“ A band is only as good as the sum of it’s parts. “ Throw in a Producer that writes brilliant orchestral string parts, and you get this tune that sticks in your head that you’ll never forget. Nothing sounds as good as these guys 53 years later.
Lol.... Ok. Sometimes " basics " is all it takes. George Martin was a genius, if if he only contributed one note on one Beatles song and masterfully produced. The song stands the test of time.
@@drvee1983 ...and to your point, the Beatles and George Martin were masters at knowing just the right amount of simplicity and just the right amount of complexity. Often less is more. 8 years of non stop evolution and brilliance!
@ziocaro this is an absolutely horrible take. Ringo is very much responsible for the bounciness that embodies a lot of the beatles. He is rock solid at holding the beat, he knows exactly when to back off. How many drummers would be restrained enough to just hit the kick, toms and tambourine during the chorus? The fills, perfectly restrained. The tones, the consistency of the snare tone and volume. Many non drummers have been conditioned to believe that flashy = good.
@ziocaro Ringo isn't a technically amazing drummer, but he's a creatively incredible drummer. His rhythms and feel are incredible. Even still, Ringo has some absolutely insane drumlines and fills that are very difficult to perform the same exact way. He's such a GOAT.
Yes Paul is amzingly tasty on bass. And Ringo original drumming also playing floor tom as a ride in a chorus and all thoses fills and breaks,, crazy track...!!!!
@@pilippepine3299yeah I see what you mean. I used to use the toms for the first drum solo, but I realized he used his kick. So I started using that instead. But for the second drum solo, he uses toms.
This song is a great song to showcase Ringo's innovations and stamp on future drumming. Not only is he a brilliant drummer, but as grown man who witnessed this I can tell you nobody drummed like that until after 1967. That said, this was a great band and I feel very, very privileged to have witnessed this as it happened.❤
Ringo Sucks! Right... Idiots. He was one of the best & most tasteful drummers ever and that drum sound... WOW! The 4 together was Pure Magic & we were blessed to have them. Luckily I was just the right age of 9 to experience them from the start. If you weren't there you honestly have no idea what it was like to get a new Beatles record twice a year. It changed the World!
Absolutely. It's the litmus test for any aspiring Paul for any aspiring Beatle band. Can you hit the "C" in "Hello, Goodbye?" Can you sing a Bb and C for two minutes straight, as "Long Tall Sally" and "I'm Down" require? Can you hit and hold the Bb on the words "Sgt. Peppah's Lonely Hearts Club Band?" We love our Macca.
And the vocal jam stuff on the outtro. Where the heck do you come up with "Hey la, hey lippa hey lo ah" or whatever the heck it is. Pretty friggin genius if you ask me
@@bcoldwell1 "Aloha" means both hello and goodbye in Hawaiian. Just ask the girls in grass skirts ;-) .............. (lyric sheets say helloa....wrong)
10:36 - There's a drawing of George from the Yellow Submarine cartoon on Paul's piano. I also see a wooden recorder on the piano, probably for The Fool On The Hill. There are also a couple of teacups up there. They were British, after all, so they must have their tea.
Ringo is fantastic here, so smooth and bassy. There are some pretty complex little subtleties here and there, too. That basic beat sound is something he brought to rock. People think he's too plain of a player, but he invented that basic sound that people take for granted. It's a rarer thing, when someone invents a new simple way of doing things, before Ringo all the rock players were more jazzy sounding.
Ringo is the best. Creative, efficient, and never loses the beat. He understood that less is more and he never made the songs about himself. He deserves all the love!
This is great. Really demonstrates how every instrument and the guy playing it are immensely important to make the song what it is. I remember listening to this when I was 13 years old and memorizing every part, including what Paul was doing at the end. This song was so creative for 1967.
According to Geoff Emerick, McCartney started overdubbing his bass tracks last instead of on a rhythm or guide tracks when they recorded Pepper. Hence why there is no bleeding on his bass here. He would lay them down after everyone except for the engineers had left. This would be his method from that point on. Gave him more time to be creative and achieve what he wanted. Started out with him in the studio alone until he eventually moved up the steps into the booth with the engineers and ran a long cable down to the amplifier.
Some people will demonize Paul until the end of time (over a breakup that was inevitable) but they can’t deny he was an extremely dedicated hard worker who gave his many talents to these boys for a decade. Paul helped make all their songs better with his unique touches, his basslines, piano and backing vocals were always quality stuff.
Yes, unless he played bass on the basic track which still happened often on the White Album (Yer Blues, Happiness is Warm Gun), Get Back sessions and on Abbey Road (Oh! Darling, I Want You, etc).
This is my favorite Beatles song strictly from a musicianship perspective. The drums and bass combo are simply perfection! The counter-play between them and the vocal melody is clearly from a group of very talented individuals. The Orchestra (George Martin), guitars, piano and organ are just cherry on the cake. Absolutely stunning. Hearing "Hello, Goodbye" on the radio doesn't really give it justice. On a great set of headphones (or top-end audiophile speakers) one could simply listen for hours. Amazing song!
