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Rap Music | Ghostface Killer | Musical Talmud: Shakey Dog
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Musical Talmud: Shakey Dog

musicaltalmud_shakeyAgain, I feel like I’ve missed the whole point of the Musical Talmud series, choosing a song that tells a vivid but utterly unambiguous narrative.  If you can’t figure out what Shakey Dog is about without my help, there’s probably no hope for you.  (I mean, yeah, he uses some slang, but that’s what urban dictionary’s for.)  Still, I find this song fascinating, and this seems like the forum to talk about it in.

So yeah.  When Fishscale came out in early 2006, it was quickly lauded as the rap album of the year – maybe the album of the year – and it hasn’t left my Ipod since.  You can understand why the critics got so excited.  It’s really, really good.  But beyond that, I found it interesting that so many commentators devoted special praise to the opening song, Shakey Dog.

What seems to come up again and again in discussions of this song is the lack of a traditional song structure.  Oh, pop critics don’t use that kind of language, but they’ll wax whapsodic about the “three minutes of day-to-day door-hammering without a pause” or the “straight 3 and a half minute narrative,” depending on who’s holding the stopwatch.  The exact length of the song isn’t important:  what matters is that rather than splitting the song up into a series of sections, Ghostface just raps a single narrative, start to finish.

Most rap songs are, formally speaking, very rigid.  You get a hook – what would probably be called a chorus in most other styles – a verse, the hook again, another verse, possibly from another rapper… wash, rinse, repeat.  Wu-Tang alumni tend to be more adventurous than most, but here Ghostface has taken it to another level by creating a song with no form whatsoever.

Well…

Maybe not.  If you just listen to Lewis Parker’s beat, there’s a pretty clear structure outlined by the harmonic changes.  You can hear the first one about :30 into the video above.    Most of the song is in E minor (henceforth I), but there’s also a recurring section built on a B chord (henceforth V), where the texture gets thicker and the vocal samples come in.  The form is still very simple — it’s what a theorist might call strophic, meaning it just goes around in a circle — but it’s definitely there.  Okay, so we have a strophic form in the music, and no form at all in the lyrics.  Right?

Well…

Here are the lyrics of the song, including most of the pre-song banter.  These are taken off the web, so I don’t vouch for their accuracy.  Oh, and expletives have been replaced with asterisks, in accordance with OTI’s family friendly mandate.

For your reference, I have included big bold Is and Vs where the chord changes hit.

Yeah, what’s the deal? What’s the deal y’all?
I need y’all n**** to buckle up one time

I

Fasten your seatbelts, I’m a take y’all on some real s***
This Theodore s***, y’all n**** know what time it is and s***
Y’nah mean? It’s real motherfuckin’ s***, you know

[song proper begins]

Yo, making moves back and forth uptown
60 dollars plus toll is the cab fee
Wintertime bubble boost,
goose, clouds of smoke
Music blastin’ and the Arab V blunted
Whip smelling like fish from 125th

V

Throwin’ ketchup on my fries, hitting baseball spliffs
Back seat with my leg all stiff
Push the f***** seat up, tartar sauce on my S Dot kicks
Rocks is lit while I’m poppin’ the clips

I

I’m ready for war, got to call the Cuban guys
Got the Montana pulled in front of the store
Made my usual gun check, safety off, come on Frank,
The moment is here, take your f**** hood off, and tell the driver to stay put
F*** them n**** on the block they shook, most of them won’t look
They frontin’, they no crooks and f*** up they own juks
Look out for Jackson 5-0 cause they on foot
Straight ahead is the doorway, see that lady with the shopping cart
She keep a shottie cocked in the hallway.
Damn she look pretty old Ghost, She work for Kevin, she ’bout seventy seven
She paid her dues when she smoked his

V

brother in law at his bosses’ wedding
Flew to Venezuela quickly when the big fed stepped in
3 o’clock, watch the kids, third floor, last door
You look paranoid that’s why I can’t juks with you.
Why?

