The Beatles On Apple Pt · PDF file2 Paul McCartney’s masterpiece. The 7 minute, 11...

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1 The Beatles On Apple Pt.II Playlist May 22 nd 2016 9AM The Beatles - Hey Jude - Non-LP Track (Lennon-McCartney) Lead vocal: Paul The Beatles’ eighteenth single release for EMI, the first on the Apple Records label.

Transcript of The Beatles On Apple Pt · PDF file2 Paul McCartney’s masterpiece. The 7 minute, 11...

Page 1: The Beatles On Apple Pt · PDF file2 Paul McCartney’s masterpiece. The 7 minute, 11 second track was the longest released by the Beatles up until that time, and the song broke wide

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The Beatles On Apple Pt.II Playlist May 22nd 2016

   

9AM The Beatles - Hey Jude - Non-LP Track

(Lennon-McCartney) Lead vocal: Paul

The Beatles’ eighteenth single release for EMI, the first on the Apple Records label.

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Paul McCartney’s masterpiece. The 7 minute, 11 second track was the longest released by the Beatles up until that time, and the song broke wide open the usual two to three minute mold that had long been the standard for pop singles. Paul got the idea for the song while driving to visit Cynthia and Julian Lennon. He wrote the lyrics as a message of encouragement to young Julian while his parents were in the throes of a very public separation. Paul wanted to stay friends, so he planned a visit. Cynthia was still living in

John’s Kenwood estate, and since Paul usually wrote songs on the way there to collaborate with his writing partner, he fell into the same routine. Paul: “I started with the idea ‘Hey Jules,’ which was Julian, don’t make it bad, take a sad song and make it better. Hey, try and deal with this terrible thing. I knew it was not going to be easy for

him. I always feel sorry for kids in divorce.

The Beatles - Revolution - Non-LP Track

(Lennon-McCartney) Lead vocal: John

The Beatles’ eighteenth single release for EMI, their first on the Apple Records label.

John Lennon lobbied hard to get his magnificent rocker on the A-side of the band’s summer 1968 single, but by any standard, Paul’s “Hey Jude” was an unbeatable choice for the A-side. There are three versions of John’s “Revolution.” The first one recorded was the slower version which opens the fourth side of “The Beatles” and was released under the title “Revolution 1.” That track was the first song to be recorded for what

would be known as the “White Album.” Ultimately, the song ran over 10 minutes. Much of it was cut out and used to create the sound collage entitled “Revolution 9,” which

would also appear on side four of the new album. Shortly before his death in 1980, John explained the reason for the song’s remake into a fast rocker: Paul and George refused

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to allow the original slower recording to be released as the next Beatles single, fearing it was not upbeat enough. So Lennon decided they would record the song fast and loud. Recording began on the fast and loud single version of “Revolution” on July 10, 1968.

Additional overdubs were added on July 11 and 12, and the final mix was completed on July 15. The single was issued on August 30, 1968, in the UK, and on August 26 in the U.S. The “Hey Jude”/“Revolution” single would go on to sell nearly five million copies in

the U.S. and eight million copies worldwide. On U.S. album:

Hey Jude - Capitol LP

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The Beatles - I’m So Tired - The Beatles

(Lennon-McCartney) Lead vocal: John

John Lennon’s “I’m So Tired” was started and finished in 14 takes on October 8, 1968. No overdubs were added. The session was a marathon 16-hour session which started at 4 p.m. on the 8th and finished at 8 a.m. on October 9 (John’s 28th birthday), and saw the completion of two Lennon compositions (“I’m So Tired” and “The Continuing Story Of Bungalow Bill”) and work on George Harrison’s “Long Long Long.” Written in India while the Beatles were studying Transcendental Meditation under Maharishi Mahesh

Yogi, the all-day regime in Rishikesh, India, prevented John from sleeping at night, so he decided to write a song about it. At the end of the song John can be heard muttering

a phrase that when played backwards offered “Paul is dead” conspiracy theorists another major clue: “Paul is a dead man, miss him, miss him.”

