F
Chumbawumba is a well-known
punk-influenced new-wave English rock band.
They are considered to be ‘anarchists’, and their behaviour sometimes
reflects this; one of their songs implicitly laments the way new labour has
betrayed England, and one of them threw a bucket containing cold water and ice
over the head of the English vice-premier!
An anarchic punk band, however, they are not, even if they do subscribe
to the philosophy. They consist of a
relatively large group of musicians, generally settling around a group of eight
musicians, although the Tupthumper album (from which the Tubthumping
song is taken) uses many more. Their
influences are varied, including Celtic music, punk, ska, reggae and other
movements in new-wave rock. The songs on
their albums vary in texture and style, and they have both male and female lead
singers. Their album Uneasy Listening, which includes works
from their early days during the Thatcher era in the eighties right up until
work produced in 1998. The range of
styles they’ve gone through are quite astounding. Politically they stand against the obsession
of the music industry with money, and divide their earnings up equally between
all people who may be working with them on a given evening, including roadies
and sound technicians. It is with Tubthumping
that the group gained international fame, and some of their fans are
disappointed with their adoption of more accessible musical formats. Tubthumping is an extremely well-known song. The title refers to the Anglo-Saxon habit of
drinking, it has an onomatopoeic rhythmic sound which certainly evokes the
drinking habits of the English.
According to the band, the word is actually used to refer to a ‘pub
crawl’ (drinking at pub after pub until you can drink no more). The text, in addition, involves the act of
drinking, in fact of constantly getting drunk, or remaining in a constant state
of drunkenness as a preferred ontology; ‘pissing the night away’ as the text
exclaims. In the book which comes with
the Tubthumper CD, a Phil is quoted as saying “If you do not want to
feel the appalling weight of Time which breaks your shoulders and bends you to
the ground, get drunk, and drunk again.”[1] The words to the song and the basic harmonic
structure of the work which follows the dialogue are included below. The letters in square brackets (e.g [D])
refers to the key; capital letters refer to major chords and small letters to
minor chords: [D] We’ll be [G] singing, [D] when
we’re [G] winning, [D] we’ll be [G] singing… [A] I get knocked [D] down, but I get
up [G] again, You’re [D] never going to keep me [G] down, I get knocked [D] down, but I get
up [G] again, You’re [A] never going to keep me down. X 2 [e/G] Pissing the [b] night [A]
away, [e/G] Pissing the [b] night [A] away… He drinks a [D] whisky drink, he
drinks a [G] vodka drink. He drinks a [D] lager drink, He
drinks a [G] cider drink. He sings the [D] songs that remind
him of the [G] good times. He sings the [A] songs that remind
him of the better times. [D] Oh [G] Danny [D] Boy, [G]
Danny [D] Boy, [G] Danny [A] Boy… I get knocked [D] down, but I get
up [G] again, You’re [D] never going to keep me [G] down, I get knocked [D] down, but I get
up [G] again, You’re [A] never going to keep me down. X 2 [e/G] Pissing the [b] night [A]
away, [e/G] Pissing the [b] night [A] away… He drinks a [D] whisky drink, he
drinks a [G] vodka drink. He drinks a [D] lager drink, He
drinks a [G] cider drink. He sings the [D] songs that remind
him of the [G] good times. He sings the [A] songs that remind
him of the better times. [D] Don’t [G] cry for [D] me, [G]
next door [D] neighbour… I get knocked [D] down, but I get
up [G] again, You’re [D] never going to keep me [G] down, I get knocked [D] down, but I get
up [G] again, You’re [A] never going to keep me down. X 2 The
harmonic progressions used in the work are not particularly unusual,
representing pretty standard guitar chord sequences which involve primarily
movements of major chords starting in the tonic and then transposing up or down
a fourth or a fifth. The work is, like
most pop songs, in common time. What
makes the song unique is the fact that it includes contrasting textures which
have to do with both rhythm and orchestration.
