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about — long

This all started out as trying to find easy songs — rhythmically and melodically — for my students to learn to play their instruments. I taught a middle-school, instrument-based music class at an international school in Germany. The job was pitched to me as a traditional American style band program, but when I got there, I felt that it just wasn’t working for the students. And if it ain’t working for the students, it ain’t working for the teacher. I slowly changed things. Very slowly. 

Then it became something to help my students learn to improvise. I eventually started making leveled materials and had students working mostly in small groups according to experience and instrument transposition. I wanted students to learn to hear things for themselves. While teaching, I found Christopher Azzara’s Developing Musicianship through Improvisation and that made me realize the value of two-chord songs. Most improvisation books start with the blues — not a bad place to start, but Azzara’s book made me realize it could be even simpler and provide access for people with “no background,” with a jazz background, and with a classical background. Anyone who’s learning music, of course, has some background, even if it’s only listening. I felt volumes two and three of the series went too fast, particularly volume three: suddenly, after doing two songs with three chords, we’re doing Rhythm changes? Secondary dominants? Altered chords? A bit much. The basic model of the method, however, is solid, and the idea of working with a very limited harmony set was appealing. My ideas and materials still needed a lot of work, but I left the job and the town to be a mom as our family moved to Prague. The seeds were planted: break things down into the smallest musical units and find repertoire that fits.

Then it became something to teach ukulele and songwriting. I was offered an opportunity to teach ukulele and saw it as a chance to work out my two-chord ideas. I looked at what chord combinations are possible in open position and started filling in a spreadsheet with songs that fit the bill. We learn a song and then we write a new song over the same chord progression. In this way, we review the chords and we develop a sense of what these chords can do musically and emotionally (you need a relationship with harmonies!). My students have come up with some pretty fabulous little ditties and it keeps them motivated.

Why just two chords? With two chords, it’s one chord or the other chord and that is easy to hear. It’s easier to make up melodies that fit the chords. With more complex songs (i.e., more than two chords), a cadence — the chords that mark the end of a phrase — consists of two chords, so working with two chords can help you hear that, too. 

I am going to try to present all of those things: pedagogical materials, improv materials, songwriting materials, all in the order that I use for teaching ukulele, but they should be used by anyone on any instrument (yes, voice is an instrument).

What does all this stuff mean?

Title (year of publication/composition/appearance, if known)

composer, if known 

style, place of origin

Recording artist, when it’s not the composer

YouTube link

Spotify link

key: The flavor of the song — major, minor, mixolydian, misheberakh, etc. and its tonic (home) note, e.g. F major, C blues

Chords have jobs. Here are five ways to talk about chords and how they function.

Euroclassical function names: These are what is used in English-speaking, classical music pedagogy, but have crossed-over into talking about other musics, with mixed results. But let’s not throw out the baby with the bathwater.

Tagg: Philip Tagg is a musicologist who has come up with some ways to extend and clarify how we think about music that often has roots in Europe (folk, Afro-diaspora musics), but a strict Euroclassical way of naming things doesn’t necessarily clarify what is going on musically. Since Classical music rarely only uses two chords for a whole piece, the songs we’ll be looking at will fall nicely under Tagg’s jurisdiction.

Riemann: Hugo Riemann was a German music theorist, flourishing in the latter half of the 19th century. His ideas are what is taught in Germanic and Slavic speaking countries. I learned about this (the hard way) as an exchange student. Once I got over the shock that the music theory I was learning back home in the good ol’ USA was not universal, I grew rather fond of this terminology. I like to use it because I feel Sp — the relative minor of the subdominant, Subdominantparalele — tells me more about what the ii chord can do more than calling it “a ii chord” or “the supertonic;” it tells me that I can switch it out for the subdominant.

Scale degrees in Roman numerals: The basis of English-speaking nomenclature in both classical and jazz. Even the Germans use it sometimes. Even rock ’n’ rollers use it sometimes. Major chords are uppercase, minor (and diminished) are lowercase, unless you do Schenkerian theory, then they are all uppercase. But again, I like the information at a glance that using uppercase and lowercase affords, and we are dealing here with songs outside Schenkerian jurisdiction. (Schekerian theory can have useful applications outside of Common Practice Period classical music, but with only two chords, not so much…)

Chord names: What you are actually going to play on a ukulele or guitar or what have you. This does not give you a sense of what the function of the chord is; it only is shorthand for what pitches to play. In that sense, it’s the most important because it will get you playing and you can leave the rest of the gobbledygook above for the birds. I’m one of those birds.