The Beatles - Blackbird - The Beatles

(Lennon-McCartney) Lead vocal: Paul

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Another Paul McCartney solo performance for the “White Album.” Paul wrote “Blackbird” at his Scottish farm house and the song was started and finished in 32 takes, 11 being

complete run-throughs of the song, on June 10, 1968. Paul has said the music was inspired by Bach’s “Bourree in E Minor,” which he learned to play at a young age. The

tapping sound on the recording is not a metronome. The percussion-like sound keeping the beat is actually Paul tapping his foot on the studio floor, which was separately miked

onto one of the tracks. Paul has since revealed that the song was a message of solidarity to black people living in the U.S.

“Blackbird” is one of only five Beatles songs Paul chose to perform live during his “Wings

Over America” concert tour in 1976.

The Beatles - It’s All Too Much - Yellow Submarine

(Harrison)

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Lead vocal: George Recording began with the working title “Too Much” at De Lane Lea Music Recording

Studios, the basement studio of an office building directly opposite the Holborn Underground station in London. On May 25, 1967, one week before the release of the “Sgt. Pepper” album, the band ran through numerous rehearsals and recorded four

proper takes of the backing track. The instruments were George on Hammond organ, Paul on bass guitar, John on lead guitar (including the soaring feedback at the beginning of the song) and Ringo on drums. Overdubs were added the next day at De Lane Lea:

George’s lead vocal, John and Paul’s backing vocal, handclaps and percussion, including cowbell, woodblock and tambourine. Brass and woodwinds were overdubbed on June 2.

Originally running over eight minutes, it was edited down to 6:25 for the soundtrack album. The version used in the “Yellow Submarine” film runs just 2:30 and features a

verse cut out of the album version of the song: “Nice to have the time to take this opportunity/Time for me to look at you and you to look at me.” The lyrics (repeated twice starting at 4:13), “With your long blonde hair and your eyes of blue,” are taken

from The Merseys’ 1966 hit “Sorrow.”

The Beatles - All Together Now - Yellow Submarine

(Lennon-McCartney)

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Lead vocal: Paul In May 1967, with the “Sgt. Pepper” album in the can and awaiting release, the Beatles went to work on two projects at the same time. They began recording the title track for “Magical Mystery Tour” and also starting to record the new songs they had promised for

the “Yellow Submarine” film. The first song specifically recorded for the “Yellow Submarine” film was “Baby, You’re A Rich Man” (on May 11, 1967), but that song was

pulled several months later to fill the B-side of the “All You Need Is Love” single. George Harrison’s “Sgt. Pepper” reject “Only A Northern Song” was added to the stack of film songs. Paul’s sing-along “All Together Now” was started and finished on May 12, 1967. Nine takes were recorded. Instruments included two acoustic guitars (probably Paul and

George), bass guitar (Paul), bass drum (Ringo), harmonica and banjo (John).

2 From the Apple Record Yellow Submarine…Paul’s All Together Now & George’s It’s All Too Much and 2 from the

White Album and here’s a quiz for BIG prizes.

*APPLE QUIZ #1 HERE

The Beatles top 3 selling albums of all time are all double albums released on Apple Records …name those 3 albums.

800-955-KLOS Good  Luck  

 

9.26  BREAK      

Back  to  our  All  Apple  Edition  Pt.  II  OK…Lets  get  into  The  Red  &  The  Blue  albums  which  next  to  the  White  album  are  the  Beatles  biggest  selling  albums  and  they’re  

all  on  Apple!    I  just  realized…the  Beatles  RED  WHITE  &  BLUE  ALBUMS  are  America’s  biggest  selling  Beatles  albums!!!???  How  about  that.  

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 The Beatles - Love Me Do – Please Please Me

(McCartney-Lennon) Lead vocal: John and Paul

The Beatles’ first single release for EMI’s Parlophone label. Released October 5, 1962, it reached #17 on the British charts. Principally written by Paul McCartney in 1958 and 1959. Recorded with three different drummers: Pete Best

(June 6, 1962, EMI), Ringo Starr (September 4, 1962), and Andy White (September 11, 1962 with Ringo playing tambourine). The 45 rpm single lists the songwriters as

Lennon-McCartney. One of several Beatles songs Paul McCartney owns with Yoko Ono. Starting with the songs recorded for their debut album on February 11, 1963, Lennon and McCartney’s output was attached to their Northern Songs publishing company.

