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Norwegian Wood

Norwegian Wood

This innovative song, composed and recorded in 1965 by the Beatles, introduced the sitar to the Western pop music world.  It is written in a compound 6/8 meter and utilizes Mixolydian and Dorian modalities.  It is in a simple verse/chorus configuration.  The intro states the verse melody, first on guitar and then doubled by the sitar.  It is drawn from the E mixolydian mode.  In the Key of E,  it is played at capo II on the guitar, and so rendered with D, G and C chord shapes.  

The chorus is, in a manner,  in the parallel minor.  This is qualified by the fact the verse is in the E mixolydian mode rather than major mode and the chorus is in the E Dorian mode rather than minor.   This gets into the larger tonal idea that the modes may be roughly divided into major type sonorities – lydian, ionian  and mixolydian (subjectively, from brightest to darkest sounding)  in that the tonic chord is major.  The other modes – Dorian, Aeolian and Phrygian (again, brightest to darkest)  have a minor i chord and thus a minor sounding feel and sonority.  There is a strong ii-V cadence at the end of the chorus taking the song from the Dorian mode back to the Major I chord of the verse.

Norwegian Wood guitar riff

Here is a pdf version Norwegian Wood for further study

and here is a link to the WIKI article on the song

R T

Musician, composer, teacher, designer

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