I will be looking at the progressions in the following order. Here I’m going to use only capital Roman numeral scale degree names, since we are talking in generalities. 

I-V

I-IV

I-VII

I-II

The keys represented in the songs are based on what is possible in open position on ukulele. Then I will look at the same progressions in other keys, and then some of the more unusual chord pairs (I-VI, I-III). Then I might just start all over. There are a lot of two-chord songs out there.

Mode: Basically the same as “scale,” but I decided that mode is more general and scale is very specific to the Euroclassical tradition. Either way, it’s simply the pitch set that is used in both the melody and the harmony of the song.

Melody: This is all the notes in the melody, in the ranges they appear, using solfege. I use moveable-do, la-based minor (re-based dorian, sol-based mixolydian, etc.). Ed Gordon does a lovely job explaining why this system is best, but in short, we don’t perceive everything as a modification of a major scale, so we shouldn’t teach it that way (scale-degree numbers work the same as do-based minor, so no on that, too). As a mnemonic device for remembering nomenclature or as a way of comparing structural elements, do-based minor/scale degrees is fine; but to train your ears to the aural flavors — the focus here — it’s not. 

Form: The order of ideas (phrases) marked as same, similar, or different. This is based on the melody and not the lyrics. I love talking about form with students because it makes learning music much less scary. “Look it’s the same thing over here! You’ve already learned that bit! Yay!” Also, it’s good for understanding how to structure their own songs.

Meter: How beats are grouped. Again, here I turn to Ed Gordon for terminology, because I think it makes more sense than “simple” and “compound.”

Suggested Time Signature: How I would notate a transcription of the song. You may beg to differ. You may also choose not to notate. But a time signature might mean more to you than “duple, paired.”

Other recordings: The main reason for this is if you want to learn the song in a different key and play along (especially if you are not using this to learn ukulele and are instead, for example, learning to improvise on, say, alto saxophone in which a different key might be a very positive thing). Equally important is simply to hear other possibilities, other voices, other arrangements. Occasionally, one of the other recordings is wildly different (Sing it with me: “One of these things is not like the others…”) and I usually try to point that out.

For learning to improvise, I highly recommend Christopher Azzaria’s book “Developing Musicianship through Improvisation.” Simply get volume 1 and apply the methods to any of the two-chord songs listed here.

I do not do comments on this blog because I do not deal with spam. I do welcome constructive comments if you want to post about it on your own blog. I’ve got a google alert on “two chord songs.”

Jambalaya

Jambalaya (1952)
Hank Williams Sr.
Country, USA

Euroclassical function names:  tonic  dominant
Tagg:tonic  counterpoise
Riemann:TD or D7
scale degrees:IV or V7
chord names:CG or G7

  C    G         C
|:////|////|////|////:|

mode: C major/ionian — C D E F G A B C
melody: drmsltd’
form: ABA’B’
meter: duple
suggested time signature: 2|4

other recordings:
Professor Longhair, C
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, D
John Fogerty, G
Sergio Mendivil y sus Huellas, G (in Spanish!)
Emmylou Harris, A
Brenda Lee, Bb

Here it is, the textbook example of the counterpoise sandwich. Yet, because this four-measure phrase repeats for the entire song, it is also a loop. Here, the V chord is both the outgoing chord (the chord leaving home, the tonic) and the incoming chord (the chord leading back to home, the tonic). The classical part of me does wonder why we need to introduce new terms, when we clearly have a “normal,” in the European Classical Music sense, tonic-dominant relationship with a Perfect Authentic Cadence. But I do also have a part of me that agrees with Tagg: Classical music of the Common Practice Period rarely uses merely two chords, and certainly not for an entire song or piece. Loops in classical music tend to be long, like a chaconne or passacaglia (or other versions of ground bass) and still feel much more like a long line than a loop. The way the chord progression works in a song like this is markedly different and deserves a different way of looking at it and talking about it.

Now, if I’m working with kids, they do not necessarily have all this background in listening to classical music like I do — and let’s face it, your average adult doesn’t either. But the issue is partly that much of the theory and terminology is coming out of the Euroclassical tradition and often the terminology is confusing when applied to folk, rock, pop, and other “vernacular” styles, that have much in common with Euroclassical (which, of course, comes out of and develops alongside European Folk musics and subsequently American Folk musics) but are not the same. I am not suggesting throwing out the Euroclassical terminology, but extending it and adapting it where necessary.

