“Eleanor Rigby” is track two of an album by the Beatles called Revolver. The song is a lament, yet with a quick 138 b.p.m. tempo and and orchestra played counterpoint all over an e minor ninth chord.

Meanspeed Music Summary
song title=”Eleanor Rigby“
composer=Lennon/McCartney
performer=The Beatles
trials calibrated=9
time elapsed, total=1,081.46 seconds
beats measured, total=1,656 beats
beats per trial=276
mean time per trial=120.16222 seconds
average tempo/mean speed=137.8 beats per minute
mean beat time=0.4354 seconds per beat
Emotive category according to meanspeed music theory=<128 class=”blsp-spelling-error” id=”SPELLING_ERROR_16″>bpm, therefore [mixed fast]
File Kind=AAC audio file
Size=3.9 MB
Bit rate=256 kbps
sample rate=44.100 kHz
volume=(-8.9 dB)
Profile=Low Complexity
Channels =Stereo
File Type=m4a
File Support=iTunes® v 7.6, QuickTime 7.4.1
most interesting rhyme=’there’ and ‘care’ in a pitifully the most pitifully sad lyric in this morose song. Yes, by the end we know that Eleanor is going to die all alone, and in fact she was lucky that the church took her in and gave her a burial and a service. What always gets me is the priest, fixing his socks - knowing that it doesn’t matter because (a) no one sees him doing it and (b) no one listens or even attends his services and sermons anyway. Yet as a man of Christian faith, works through the Spirit he feels.
“Look at him working.
Darning his socks in the night when there’s nobody there.
What does he care?”








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