The winning sequence which made the song (and thereafter the group
itself) such a success is the strongly rhythmic chorus centred around the “I
get knocked down” text. On
closer analysis the song reveals itself to be far more complex than the
impression the standard chord sequence may give. The song begins, for one, with the following
spoken text which begins over a three chord sequence, each chord leading one
tone upwards with a standard drum kit rhythm accompanying it. A single synthesizer plays the chord sequence. The opening text is as follows: "The truth is I thought it
mattered . I thought that music mattered . But does it [matter]? Not compared to how people matter.” In
my opinion, this text sounds like the sort of remark a drunken person may make
about music, and seeing that the song chooses rather stereotyped song types (as
we shall discuss), this seems to make sense.
Perhaps it is saying something about the fact that the song isn’t really
supposed to be taken seriously, that the pop music to come is rhythmic and
sounds great, but that it is critical of the pop idiom. After this opening text
the texture and the instrumentation change for the first time suddenly with the
text “we’ll be singing, when we’re winning” (twice) which is accompanied by a
small tempo change (small enough to be striking) with the accompaniment of
electronics and the entrance of voices singing in a highly vocal style,
amplified to exaggerate the contrasts.
The real dynamism, however, happens in the following change which leads
into the main rhythmic sequence. Here
suddenly a number of voices in a raucous tone begin the “I get knocked down”
chorus. It is vibrant, dynamic and
exciting. It reeks of camaraderie,
confidence and masculinity and it is strongly accompanied by loud guitars and
keyboards and of course strong drum-kit percussion. The point of the text is undoubtedly to
encourage the social aspect of raucous drinking culture. The message is, plainly, that if one does get
knocked down, with the numbing effects of alcohol one doesn’t notice and gets
up and keeps drinking. This is followed
by the “pissing the night away” text which drives the message home, and it
contrasts because it is sung by a female voice.
This probably explains its ‘commentary’ function on what otherwise is
happening in the song. To perform this
text, the orchestration is reduced to synthesizer, voice and drum kit. This is followed by an almost spoken text
involving a series of drinks: “he drinks a whisky drink, he drinks a vodka
drink” etc. This ends with another piece
of commentary on the fact that “he sings the songs that remind him of the good
times” and then ‘the better times’. This
demonstrates both the celebratory aspect of the work and the function of
alcohol to make life more bearable. The
following sequence returns to the female voice who sings in a similar tone the
words to the well-known song “Danny-boy” even though the song itself is of
little signification (i.e. any song would do).
This leads back to the raucous “I get knocked down text” which is
basically repeated in the same fashion, which is followed again by the “pissing
the night away” and then the sequence which leads to the “he sings the songs
that reminds him of the good times.” This
is answered by the female voice in a similar fashion, but with the text “don’t
cry for me, next door neighbour” which is probably a parody of Lloyd-Weber’s Don’t
Cry For Me Argentina song from his pop opera Evita, and at the same
time a commentary on the fact that it is often the neighbour who comments on
one’s coming home hopelessly drunk and noisy.
This means that the whole sequence has been repeated twice with a few
variations in text rather than harmony or orchestration. After the ‘neighbour’ text, the rhythmic
chorus is repeated for a third time in the same way, but this leads to a period
with a trumpet playing the melody, which is accompanied by keyboard. Then the chorus returns, but this time with
the “we’ll be singing” text in the background, a sort of simple two-part
polyphony. After one repetition, the
“pissing the night away” melody joins in to make it three-part polyphony. The chorus then, as is typical of the pop
idiom, fades out after a couple of repetitions.
This is an exciting composition, made dynamic by its sudden contrasts,
and it is a song with a ‘message’, even if their standpoint on the issue of
drunkenness remains rather ambiguous.
© May 2008 Nachtschimmen
Music-Theatre-Language Night Shades,
Ghent (Belgium)*
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Major Writings
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