So Sad They Had to Fade It

This article was first published in Crank Magazine from Pinknantucket Press in 2014.

Back in a previous life, I fancied myself as something of a musician. I was self-taught, so I would play on the family piano what I heard on the radio. When my listening skills weren’t up to the job I would spend hours in the basement at Allans on Collins Street, leafing through the sheet music and memorizing chord progressions—something I was genuinely good at—for me to practise when I got back home. The sheet music was way too expensive to actually buy.

So many songs on the radio would end the same way: Repeat And Fade. This would be what the sheet music said: 𝄆 eight bars 𝄇, then, as if it was helpful to me on my 1927 Becker upright grand, Repeat And Fade. In case you younger readers didn’t know, no, analogue pianos don’t have a volume control. The best I could manage was to play ever softer, poco a poco piano, until I was barely touching the keys.

When I was older, I started taking music theory lessons. One part of the syllabus was “cadences”, with peculiar names for the different chord progressions that end a piece of music: perfect, imperfect, pluperfect, plagal, interrupted. Cadences seemed to me at the time pointless. Who uses them? Surely everyone just ends with Repeat And Fade!

Apparently not, I was to learn as i broadened my musical tastes. Classical music hardly ever ends with Repeat And Fade1. Classical music is full of proper, perfect (or imperfect, or past perfect) cadences. And it hardly affected sales of their albums at all! When Mozart was writing his Requiem, he didn’t just toss together “Kyrie eleison” (Repeat And Fade). He stuck a proper plagal cadence onto it, sung to the now-famous lyric: “Amen!”

So how did we lose the art of The Ending? When did composers decide, “screw it, it’s too hard to end this song properly, I’ll just turn the volume down”? Or was it the sound engineers, concerned about job security, putting their inimitable touch onto the recording process? Or was it the performers, too absorbed in their jam sessions, to remember how many bars they’d played? Is all modern music written by Stephen King? I don’t know, but I think it’s a cop-out, and it has to stop. All songs should end properly. Heck, even “99 Bottles of Beer on the wall” has an end.2

My plea goes out to all musicians everywhere: Shun Repeat And Fade! Spend five minutes wrapping up your songs properly. Use a cadence if you need; there are plenty to choose from. Kids with their analogue pianos will thank you from the bottom of their too-cheap-to-buy-the-sheet-music hearts.

Plagal cadence to that!

Deborah Pickett (@futzle), like everybody, wants to rule the world.

  1. One well-known exception was the last 15 seconds of John Cage’s 4′33″ ↩︎
  2. Imagine if it didn’t: zero bottles of beer on the wall / take one down, pass it around / minus one bottles of beer on the wall. ↩︎

Comments

5 responses to “So Sad They Had to Fade It”

  1. @blog Afterword: In my teenage years, I wrote some music, composing it on said 1927 Becker upright grand. Readers may have been unfortunate enough to have heard some of it. I promised then that I would never, ever, Repeat And Fade.

    Life happened. Quite a lot of it. Then I got back into songwriting in 2022.

    Friends, I have broken that promise, and written a song that ends with Repeat And Fade. But it was the right thing to do, *for that song*. I am not ashamed; I have grown as a person.

    Aside: one of the songs I wrote as a teenager, I remember every part of it, except how I ended it. I have spent fruitless hours trying to reconstruct the ending. But in my head it just repeats, and fades. I admit defeat, and that is how you will hear it, if I ever have the gall to record it, because it was not actually a very good song.

  2. @futzle
    One thing I've learned is "never ban a tool for being overused". Tropes become tropes for a reason.
    @blog

  3. @futzle @blog
    When I was really young (early twenties), I would deliberately try to end my songs in some totally unexpected way (neither a fade out, neither a proper cadence of some sort).

    One day, I was playing some 4-track demos for my dad (pre-internet days, so limited public), and he says something to the effect of « very nice, I’m impressed. There’s just one thing, your endings suck! ».

    Very useful remark that I took to heart from then on 😂

  4. @futzle @blog

    I'm very guilty of doing this.. the only defence I have is that in some cases I was deliberately trying to capture a feeling/sound that those older influential releases had.

    Of course sometimes I was just too lazy to come up with a good ending, cadence or otherwise!!

  5. @blog This so reminds me of my teenage years and getting the sheet music for "Invisible Touch" by Genesis, and trying to learn to play on a cheap little Casio keyboard. 6 of the 8 tracks faded. Now, I was a band kid, so I knew that live performances had to have an ending. How were the song going to end when the band went on tour? Turns out the band had to write some endings!

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