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Another Chickadee Song

two-birds-title

Two birds in my backyard whistle at each other. The first bird whistles a high B♭ to a G, an interval of a minor third. The second bird answers with the same interval, except a whole tone above the first bird, C to A. I guess one bird is a little hotter than the other. Together the two birds create an unintentional song.

Click the score to turn on and off.


And so the verse of a new song was born. It kind of sounds like “Better Man” by Pearl Jam. Was Eddie Vedder also inspired by two chickadees and their aleatoric song?

Here, take a listen.

* * *

The title “At Song-Two-Birds” is a play on the Irish comic novel At Swim-Two-Birds by Flann O’Brien, wherein the mad King Sweeny transforms into a bird-man and recites poetry on the river ford.

A year to last night
I have lodged there in branches
from the flood-tide to the ebb-tide
naked.
Bereft of fine women-folk,
the brooklime for a brother –
our choice for a fresh meal
is watercress always.
Without accomplished musicians
no jewel-gift for bards –
respected Christ, it has perished me.
The thorntop that is not gentle
has reduced me, has pierced me,
it has brought me near death
the brown thorn-bush.


This is the second Los song inspired by the chickadee. The previous song, “Chickadee (New Wave)”, used the wintry whole tone rather than the spring-time minor third. As summer progresses, the chickadee widens his interval by a step or two. The “fee bees” will be happy major thirds by the end of the summer, but for now they are minor thirds as above.

Listen to “At Song-Two Birds”

To all you chickadees out there, may your songs find you true love.