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I'm Down
Composer(s) : Lennon and McCartney
Year : 1965
Chords/Tabs: I'm Down
Notes on "I'm Down" (ID)
KEY G Major
METER 4/4
FORM Verse -> Verse -> Break (guitar solo) -> Verse ->
-- 3X --
Break (organ solo) -> Refrain (fadeout)
GENERAL POINTS OF INTEREST
Style and Form
- Tucked away on the lonesome B-side of the "Help!"
single was this spicy little surprise. It's raucous, rough-shod, and
in context of where the Beatles were "at" as of the time of its
release, it's even a bit self-consciously regressive. We had heard
Paul screaming several times before, "repeatedly", but never quite as
primally this; at least not in an L&M original.
- On the basis of the raw material alone it's tempting to assume that
they threw this song together in less than a single afternoon. The
musical style is derived from one of the archtypal cliche R&B idoms of
the 50's; a semi-improvisatory rave-up in which the exact words don't
quite matter as much as the angry or naughty tone they set. You might
even say that this quality of sounding as though it's being made up on
the spot as they go along is an essential part of the aesthetic.
- That said, there's still an impressive amount of carefully staged
and choreographed variety applied to both the arrangement and the
blues form here. Nothing earth shaking per se, but indicative
nonetheless of the type of care the Boys would take in sweating the
details, even for a quick one-off.
Melody and Harmony
- The song is extremely bluesy in both departments. The tune is shot
through with flat 3rds and 7ths, and the chords are strictly limited
to I-IV-V.
- Even though the tone of the song is very similar to those Berry and
Penniman numbers in which every section is based literally on the
same chord progression and phrase lengths, it turns out that a couple of
slightly different forms are used here in alternation.
Arrangement
- The first and last phrase of each verse feature sudden syncopated
accents that are followed by dramatic momentary rests in the backbeat.
This effect provides a bookend-like symmetry to the verse itself. It
also provides contrast with the rest of the bouncy texture that is
otherwise used throughout and lends a certain amount of higher-level
periodic rhythm to the overall composition.
- The backing vocals sound more like the Stones (circa "Between The
Buttons" or earler) than the Beatles. Every time Paul sings the title
phrase, someone (John?) doubles him on the second word in a sustained
mock baritone voice, while two other singers (one of which is
definitely George and the other might even be Paul overdubbed) provide
a mockingbird like commentary in response ("I'm really down/ down on
the ground").
- SECTION-BY-SECTION WALKTHROUGH
Verse
- The verse is a fourteen measure long distortion of what would otherwise
be a straight 12-bar frame of the 4 + 8 model if only the middle phrase
were not extended by a third repetition of the title phrase. If you
don't believe me, imagine what the section would sound like with
measures 9 and 10 excised:
|G |- |- |- |
G: I
|C |- |G |- |C |- |
IV I IV
|D G |- |D G |- |
V I V I
- A couple of Beatle-esque verse variants worth mentioning: Paulie starts
off the song in the first verse entirely solo without even so much as a
single bassnote or drumbeat to help clarify to the listener the location
of either key or downbeat; no matter how many times you've heard the
song, it's an effect which retains the power to startle. In the second
measure of the third verse he anticipates the syncopated downbeat with a
little chromatic riff of F-> F# -> G; or is that actually George on
lead guitar ?
Break
- Both breaks are genuine 12-bar frames though they differ on a choice
of chord in one measure (the first break sustains the D chord through
measure 10):
|G |- |- |- |
I
|C |- |G |- |
IV V
|D |C |G |- |
V IV I
- The first break features the lead guitar in foreground against a
backing of fast organ triplets that is punctuated by Paul's screaming.
The first phrase of this break carries through the dramatic pause
concept heard in the verse sections.
- The second break features the organ itself in the foreground, its
rapid-fire triplets now punctuated by some wild off-beat glissandi and
even more of Paul's screaming than heard before. In this
break the dramatic pauses in the first phrase are dispensed with
making the section feel quite a bit looser than the previous break; an
effect which nicely sets up the jam-session feeling which prevails for
the remainder of the procedings.
Refrain
- The thrice-repeated refrain section is yet again a 12-bar frame in
the same flavor as the second break diagrammed out above.
- The only differences among the three refrains are in the improvised
scat singing and improvised lyrics heard in each section. From one
repeat to the next, the mood gets successively wilder and less strcutured
with the final round degenerating into the likes of "baby, baby, baby"
and "I'm down, down, down, down, down, down ..."; the latter strung out
nicely at cross-rhythm to the underlying beat.
- Some kind of congas, bongos, or other kind of slapped drums sound as
though either added new at this stage of the song, or else they were
perhaps there all along and only now mixed a bit more forward.
SOME FINAL THOUGHTS
- As Lewisohn points out (and well he should), "I'm Down" was recorded
on June 14, 1965 at the same session as "I've Just
Seen A Face" and "Yesterday". Whether by
coincidence or by design, it was indeed a day on which Paul's prowess
in the versatility department was fated to be displayed with
astonishing prowess. Given that our current subject was 2nd in the
batting order that day, maybe I'm still amazed that, with only a 90
minute break for dinner and a smoke, he was ready after all that
earlier shouting to come back in to tackle Ol' "Scrambled Eggs." But
that's Our Kid for you.
- Of course such historic perspective and appreciative revisionism is
a wonderful but curious thing. Memories of my own reactions to
hearing "I'm Down" for the first time way back in the counselor's
lounge at camp in the summer of '65 are quite different. There, in
spite of the reverent popularity accorded to the A-side of the same
single, the lads would frequently gather round the juke box to listen
to this one strictly for a giggle. We couldn't quite turn
the sound down on him, but it never did stop us from saying rude
things :-).
Regards,
Alan (awp@bitstream.com OR uunet!huxley!awp)
---
"Get him out of here!"
110992#69
---
Copyright (c) 1992 by Alan W. Pollack
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Ook op Past Masters, Vols. 1:
(c) 2025 Serge Girard