Because their first single was released before John and Paul had contracted with a music publisher, EMI assigned it to their own, a company called Ardmore and Beechwood,

which took the two songs “Love Me Do” and “P.S. I Love You.” Decades later McCartney and Ono were able to purchase the songs for their respective companies, MPL

Communications and Lenono Music. Fun fact: John Lennon shoplifted the harmonica he played on the song from a shop in Holland.

On U.S. albums: Introducing… The Beatles (Version 1) - Vee-Jay LP

The Early Beatles - Capitol LP

The Beatles - And I Love Her - A Hard Day’s Night (Lennon-McCartney)

Lead vocal: Paul Written mainly by Paul with the middle eight by John it was released as a single in the U.S. reaching #12. Recorded initially as a heavier, up-tempo number on February 25, 1964, The Beatles attempted two takes and moved on to something else. On February 26 they struggled with the simpler, now acoustic arrangement through 12 more takes and Ringo swapping his drums for congas, ultimately leaving it to be re-made the next day. Finally, on February 27, they had the arrangement to their liking and perfected the

song in two completed takes (takes 20 and 21). On U.S. album:

A Hard Day’s Night - United Artists LP

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Something New - Capitol LP

The Beatles - Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown) - Rubber

Soul (Lennon-McCartney)

Lead vocal: John Originally recorded on October 12, 1965, The Beatles decided to scrap this version and re-record the song nine days later, on October 21. George Harrison provides the sitar, the first appearance of the instrument on a Beatles recording, though the sitar can be

heard in the instrumental introduction on the American version of “Help!” Written mainly by John with some lyrical assistance from Paul. John: “I was trying to write about an

affair without letting me wife know… so it was very gobbledegook. I was sort of writing from my experiences, girls’ flats.” Paul has said that the ending lyrics, “so I lit a fire,” refer to the house being burned down in an act of revenge by the spurned lover. Bob Dylan did a slight parody of the song on his 1966 album, Blonde on Blonde. Check out

the song “4th Time Around.” On U.S. album:

Rubber Soul - Capitol LP

The Beatles - Michelle - Rubber Soul

(Lennon-McCartney) Lead vocal: Paul

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The basic backing track of this classic song was completed in one take on November 3, 1965. Various overdubs and double-tracking were added to complete the song the same day. Lennon is credited with coming up with the “I love you” middle eight section. The tune had been written by Paul several years earlier but he didn’t have proper lyrics until

1965. On U.S. album:

Rubber Soul - Capitol LP

We just one song from each side of the Beatles 1962-1966 or the double

Red Album…up next one song from each side of the 1967-1970  double Blue Album…on Apple

The Beatles - Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds - Sgt. Pepper’s

Lonely Hearts Club Band (Lennon-McCartney)

Lead vocal: John Recorded March 1, 1967. John Lennon’s classic song of psychedelic imagery was

inspired by a drawing brought home by son, Julian, who was four years old at the time. In February 1967, Julian returned home from his nursery school with a painting depicting one of his classmates, Lucy O’Donnell. Young Lucy was pictured with a

background of stars in the sky. When asked by his father about his painting, Julian said it was “Lucy, in the sky, with diamonds.” John was so taken with the phrase he

combined it with passages similar to two books by Lewis Carroll that he’d loved as a child, “Through The Looking Glass” and “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.” Paul added the line about “newspaper taxis” and Lennon’s beloved “Goon Show” got a shout out.

Their famed “plasticine ties” merged with “Through the Looking Glass” to become “plasticine porters with looking glass ties.” Work began on “Lucy In The Sky With

Diamonds” with an evening full of rehearsals. The rhythm track was recorded on March 1 with Paul playing the opening riff on a Lowery organ (with a bell stop), George on

acoustic guitar, Ringo on drums and John on maracas and offering a guide vocal. John’s lead vocal and other instruments (George’s tamboura, Paul’s melodic bass) were added

the next evening.

