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Two of Us
Composer(s) : Lennon and McCartney
Year : 1969
Chords/Tabs: Two of Us
Notes on "Two of Us" (TOU)
KEY G Major
METER 4/4 (3/4, 2/4)
FORM Intro -> Verse -> (Intro) -> Verse -> Bridge ->
Verse -> Bridge -> Verse -> Outro (w/fadeout)
GENERAL POINTS OF INTEREST
Style and Form
- "Two of Us" (TOU) is an idyllic love song in which uneven phrase lengths,
changes of meter, and novel chord changes liven up and add bite to an
acoustic pseudo-folk song that might otherwise be a bit too sweet and
blandly charming for its own good.
- The form is the very classic two-bridge variant in which just a
single verse separates the bridges and there is no instrumental solo
section. The repeat of the intro between the first two verses is
a rare but far from unique touch.
- The change of meter in the Verse is one of the more extreme examples
of this gambit this side of "She Said She Said" and
"Good Day Sunshine."
- This song is a unique (?) example of where the _LIB_ album track
is arguably the definitive "best" version. It's a later take of the song,
more carefully arranged and more crisply performed than the one on
the _Get Back_ album. And to give the devil his due, it's one of the
only songs on the album for which Spector delivers a mix whose "finish"
(in the photo processing or wood furniture sense of the word) feels
appropriate to the style and mood of the music. See our Further Thoughts
for more on this and the other alternate versions of TOU.
Melody and Harmony
- The Verse opens with an archtypal pentatonic lick in the tune, but
adds in the 4th scale degree (C) for the rest of the section. The
chords used in the Verse are small in number and are of common variety;
i.e. I, ii, IV, V.
- The Bridge's casual shift to the parallel minor of the home key flattens
the 3rd, 6th and 7th scale degrees of the tune, and thereby unavoidably
alters a number of chords used in the section. It's the same trick Paul
used (in the same key, no less!) back in
"Here, There, and Everywhere"
to make the same bittersweet point. In the earlier song he takes it
a bit farther by actually settling down in the minor key with a full
cadence. Here in TOU, the minor key is heavily implicated for sure,
but is never 100% confirmed; the only V chord in the bridge is followed
by the return to the Major mode.
Arrangement
- The backing track is for two acoustic rhythm guitars, a noodling electric
lead guitar, and a relatively small part for percussion. You might jokingly
say that had the "Unplugged" TV series in mind when they came up with it.
- The rhythm guitars create alot of percussive finger-nails-against-taut-string
noise, plus there's what sounds like a Buddy Holly-era overdub of thigh
slapping and guitar body patting added in, perhaps explaining the limited
role for Ringo.
- George plays almost the whole way through. His part is scored in the
tenor range and played quietly in background, though he does get one moment
in the spotlight with a recurring scale figure that punctuates the metrical
shifts in the second half of the verse. Ringo's drumming is limited to
a snare tapping figure that joins the verse to the bridge plus some light
cymbal work during the bridge.
- Paul's lead vocal is harmonized by John in 3rds for virtually the
entire verse. Paul sings solo for most of the bridge, with John coming
back at the 3rd for the last couple measures of the section.
SECTION-BY-SECTION WALKTHROUGH
Intro
- The four-measure intro establishes the home key by simple insistence
on its I chord.
- The Beatles staggered entrance rule appplies even for so brief an
introduction: we start off with a syncopated hook phrase on
one of the acoustic guitars, followed by guitar body thuds
in the second measure, and finally the rhythm guitar and electric
lead parts kick in for the second half of the section.
Verse
- The verse has a relatively straightforward closed harmonic shape,
starting and ending on I, but its phrasing and meter are far from it:
-------------------------- 2X ------------------------
4 4 2 4 4
|G |- |- |C |a |
G: I IV ii
3 3 3 3 3 2 4 4
|G |D C |G |D C |G |C |G |- |
I V IV I V IV I IV I
- The phrasing pattern is "AB/AB,CCC'" in which the repeated "AB"
couplet contrasts sharply in terms of rhythmic character and length
with "C" phrases.
- Phrase "A" concludes with only half a measure. The unusual switch to
3/4 time for the iterated "C" phrase is no less interesting than the
way in which the single 2/4 measure at the end of phrase "C'" would
appear to belatedly make up for the half measure (2/4 beats) subtly
left "missing" at the end of the "A" phrase. It's as if the "B" and
"CC" pair of phrases were all shifted two beats out of alignment until
that short 2/4 measure at the end of "C'" balances the books.
- IV -> ii makes for a lazy feeling chord progression; the "move"
from one subdominant to another subdominant doesn't provide much in
the way of a sense of teliological progress. The lazy effect is
amplified by the way that the passing tones in the vocal lines here
turn the second half of the measure 4 into a C9/7 chord. Substitute
a G chord in the first (6/3) inversion for the second half of that
measure and notice the difference.
