The song is about dancing, being happy and not caring what others think. The video depicts everyday people dancing in their work or leisure clothes. This mood is typical for many hits and it tries to associate the positive feeling of „you can dance, too, don't care what others think“ with the song.
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Read More »Today I will analyze the song "Can’t Stop The Feeling" by Justin Timberlake in terms of music theory and its harmonic content. The idea is to bring the dry topic of music theory to the real world and help you understand why songs like „Can’t Stop the Feeling“ work and sound like they do. Since the pre-chorus section of this song is particularly interesting, I split this article into two posts (part 1 and part 2). So let’s get started with part 1…
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Read More »The verse uses the same chords as the chorus. It’s actually rather common in pop songs to use the same chord changes for verse and chorus. As long as other parts of the arrangement change, the familiar chords glue verse and chorus together. There should always be at least one element that stays the same from one part to the other — otherwise the song falls apart.
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Read More »Harmonically the pre-chorus continues with the subdominant of F major: Bb. But in a typical funk/soul/blues/gospel fashion, this chord is interpreted like a dominant. Originating in the blues style, the tonic, subdominant and dominant are often voiced like dominant chords and played with a minor 7th. This tradition is also audible in gospel, funk and soul. If you want your song to sound like these styles, think about interpreting the I, IV and V chords all as dominants. One could also interpret the move from C79sus4 to Bb79sus4 as a simple shift down of the chord. You can almost always get away with shifting a chord up or down any amount of steps, as long as you keep the voicing the same. Yes, that even works for chords „outside“ the current key. Why does this work? Again it’s the simple rule of keeping some elements the same (the internal structure of intervals in the voicing) while changing other elements (the key center). The last two chords of the pre-chorus are a cadence leading back to the tonic of the chorus. You might ask, how this cadence ( Fm Bb13sus4 ) can lead back to a C major tonic chord!? After all, these two chords are a ii-V7 cadence in the key of Eb (!). I will solve this riddle in part 2 of this analysis.
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