😐 Well... that's a testament to how unpopular it is; it's so weird people gloss over the words in the song. The only words from that song that I remember (with the known exception of "number nine?") are "Financial Imbalance" and "Take this, Brother; may it serve you well."
Always loved the fact my hometown of Blackburn is mentioned in a Beatles song, but I think there's more than four-thousand holes in the roads these days.
Gibraltar being named part of England will start a war. I also like how most of these can be different places. There are 2 Southamptons, 2 Kansas Citys, etc.
Nicely done, some of these I'd never even thought of before, like "Kirkcaldy" or the "Cast Iron Shore". If one were to be overly pedantic then I suppose that the Bungalow Bill lyric shouldn't count since the word in question is "American" and not "America".
What about Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Herts Club Band? Rayne? Ticket to Ryde? The Long and Wynding Road? No Ware Man? Don’t Let Me Downe? Ask me Wye? Îles Féroé The Sun?
@@woooooooooooooooooooooooo No. It was just a co-incidence. From Wikipedia, "McCartney said that the idea to call his character "Eleanor" was possibly because of Eleanor Bron, the actress who starred with the Beatles in their 1965 film Help! "Rigby" came from the name of a store in Bristol, Rigby & Evens Ltd. McCartney noticed the store while visiting his girlfriend of the time, actress Jane Asher, during her run in the Bristol Old Vic's production of The Happiest Days of Your Life in January 1966. He recalled in 1984: "I just liked the name. I was looking for a name that sounded natural. 'Eleanor Rigby' sounded natural.
@@johnnystarr2021somehow I believed it was called "the entire" for a year but then realised it was always the "enitre". Look at the title cards in the first few seconds btw :P
Wait. Which Georgia is Paul singing about in Back in the U.S.S.R? Is it supposed to be ambiguous? Cause I always thought it was a reference to Ray Charles's Georgia on my mind, which would be the US state, but Georgia the country was part of the U.S.S.R. huh.
@@nugget2366 Well that's the thing, is it ambiguous on purpose? There's the whole "Back in the US, back in the US, back in the USSR" bit, Georgia on My Mind is a specifically very American classic, "make me scream and shout" makes you think of American Rock n' Roll since shouting was always referenced in it (Shout by Isley Brothers, Twist and Shout - wait... also by Isley Brothers?), and the whole song is about subverting American patriotism. I guess it's about subverting the familiar American Georgia with elthe Soviet one.
@@althealligator1467 depending on where you live the American Georgia might not be familiar. This has nothing to do with what you said really, it is just that US defaultism is fairly annoying
Request: The entire Beatles discography, but only when they say the names of other Beatles songs
How much does it happen? I can think of Glass Onion mentioning 4 other Beatles songs and maybe the end of All You Need Is Love? Does this count?
@@jonathasantoz I found a video that did it: th-cam.com/video/VSgdz5o4u7s/w-d-xo.html
@@jonathasantoz the beatles has made a song called girl so the video will be 10 hours long
th-cam.com/video/VSgdz5o4u7s/w-d-xo.html
@@melhanlol It's a good point, but maybe then the video could be when the Beatles actually intentionally referred to other Beatles songs.
In Revolution 9, John mentions a shortage of grain in heartfordshire
No ... JOHN... doesn't. It was a BBC broadcaster.
@@v1e1r1g1e1It is still a location that is mentioned in the track.
@@eletronicplayers9564 Yes, but 'Hertfordshire', not 'Heartfordshire'.
😐 Well... that's a testament to how unpopular it is; it's so weird people gloss over the words in the song. The only words from that song that I remember (with the known exception of "number nine?") are "Financial Imbalance" and "Take this, Brother; may it serve you well."
1:54 the delivery of that line is hilarious.
Tempted to set it as a ringtone lol
Leverpoooruuuullll
Liverpewlll
1:53 Lime Street, Liverpool!
Always loved the fact my hometown of Blackburn is mentioned in a Beatles song, but I think there's more than four-thousand holes in the roads these days.