The Beatles - Magical Mystery Tour - Magical Mystery Tour (EP)

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(Lennon-McCartney) Lead vocals: Paul and John

When Paul McCartney was in the U.S. in early April 1967 he came up with the idea for a Beatles television film about a mystery tour on a bus. During the April 11 flight back home he began writing lyrics for the title song and sketching out some ideas for the film. Upon his arrival in London, Paul pitched his idea to Brian Epstein who happily

approved. Paul then met with John to go over the details and the two began work on the film’s title track. The title track was written primarily by Paul but was not finished

when McCartney brought the song in to be recorded on April 25, 1967. John helped with the missing pieces during the session.

On U.S. album: Magical Mystery Tour - Capitol LP

The Beatles - Don’t Let Me Down - Non-LP B-Side (Lennon-McCartney)

Lead vocal: John with Paul The Beatles’ nineteenth single release for EMI, and second on the Apple

Records label. The “Get Back” sessions, as the January 1969 recording sessions were now known, produced about 475 hours of film and 141 hours of audio tape that had to be sifted

through. But proper multi-track recordings weren’t made until the band was recording in the basement of the Beatles’ Apple headquarters between January 21-31, 1969.

Producer/Engineer Glyn Johns attempted to construct an album entitled “Get Back” from the tapes but his versions were rejected. The tapes would be left dormant in the vault

for a year, with the exception of a single (“Get Back”/“Don’t Let Me Down”). John Lennon’s “Don’t Let Me Down” was a love song for Yoko Ono and was the first song

given a full run-through by the group when sessions for the new album began at Twickenham Studios on January 2, 1969. But proper multi-track recording takes were not done until the band changed location to the basement recording studio at their Apple headquarters. The master take was recorded on January 28, 1969. Like Paul

McCartney’s “Get Back,” the song features Billy Preston on keyboards. Rush-released as a single with the hope of being in stores in the UK on April 11, 1969, the single showed

up a week later. Although the single did not list a producer credit, it did, for the first time on a Beatles single, list an artist in addition to the Beatles: “THE BEATLES with Billy

Preston” graced both sides of the single. “A great honor,” said Preston. On U.S. album:

Hey Jude - Capitol LP (1970)

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The Beatles - Something - Abbey Road

(Harrison) Lead vocal: George

The Beatles’ twenty-first single release for EMI, and fourth on the Apple Records label.

Although initially crediting Lennon and McCartney as the songwriters, legendary crooner Frank Sinatra called George Harrison’s “Something” “"the greatest love song of the

past 50 years".[7 .” Commonly referred to as George’s first Beatles A-side, some sales chart makers at the time considered the single a “double-A,” as both sides of the record received significant radio airplay, and charted both “Something” and its flip side (John’s “Come Together”)

as one combined chart listing. The song is the first of two CLASSIC songs George delivered for the “Abbey Road” album, the other being “Here Comes The Sun.” It was a phenomenal one-two punch that had to have Lennon and McCartney wondering what

else Harrison had up his sleeve.

One  song  from  each  side  of  the  Beatles  2nd  BIGGEST  selling  album  of  all  time…1967-­‐1970  The  double  Blue  album…One  more  QUIZ  about  the  

RED  &  BLUE  albums  on  this  all  PT.2  of  our  all  Apple  edition  of  BWTB???  

 APPLE  QUIZ  #2  

Which  Beatles  album  is  most  represented  on  the  greatest  hits  RED  &  BLUE  albums…OK…they  have  a  few  songs  from  each  Beatles  album…which  album  get  the  

most  songs  on  the  RED  &  BLUE  albums?  

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 9.58  BREAK  

 Winner!  HERE  

 Apple’s  most  successful  band  other  than  the  Beatles  were  Badfinger  who  were  first  signed  as  the  Ivey’s…then  Paul  wrote  

this  song  and  told  em  to  do  it  just  like  this.  

