial spoken bit spliced in
which is followed by a final plagal cadence for the backing ensemble that
is not part of the 8:23 tape. There's even a video excerpt of this
performance in the LIB film, showing the four Beatles, plus Yoko, Billy
Preston, Heather Eastman, and George Martin (shaking a Latin percussion
instrument).
- Reportedly there's 33 seconds worth of an outtake from 1/27 that I haven't
heard. Any takers out there? And finally, there's part of a very fast
version in 12/8 rhythm recorded on 1/29, featuring Paul with a doo-wop,
woah-woah-woah backing vocal.
- The alternates, even the parts of the official take that were edited out,
suggest a level of byplay between John and Paul (and even George) that
belies the John-only vision suggested by the official track. While DI
may have been inspired and even loosely "composed & conducted" by John,
I think the full set of outtakes provides a rare but by no means unique
counter example to the conventional portrayal of the group at this point
as supposedly being incapable of having a good time out together.
Regards,
Alan (awp@world.std.com)
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"Saint Buttersfield Cargo..." 080199#171
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Copyright (c) 1999 by Alan W. Pollack
All Rights Reserved
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(c) 2024 Serge Girard