mean speed® music exact tempo breakdown | Eric Clapton “Tears In Heaven” | The Ultimate Song Of Maudlin Bittersweetness | Legal tempo still maps, Legal YouTube® video, Purchased legally with tax paid on same a iTunes®

TEARS IN HEAVEN is taken from the CD from the soundtrack of the movie Rush, performed and written by Eric Clapton.

tears-in-heaven-tempo-still-map-Eric-Clapton

tears-in-heaven-tempo-still-map-Eric-Clapton

Of any speed at which popular songs are played, we are looking right into the face of *mean* – mean in that it is the speed at which the song cannot make up its mind whether it wants to be slow or mid-tempo, and *mean* in that the bittersweet memories cited during these songs is always that of precious glory *tinged* with a bitter aftertaste. The group within meanspeed music theory, or “mean emotion,” called Bittersweet comes out with an average tempo of 77-78 beats per minute.

modern-tempo-graph-speed-of-bittersweetness-eric-clapton-tears-in-heaven

modern tempo graph - speed of bittersweetness - eric clapton - TEARS IN HEAVEN

modern tempo map - Theme from RUSH - "Tears In Heaven," by Eric Clapton

If you look back, listen back to the 1970s classic: Helen Reddy’s “You and Me Against The World,” you will find -
1) the song is played *live in the studio* at this odd speed;
2) if you play the songs back to back, it sounds to me as though Eric Clapton subconsciously borrowed the Reddy song, that 77 1/2 groove, the √60″ x 10-1 groove.

Eric might have heard it – but one cannot “steal” a speed, as Phil Collins defended himself in asserting that “Sussudio” was not intellectual theft of Prince’s “Little Red Corvette.” Beyond the feeling of the tug of a mean bittersweetness in both songs, which ties them together, the harmonies and melodies are completely different.

The most haunting element where the Reddy song foreshadows of a child dying before a parent no one speaks of the connection between these two songs. Eric Clapton is starting to talk about his son’s death, the inspiration for the song, 10 years after the accident. No one speaks of it because the idea of a 4-year-old falling 550 feet onto a city street. Such is respectful however, the taboo keeps people obsessing about this song. The song’s power lies in the territoriality of the speed and emotion. When the song is going through your head and you *know* why you are hearing a tear-jerker, you may feel a burst of self-control that never goes away. This happens for different people at different speed ranges. There are 1000s of studies that back same. Meanspeed Music, though, is the first, as far as I know, to publish in November 1992 in Washington and November 1995 on the we that *a particular sequence was predictive of an emotive type of musical expression. Asserting that there exists such a speed range as this has not been disputed or denied in 12 years. That would be because when you just look at the lists on the pages, the truth speaks for itself. Not to be falsely humble, but mean speed music theory is one of those: “Why the xxxx didn’t *I* think of that?!?!” ideas. Dumb luck? Huge factor – I was lucky along the way to defining these mean speed ranges, or “meanemotions.” It will become obvious to you. What humbles me the most is that I invented, created and built *nothing* – I was just the first that I know of to articulate the emotions could be broken down into time sequencing. There are some in the scientific community who say: “Emotion is an untestable variable, therefore the thesis fails .

tears-in-heaven-speed-map

tears-in-heaven-speed-map

Others hear and see the light. Be not afraid of the engineer behind the glass in the studio! Just know what the speed of that groove going round and round in your head is saying. Your self-control will be boosted immeasurably. Cost: $0.00, with the catch that you actually have to read a page or two that demystified some of your favorite songs. Up to you, dear reader, if you want to see the woman behind the curtain. Of course, the “no place like home” analogy carries as far as groove. Tempo is all good and well on its own, as the Wizard so maintains. But there is nothing like just rocking out live – see other posts for that, thanks. Your time will be repaid every day if you wake up to the song of a speed that contain the mood in which you want to find yourself – the “music playing in your head” – see, The Beatles, LADY MADONNA lyrics.

Meanspeed Music Modern Tempo map - Three Dimensional Beatles Tempo Chart - FIXING A HOLE

beatles-tempo-map-fixing-a-hole-contiguous-calibration-4-779451

tears-in-heaven-speed-graph-3-Dimensional

tears-in-heaven-speed-graph-3-Dimensional

In the lyrics of Tears In Heaven we have a completely abstract story: the performer imagines that he goes to Heaven, meets someone (to whom we are not introduced) he knew many years before and wonders in song whether that person will still remember them.
The bridge of the song features has a 4-line poem about the lament of time passage itself. Clapton’s point seems that at times it seems like time, in and of itself, reminds you that one day death has your number.

tears-in-heaven-bpm-graph-

tears-in-heaven-bpm-graph-

Musically, this is a most basic and simple harmony. Along with the melody, I can imagine of some substituted the words, ‘asked in April” for “tear in heaven”, as in, “Would you marry me? If I asked you in April?” One can imagine another who speaks no English, learning the song from sheet music only, and making the mistake of making a proposal like that.
As to whether this song is more bitter than sweet, most online comments I read talked about one story after another about people playing this song, live many times, and crying their eyes out at funerals.