Hell

Hell (1996)
Squirrel Nut Zippers
Jazz (Early Swing)

key: D minor

Euroclassical function names:  tonic  dominant
Tagg:tonic  counterpoise
Riemann:tD or D7
scale degrees:iV or V7
chord names:DmA or A7

 Dm             A7
|////|////|////|////|
 A7             Dm
|////|////|////|////|

mode: D minor — D E F G A Bb (B) C (C#) D
melody: l (li) t d r (ri) m f s si l’ t’
form: verse – AB; chorus – AB
meter: duple
suggested time signature: 4|4, 2|2

Tagg doesn’t talk about this progression specifically, but it is a common occurence in two-chord songs, particularly with tonic-dominant pairs. The second phrase is the inverse of the first. Although each chord is heard for the same amount of time, the placement of the chords in the larger structure may disqualify it from being a shuttle. We might consider it to be a counterpoise sandwich, that is, a counterpoise filling between two slices of tonic, except the slices are different “thicknesses,” so to speak. But this phrase inversion is common enough that we might do well to consider it as its own category. We will see it again and repeatedly.

Working with children, as I so often do, this song usually gets an eyebrow raise from the kids themselves, as “hell” is a word they have learned is bad to say. And so this song gave me pause, too. But I decided there’s a difference between talking about hell as a place (especially one that you don’t want to go to) and using it as a swear (“What the hell?!” or telling someone to go to hell). Since the lyrics fall squarely into the narrative of talking about hell as an undesirable place, I feel that this song is okay for 8+. You may certainly feel differently! In my experience, once kids realize what the song is about, they often like it.

Despite being from 1996, the style is very much 1920s early Swing, a style which enjoyed a alterna-pop revival in the late 1990s.

Clementine/Found a Peanut

Clementine (1884)
Percy Montrose

Andy Z

Found a Peanut (1940s)
folk, USA

key: F major

Euroclassical function names:  tonic  dominant
Tagg:tonic  counterpoise
Riemann:TD or D7
scale degrees:IV or V7
chord names:FC or C7

 F           C
|///|///|///|///|
 C   F   C   F
|///|///|///|///|

mode: F major/ionian — F G A Bb C D E F
melody: STdrmfs
form: AB
meter: triple
suggested time signature: 3|4

other recordings:
(Clementine)
Bing Crosby, Db
Gene Autry, Eb
Pete Seeger, Eb
Jay Laga’aia, E
Tom Lehrer, F (just for fun)
Bobby Joe Bratcher, G

(Found a Peanut)
Susie Tallman, C
Lisa Loeb, A

I started with “Clementine,” but discovered “Found a Peanut” (never sang it as a kid!) and realized that lyrically it was much closer to where my 9- & 10-year-old students were at, than a old-timey death ballad. I suppose it’s closer to where I am at, as well.

What do we call a “folk” song when we actually know who the composer is? Is it just a pop song? A pop song from the 1880s? Just because there weren’t top 40 countdowns on the non-existent radio doesn’t mean we don’t know what songs were popular. Is it country? Is it western?

The first phrase has a clear tonic-counterpoise structure, second has a counterpoise-tonic/dominant-tonic/V-I shuttle.

Joshua Fought the Battle at Jericho

Joshua Fought the Battle at Jericho (1800s)
African-American Spiritual, USA

Moonshine Music Co.

Euroclassical function names:  tonic  dominant
Tagg:tonic  counterpoise
Riemann:TD or D7
scale degrees:IV or V7
chord names:FC or C7

chorus:
 Dm
|/ / / / |/ / / / |
 A        Dm  A
|/ / / / |/ / / / |
 Dm
|/ / / / |/ / / / |
 A        Dm
|/ / / / |/ / / / |

verse:
 Dm
|/ / / / |/ / / / |
 Dm           A
|/ / / / |/ / / / |
 Dm
|/ / / / |/ / / / |
 A        Dm  A
|/ / / / |/ / / / |

mode: D minor — D E F G A Bb (B) C (C#) D
melody: ltdrml’
form: verse – ABAC; chorus – DDDC
meter: duple
suggested time signature: 4|4, 2|2

other recordings:
Wee Sing, D minor (Way better than I would have expected! But more of a jazz arrangement with a modulation…)
Hoot Chissum, D minor
Willie Wright, Eb minor (The vocal performance on this one is very much worth a listen.)
Fisk Jubilee Singers, Eb minor
Harrod’s Jubilee Singers, Ab minor
Mahalia Jackson, A minor
Clara Ward, A minor
Odetta, A minor
Paul Robeson, Bb minor
Ella Jenkins, Bb minor
Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Bb minor (Recommended by Ken Thomson!)
Pete Seeger, B minor

This is an African-American spiritual, based on the story in the Old Testament about Joshua leading the Israelites against Canaan (Joshua 6:1-21).