Yep, it’s hands down one of their best songs. People love to pick on Paul’s happy pop songs but this proves why they fascinate people-and especially listeners who are musicians themselves. All the well-constructed layers and exciting use of the most clever rhythm section in all rock music (I will die a Macca/Ringo fan).
@@popkorn256 wanna say he really nailed harmonies in the Beatles! You can tell in “I Really Love You” sung by George Harrison in the album Gone Troppo the harmonies are really awesome and it gives you Beatles vibes so you know that he really carried Beatle harmonies!
@@sebastianmaharg I honestly believe it’s just George. I’ve been listening to the Beatles for a long time and I know how they each all sound. Unless there’s a interview or something said by John or written information that I missed. But anyway, I’m pumped for Revolver 2022 Mix
@@D3RPFR0G no, it's not just George, although he might have been slightly closer to the microphone. Check out The Beatles Vocal Harmony channel for a concise breakdown
The parts are more astonishing than the whole. The whole is mystically magical. Each part is as if made by wizzards boiling up something with a life if it's own. More stew please!
@@LucyGoosey4636 You liked that? Have other combinations of words that hopefully will be enjoyed by many in the future since the past is impossible to do anything about except either remember or forget.
Incredible, and so interesting to hear the separate parts. The song has a magical quality, and to hear all the individual bits of magic broken down is incredible... the cello and guitar part gives me goosebumps 🥰
I think the last word is "Aloha" which means both Hello and Goodbye in Hawaiian, and that's why the girls in the promo are dancing with grass skirts pretending to be Hawaiians.....
While this is a great one, I'd urge all interested to look on TH-cam for take 1-Hello, Hello. It's an instrumental that runs about 5 minutes with Ringo on drums and Paul on Piano. Think about it; the piano is essentially a percussive instrument so these two combine to deliver an incredibly propulsive driving track.
I really love this song and hope you do this to every song you can. The Beatles were amazing huh? Love the drums so much and every Beatle sat at them. Love the vocals too separated.
Thanks for this. This is my favorite Beatles' / Paul A-Side. Even though the lyrics almost make no real sense, philosophically. I've always loved it, as MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR was the first Beatles' album my brother and I ever had.
Sei lá cara, é muito legal ver isso. "Hello, Goodbye" tem uma pegada não infantil, como "Obla-di-Obla-da", mas nostálgica. Olha só, coloca no vocal e tenta lembrar da sua infância, agora na guitarra e na orquestra pensa um pouco no significado de juventude, no baixo é super calmo e gostoso de ouvir, como no piano.
A parte da orquestra e da guitarra remete à passagem de tempo. É como se fosse possível imaginar cada momento da sua vida passando como em um filme, mas com um ar de mistério.
Paul is brilliant. One of his very best songs. Not every song has to have some deeper meaning. The chorus is so good! George Martins instrumental should end the question on who the 5th Beatle is. So many of these songs just wouldn't sound the same without George Martin. Five Geniuses working together.
To me, Paul's lead vocals sound they were pitch shifted up a half-step which could mean the vocals were recorded with the tape slowed down so the pitch was a half-step lower when recorded.
This is a very interesting concept - the only suggestion I would make is to have a final section where you put it all together (i.e the entire song, so that after you've heard it deconstructed you can hear the final result without having to look for it somewhere else - just suggestion
This is a great example of The Beatles actually double tracking their vocals instead of using ADT... You can hear Paul ending his notes differently from each vocal image he sang relative to each other at the end of each phrase... It goes to show that no human is perfect and it actually enhances the song!
Further evidence the above picture is from The Fool On The Hill session (as someone has said below) is the odd D variant chord the disembodied guitarist is playing, the first chord you hear in the song.
Actually Ringo did. He said he wanted to do something interesting so he put the child’s kit and the jumbo kit in. You can find it on TH-cam. It is hilarious. Ringo is hilarious.
I'm working on a catalog overhaul project that I want to send to Giles Martin and the Abbey Road crew for possible release.Since there is no Stereo mix of She Loves You currently issued,one is being worked on,the isolated mix would make it easier to complete for inclusion in the project.
Technology will eventually get to the point where every single instrument or vocal can be separated. Probably very close now. That's when true stereo mixes of the first few Beatles albums can happen. I think it will happen.
Walter echeverry: NOT England please Walter. The name of our country is U.K. or Great Britain or even just Britain if you prefer. But England is only a fraction of our country. We’re all British.
@@sylviaroberts8103 ohhh....yes...you "re right...thanks for the red heart....I"m from Vasco Country, north of Spain....fan of The Beatles since 1980......Bye and good luck S Y L.....
