packbat: A bat wearing a big asexual-flag (black-gray-white-purple) backpack. (chess)
packbat ([personal profile] packbat) wrote2008-05-21 08:05 pm
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Album Composition

It seems to me a pattern: albums begin well, and end weakly. The first track on the Beatles' Abbey Road is "Come Together", a big winner - the last tracks are "The End" and "Her Majesty", two unknowns. The Indigo Girls' eponymous album begins with "Closer to Fine" and ends with "History of Us". Phil Collins' Face Value starts with "In the Air Tonight", ends with "Tomorrow Never Knows". Tracy Chapman starts with "Talkin' Bout a Revolution", ends with "For You".

Joni Mitchell's "Clouds" is a notable exception - the big winner, "Both Sides Now", is the final track - but still. Is it that people buy based on the first N tracks? Do they?

[identity profile] packbat.livejournal.com 2008-05-22 01:53 am (UTC)(link)
They're good points - (2) hadn't occurred to me, but it's very true. (And the stickers are irritating - especially when I've never heard of the track they pick.)

I have a friend who approaches album composition like an art, both in considering published albums and in making mix compilations.


Well they should! There's a very real difference between a good album and the more obvious sort of "Greatest Hits" disc.

But yes, starting with something attention-grabbing is good. But ending on the right note is good, too! It's a shame.

[identity profile] fadethecat.livejournal.com 2008-05-22 05:40 am (UTC)(link)
On the ending being weak... I haven't given it as much thought, but I suspect the problem is related to the way a lot of CDs these days (and a few tapes, as I recall) end in a 'bonus track', whether it's an extra song or a remixed one or some little snippet of goofing around. It's the sort of thing that gets put on there because the band wants it, and not necessarily because anyone else thinks it's good.

So you have a song the musician loves, wants to keep, isn't so great. They only do so many songs; it's a rough fight to keep it off entirely. Or maybe you need it to pad out the length anyway, even if you're not so enamored of it. Where's the best place to put it, from a marketing standpoint? In the place least listened to: the very end of the album. A lot of people listen to albums straight through, in order, even in this day and age. It stands to reason they'll start from the beginning a lot more often than they'll listen all the way to the end.

Which makes for a weak overall feeling if you want a nice cohesive album, but...most people aren't doing The Wall, they're doing three great songs, four good songs, and two or three more they came up with and tossed on there to make it look like a full album. Coherence and overall composition get sacrificed for "We need more than seven songs or people won't buy this."

[identity profile] packbat.livejournal.com 2008-05-22 12:16 pm (UTC)(link)
That's definitely a coherent story - that's definitely where the "bonus" live tracks always end up. And if the album is an album-level composition, you have to start at the start and keep going. Ah, well.