(I would love a songbook of all the spirituals in Biblical order! Why read the Bible when you could sing it? Of course, then I’d need, like, all the Renaissance choir pieces in Biblical order, all the atonal settings in Biblical order, and so on…)

Spirituals have a special place in American culture and history. These songs were really a matter of life and death for the slaves who sang them:

from the Library of Congress website:

“The African population in the American colonies had initially been introduced to Christianity in the seventeenth century. Uptake of the religion was relatively slow at first. But the slave population was fascinated by Biblical stories containing parallels to their own lives and created spirituals that retold narratives about Biblical figures like Daniel and Moses. As Africanized Christianity took hold of the slave population, spirituals served as a way to express the community’s new faith, as well as its sorrows and hopes.”

Pamela Crosby writes:

“The slave’s acceptance of Christianity, while experiencing the conflicting behavior of slave owners, is a testament to the power of the gospel. Often slaves believed that the salvation and new life of which they learned when “worshipping” with their owners would happen not on earth, but, rather, when they went to heaven. While many slaves understood God’s promises were meant for all people while on earth, they also knew they could not openly pray for deliverance and equality. Imagine hearing of a God who loves and cares for all, who provides for needs and urges God’s children to ask for their needs, but all the while being afraid to request openly for fear of beating or death. In their songs, the slaves named issues and fears they could not express publicly. Meeting in the woods or arbors, out of the sight and hearing of slave owners and overseers, the slaves were free to worship and praise, to express their true feelings and to offer unbridled prayers and requests to God. They could lay their burdens down and find strength to face another day. Many of the spirituals carried dual meanings and symbolic messages unknown to slave owners.“

Skip to My Lou

Skip to My Lou

Skip to My Lou (1800s)
folk, USA

Leadbelly

key: F major

Euroclassical function names: tonic  dominant  
Tagg:tonic  counterpoise  
Riemann:TD or D7
scale degrees:IV or V7
chord names:FC or C7

 F         C
|/ / |/ / |/ / |/ / |
 F         C    F
|/ / |/ / |/ / |/ / |

mode: F major/ionian — F G A Bb C D E F
melody: Tdrmfs
form: ABAC [alternately, AA’AB]
meter: duple
suggested time signature: 2|4

other recordings:
Charlie Hope, D
Raffi, E
Pete Seeger, G.
Elizabeth Mitchell, Bb.

A classic, American song and partner-stealing dance. Lots of lyrics have been made up for this one — just compare the Pete Seeger version and the Elizabeth Mitchell one. You should definitely make up your own, too. This can be sung, of course, like all songs, in any major key you like, but F is always a good key for singing with the under-11 set.

F and C are also nice and easy to start with on ukulele, especially if you use a 3-finger F chord — then all you have to do is lift and place the same two fingers. I personally do not usually use a 3-finger F, but for the pedagogical reasons I mentioned, I like to start this way.

This song illustrates Tagg’s “counterpoise kickback” concept. Tagg suggests that a song with few harmonies doesn’t provide a sense of “dominant” in the classical sense; the chord that is not the tonic becomes simply “another place to be,” which he calls the counterpoise. This song starts off like a shuttle — oscillating evenly between two chords, tonic and counterpoise — but a shuttle like this wouldn’t end on the tonic. In order to end the phrase on the tonic, the duration of the counterpoise is halved in order to finish the phrase on the tonic. (Tagg, Everyday Harmony, 334-335) Because we are dealing with songs with only two chords, we will see this kind of structure a lot.

about —short

I decided that two-chord songs would be good for a) learning to improvise, b) learning to compose, and c) learning to play ukulele. It became more of a rabbit hole than I ever expected and I spend probably too much time hunting down two-chord songs. I hope you, too, will find this useful.

Who is this, anyway?

Andrea La Rose plays flutes big and small, ukulele (just the smallest one), and lots of little whistley things. She improvises (mostly in the free improv tradition) and composes (mostly in the quirky chamber music tradition). She teaches ukulele and songwriting to people 8 and up, and private instrumental lessons. Living in Prague, she struggles with Czech and enjoys riding public transit with her wife and son. 

If you want a long-winded deeper explanation, you can read the long about page. Otherwise, just listen and enjoy.

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