Your love is a magic carpet ride
I just gotta get out of here
Your love is a deliberate uncertainty
I just gotta get out of here
I just gotta get out of here
I gotta get out of here
Your love is gone, gone, gone
The song "Roller Coaster" is a metaphor. I found a skeleton of it on my dictaphone as I sat down to review my fragments last week. I'm not sure why I never developed it. It's not the best song in the world, but, at least, it deserved being finished...to be made into a complete thought.
When people hear these kinds of songs from me, they often ask if I'm having relationship troubles. No, I'm not. That's were the analogy comes in. The song uses the portrait of a bad relationship to convey a sense of entrapment. The metaphor can then affect the listener in two ways. For one, someone may relate the comparison to her own relationship and think "yeah, I feel that way sometimes." For two, someone might hear this and say, "yeah, I need to get off of these anti-depressants," or, "Wow, I'm really drinking too much" or, "I'm smoking too much weed." Then, the listener might (assuming he likes the song to begin with) feel like he has to change something. To walk into light we must ascend from darkness.
In listening to the song (I have the track on as I write this), this honestly sounds the most like the stuff I've done in the past. The date on my dictaphone was late 2002, so that would make sense that it sounds like something that could have been on the MG4 EP. Being so, I approached the production with sparse instrumentation. Acoustic guitar, drums, one electric guitar (a strat) and a simple bass line (played with the thumb). I added a B3 patch (that's a vintage organ sound) to the background to thicken up the exterior.
Where I embellished this song was in the vocal sound. I sang in a low register for the most part. Then, I doubled and tripled the chorus parts. It made for a lush experience.
When producing a song, it's a good idea to try to give the listener a different experience each time a new part of a song enters. The first verse features just some hand percussion with the acoustic guitar. The second verse has the bass enter with some additional percussion. The chorus has the whole band enter...this is a good way to make the chorus jump out. The third verse brings things down a bit, but only by having the electric guitar drop out and play some accent notes. The second chorus features a panned and intensely EQ'd vocal answer..."I gotta get outta here." Then there's a solo/bridge. Then there's a chorus where one of the passing chords is changed slightly. All in all, the idea with production is to make the three minute journey one that is entertaining. One way to do that is to vary the sections of your songs.
Your love is a roller coaster
Always up and then down
Turned around
Never knowing why
Always high and then low
Fast and then slow
Never knowing why
I gotta get out of here
I gotta get off of this roller coaster
Always hot and then cold
Scared and then bold
Never knowing why
I gotta get out of here
I gotta get off of this roller coaster
I gotta get out of here
I gotta get off of this roller coaster
I gotta get out of here
I gotta get off of this roller coaster
Mike Garrigan on
"Roller Coaster":
Lyrics gathered by J. Hodge
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