Written and sung mostly by John Linnell, with John Flansburgh providing the unusual backward vocal of the bridge, "Dinner Bell" 'indirectly refers to Pavlov's famous experiment involving a dog's reaction to the ringing of a bell after associating the sound with food.' Thank you TMBW. But I had no idea that it was about that when it came on about ten years ago. I just thought it was someone waiting for dinner. Anyway, the topic of the song wasn't what attracted me. It was the likable melody which changes against the major and minor key changes during the verses. The multi-tracked vocals panning from one ear to the other, one syllable falls right into the next becoming something of a tongue-twister. Its 2/4 signature, which keeps the track on a steady pace with every chord change occurring at the beat. And obviously the lyrics that seem to mean nothing at all, but sound right because they fit in with the song's music so well.
This welcomed me to the world of They, and I embraced it with open arms.
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