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Song: Tambourines : MP3
| Album: Village Thrift: Circa 2005 |
| Artist: Enter The Worship Circle |
| Release: 2005 |
| Label: Worship Circle Records |
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Add to Cart: USD0.84 | |
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| Digital Extras | | Price | Add to cart | | Tambourines : Chord Charts |  | USD0.00 |  | | Tambourines : Lyrics |  | USD0.00 |  | Behind the Music:
This song, at the basic level, came together in one sitting as a guitar/vocal thing. i actually wrote this when there was a potential i'd be a part of Third Circle, so i was thinking very traditionally, just trying to write a good verse and chorus that was very hooky and straightforward lyrics. so i didn't even have the village in mind, and i don't think anyone did (except ben?) at that point. so that makes this the oldest tune on the record. i created an arrangement of the song initially that i could do solo in worship settings with my laptop, guitar, and a mic. it was real rootsy and acoustic feeling (hand drums, tambourines, acoustic). todd and i led it together occasionally, and people just really dug and picked it up fast.
when the village came up, we were gathering songs together and i submitted it to ben in a different, sort of sade-feeling r&b arrangement w/ electric kit and acoustic kit and organ and rhodes. it also had this crazy, excessive anthemic chorus deal that is funny now that i think of it. in light of the other tunes for the album under development, i squeezed out a completely new arrangement at the last minute, complete with da da da's (nod to "wake up") and a vinyl kit (like most of the other tracks), and custom synth and bass sounds. then robin rocked a great bgv line to juice up the chorus, which worked well to make the part more hopeful and distinct from the others. ben also tweaked some stuff to restore the original moody drama of the song, accentuating transitions and shortening sections.
what i dig about this cut is that when you strip it all down the song is exactly the same as was initially conceived (lyrically, melodically, and harmonically).
so like most of the tracks on the village, tambourines can be paired down to a single harmonic instrument and a voice.
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