Mean Speed the theory is backed up with many “singer-songwriter” arena. In the area of grace, I hypothesized that James Taylor is successful recording songs in that range: 70-76 bpm. In the group of ceremony, Elton John dominates, and at the same time most of his popular songs lie in that category.

Clapton is as Bruce, Sting, Phil Collins, Paul Simon—used in this theory multiple times because they are “singer-songwriters” who have success at almost every speed in general, as I try to feature here. Clapton *is* successful in other categories. So said, like his “Let It Grow,”within this small 2 beat per minute range of 76.6-78.4 beats per minute, songs are indicative of bittersweetness. The *Too* long goodbye – the ‘better to have love and lost than not loved at all’ myth – the horror of desperately trying not in public to cry and failing, adding on to your unnecessary embarrassment.

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The production of Tears In Heaven made use of a click track or metronome track or drum machine, so as you see in the charts, Clapton plays no measure faster than 78 or slower than 76. Therefore, from start to end the speed remains exactly the as a linear trend, and there is no overall acceleration or deceleration.

Maybe the relentless 76.8 beats per minute sequence only serves to make Clapton’s point: Time is the relentlessness (see, Billy Joel’s “2,000 Years) and a weight in itself is bitter – we are dead but we are in a good space now, heaven: sweet.

mean speed, or the speed of the song expressed as beats per minute= 76.8 beats per minute.
average beat= 915 milliseconds.
mean slow phase= 1.093 beats per second.
corresponding pitch in equal temperament=327.68 Hertz, found between the notes E4= 329.628 Hertz and much farther aways and D#4/Eb4=311.127 Hertz.
mean emotion according to meanspeed music theory=bittersweetness

Republished March 13, 2012, after WordPress® admittedly took my site down for a reason into which they had not inquired sufficiently enough to know that reason did not exist.  IN SO DOING, the apologetic WordPress® said [I could have the site back] but all backups of text and images thereon were my backup problem.  Fair enough.  It is the first huge mistake WordPress® had made in my 6 years of using their Free service. For a free service especially, the customer service was surprisingly fast and the apology about the work needing to be re-uploaded was sincere.  That impressed me more than I was angry that I was going to need to recreate the same thing.  Luckily I have a wife, who by definition is smarter than I am, and I had everything backed up and most of the site re-uploaded from a Western-Digital® hard drive.  That was a true nerdy blogger experience: meaning, I don’t “blog” or write about speed, music and emotion day after day because I need to apply my wonderful computer skills.  No – the opposite!  The main ideas on this page were copyrighted in November 1992, no computer graphics, not one chart needed.  Everything was asserted mathematically from a 10,000 song database.  Meanspeed®/meanpeed®, mean speed® and meanspeed® were service marked and trademarked in January 2010 after an August 2009 application for only meanspeed®.  I thank the United States Patent and Trademark Office for coming to me and offering me the two variations on same – given what I was doing.  This is an offer I could not refuse.  It made me trust the legal staff especially at the U.S.P.T.O.

These trademarks were not sought and granted in order that I sell it or anything derived from it – though 9 out of 10 people who sell computer “apps”, in my opinion, *would*.  The reason the website was blocked for 36 hours early last winter is because someone was complaining that I was “[trying to profit]” from my work.  Uh – do you see any gift shop here?  Is there a “donate here” button?  No.  If one is greedy, they can see where an idea that is kinda big IF it is correct, and it seems to be correct: they will look for ways to profit therefrom.  However, I am only exhibiting a Pattern In Nature that I discovered through working very hard and getting very lucky, many times – and then many more times.

/Ian Andrew Schneider/

October 9, 2007

re-written on 3.12.12

You had a BAD DAY, you had a BAD DAY! “bad day” CREATIVITY, SELLING OUT AND SURVIVAL AS THE STARVING ARTIST – Tempo maps and Video of Dan “I sold my best song to the National Football League” Powter

Image

IN 2006, Danny Powter had the most famous one-hit wonder song ever to become property of the National Football League called BAD DAY.