I

Why you behind me leery?
Shakey Dog stutterin’, when you got the bigger cooker on you
You a crazy m************, small Hoodie dude
Hilarious smooth, you on some Curly, Moe, Larry s***
Straight parry s***, Krispy Kreme, cocaine, dead bodies, jail time you gon’ carry it
Matter of fact, all the cash, I’m a carry it
Stash it in jelly and break it down at the Marriott
This is the spot, yo son your burner cocked?
These fuckin’ maricons on the couch watchin’ Sanford and Son
Passin’ they rum, fried plantains and rice
Big round onions on a T-bone steak, my stomach growling yo I want some

V

Hold on, somebody’s comin’, get behind me, knocked at the door
Act like you stickin’ me up, put the joint to my face
Push me in quickly when the b**** open up
Remember you don’t know me, blast him if he reach for his gun
Yo, who goes there?

I

Tony, Tony, one second homie,
No matter rain, sleet or snow you know you suppose to phone me.
Off came the latch, Frank pushed me into the door
The door flew open, dude had his mouth open
Frozen, stood still with his heat bulgin’
Told him Freeze! lay the fuck down and enjoy the moment
Frank snatched his gat, slapped him, asked him
Where’s the cash, coke and the crack? Get to spoken and fast
His wife stood up speakin’ in Spanish, big tittie b**** holdin’ the cannon
Ran in the kitchen, threw a shot, then kick in the four fifth
Broke a bone in her wrist and she dropped the heat
Give up the coke! But the b**** wouldn’t listen

V

I’m on the floor, like Holy s***! Watchin my man Frank get busy
He zoned out, finished off my man’s wiz
He let the pitbull out, big head Bruno with the little shark’s teeth chargin’
Foamin’ out the mouth, I’m scared

I

Frank screamin’, blowin’ shots in the air
Missin’ his target, off the Frigidare, it grazed my ear
Killed that b******** pit, ran to the bathroom, but first
Frank put two holes in the doorman’s Sassoon
The coke’s in the vacuum[?], got to the bathroom, faced his bad moves
The big one had the centipede stab wound
Frank shot the skinny dude, laid him out
The bigger dude popped Frankie boy, played him out
To be continued…

Do you notice anything interesting about the way the lyrics interact with the music?  Listen to the song one more time, paying close attention to two things.  1)  The geography of the story.  Where are the characters at any given time?  2)  Where do the lines of “dialogue” – the things that are clearly said by someone other than the narrator, or that he’s clearly saying out loud to someone in the story – fall?

Don’t worry, I’ll post the lyrics again – with my answers to these questions – after the page break.

So basically, there are four locations in the song.  1) In the car, 2) outside of the apartment building, 3) upstairs in the hall outside of the apartment, 4) inside the apartment.  You could maybe argue for a 5) in the apartment’s bathroom.  And each time that I chord rolls around, we move into a new location.  It’s not precisely timed.  Sometimes its a line or two early, sometimes late.  But I still find it pretty convincing.

The business with the “dialogue” is a little less convincing.  In my mind, I associate the V chord with dialogue, and the I chord with the narrated sections of the song.  Unfortunately, if you go over the song carefully it turns out that really a LOT of it is dialogue.  Still, there are certain lines where you can hear Ghostface putting on a voice — where the “dialogue” is marked as such — and these begin to suggest a pattern.  But if it is there, again, it’s not precise:  the “dialogue” line “Damn, she look pretty old Ghost” comes just a bit before the V chord, etc.  I’ve put the lines I find significant in quotes and italics below.  Perhaps my choices are arbitrary, but you can make up your own minds.

———

Yeah, what’s the deal? What’s the deal y’all?
I need y’all n**** to buckle up one time

I:  In the car.

