Callahan's songwriting increasingly included multi-part harmonies that created song melodies and "hooks" distinctive to rock music of the day, while focusing lyrically on social and economic justice.
The song melody is a slowed down version of "The Life I Lead" which serves as Banks' leitmotif as he was fired.
In 1962 her collection of song melodies for piano, Mes Plus Belles Chansons, was published through a grant by the Canada Council.
The song melody is actually from the earlier recording called "Spanish Eyes", found on Rick's "Sound City Recordings" from 1978.
The song melody uses four notes of the five-note pentatonic scale, first rising, then falling.
In the film, the song main melody appears repeatedly with different sounds.
Indiana's popular fight song melody is "Indiana Fight!"
She sang the poetry in lines akin to chanting, sustaining notes with an occasional impassioned quaver, then gave the more vigorous song melodies a sense of release.
The song melody is sampled from Bobby Orlando's The O Medley (1984).
Some features are highly mobile (for example, concrete song melodies, or musical instruments), they can easily travel to new territories and change during short time.