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The ‘Anchoring vi Schema’ and its relation to phrase rhythm in popular music

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 January 2024

Stanley Ralph Fink*
Affiliation:
Music Department, Harmon Fine Arts Center, Drake University, 2505 Carpenter Ave, Des Moines, IA 50311, USA
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Abstract

In order to reveal normative prototypes undergirding various formal sections, this article introduces the ‘Anchoring vi Schema’: a medium length major-mode passage (typically eight or 16 bars) that initiates on an unambiguous hypermetric downbeat (for example, the beginning of a verse or chorus). The Anchoring vi Schema must begin with tonic harmony and deploy submediant harmony at its midpoint – the second most hypermetrically strong beat. The identification of the Anchoring vi Schema enables closer readings of phrase expansion and deletion in popular music. A comparison of the common harmonies used in eight- and 16-measure passages reveals some striking similarities, particularly in terms of where tonic and subdominant chords are likely to occur. Although the endings of formal sections can take a variety of paths – including arriving at various tonal goals within a range of possible times – hypermetrically accented beginnings and midpoints show greater consistency in their organisation.

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Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Example 1: The first chorus of Leann Rimes's ‘How Do I Live’ (1997).

Figure 1

Example 2: The six most common harmonies on the eight downbeats of eight-measure Anchoring vi Schemas. The 55 song passages represented here are listed in Table 1.

Figure 2

Example 3: The six most common harmonies on the eight strongest downbeats of sixteen- measure Anchoring vi Schemas (in other words, the downbeats of odd-numbered measures). The 32 song passages represented here are listed in Table 2.

Figure 3

Table 1 Eight-measure Anchoring vi Schema passages in songs, 1963–2019. The tempo of each song is indicated in the column labelled ‘BPM’.

Figure 4

Example 4: The first verse of Klymaxx's ‘I Miss You’ (1984).

Figure 5

Table 2 16-measure Anchoring vi Schema passages in songs, 1960–2022. The tempo of each song is indicated in the column labelled ‘BPM’.

Figure 6

Table 3 A supplemental list of expanded or contracted Anchoring vi Schemas based on eight-measure prototypes, 1963–2012. The tempo of each song is indicated in the column labelled ‘BPM’.

Figure 7

Table 4 A supplemental list of expanded or contracted Anchoring vi Schemas based on 16-measure prototypes, 1963–2018. The tempo of each song is indicated in the column labelled ‘BPM’.

Figure 8

Example 5: The first chorus of Samantha Mumba's ‘Don't Need You To (Tell Me I'm Pretty)’ (2001). Mm. 8–9 initially sound like a repetition of the chorus; in short order, the passage becomes a link to the second verse.

Figure 9

Example 6: The verse of Linda Ronstadt and Aaron Neville's ‘Don't Know Much’ (1989), with analysis of the phrase rhythm shown in red numbers. The phrase expansion begins in m. 6 as the harmony stalls on a IV chord.

Figure 10

Example 7: The first verse, refrain, and link of Ben Folds's ‘The Luckiest’ (2001). The harmonic rhythm and rate of vocal syllable delivery slow considerably in mm. 12–13.

Figure 11

Example 8: The first verse of Céline Dion's ‘The Reason’ (1997). Tonic is prolonged via neighbor motion in the upper voices during m. 2. The upper-voice neighbor note figures are repeated in m. 4, resolving into an Anchoring vi7 chord in m. 5.

Figure 12

Example 9: The first chorus of Céline Dion's ‘The Reason’ (1997), with phrase expansion analysis shown in red numbers. The applied chord to vi in m. 7 causes a revision of the phrase's trajectory. The chorus concludes with a composed-out fermata in mm. 10–11.

Figure 13

Example 10: Formal diagram of Céline Dion's ‘The Reason’ (1997). V = verse; C = chorus; B = bridge.

Figure 14

Example 11: The first chorus of Leann Rimes's ‘How Do I Live’ (1997). Red numbers interpret the expansion of the eight-measure basic phrase.

Figure 15

Example 12: The first verse of Extreme's ‘More Than Words’ (1990), with elided resolution of the cadential dominant in m. 16. Red numbers reveal the 16-measure prototype. The parentheses indicate a parenthetical insertion.

Figure 16

Example 13: A four-measure turnaround rounds out the 16-measure first chorus of ‘I Do (Cherish You)’ by 98° (1998).

Figure 17

Example 14: The final chorus of ‘I Do (Cherish You)’ by 98° (1998) omits the material from mm. 3–6 of the first chorus, expands the phrase internally through composed-out deceleration, omits the turnaround, and appends a four-bar coda.

Figure 18

Example 15: The first verse and refrain of Beyoncé's ‘Sandcastles’ (2016).