I just came here for Strawberry Fields and got exactly what I wanted
Montélimar and Savoy, France are technically refered to in savoy truffle too
Ukraine Ukraine Moscow Moscow
@oreostrash*Sakartvelo Sakartvelo
FTFY
@oreostrashSTRAWBERRY FIELD
@@mannequinyt CASTIRONSHORE
@@willingshelf AMERICA
I can't believe Beatles predicted it!
Ay bruh “The Void” is a real place.
Put up Tomorrow Never Knows.
You missed Congo and Georgia in Rock And Roll Music
I appreciate the extra editing in this. It's neat.
The Universe?
Nice concept, and very well done!
My mam's obsessed with Penny Lane because the bank was a TSB, which is the company she used to work for!
I'm so happy to hear mention of my home town Get Back, Arkansas
The Penny Lane section is actually a great showcase of the key changes in that song
Gibraltar being named part of England will start a war. I also like how most of these can be different places. There are 2 Southamptons, 2 Kansas Citys, etc.
There's a ton of places called "Los Angeles" in the world
@harveysmith409 *Britain
Alternative title: The Beatles discography, but pilgrimage sites
I didn't realise America was a real place 🤭
Yeah me too
It's not
Same
😂😂
@@Tony_Baloney_69420 I put the new forgis on the Jeep...
1:45
France
PARIS, France
SEINE, Paris, France
why is there the same fictional place THRICE in this video wtf
“Bishopsgate…” has the same energy as “look at this graph…”
Didn't knew that blue jay way existed
Pedant alert! That's Cornhill, not Bishopsgate. Nice idea though, and very well put together. 👍
I look at "the world" in my guitar gently weeps
i love the massive pause after "Bishopsgate....." (also georgia in rock and roll music)
“Inthablackmininhillsofdakota”
I liked the part when he said "USSR"
Good thing there isn’t a place called Na Na Na
Thanks for the world tour
I love this kind of videos.
You missed Hertfordshire, London, France, and The Eiffel Tower in Revolution 9.
1:53 That's "Lime Street".
you forgot Savoy in the song "Savoy Truffle"
The Beatles do be gettin' around do
😳
what about here comes the sun? the sun is a real place
Nicely done, some of these I'd never even thought of before, like "Kirkcaldy" or the "Cast Iron Shore". If one were to be overly pedantic then I suppose that the Bungalow Bill lyric shouldn't count since the word in question is "American" and not "America".
Love = The Beatles Love in Las Vegas
1:37 Paul, chill! I know where Black Hills is!
0:32, blue jay waaaaaaaaaaaay... THE EIFFEL TOWER!!!
Also strawberry fields in New york
what about:
"sitting in an English garden"
"the English army had just won the war"
What about Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Herts Club Band? Rayne? Ticket to Ryde? The Long and Wynding Road? No Ware Man? Don’t Let Me Downe? Ask me Wye? Îles Féroé The Sun?
Hey you might like a band called The Doublejumps if you like The Beatles
@@grabgrabgrabthegraband The Analogues
enitre
Interesting how few references there are on the early albums. 1 cover song on the 4th album and then nothing to Sgt Peppers.
You missed The Bathroom Window, just saying
I was thinking of this 😟
Eleanor Rigby's Tombstone counts as a real location? Just asking. 🤔
Is say no in this situation. They didn't know about the grave & didn't have it in mind when writing the song.
@@mushtombofficial Thanks!
@@mushtombofficialI thought the song came from them seeing the grave and thinking the name sounded good
@@woooooooooooooooooooooooo No. It was just a co-incidence. From Wikipedia, "McCartney said that the idea to call his character "Eleanor" was possibly because of Eleanor Bron, the actress who starred with the Beatles in their 1965 film Help! "Rigby" came from the name of a store in Bristol, Rigby & Evens Ltd. McCartney noticed the store while visiting his girlfriend of the time, actress Jane Asher, during her run in the Bristol Old Vic's production of The Happiest Days of Your Life in January 1966. He recalled in 1984: "I just liked the name. I was looking for a name that sounded natural. 'Eleanor Rigby' sounded natural.
