Since I'm in the final round I'm only discussing the shadows.
How will people deal with this challenge? and how was I going to approach it myself? I had all kinds of thoughts about it over the past week, and was super curious to hear the entries.
First, I was thinking there would be some Working Class Hero type songs
https://open.spotify.com/track/1yKQBy7o ... 8bbdd146e9, in which the music essentially served as a Lyrics Delivery System. There was at least one, but we didn't get a lot of story songs like I thought we might, though
Bucket Hat Bobby Matheson had a lyric-heavy story with "Two Cords". (Still trying to envision someone whose face is in the dirt while they are simultaneously staring straight up

. Also, I seriously doubt one can teach heartstrings anything, whether they are
taut or slack...)
Hot Pink Halo looked like they had a lot of lyrics with "One Two Punch", but it looks like more than it is, since the same stanzas were just copy-pasted, and most of the time she's just singing fuck you to a politician in sort of a sweet gentle voice - the effect is trippy and I can hear it being produced as this super cool creepy thing...
I also thought there might be songs relying on a catchy bass hook like this
https://open.spotify.com/track/76hfruVv ... 1ca9d941ab. I REALLY wanted to do something like that song, but not having experience with it I decided against it. It wasn't going to end up being as good as that and I'd be disappointed. (I love that song though.)
Jocko Homomorphism was the only entry that ventured down the techno path. I didn't even notice that "Tuck and Roll" was only two chords for that reason. Interesting how this challenge was so wheelhouse-y for some, while others sounded more like it was a struggle. (If I sang like JH but also did songs in the style of JH, I don't know quite what I would do. They don't match for me, but I don't have any ideas. )
One of my big questions all week was would these songs feel natural with only two chords, or would they sound like the songwriter struggled with the challenge? How would
I feel about them as a listener? Would they drone on and get boring? I am absolutely harmony-forward in both my composing and my listening preference. Not enough chords is a frequent complaint from me, for better or worse. What two chords besides I-IV and I-V would I hear? I was wondering specifically whether I would hear a combo in which one of the chords was not a I or i chord. I think
See-Man-Ski came the closest with his Radioheady "Love Is". By using the F and A he did, he gave himself the opportunity to come up with all sort of interesting extensions on the basic major chords, and that was fun. It was an ambitious idea he could have taken even further had he used more instrumentation.
I also guessed that the success of the songs would depend on the groove that was established, and in that regard I think I was right.
Stacking Theory's sort of lovely indie-rock number sets up a nice groove with pretty little melodies and the I-IV never feels constrained by not having more chords. I know from experience how hard it is to get that groove to sound right, so hats off, dudes. When I've ever been able to hit that groove sweet spot, it feels like the song is 3/4 done already.
I wondered would any entries only have ONE chord? IIRC there was no stipulation that it had to have exactly two, only that we were limited to two. As it turns out, I think there IS a song that is is only one chord, albeit inadvertently, and that is
Cybronica's "Yesterday's Mascara", which is really just in E minor with a first inversion to a G bass. Funny, she had a whole 'nother chord available that she didn't even need! But again, it didn't feel constrained by not enough harmonic interest. How are people able to do this? Lucky thing I was wearing two hats today because hats off to you too for that.
At the conclusion of the contest, I find it interesting that this is the only challenge with
three -- by my count -- songs which specifically referenced the challenge itself,
See-Man-Ski's "Brief", "
Bucket Hat Bobby Matheson's "Two Cords" (only via the title) and Sober's entry. None of the other challenges had much of that at all. Which makes me think this was a hard one for many.
As for me, as I said, my first instinct was dance/techno, a lot of which I love, but I decided it wasn't in my wheelhouse, and since this is a game after all, and the whole fun of any game is for everyone to try to be the winner, I decided to play for real, and thought I'd have a better chance sticking to what I'm good at rather than trying to go outside what I normally do.
Then I wondered if I could go without a I chord at all, and that's when I thought the ii7/V7 approach might work, which is where I ended up going. The theme seemed exceedingly sad and sort of like a big resigned sigh, and was pretty enough as a piano tune that I didn't want to sing it. And I started coming up with little three-word phrases in counterpoint, which is where the "story" of a breakup sprang from. After a day or so of messing around with the theme and the chords, allowing myself to invert the two chords and add extensions, I had way more ideas down than I could use, which is where the idea of a theme and variations came from.
Everyone that I had hear it thought it was so sad and that the lyrics seemed really real and personal, but honestly, there is no connection to any real persons living or dead. People's reactions have all been this sort of somber admiration. Unlike my earlier entries "Gray" and "Snorkeling" which had happy energized reactions. But I was tickled by how my little theme was just dripping with regret and sorrow, and it made me want to see about exploring that emotion while staying to the two-chord challenge. How much could I stretch and pull this two chord taffy? Eek.
The song simply imagines the routine sadness of a couple breaking up. Weekday afternoon, raining, surrounded by mementos of their happier times. And while the breakup itself is the saddest part of the experience on the surface, there's this undercurrent of routine-ness permeating the ordeal. People break up every day, but it's still so painful being in the middle of it. So, I realize it's not a rip roarin' hootenany of a song, but I'm hoping the judges won't mark me down for making them briefly depressed.
My daughter plays violin, my sister is sax and clarinet, and my wife sings. I learned a ton from this challenge.
Lastly, thank you SpinTunes!! This contest was positively exhausting. I knew I would regret not giving it my all, and so I gave this contest everything I had. When I sent Send on this last one, I felt like I wasn't going to be up for writing more music for about 50 years. I was gulping oxygen through a mask in my sweat-soaked songwriter uniform. Add to that my little reviewgate which I still feel bad about, and it was quite a journey I've been on. So glad I was invited. It took everything out of me, and I'm a better person for it.