bookmark_borderUnprecedented

Songwriting at March Creek State Park
Songwriting at March Creek State Park, Pennsylvania

LYRICS
Never been in this place before
So close to the edge
The outcome… unsure
Never been in this space before
So close to the judge
The vision a blur

What the hell are we doing
Pollution
Suing
De-evolution pursuing
Solution avoidance
Despite evidence
Wipe-out existence

The minds that shine will shine, shine, shine
But
Never been to this place
To history trace
The accumulation of the humanization blunders
Then… as one… wonders
What the hell are we doing
Pollution
Suing
De-evolution pursuing
Solution avoidance
Despite evidence
Wipe-out existence

Please… don’t wipe-out existence

 

How to Play the Guitar Part
How to Play the Guitar Part

ABOUT THIS SONG
Wow! There’s a lot about this song. I won’t say it all… leaving some to your imagination.

Chords
A / D / A / G / A
A / Em
Capo 2
A / D / A / G / A
A / Em
A / G / A / D / A

Though it was unintended, the music ended up being inspired by the Kinks’ David Watts. The idea is kind-of like David Watts, too… I wish I could be like David Watts. I wish I could be smart enough… to get through to the people… that don’t care about other people. What the hell are we doing?
.
Written and recorded on October 1, 2012 at Marsh Creek State Park and other locations in Chester County, Pennsylvania… on an 8-track digital recorder. 2 tracks as stereo guitar (first with no effects, then effects followed by Capo 2 with effects). 2 tracks as stereo vocals. 1 backing vocal with a bullhorn effect. 1 backing vocal with Darth Vader effect. The six tracks were mixed down onto the remaining 2 tracks.

Daniel – Vocals, Guitar, Effects

from the album Revolution Evolution
by Daniel Brouse

bookmark_borderSaid

LYRICS
I said what I said like I said before
No need to take it… no… no more
You don’t need to be a whore
You don’t need to be a bore
Think heavenly… as in above
Put the shine on with some love

I said what I said like I said before
No need to take it… no… no more

I said what I said like I said before
No need to take it… no… no more
There’s no need for you to abuse
Get loose before you lose
I said what I said like I said before
No need to take it… no… no more
Think heavenly… as in above
Put the shine on with some love

I said what I said like I said before
No need to take it… no… no more
Think heavenly… as in above
Put the shine on with some love
Put the shine on with some love
Put the shine on with some love

Said.mp3

Said Instrumental.mp3

ABOUT THE SONG
E
E / G / E / A / E
E / G / A / E

Written and recorded on September 30, 2012 in West Chester, Chester County, Pennsylvania.

Daniel – Vocals, Guitar

from the album Revolution Evolution
by Daniel Brouse

bookmark_borderPlebs

LYRICS
Should the aristocratic make you sick
Pledge to be a pleb
… just sayin’… Plebian

When in roam do as the roam-ans

Don’t take it as pathetic… alternative, quick
Serve up an order of “Conflict of the Orders”
Roam across the Roman borders
Bulk if they consider it an insult
Quote: the UK minister is sinister
Sure, the po-po can be low, low, low
But, why insult a pleb instead

Pledge to be pleb
And, when ya see someone plebby, say, “Hey!”
Shout out to the plebs all day

Plebs.mp3

Plebs Instrumental.mp3

ABOUT THE SONG
Music
Capo 1
Am / C
Am / E

This song was inspired by a news report over a big tadoo in England. It turned out to be a sort-of theme song to the album Revolution Evolution.

LONDON – In class-conscious Britain, a Cabinet minister is in trouble over a four-letter word: “pleb.”

The single syllable was reportedly not the most profane part of Andrew Mitchell’s tirade at police officers who asked him to get off his bicycle as he passed through the gates of Downing Street. But it is the most incendiary – a pejorative term for the working class with a whiff of contempt that is bad news for a government often characterized as elitist.

Class distinctions are the great tugging undercurrent in British society – ever-present, endlessly debated, never resolved. The topic is a minefield for any politician keen to appeal to a wide range of voters. And the four-letter clanger attributed to Mitchell lands as a thudding reminder that class is still a potent and divisive aspect of British life.

Last week’s altercation between the minister and police officers guarding the approach to the prime minister’s residence has been seized on by the media and political opposition, and escalated into a political tempest with its own title: “Gategate.”

Mitchell on Monday apologized for the incident, in which – according to press reports – he told the officers “Best you learn your (expletive) place. You don’t run this (expletive) government. You’re (expletive) plebs.”

The Metropolitan Police force has not officially confirmed the account, but says it has launched an investigation into how internal police information was leaked to the press.

Mitchell conceded that he had lost his temper at “the end of a long and extremely frustrating day.”

Mitchell’s reported word choice is a blow to attempts by Prime Minister David Cameron’s Conservative-led administration to downplay its image as a privileged club.

Pleb – short for plebeian – comes from the Latin plebeius, the mass of ordinary citizens apart from the elite of upper-class patricians.
— The Associated Press

Plebs in ancient Rome
In Latin the word plebs is a singular collective noun, and its genitive is plebis. Multiple “plebs” are “plebes”.

