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In The Garden (1980)

In any ‘Dylan’s strangest song’ contest, In the Garden will always be a strong contender. Dylan himself has expressed some bewilderment as to how it all came about, and upon first hearing, one can only agree: The chord changes seem to go randomly in any direction, but strangely, it doesn’t fall apart, and somehow it even seems to make sense. What’s going on here?

The whole ‘mystery’ of the song hinges on the chord at the end of the first phrase. (For the sake of simplicity, in the following explanation I have transposed the song up a semitone, to C.)

          C                   G                Am      [?]
When they came for Him in the garden, did they know?

To begin with, it is all plain and easy chords, well within the C tonality. The last chord, however, is the pivot. When it first enters, if one judges it according to what comes before it, it should either be seen as an Ammaj7 (i.e. G#mmaj7 465444 in the song’s tonality). The logical continuation would then be to let the chromatic descent that has started with those two chords continue downwards, e.g. with Am7 – D (notice the line a–g#–g–f# that binds those four chords together), which could eventually lead back to C again, either directly or by way of G7 – something like this (the next few examples are of course constructions, just to provide possible, working continuations):

          C                   G                Am      Ammaj7
When they came for Him in the garden, did they know?
          Am7                                  D7
When they came for Him in the garden, did they know?

Or the g# that gives Ammaj7 the maj7 character could be considered to make the chord a variant of E, which would work as the dominant of Am, with possible continuations to F or back to Am again, in this hypothetic example with an ascending line, e–f–f#–g:

          C                   G                Am      E
When they came for Him in the garden, did they know?
          F                   D/f#             G7
When they came for Him in the garden, did they know?

It could even be seen as a variant of C itself, which might have continued like this:

          C                   G                Am      C/g
When they came for Him in the garden, did they know?
          F                   C/e              D7      G7
When they came for Him in the garden, did they know?

The reason for this wide array of possible interpretations is that the chord I’ve called ‘[?]’ is an augmented chord, i.e. a chord where the fifth step – G in this case – is raised a semitone (one fret). This gives a chord that consists of three equal intervals – major thirds (= four semitones) – which in principle can be stacked whichever way you want.
The tones in the chord are c, e, and g♯, and depending on which tone is given priority and is interpreted as the key note, it can either be heard as a C (c-e-g) , an E (e-g♯-b) or a G♯ (or A♭) (g♯-b♯-d♯, or A♭-c-e♭). In each of the alternatives, the fifth is altered, for extra flavour. The Ammaj7 option is basically a variant of the C interpretation.

Now, the C and E interpretations are both well within the limits of the main tonality, as the examples above will show: they don’t really stand out, and they don’t cause major disturbances in the tonal foundations of the song. This is because they are both united to C through their common ‘relative’, Am.

What Dylan does in ‘In The Garden’, however, is to choose the third alternative, G#, which is a much bigger step. True, it is ‘just’ a matter of going a major third from C in the opposite direction of E, and, true, it is used, occasionally (the James Bond theme comes to mind), but the effect is much more spectacular than the turn to E.

Once the augmented chord has been interpreted as a G#, the whole trick is done: we are now in the key of G# – for a little while. But first the chord is reinterpreted again. In the second line:

             Am      G#aug
... did they know?
          C#m                 G#aug            E      F#
When they came for Him in the garden, did they know?

both of the G#aug chords could be played as plain G#s, but as an augmented chord, it is already ‘almost’ an E, which is where it immediately goes to, as the new tonal centre. So one might say that Dylan repeats the trick: he has shifted the whole key of the song down in two leaps, first from C to Ab/G#, then further down to E – both times in the unexpected direction. The rest of the song is laboriously working its way up again, step by step, whole tone by whole tone: E, F#, G#, A#, and finally back to C again.

The E doesn’t live long enough to take on the role of ‘tonal centre’ on its own – it appears as an episode within the larger G episode. But one might call it, slightly figuratively speaking, the landing where the energy necessary for the ascent through the keys back to C again is collected.

If we stay with the ‘energy to run up the stairs’ metaphor, this will account for the end as well: the melody has reached the top, but needs an extra step in order to gain balance and to really be able to come to a halt: it is not enough just to rush up through the keys – an ending ‘needs’ something more than that to be felt like an ending, and the final flourish, after the singing is over, is what accomplishes that.

(2009)