 Paul  McCartney  -­‐  Come  And  Get  It  -­‐  24th  July  1969  –  

EMI  with  john  Lennon  watching.  

 Badfinger  –  No  Matter  What  –  Single  `70  

 No  Matter  What…Apple  artists  Badfinger  following  Paul’s  demo  of  Come  &  Get  It…recorded  while  John  Lennon  watched  him  do  it  July  1969…and  speaking  of  

John  Lennon.    

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John Lennon – Hold On - Plastic Ono Band ‘70

This is an ode to self-help for himself, Yoko and the world in general. It is one of the lighter tracks on the album.

The Beatles - Let It Be - album version - Let It Be

(Lennon-McCartney) Lead vocal: Paul

“Let It Be” was the last song properly recorded on multi-track at Apple Studios during the “Get Back” sessions in January 1969. It was completed in eight takes (numbered Take 20 through 27 to match the film crew clapboard numbers) on January 31, 1969,

the day after the rooftop concert. Take 27 had two complete performances of the song and the first of these Take 27 performances was deemed the best. Though the intent of

the January 1969 “Get Back” sessions was to capture the Beatles “live” in the studio

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without benefit of studio trickery like overdubbing, an exception was made on “Let It Be” so that George Harrison could re-record his lead guitar solo. George’s overdub was recorded on April 30, 1969. Author Mark Lewisohn: “It is widely believed that there are two different takes of ‘Let It Be’ publicly available - the single released (in the UK) on

March 6, 1970 and the “Let It Be” LP version released (in the UK) May 8, 1970. Certainly the lead guitar solos in the middle eight differ considerably, and the LP version has a longer duration. But, in truth, these are one and the same version. That is, they are

derived from the same tape.”

   

BREAK  HERE  FOR  NEWS    

10.28  BREAK  

 The Beatles - One After 909 - Let It Be

(Lennon-McCartney) Lead vocal: John and Paul

One of the oldest songs in the Lennon-McCartney catalog, “One After 909” had been written by John when he was 17 or 18, and had been performed by the Quarrymen in

1960, and by the Beatles in their pre-fame club days. The song was first recorded by the Beatles at the March 5, 1963, session for their third EMI single. After completing both sides of the new single (“From Me To You” and “Thank You Girl”), John and Paul had two additional songs they wanted the group to record. In addition to “One After 909”

they also brought in “What Goes On,” but there was only enough time in the session to record one additional song, so “One After 909” got the go-ahead. Six years later the

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group revisited the song, with Billy Preston on keyboards. In his 1980 “Playboy” interview, Lennon admitted the song was probably resurrected for “Let It Be” because of a lack of material. As the rooftop performance drew to a close John sang an impromptu

line from “Danny Boy.” The previously unreleased 1963 version can be found on the “Anthology 1” album.

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The Beatles from the Apple album Let It Be…now we can’t talk about Apple Records without mentioning 1969’s official 5th Beatle Billy Preston…Billy recorded

a bunch of LP’s for Apple this is from his 4th now dig who’s playing on this George Harrison produced track….along with Billy….

George  Harrison  –  electric  and  acoustic  guitars,  Moog  synthesizer,  sitar  

Eric  Clapton  –  electric  guitar  Keith  Richards  –  bass  

Ginger  Baker  –  drums,  tambourine  Doris  Troy  –  backing  vocals  

Madeline  Bell  –  backing  vocals  

 Billy  Preston  -­‐  That's  The  Way  God  Planned    -­‐  

~69  Title  track    

The  LORD  was  BIG  as  the  decade  turned  into  the  70’s…here’s  George  Harrison’s  biggest  Apple  single!  

 

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 George Harrison – My Sweet Lord - All Things Must Pass

‘70 This was the major smash hit of the album by Christmas 1970. It was originally

intended for the Edwin Hawkins Singers (who had record, “Oh Happy Day,” which greatly influenced “My Sweet Lord.” George had also let Billy Preston

release his own version before George’s – but it was George’s version that was the huge hit and remains the biggest single song success of his entire solo

career.

