B
I hung a shingle 'Country Music for Hire'
EB
No fans, no singles 10 years later I'm tired
F#E
Now I've racked my brain And I've looked all around
F#E
But I can't find a way To freshen my sound
F#BC#mBE
And now who do you call When you're down to one musical dime?
EmB
Fountains of Wayne Hotline
[Dialogue Interlude 1]
[Gerald]
B
Fountains of Wayne Hotline. Gerald speaking. How can I help you?
[Robbie]
B
Oh, yeah. Thanks. Uh, hello. Um, yeah, I'm a country singer in a
small Midwestern town. And I'm here in the studio today. Uh, let
B
me explain. We're working on a track. And uh we juhs, dih- dih- dih-
just did a verse. It was kind of broken down. And at this point
I'm not sure where to take it. Where to go from here...
[Gerald]
B
Sir, sir. Calm down. We can help you. We can help you. What you
need to do now is employ the "radical dynamic shift"
[Robbie]
B
The, The radical... yes, uh, wha-, what do you mean by that?
[Gerald]
B
You know. Full band entry, fortissimo, while maintaining consistent
apparent volume on the vocal track
[Robbie]
B
Oh. Oh! Yeah, yeah! That's a great idea! Thanks a lot. Thanks for your time
[Gerald]
B
My pleasure. We're always here
[Verse 2]
B
It's such a drag To face another filthy stage
EB
Beating these 3 chords In an early middle age
F#E
I'd be better off with 7 in hand
F#E
An analog synth and an Angry young band
F#BC#mBE
Then I could turn my muddy water Into sweet Mexican wine
EmB
Fountains of Wayne Hotline
B [mute]
— Slightly distorted melodic solo! — Check!
[Musical Interlude]
BBBBEEBBF#EF#EBC#mBEEmB
[Dialogue Interlude 2]
[Grant]
B
Hotline. Department of Bridges and Infrastructure. Grant speaking
[Robbie]
B
Oh yeah, hi there. I called a little while ago. I talked to a
gentleman. I believe his name was Gerald. And, um, he...
[Grant]
B
Sir, we've got about seven Geralds here. You're talking to me now
[Robbie]
B
Yeah, of course, yeah. The point is I'm in the middle of the song,
we're about 3 minutes in, and I'm not sure where to take it from
here. We've done a couple verses and its just kind of, um hit a, hit a wall
[Grant]
B
Yeah. Yeah, well, Tell me about your textural variation and
harmonic palette that you have going so far
[Robbie]
B
Oh of course. Well, um. Two 16-bar verses, the first one broken
down, followed by a radical dynamic shift
[Grant]
B
Oh, THAT Gerald
[Robbie]
B
A slightly distorted melodic guitar solo. And chordally, let's see,
a 1, a 5, a 4, with and without a sub-dominant 7, a 2, 2 minor, and
briefly a 9th compound over the tonic
[Grant]
B
Uh, well that 9th, is that telegraphed or just gratuitous coloration?
[Robbie]
B
Um, a bit of both, actually
[Grant]
B
Oh, OK. Well let's hit the bridge, I'll tell you what you do. No
new chords introduced. Get a split bar of 4 in there, and push the
one. and then we'll slather the holy hell out of the thing with a s
B
emi-ironic Beach Boys vocal pad. And then an asymmetrical back hand.
There's your bridge
[Robbie]
B
Uh huh
[Grant]
B
Yep
[Robbie]
B
Isn't that a lot of information to put in the...
[Grant]
B
Sir, I've been on this hotline for 15 years you're gonna havta trust me on this one
[Robbie]
B
OK, OK. Thank you very much. I'll give it a try. Thank you
[Grant]
B
You got it, Chief
[Bridge]
C#mB
Oh, yeah
E
Now we're getting big and full
C#mB
Oh, yeah
E
Try a wider interval
C#mB
Just like this? Oh yeah
C#mB
More like: Oh yeah!
E
Check me out: oooooooo, yeah!
[Verse 3]
F#E
I feel invincible and all dialed-in
F#E
Kind of Long Island with some West Coast sin
F#BC#mBE
So let's cut to the coda Any old gimmick is fine
Em [mute]
Fountains of Wayne Hotline