Bad Day - Tempo Mapping - New Jersey Free School - no lyrics - no mp3

Bad Day - Tempo Mapping - New Jersey Free School - no lyrics - no mp3

Mr. Tony Dungy's favorite songL One Hit Wondre Extraordinaire BAD DAY

BAD DAY

Even for Ricci and Theron, a very "BAD DAY" - NEW JERSEY FEE SCHOOL TEMPO MAP - © 2010 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

THERON/RICCI show what a BAD DAY is in the fantastic film - MONSTER

“Bad Day” is a pop song written by Canadian singer Daniel Powter. It was released as the first single from his second album Daniel Powter (2005) and achieved a huge success throughout the world, reaching the #1 spot in the U.S. and Ireland. In the U.S. it was a massive smash hit, and became the most successful single of 2006 as ranked by Billboard Magazine. It was also used in the opening sequence of the movie Alvin and the Chipmunks, where the chipmunks were singing the song as they stored the nuts for the winter.
“Bad Day” was used as the 2005 ‘Goodbye Song’ in the fifth installment of the hit show American Idol.
Despite the song’s massive worldwide success, Powter failed to release any more pop hits, proving to be a very successful one-hit wonder.
Contents
Music video
The boy and girl in split screen from the music video.

The music video is directed by Marc Webb and features two single people, a male (Jason Adelman) and a female (Samaire Armstrong), waking and going about their daily schedule. The video shows this happening over a three-day period, but makes no distinction between the days apart from the different clothing worn for each day. The main event is the two adding graffiti to the same wall, separately, on each day, culminating in the completion of a heart. At the end of the video, life mirrors the image created on the wall, with the boy offering the soaking wet girl a red umbrella in the pouring rain, as a cab stops for them. Parts of it are shot in a split-screen. Throughout the video, Powter is shown with his tuque, playing his piano. The Metro Red Line subway in Los Angeles was used during the shooting of this video and prominently featured throughout. The area where the two meet and add the graffiti on the wall is on the mezzanine level of Pershing Square Station in Downtown Los Angeles.
Critical reception
Billboard called the song “one of the great discoveries of the year”[2] and the top One Hit Wonder of the 2000s.
Release history
Country     Release Date
Europe     January 2005 (2005-01)
Australia     June 27, 2005 (2005-06-27)
United Kingdom     July 25, 2005 (2005-07-25)
United States     January 17, 2006 (2006-01-17)

“Bad Day” reached number seven on the Canadian Singles Chart; it was also successful in the United Kingdom, where it reached number two on the UK Singles Chart after it was used in an advertising campaign for Coca-Cola.[4] In the United States, it reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100. The song grew in popularity in the United States when it was used in the fifth season of American Idol in the farewell video packages for eliminated contestants. It was also featured in the compilation album Voices from the FIFA World Cup during the 2006 FIFA World Cup. It is also currently a popular song to play in sporting events, usually whenever the home team loses. It was even played after the 2008 U.S. Presidential election after John McCain’s concession speech.
“Bad Day” has been certified 2x platinum by the RIAA in the U.S. for digital sales of over 2 million. The song was featured as a free download on the iTunes Store from August 2–9, 2005. It was nominated for a 2007 Grammy Award for “Best Male Pop Vocal Performance”.
Billboard named “Bad Day” the No. 1 Hot 100 song of 2006. It is one of three “one hit wonders” to become Billboard’s single of the year, following 1958’s “Volare (Nel Blu Di Pinto Di Blu)” by Domenico Modugno and 1962’s “Stranger On The Shore” by Mr. Acker Bilk.[citation needed]
On the 16th July 2008, it was revealed by BBC News that “Bad Day” was the most played song in the UK during the period 2003-2008.
[edit] Cover versions
“Bad Day” was covered by the fictional music group Alvin and the Chipmunks for their 2007 film Alvin and the Chipmunks. Their version made the charts in January 2008, debuting (and so far, to date) peaking at #86 on the Billboard Hot 100.
“Bad Day” was also covered by Kidz Bop, also the first Kidz Bop song to be a single.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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“Bad Day”
Single by Daniel Powter
from the album Daniel Powter
Released     January 2005 (2005-01)
Format     CD single, digital download
Recorded     2004
Genre     Pop rock
Length     3:53
Label     Warner Music Group (USA)
Sony BMG (Europe/Korea/Latin America)
Writer(s)     Daniel Powter
Certification     3× Platinum (RIAA)
Daniel Powter singles chronology

BAD DAY - A NJ FREE SCHOOL TEMPO MAP COMPARISON OF ELECTRIC AND ACOUSTIC VERSION

BAD DAY - A NJ FREE SCHOOL TEMPO MAP COMPARISON OF ELECTRIC AND ACOUSTIC VERSION

/Ian Andrew Schneider/

The NJ Free School

a division of the MEANSPEED® MUSIC COMPANY

January 30. 2010

Bad Day by Dan Powter - tempo graphic by the NJ Free School

BAD DAY - DANIEL ONE HIT WONDER POWTER'S TEMPO - sold to the National Football League