The Beatles – Polythene Pam - Abbey Road Recorded July 25th w/ “She Came in Through The Bathroom

Window “. The only Beatles song inspired by a woman in New Jersey who

dressed in polythene (but not jack boots or kilts). Written in India, demoed

for the White LP. Lennon 1.00

/ The Beatles – She Came In Through The Bathroom

Window - Abbey Road

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Recorded July 25th 1969. Written while in NYC to announce Apple. Based on a true story about some Scruffs breaking into Paul house at St. John’s Wood. Paul wrote w/ Joe Cocker in mind…who later coved it as he did with most Beatle songs.

McCartney 1.00

 John Lennon - #9 Dream - Walls And Bridges ‘74

This track had started out with the title of “Walls and Bridges.” It was later renamed as it is much more fitting, and continues John’s fascination with the

number nine. May Pang provide backing vocals (“John’s”) – while a message to George Harrison can be heard (as the two men had been arguing).

A set of Apple Records from JPG&R as we spin ONLY Apple disc’s this morning…..pt. celebrating the anniversary of John

& Paul going to NYC announcing their new corporation!

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10.58  BREAK  

*Play James Taylor spot Apple spot & bumper HERE

That JT spot reminded me we should play one James song as he was an Apple Artist…brought in by A&R man Peter Asher…and I think this opening line of this song might sound familiar…. here’s James Taylor

sounding very 70’s in 1968

James Taylor – Something In The Way She Moves

The Beatles - I Will - The Beatles

(Lennon-McCartney) Lead vocal: Paul

One of Paul McCartney’s most cherished ballads, “I Will” was recorded in 67 takes on September 16, 1968, with Paul on acoustic guitar, Ringo playing maracas and cymbals, and John on temple blocks, tapping out a beat with wood on metal. George Harrison

was not at this session. Not all 67 takes were complete run-throughs, and as Paul was still putting the finishing touches on the song, he would drift into other songs during the

numerous takes. Of particular note was take 19, which included a 2:21 untitled song with lyrics along the lines of “Can you take me back where I came from, can you take me back?” Twenty-eight seconds of this song were used as a link between “Cry Baby Cry” and “Good Night” on Side 4 of the “White Album.” The song fragment is unlisted and uncredited. It was determined that take 65 was the best version of “I Will,” and overdubbing began. Paul added additional vocals, hummed his bass guitar part and

played a 12-string guitar. Paul has said he had the tune before he traveled to India and there he recruited folk singer Donovan to help him with the lyrics, but was not satisfied

with what they came up with.

The  acoustic  sounds  of  Apple  Records  circa  1968  from  Paul  McCartney  &  James  Taylor  as  it  was  this  week  in  1968  that  John  &  Paul  introduced  Apple  to  the  world  from  the  then  Americana  hotel  

in  NYC  …    

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 John Lennon – New York City – Some Time In New York

City ‘72 This is the best “rocker” of the LP and a testament to the love John felt for the

place he would now call home.

 George Harrison – While My Guitar Gently Weeps - The

Concert for Bangla Desh ‘71  

Ringo  –  Back  Off  Boogaloo  –  1972      

QUIZ  #3  For  the  RINGO  tickets…The  title  Back  Off  

Boogaloo  was  inspired  by  what  British  Rock  star?  800-­‐955-­‐KLOS  

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 11.28  BREAK  

 Winner  HERE  

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 Ringo  –  Have  You  Seen  My  Baby  (Newman)  –  RINGO  

