I think George played both parts in the middle solo as they sound the same tonally and around this time John would leave the more technical lead stuff for George to play 😊
THE BEATLES were masters of distortion. between all their different songs the levels of distortion on guitar and bass is endless. from clean as a whistle to subtle AC/DC type distortion to downright metal they did it all. they were blessed to have such amazing and innovative engineers at their disposal. GEOFF EMERICK was an outright genius. him KEN TOWNSEND, etc. really made THE BEATLES possible.
He is quoted enjoying his guitar tone the day they recorded, its just not known what they were doing and cant be the Rhythm track because of the full band live takes with John clapping/singing
@@ablyhouseisolated during John’s rehearsal for his madison square garden show where he played come together, the keyboard player is trying to get the part right and John talks about how Paul played it
@@westfield90 I'm not sure who played it obviously. I don't think Paul is always a reliable source. He has a habit of revisionary history telling, whether intentional or not. Same goes for many 1st hand sources. I was referencing Geoff Emericks book Here, There and Everywhere where he tells the story of Paul writing the part and John learning it. It wouldn't be the first time Geoff got it wrong either. McCartney also says in 321 that John played the rhythm guitar. Unless he is remembering overdubs, I think he is wrong because the rhythm guitar is identical on the outtakes to the final and John is busy clapping and singing for those performances. Paul may want credit for playing it because he originally wrote it. Or he actually played it. Not sure!
@@JudePittingerMusic I'm interested in this story but could not find it. First, the part is so simple, it's hard to believe a keyboardist would be asking John how to play it. Also, the Abbey Road Boxset says Paul played it, I trust that because they have access to more outtakes that hopefully answer more of these questions
From all the outtakes, anthology and Take 5 released more recently, you hear John clapping while singing. These are live takes and one of them has breakdown. The rhythm guitar parts overlap the clapping and are exactly the same as the final, so it must be George. However, Paul in 3, 2, 1 was saying John played the rhythm. There is also evidence of John really liking his tone the day they recorded. This can only mean for overdubs and Paul must be misremembering. Unless you can explain the lineup on Take 5 another way
Lulz you know much prep work and vetting we did before we made this video? An infinite amount more than you did before you wrote this “random” angry and factually incorrect comment.
Getting really good at that "guitar played by no one but a pair of hands in a black void" trick, Andrew. Nice.
Legend says it’s what you see when you die
Love that song miss you John. Great guitars added. Miss you too George. Great tribute ❤
5:39 Hard to say what, I do think John played some Lead on this song
I agree
@@HJsCorn909 I too agree
I think George played both parts in the middle solo as they sound the same tonally and around this time John would leave the more technical lead stuff for George to play 😊
I’ve always loved those improv slides George plays during the last verse and outro. You’ve nailed them perfectly.
Deep diving. Respect.
Amazing!
Beautiful nuances.
GooD)))))))
I love you guys and what you do. I love the attention to detail.
You Guys Did Fantastic On That Cover, Awesome Job. Rock On Ably House 👍.
FINE
Love the Beatles great cover love it
4:24 and 5:31 sound like they were isolated from a video game song.
Great stuff!
4:52 me agrado mucho ese sonido.
Wow
Great job! Not only just your playing but also your storyboard for your photo shoots. Breaking this down you see why the beatles were the Beatles..
Congrats. You nailed it..
Perfect !
THE BEATLES were masters of distortion. between all their different songs the levels of distortion on guitar and bass is endless. from clean as a whistle to subtle AC/DC type distortion to downright metal they did it all. they were blessed to have such amazing and innovative engineers at their disposal. GEOFF EMERICK was an outright genius. him KEN TOWNSEND, etc. really made THE BEATLES possible.
Loving the Lucy Chibson, is there any covers in the near future that we'll get to see it on?
What else would you like to see it on?
@@ablyhouseisolated I Want You (She's So Heavy), The End?
@@harrisonho8934 I second this, haha!
@@ablyhouseisolated Golden Slumbers/Carry That Weight/The End Please! Your so advanced lol
@@harrisonho8934 I Want You would be great.
How about Revolution?
do you happen to know did JOHN and GEORGE play that harmony lead together on the album? THE BEATLES switched instruments all the time.
So is John just playing electric piano?
He is quoted enjoying his guitar tone the day they recorded, its just not known what they were doing and cant be the Rhythm track because of the full band live takes with John clapping/singing
Just recently perhaps in the Hulu 321 McCartney says he played the keyboard solo
@@ablyhouseisolated during John’s rehearsal for his madison square garden show where he played come together, the keyboard player is trying to get the part right and John talks about how Paul played it
@@westfield90 I'm not sure who played it obviously. I don't think Paul is always a reliable source. He has a habit of revisionary history telling, whether intentional or not. Same goes for many 1st hand sources. I was referencing Geoff Emericks book Here, There and Everywhere where he tells the story of Paul writing the part and John learning it. It wouldn't be the first time Geoff got it wrong either.
McCartney also says in 321 that John played the rhythm guitar. Unless he is remembering overdubs, I think he is wrong because the rhythm guitar is identical on the outtakes to the final and John is busy clapping and singing for those performances. Paul may want credit for playing it because he originally wrote it. Or he actually played it. Not sure!
@@JudePittingerMusic I'm interested in this story but could not find it. First, the part is so simple, it's hard to believe a keyboardist would be asking John how to play it. Also, the Abbey Road Boxset says Paul played it, I trust that because they have access to more outtakes that hopefully answer more of these questions
WRONG WRONG, the gibson is everything lead, and the epiphone is rhythm, y'all flipped it. smh
From all the outtakes, anthology and Take 5 released more recently, you hear John clapping while singing. These are live takes and one of them has breakdown. The rhythm guitar parts overlap the clapping and are exactly the same as the final, so it must be George. However, Paul in 3, 2, 1 was saying John played the rhythm. There is also evidence of John really liking his tone the day they recorded. This can only mean for overdubs and Paul must be misremembering. Unless you can explain the lineup on Take 5 another way
how about you make a video of you playing it correctly since you apparently know it better than the people on the best cover channel on youtube
Because it was already made XD
Lulz you know much prep work and vetting we did before we made this video? An infinite amount more than you did before you wrote this “random” angry and factually incorrect comment.