@@pintpot Fair enough
What about: "At the Costa del sooooool"?
1:32 What about Georgia, USA? Georgia is also one of the 50 states in America.
Kansas City (a cover) was the only mention of a place until Sgt Pepper? That's hard to believe
It's true. The only other time before Sgt Pepper was Norwegian Wood, but that doesn't count because it's an adjective
Request: the Beatles discography but only verbs
IUESESAR!!!
What about beatles discography but it's only historical figures?
I didn't know the Beatles mentioned the Soviets
Hey you might like a band called The Doublejumps if you like The Beatles
Most of these are from The Magical Mystery Tour...
Where's "The Universe"?
Around here somewhere!
@@globalheartwarming something Lennon would say
Hey you might like a band called The Doublejumps if you like The Beatles
@@grabgrabgrabthegrab It is kinda SUS that you joined TH-cam about 3 weeks ago
@@Nilo1310 gotta start sometime lol
Thank you.
Hey you might like a band called The Doublejumps if you like The Beatles
I mean, idk but I guess the USSR doesn’t exist anymore
What about There’s a Place
Did you do this already with People's names?
What about Kansas City, Kansas. (As a Kansan I feel obligated to mention that Kansas City is technically also in Kansas.)
It was included, bro
0:08
@@Tony_Baloney_69420 No, that was Kansas City, Missouri (the famous one)
@@mmoney416 oh😕
@@Tony_Baloney_69420 I know but they say Kansas City, Missouri. I was mentioning that Kansas City also existed in Kansas.
@@Tony_Baloney_69420 sorry I didn't realize someone else replied to your comment until now
You forgot Norwegian Wood - Norway 🇳🇴🇳🇴🇳🇴🇳🇴🇳🇴🇳🇴🇳🇴
You missed Montélimar, Savoy Truffle
and Savoy…
THE ENITRE
@@simplyalonso HOW DID YOU NOTICE IT 😭😭😭 Fixed it 💀
@@johnnystarr2021somehow I believed it was called "the entire" for a year but then realised it was always the "enitre". Look at the title cards in the first few seconds btw :P
also "Missour" 0:07
Wait. Which Georgia is Paul singing about in Back in the U.S.S.R? Is it supposed to be ambiguous? Cause I always thought it was a reference to Ray Charles's Georgia on my mind, which would be the US state, but Georgia the country was part of the U.S.S.R. huh.
The song is called Back in the U.S.S.R so it would be pretty safe to assume they are talking about the country known as Georgia
@@nugget2366 Well that's the thing, is it ambiguous on purpose? There's the whole "Back in the US, back in the US, back in the USSR" bit, Georgia on My Mind is a specifically very American classic, "make me scream and shout" makes you think of American Rock n' Roll since shouting was always referenced in it (Shout by Isley Brothers, Twist and Shout - wait... also by Isley Brothers?), and the whole song is about subverting American patriotism.
I guess it's about subverting the familiar American Georgia with elthe Soviet one.
@@althealligator1467 depending on where you live the American Georgia might not be familiar. This has nothing to do with what you said really, it is just that US defaultism is fairly annoying
@@nugget2366 fair enough
@@althealligator1467 It's just a pun.
Stro bury fields.
Hey you might like a band called The Doublejumps if you like The Beatles
rock and roll music ?
Is the USSR really a real location?
in 1968 it was, but not since 1991.
The house of Lords is not a physical "house. What the HELL are you calling Penny Lane "Penny Lane STREET" for?
It’s still a place
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penny_Lane,_Liverpool
He means that adding "street" is unnecessary, it has roughly the same meaning as "lane"
No need to use an atlas
I fucking hate Kansas City/Hey-Hey-Hey so that was a fun start
Lame street? Lime.
"Lame Street".........ha ha.