 The Beatles - Oh! Darling - Abbey Road

(Lennon-McCartney) Lead vocal: Paul

Paul’s “Oh! Darling” had been run-through a few times during the “Get Back” sessions, but the first proper recording was at Abbey Road Studios on April 20, 1969. The backing track was recorded in 26 takes with Paul on Rickenbacker bass, John on piano, George

on Telecaster through a Leslie speaker and Ringo on drums. Paul’s lead vocal was recorded on April 26, but he was not happy with it. The band moved on to other songs. Paul would return to “Oh! Darling” in mid-July. He wanted to record his lead vocal in one single take when his voice was most gravelly. Engineer Alan Parsons: “Perhaps my main memory of the “Abbey Road” sessions is of Paul coming into Studio Three at two o’clock or 2:30 each afternoon, on his own, to do the vocal on ‘Oh! Darling.’ That was a feature

of the “Abbey Road” sessions. You rarely saw all four Beatles together. It was either John or Paul or George working on their various things, perhaps only getting together to her something back. But Paul came in several days running to do the lead vocal on ‘Oh! Darling.’ He’d come in, sing it and say, ‘No, that’s not it, I’ll try it again tomorrow.’ He only tried it once per day, I suppose he wanted to capture a certain rawness which

could only be done once before his voice changed. I remember him saying ‘five years ago I could have done this in a flash,’ referring, I suppose, to the days of ‘Long Tall

Sally’ and ‘Kansas City.’” McCartney made lead vocal attempts on July 17, 18, 22, and 23, and his July 23 lead vocal appears on the finished master. On August 8, Paul

overdubbed lead guitar and tambourine. Paul, John and George added backing vocals on August 11.

John Lennon – Angel Baby - Menlove Avenue ‘86

Another leftover from the Rock ‘n’ Roll sessions.

Fave of John…produced by Phil..didn’t make the cut

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 Mary  Hopkin  –  Goodbye  –  Single  released  on  28  

March  1969  No.  2  in  the  UK  singles  chart,  prevented  from  reaching  the  top  

position  by  the  Beatles'  single  "Get  Back    

In  the  US,  the  song  reached  No.  13  on  the  singles  chart.    In  the  Netherlands  the  single  peaked  at  No.  1  

 The  recording  was  Apple's  first  official  double-­‐A-­‐side,  and  the  first  Apple  record  to  feature  a  full-­‐

fledged  picture  sleeve.      

I’m  sending  this  last  one  out  to  my  main  man  here  at  KLOS  Beatle  Bob  Coburn…we’re  here  for  ya  man.  

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 The Beatles - Getting Better - Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club

Band (Lennon-McCartney)

Lead vocal: Paul The title “Getting Better” was inspired by a phrase often used by substitute Beatles

drummer Jimmy Nicol. Nicol stepped in for the ailing Ringo Starr during his bout with tonsillitis in June 1964. On the eve of the band embarking on their first world tour Ringo collapsed at a photo shoot and the final night of recording for the “A Hard Day’s Night” LP were scrapped, leaving the final version with 13 songs instead of the expected 14. Nicol was called in on no notice to rehearse the concert set list. The next day he was

thrown into the crush of full scale Beatlemania as the Fab Four landed in the Netherlands for the first of the sold out concerts. Once on the mend, Ringo caught up

with the tour in Australia. After each show, John and Paul would ask their new drummer how he was doing. His standard reply was “It’s getting better.” McCartney was reminded of this phrase while walking with Beatles biographer Hunter Davies during the making of the “Sgt. Pepper” album, and he decided to build a song around it. Recording began on the song on March 9, 1967 and the basic rhythm track was completed in seven takes. Paul described the tune as “an optimistic song,” but noted John’s biting wit gave the lyrics the perfect counterpoint. Paul: “I was sitting there doing ‘Getting better all the

time’ and John just said in his laconic way, ‘It couldn’t get no worse,’ and I thought, Oh, brilliant! This is exactly why I love writing with John.” Recording continued on the track

on March 21. The March 21 session is notable in Beatles history. John informed producer George Martin that he was feeling ill. It was a rarity for John Lennon to complain of illness or to miss a recording session due to illness. Martin thought he could do with

some fresh air and took him to the rook of the Abbey Road studios and left him there to convalesce. Paul and George knew John had taken a tab of acid. Realizing that John was alone on a roof with no rails and in the middle of an LSD trip, the pair ran up the roof to bring him back inside. On March 23, Paul’s lead vocal, John and George’s backing vocals

and handclaps were double-tracked and added to the mix.

   

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