Fasten your seatbelts, I’m a take y’all on some real s***
This Theodore s***, y’all n**** know what time it is and s***
Y’nah mean? It’s real motherfuckin’ s***, you know

[song proper begins]

Yo, making moves back and forth uptown
60 dollars plus toll is the cab fee
Wintertime bubble boost,
goose, clouds of smoke
Music blastin’ and the Arab V blunted
Whip smelling like fish from 125th

V

Throwin’ ketchup on my fries, hitting baseball spliffs
Back seat with my leg all stiff
Push the f***** seat up!” tartar sauce on my S Dot kicks
Rocks is lit while I’m poppin’ the clips

I:  Outside of the apartment building

I’m ready for war, got to call the Cuban guys
Got the Montana pulled in front of the store
Made my usual gun check, safety off, come on Frank,
The moment is here, take your f**** hood off, and tell the driver to stay put
F*** them n**** on the block they shook, most of them won’t look
They frontin’, they no crooks and f*** up they own juks
Look out for Jackson 5-0 cause they on foot
Straight ahead is the doorway, see that lady with the shopping cart
She keep a shottie cocked in the hallway.
Damn she look pretty old Ghost.” She work for Kevin, she ’bout seventy seven
She paid her dues when she smoked his

V

brother in law at his bosses’ wedding
Flew to Venezuela quickly when the big fed stepped in
3 o’clock, watch the kids, third floor, last door
You look paranoid that’s why I can’t juks with you.
Why?

I:  Inside the building, outside of the apartment

Why you behind me leery?
Shakey Dog stutterin’, when you got the bigger cooker on you
You a crazy m************, small Hoodie dude
Hilarious move, you on some Curly, Moe, Larry s***
Straight parry s***, Krispy Kreme, cocaine, dead bodies, jail time you gon’ carry it
Matter of fact, all the cash, I’m a carry it
Stash it in jelly and break it down at the Marriott
This is the spot, yo son your burner cocked?
These fuckin’ maricons on the couch watchin’ Sanford and Son
Passin’ they rum, fried plantains and rice
Big round onions on a T-bone steak, my stomach growling yo I want some

V

Hold on, somebody’s comin’, get behind me, knocked at the door
Act like you stickin’ me up, put the joint to my face
Push me in quickly when the b**** open up
Remember you don’t know me, blast him if he reach for his gun
Yo, who goes there?

I: Inside the apartment

Tony!” “Tony, one second homie,
No matter rain, sleet or snow you know you suppose to phone me.

Off came the latch, Frank pushed me into the door
The door flew open, dude had his mouth open
Frozen, stood still with his heat bulgin’
Told him Freeze! lay the fuck down and enjoy the moment
Frank snatched his gat, slapped him, asked him
Where’s the cash, coke and the crack? Get to spoken and fast
His wife stood up speakin’ in Spanish, big tittie b**** holdin’ the cannon
Ran in the kitchen, threw a shot, then kick in the four fifth
Broke a bone in her wrist and she dropped the heat
Give up the coke!” But the b**** wouldn’t listen

V

I’m on the floor, like “Holy s***!” Watchin my man Frank get busy
He zoned out, finished off my man’s wiz
He let the pitbull out, big head Bruno with the little shark’s teeth chargin’
Foamin’ out the mouth, I’m scared

I: In the bathroom? (Admittedly, this one’s a little weak).

Frank screamin’, blowin’ shots in the air
Missin’ his target, off the Frigidare, it grazed my ear
Killed that b******** pit, ran to the bathroom, but first
Frank put two holes in the doorman’s Sassoon
The coke’s in the vacuum[?], got to the bathroom, faced his bad moves
The big one had the centipede stab wound
Frank shot the skinny dude, laid him out
The bigger dude popped Frankie boy, played him out
To be continued…

———————–

If I’m right about all of this, the form of the lyrics is just as strophic as the form of the music.  But instead of being based on rhyme scheme and repeated lines – you know, the stuff pop music form is generally based on – it’s based on the type of language and the subject matter.  And this, to me, is way more exciting than the mere fact that he goes on for three minutes in a row.

Can anyone think of any other songs that work this way?  (Credit where due, Carolyn Abbate describes a somewhat more complicated one from Gotterdammerung in Unsung Voices, but I’m looking for pop music, and hip-hop in particular.)

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