The origin of the separation into orders is unclear, and it is disputed when the Romans were divided under the early kings into patricians and plebeians, or whether the clientes (or dependents) of the patricians formed a third group. The nineteenth century historian Barthold Georg Niebuhr held that plebeians began to appear at Rome during the reign of Ancus Marcius, possibly foreigners settling in Rome as naturalized citizens. In any case, at the outset of the Roman Republic, plebeians were excluded from magistracies and religious colleges. Later on, after a general strike by the plebeians[citation needed], the Law of the Twelve Tables was promulgated, and explicitly forbade intermarriage in Tabula XI (a prohibition which was eventually reversed by the Lex Canuleia). However, before the Twelve Tables plebeians were forbidden to know any laws, but were still punished for breaking them. Despite these inequalities, plebeians still belonged to gentes, served in the army, but very rarely became military leaders.

Even so, the “Conflict of the Orders” over the political status of the plebeians went on for the first two centuries of the Republic, ending with the formal equality of plebeians and patricians in 287 BC. The plebeians achieved this by developing their own organizations (the concilium plebis), leaders (the tribunes and plebeian aediles). When the plebeians felt the situation had become dire, they would instigate a secessio plebis, a sort of general strike where plebeians would leave Rome, leaving the patricians to themselves.

Modern usage
In British, Canadian, Irish, Australian, New Zealand and South African English the back-formation pleb, along with the more recently derived adjectival form plebby, is used as a derogatory term for someone considered unsophisticated or uncultured. In September 2012 UK Conservative Party Chief Whip Andrew Mitchell was reported using the word in an expletive-heavy tirade directed at police officers in Downing Street. He disputed the accusation. — Wikipedia

from the album Revolution Evolution
by Daniel Brouse

bookmark_borderGet It Right

LYRICS
If you’re gonna pray, you might as well say
“I pray that I get it right!”
If you’re gonna say you might as well pray
“I pray that I get this right!”

Better pray, better pray all through the night
Better pray, better pray all through the day
Better pray as I work at working it into my work
Better pray as I work at working at what I play

Get It Right.mp3

ABOUT THE SONG
E / G
E / A
E / A / E / G / E

Written and recorded on September 27, 2012 in West Chester, PA. Why pray for anything else?

Daniel – Vocals, Guitar

from the album Revolution Evolution
by Daniel Brouse

bookmark_borderWho You Are

Writing the Song Who You Are
Writing the Song Who You Are

LYRICS
It doesn’t matter who you are
You can go as far….

You can go as far as any star
You can rise up into heaven
You can sing or play the guitar
You can make what is odd even
And, then….

Who You Are.mp3

ABOUT THIS SONG
Am
Am / Em
Am / Em
Em / C
Em / Am
Am / Em

Production Assistant: Toucan the Singing Bird Dog
Production Assistant: Toucan the Singing Bird Dog

Written and recorded on September 24, 2012 in West Chester, PA. While trying to record the flute, my dog was compelled to sing along.

Daniel – Vocals, Guitar, Piano, Flute

from the album Revolution Evolution
by Daniel Brouse

bookmark_borderEquinuck Equinox

LYRICS
I think I
I think I am
I think I can begin

I think it’s time to think
Crawl out from undercover
Crack a smile and wink
True love can never smother
Hug another like your lover
Hug another like your mother
Hug another

Smile, nod… or just say “hi” as they’re passing by
It’s not outrageous for something good to be contagious

Do my part
To start a heart
Let the hate depart

Ya know hate’s got to go
Pack his bag and stow
On the last train to “I don’t know”

Equinuck Equinox .mp3

ABOUT THE SONG
notes: Ab Eb Db / Ab Eb Db B / Ab Eb Db B Ab
Capo 4
A less C#
Em

Written September 21 and 22, 2012 at the JibberJazz Music Festival Meeting of the Minds V in Equinuck, Pennsylvania on the fall equinox. It was inspired by the positive vibes and sense of community created at the event.

Daniel – Vocals, Piano, Keyboards

from the album Revolution Evolution
by Daniel Brouse

Songwriting at Meeting Of The Minds
Songwriting at Meeting Of The Minds

bookmark_borderWhat Do I Believe In?

LYRICS
What do I believe in?
I believe in the freedom of speech
That let’s me speak my mind
My right to point out someone viscous, savage… or kind
I believe in the freedom to believe in religion
Or the those that choose no diving discipline
My God!
Believin’ in believing in believing

I believe I can walk the walk
Given the freedom to talk, talk, talk
I don’t believe a bit in being a hypocrite
I do believe we should teach the children this bit

What Do I Believe In? .mp3

ABOUT THE SONG
Capo on Lucky 7
A
A less C#
A / G
A / G / D / A

Written and recorded September 18-24, 2012 in Ambler and West Chester, PA. The song was inspired when my daughter told me she had a school project and asked, “What do I believe in?”

Daniel — Vocals, Guitar

from the album Revolution Evolution
by Daniel Brouse