Jana wrote:brywool wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:brywool wrote:Funny thing about Twist and Shout- That album, "Please Please Me", was recorded in ONE 12-hour session. ONE DAY to make an album. Holy Crap. It takes bands freakin' years now.
"Twist and Shout" is a great vocal. Paul's "Oh! Darling" is also an amazing one that is super hard to pull off.
And definitely- Thanks to all of you that didn't mention the bastard's name.
I think Rick Springfield actually put the whole thing great. This song rules (lame video though):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bji-C8aK ... re=related
I heard Paul drank and smoked all day, maybe even for weeks(?) before pulling off the Oh! Darling take. That's as raspy as I've heard the usually smooth, clean voice of Paul.
Nah, He'd go into the studio in the mornings and lay down the vocals before the rest of them got there. He'd use his 'morning' voice. I've got a couple of boots from those sessions where he was experimenting and he does it in falsetto and it's just so not the same.
love that song.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=URlVbNUkUDMAnd I absolutely love the whole Magical Mystery Tour album, and I read that John Lennon said it was his favorite album b/c it was so strange. I don't know itf that's true, that he said that.
Fool on the Hill one of my favorites -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nx44d_mxUCY
I haven't heard John say that about the album, but I know he loved "I Am The Walrus" for that reason- which is on that album. Thing is, it was only an EP originally and then the US put out those songs with a bunch of singles thrown on to make it an album, but MMT was really only an EP in Britain.
Magical Mystery Tour's okay. I'm not a big fan (GASP) of Strawberry Fields. Probably because I heard it in each of it's incarnations so many times that I got sick of it. For my money, nothing tops Rubber Soul/Revolver/Help! as my favorite albums, though Abbey Road is right in there. They're all good... Hard Day's Night is also a masterpiece.
As for Lennon love- I loved John until the later (67-onward) period. He then just seemed to get so serious, where before he was a much more fun guy. Then Paul became pretty much the Soul of the Beatles and just became this prolific songwriting monster. Lennon and Harrison kind of were backing out at that stage. But if you look at the pre-Sgt. Pepper (mop top) period- the majority of the output was Johns. If you look from Pepper onward, Paul kind of came into his own. Paul actually came into his own on Help! with Yesterday and I'm Down (both recorded right after each other!).
Speaking of Oh! Darling- here's one of the vocals that wasn't used- still a great vocal:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HtYJDouzy5U
Here's one with the falsetto that just didn't cut it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IKhnOofh ... L&index=11
Dang, my inner Beatle is showing. Sorry kids... Okay, back to bashing Journey!