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Archive for April, 2008

This ain’t no Red Sox game! This is American Idol! – SWEET CAROLINE – Neil Diamond – Can Cook and Archuleta handle Mr. HOT AUGUST NIGHT?

April 29, 2008 Ian A Schneider Comments off

 
 

On The Boats and On the Planes - Meanspeed® Music Psychology-Tempo Graph - AMERICA - Neil Diamond

On The Boats and On the Planes - Meanspeed® Music Psychology-Tempo Graph - AMERICA - Neil Diamond

 

Fenway Park - rebirth place for "Brooklyn" Neil Diamond's SWEET CAROLINE

Fenway Park - rebirth place for "Brooklyn" Neil Diamond's SWEET CAROLINE

Unlike other music websites, we at Meanspeed Music Research Labs, located in a remote undisclosed location in New Jersey, *work* with the songs we represent. We love to calibrate and find out what is really going on behind the pace of the music. For example, simply knowing that this song, Sweet Caroline, a song Neil wrote as a silent tribute to the daughter of teh 36th president of the United States, John Fitzgerald Kennedy. We legally purchase (that would mean: pay for) and download a song:

 

 

 

next, we use the methodology described on the site and enter the co-ordinates in a spreadsheet, as we did below:

next, we plot all 9 trials to create speed graph showing results in line form:

We take a look at all 9 trial in scatter graph form:

Finally, we synthesize this a speed chart:

Now we can enter the speed in the BPM column in iTunes and create the best playlists that money cannot buy:

speed summary, by James C.C. Manning and Hunter Newman

song=”Sweet Caroline”

performer=Neil Diamond

composer=Neil Diamond

total beats measured=3,690

time elapsed=28 minutes, 51 seconds

beats per trial=410

mean time per trial=3 minutes, 12.3 seconds

mean speed=127.9 beats per minute

mean emotion according to meanspeed music conjecture=victory

average beat=0.469 seconds

Meanspeed® Music

Ian Schneider

James St. James Manning

April 29, 2008

From wikipedia.org, the People’s Free Encyclopedia

Sweet Caroline” is a pop song written and performed by Neil Diamond and officially released on September 16th 1969 as a single,and was also included on later pressings of his Brother Love’s Traveling Salvation Show album. The song reached #4 on the Billboard chart and eventually went platinum for sales of one million singles.[1]

In the fall of 1969, Diamond performed “Sweet Caroline” on several television shows, including The Joey Bishop Show, The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour, and The Ed Sullivan Show. It later reached #8 on the UK singles chart in 1971.

It is also very popular at sporting events worldwide, usually sung by supporters of English football team Arsenal, but in North America, it has been the signature song played during Boston Red Sox games at Fenway Park. The tradition began when Amy Tobey, the club’s musical coordinator at that time, started playing it in 1998 at the request of a Red Sox employee who had become a father to a girl named Caroline.[2] Tobey continued to play it (usually in the middle of the 8th inning) when the team was winning and she felt the Red Sox would win.[3] Other sources deny that Amy played the song at the request of an employee and state that she played it because she liked the song and it was played at other sporting events and those crowds seemed to like it.[4] In 2002, new owner John W. Henry requested that the song be played at every home game. The sing-along gained fame in a sequence of the 2005 movie Fever Pitch.

The song is also sung during New York Rangers hockey games, New York Mets, Washington Nationals, San Jose Giants, University of Mississippi,Vanderbilt University baseball games, and Boston College and University of North Carolina sporting events.

In the karaoke and sing-along versions, the chorus has fans singing “Sweet Caroline…” with the fans imitating the music to “Oh, oh, oh! Good times never felt so good” followed by the chant of “So good, so good, so good!” The next line goes “I feel inclined…” with the “Oh, oh, oh!” tag repeated.

[edit] Covers

  • In 1996 film, Beautiful Girls, Timothy Hutton leads a sing-along performance of the song in a bar.
  • In September of 2004, Jimmy Buffett included “Sweet Caroline” in a medley with “Why Don’t We Get Drunk” during both of his Fenway Park shows (9/10/2004 and 9/12/2004) stating, “Never again will those songs be played together in one medley at Fenway Park.”
  • The song was covered by The Railbenders, a Denver-based hard-country band on their 2003 release Segundo.
  • Bobby Darin performed the song live, but at a slower, more dramatic tempo. This cover is available on the HYENA DVD Bobby Darin- Seeing Is Believing.

According to the album literature of 1996′s In My Lifetime, Diamond came up with the famous A6 chord (used in the “…hands, touching hands” portion of the song) in the song in a hotel room one night.

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/bio/index.jsp?pid=4456&aid=5629
  2. ^ http://www.boston.com/sports/baseball/redsox/articles/2005/08/21/a_diamond_note_unique_to_the_red_sox/
  3. ^ http://www.boston.com/sports/baseball/redsox/articles/2005/05/29/another_mystery_of_the_diamond_explained_at_last
  4. ^ http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4930465

[edit] External links

Annie Lennox on Idol Gives Back – MANY RIVERS TO CROSS – A meanspeed conjecture shows speed of ceremony during ritual, visited by the President of the U.S.

April 28, 2008 Ian A Schneider 1 comment

“Many Rivers To Cross” is the title to a song written by Jimmy Cliff.  On April 16, 2008, Annie Lennox performed the song live on FOX-TV’s ‘Idol Gives Back’ using vocal, piano and minimal backup.  She wore an HIV-POSITIVE t-shirt on and she was her typically composed self and performed so well that iTunes has done very well with downloads of this song.

The above meanspeed conjecture chart was designed by Hunter Newman.  The lyrics were written as hear on the purchased download.
Meanspeed-Carlton Summary, supervised by James C.C. Manning
beats calibrated=150
mean speed=66.7 beats per minute
mean emotion according to the meanspeed conjecture=ceremony
event=Idol Gives back, FOX-TV, April 16, 2008



MANY RIVERS TO CROSS - lyrics as heard by Ian Andrew Schneider

MANY RIVERS TO CROSS - lyrics as heard by Ian Andrew Schneider

Annie Lennox - Mamy Rivers To Cross - spreadsheet 1

Annie Lennox - Mamy Rivers To Cross - spreadsheet 1

Annie Lennox – Mamy Rivers To Cross – spreadsheet 1

The Speed Of The Beatles: LUCY IN THE SKY WITH DIAMONDS mixes a waltz with common time for an L.S.D.-like (or so they say) tempo structure

April 25, 2008 Ian A Schneider Comments off

LUCY IN THE SKY WITH DIAMONDS - modern tempo map by meanspeed music - BEATLES

LUCY IN THE SKY WITH DIAMONDS - modern tempo map by meanspeed music - BEATLES

Microsoft's free Audio Editor Frequency viewMeanspeed Music Research  - Lucy In The Sky With DiamondsMeanspeed Music Research  - Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds

Lucy In the Sky With Diamonds is the third track from the 1967 album by the Beatles called ‘Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.’ Lucy In the Sky With Diamonds is the third track from the 1967 album by the Beatles called ‘Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.’ In this mean speed® music calibration, the beats in the waltz sections were measured as dotted half notes, and the beats in the common time sections were measured half-notes.

/Ian Andrew Schneider/

Meanspeed-Carlton Summary,

supervised by James C.C. Manning
song title=Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds
composer=John Lennon and Paul McCartney
album=Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
performer=The Beatles
key=A major
average time per trial=202.0 seconds
beats calibrated=280
average beat=878 milliseconds
meanspeed/average velocity=68.3
mean emotion according to the meanspeed conjecture=ceremony