Research project 2

Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)

Christmas Baby Please Come Home is a pop song originally sung by Darlene Love and included on the 1963 compilation album A Christmas Gift for You from Philles Records(later renamed A Christmas Gift for You from Phil Spector). The song was written by Ellie Greenwich, Jeff Barry, and Phil Spector.

Upon release, the song did not find commercial success, but in later years it has gone on to become a Christmas standard. It charted for the first time on the Billboard Hot 100 in December 2018 and has since peaked at number 15.

Drum Tabs

The drums are quite simple mainly playing on the floor tomb and snare , the bits I need to remember and learn are the triplets fill and where the crashes and stops are.

Guitar and Lyrics

Capo III *
 
C  Em  F  G
 
 C     C                            Em    Em
(Christmas) The snow's comin' down (Christmas)
                      F     F
I'm watchin' it fall (Christmas)
                       G     G
Lots of people around (Christmas)
 
Baby, please come home
 
 C     C                              Em    Em
(Christmas) The church bells in town (Christmas)
                        F     F
They're ringin' a song (Christmas)
                    G     G
What a happy sound (Christmas)
 
Baby, please come home
 
C
 They're singin' 'deck the halls'
Am
 But it's not like Christmas at all
F
 I remember when you were here
G
 And all the fun we had last year 
 
 C     C                               Em    Em
(Christmas) Pretty lights on the tree (Christmas)
                        F     F
I'm watchin' 'em shine (Christmas)
                            G     G
You should be here with me (Christmas)
 
Baby, please come home
 
C Em F G
 
C
 They're singin' 'deck the halls'
Am
 But it's not like Christmas at all
F
 I remember when you were here
G
 And all the fun we had last year 
 
 C     C                        Em    Em
(Christmas) If there was a way (Christmas)
                           F     F
I'd hold back these tears (Christmas)
                        G     G
But it's Christmas day (Christmas)
 
Please, please, please, please, please
                  C
Baby, please come home
                  Am
Baby, please come home
                  F
Baby, please come home
                  G
Baby, please come home
 
         C Em F G . . .
Christmas...
 
* Alternates:
 
Capo I
 
C  = D
Em = F#m
F  = G
G  = A
Am = Bm
 
Open (These chords are not in the original key)
 
C  = A
Em = C#m
F  = D
G  = E
Am = F#m
 
Open (These chords are not in the original key)
 
C  = G
Em = Bm
F  = C
G  = D
Am = Em
 
Set8
X

The guitar consist of the chords C, E minor, F, and G, and a basic strumming pattern, often down down up up down up. The verse uses a repeating progression of C, E minor, F, and G, while the chorus has a different chord set.

Blitzkrieg Bop

Blitzkrieg Bop, titled “The Blitzkrieg Bop!!” on its single release, is a song by American punk rock band Ramones, released in February 1976 as their debut single in the United States. It was the opening track on the band’s self-titled debut album.

Although the composition was credited to the whole band it was actually written by the drummer Tommy Ramone and bassist Dee Ramone.

The idea for a chant at the beginning of the song came from the 1973 Bay City Rollers hit song Saturday Night, which begins with the chant “S-A-T-U-R-D-A-Y night”; Tommy Ramone wanted the Ramones to have a similarly catchy chant. The lyrics “Hey ho, let’s go” were inspired by the line “High, low, tipsy toe” from the 1963 song “Walking the Dog” by Rufus Thomas,

Drum tabs

The song normally is 177bpm however while playing it live they often sped it up reaching or going over 200 bpm showing there signature fast punk energy.

The drums themself are quite simple but fast , the crash pattern to me is what makes the song though , as well as the tomb section for the chanting.

The tuning is in standard ( E A D G B E) The chords and simple just being A5, D5, and E5 hough a rare B5 appears in the bridge it is played very fast driving rhythm with downstrokes only.

Blitzkrieg Bop by The Ramones uses the German war term (blitzkrieg) and “bop” to describe the chaotic, overwhelming energy of teenagers at a rock concert, portraying the music event as a fast, aggressive, but fun attack on the senses, not a literal war.