- The form of the verse ending varies depending on context. The end
of the first verse (the only one in the song followed immediately by
another verse) rests for 1 measure on G, then repeats the entire Intro
before the second verse. The second and third verses, both of which
are followed by a bridge, use a two-measure rest on G to transition
into the bridge sections. The final verse is a hybrid, with a two-measure
rest followed by one more reprise of the Intro.
Bridge
- The meter is held constant for the bridge, but the harmony and phrase
lengths still remain tricky:
|Bb |d |g |a |- |D |
g: III v i ii V
- The phrasing has a free-verse A/B pattern in which the phrase
lengths are 2 + 4 measures. The sustaining of the a minor chord
for measures 2 & 3 of a four-measure phrase is a subtle type of
slow syncopation.
- Cross relations abound as a result of the shift to the minor mode:
- Bb in the first measure in contrast with the B naturals of the
G major mode of the verse.
- F natural in the d minor chord in contrast with the F sharps found
in the V chords of the verse and the end of this bridge. Similarly,
F natural in the tune (both on the first syllable of "longer" and
and the word "that" following "road") in bluesy contrast with the
F# of the D Major chord at the end of the section.
- Eb in the tune (passing note on the second syllable of the word
"longer") in contrast with the E natural of the a minor chord in
the following measure.
Outro
- Following a complete reprise of the Intro, the music fades out
during eight measures worth of vamping on the rhythm guitars, with
John whistling above it, and Paul making spoken interjections.
- Based on the evidence of outtakes, the fadeout here is a bit of
a fake. I have every reason to believe that the performance in
the studio ends with a complete ending, but the _LIB_ track cuts
out before the final chord.
SOME FINAL THOUGHTS
- Unreleased recordings of TOU fall into three buckets: rehearsals,
outtakes of the familiar official version, and outtakes of a different
arrangement of the song. My knowledge of what is currently available
under the counter is far from exhaustive but I believe it covers the
highlights.
Rehearsals
- First runthrough of the song, 1/2/69 (Songs From the Past, volume 4)
- We have a sizeable 12 minute segment of what must have been a longer
rehearsal. It's one of the nicest candid home movies we have.
- It sounds like Paul is sharing the song for the first time with George
and Ringo; John is nowhere in evidence. The finished lyrics are not yet
set, and the Three Of Them stumble and stagger through the performance,
frequently breaking down, especially (and quite understandably) when
the meter changes in the verse.
- Paul is clearly the leader and the coach in this context. He does
most of the talking but doesn't come across as bossy, per se.
- Paul coaches John on a backing vocal for the bridge
- At one point, they apparently planned on having John sing an elaborate
backing vocal through most of the bridge, one not in easy parallel
thirds. This clip catches them practicing it several times running
with John generally out of tune and not getting any better at all from
one iteration to the next.
- This outtake is as painful to experience as is the previous one "nice."
Paul plays the part of a relentless schoolmarm cluelessly pressuring
John who must have been already getting frustrated with himself most
of all during this rehearsal, to try it again and again.
- Aside from your interest in the Beatles, if you yourself have ever
been on the receiving end of a Bad Rehearsal Day with your own music
group, this outtake is bound to touch a nerve.
Outtakes of the official version
- "Funky Body take 1" (Unsurpassed Masters, volume 5)
- Relatively rough but complete runthrough by the full group.
- Paul opens the song with an unsyncopated variation of the guitar
hook, but then uses the syncopated version of it later in the song.
The guitar hook is also used here to fill the two measure space between
the verse and bridge.
- When the meter changes in the first verse the performance comes very
close to breaking down.
- _Get Back_ album track, 1/24/69
- Form is identical to official version, though we have a shorter
rest here before the outro.
- The guitar hook is always unsyncopated.
- John does not sing at all in the bridge.
- The lead guitar work is less clearly worked out than in the official
version.
- No whistling in the coda, but before the final chord, Paul stage
whispers "and so we leave the little town of London, England."
Different Arrangement
- As the "Revolution" single is to "Revolution 1,"
so is the different
arrangement of TOU to its official version, a sample of which appears
in the _Let It Be_ film. At least two or more outtakes of the arrangement
also appear on bootleg.
- The words and music are the same but arrangement is for rock
ensemble with more electic guitar, more drums, and a much faster
tempo.
- The finger picked guitar hook is replaced by a rhythm guitar figure,
and hard, jumpy bassline.
- Bridge vocals vary (depending on the outtake) from choral backing on
the word "Ah ...." to rhythmic "dit-dit-dit" (in the manner of
the song "Girl"
), both on SFTP volume 3. One take features Paul
singing is his Elvis voice, on the Yellow Dog rooftop concert disk.
- The coda is a "three times you're out" reprise of the "B" phrase
of the verse; SFTP3, tk.10. One outtake ends with John announcing
"halt" at the end of the second bridge; SFTP3, tk.20.
- The rock version, though it contains an enjoyable intensity, does not
come close to the idyllic essence of the song as captured in the official
version. By the same token, the alternate does, in its own way, cast
a unique other light on the latter.
Regards,
Alan (awp@world.std.com)
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"A-minor sevens to D ...... ba' Bom." 053199#167
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Copyright (c) 1995 by Alan W. Pollack
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