@@walterecheverry4812 : Good morning Walter. Thank you for your reply. I’ve looked up some images of your Vasco region and it is certainly beautiful and spectacular. I live in North Wales and it is also lovely countryside - only about 30 miles from Liverpool. Best wishes - keep well, be happy, from Syl.
This is Beautiful pure BEATLES MAGIC Thanks. Have you done ELEANOR RIGBY AND we need other REVOLVER tracks Obviously the Box will leave good stuff out this an excellent job 😍😍😍
i’m a violist and a guitarist, so it really helps to hear it separate from the other music. i really do like this song (especially the F to G# part, for some reason)
I always enjoy hearing Ringo's isolated drums. He's brilliant and seems to somehow convey a sense of humor with drums.
There is something very personal--and unique--that comes through in his playing.
Absolutely. His parts are perfect for each song.
“ A band is only as good as the sum of it’s parts. “ Throw in a Producer that writes brilliant orchestral string parts, and you get this tune that sticks in your head that you’ll never forget. Nothing sounds as good as these guys 53 years later.
The orchestral part of this song is nothing more than basic.
Lol....
Ok.
Sometimes " basics " is all it takes.
George Martin was a genius, if if he only contributed one note on one Beatles song and masterfully produced.
The song stands the test of time.
The best producer of the Beatles is Paul McCartney, not George Martin.
From '62' - ' 67 '?
Sorry....
No.
@@drvee1983 ...and to your point, the Beatles and George Martin were masters at knowing just the right amount of simplicity and just the right amount of complexity. Often less is more. 8 years of non stop evolution and brilliance!
Great drums by ringo here
yes!!
As always
@ziocaro ?
@ziocaro this is an absolutely horrible take. Ringo is very much responsible for the bounciness that embodies a lot of the beatles. He is rock solid at holding the beat, he knows exactly when to back off. How many drummers would be restrained enough to just hit the kick, toms and tambourine during the chorus? The fills, perfectly restrained. The tones, the consistency of the snare tone and volume. Many non drummers have been conditioned to believe that flashy = good.
@ziocaro Ringo isn't a technically amazing drummer, but he's a creatively incredible drummer. His rhythms and feel are incredible. Even still, Ringo has some absolutely insane drumlines and fills that are very difficult to perform the same exact way. He's such a GOAT.
Pauls’ bass lines drive many of their songs to a much higher level. Brilliant!
I love listening for his basslines, they’re so fun!!
Yes Paul is amzingly tasty on bass.
And Ringo original drumming also playing floor tom as a ride in a chorus and all thoses fills and breaks,, crazy track...!!!!
Why did he do that to his Rick? Must have been on drugs
@@pilippepine3299yeah I see what you mean. I used to use the toms for the first drum solo, but I realized he used his kick. So I started using that instead. But for the second drum solo, he uses toms.
This song is a great song to showcase Ringo's innovations and stamp on future drumming. Not only is he a brilliant drummer, but as grown man who witnessed this I can tell you nobody drummed like that until after 1967. That said, this was a great band and I feel very, very privileged to have witnessed this as it happened.❤
1:19, 1:57 dude those fills are insanely good
So fat, I love the tone too, outrageous that a sound from 50 years ago is still the industry benchmark
No one plays a fill like ringo
Ringo has a very different drumming style that was perfect for the Beatles style. I couldn’t imagine anybody else on drums for Beatles.
Ringo is the metronome of the band.
Well Dear Prudence was played by Paul on Drums so you can have an idea that it would be different but if the drummer is a genius then it'll work
8:21 just an epic sound
I'm amazed some of the session people that worked on these songs aren't more famous
I agree. Had a feel of Bach in there too.
Ringo Sucks! Right... Idiots. He was one of the best & most tasteful drummers ever and that drum sound... WOW! The 4 together was Pure Magic & we were blessed to have them. Luckily I was just the right age of 9 to experience them from the start. If you weren't there you honestly have no idea what it was like to get a new Beatles record twice a year. It changed the World!
Too bad ur old as shit now
@@lonelystoner8594 mood
Go cry babe
Don't listen to haters, hippydippy. You have 49 thumbs up and they have none. Glad you enjoy the music so much.
@@lonelystoner8594 lol
01:54 Nobody can lay down those subtle fills like Ringo Starr, seemingly light and heavy at the same time.
He’s like the perfect grilled cheese; you only think they’re basic till you find one that exceeds your greatest expectation.
Paul's at 15:28 get me every single time. Timeless
Absolutely. It's the litmus test for any aspiring Paul for any aspiring Beatle band. Can you hit the "C" in "Hello, Goodbye?" Can you sing a Bb and C for two minutes straight, as "Long Tall Sally" and "I'm Down" require? Can you hit and hold the Bb on the words "Sgt. Peppah's Lonely Hearts Club Band?" We love our Macca.
@@JoshMaxPower Love is too weak a word!!!!
And the vocal jam stuff on the outtro. Where the heck do you come up with "Hey la, hey lippa hey lo ah" or whatever the heck it is. Pretty friggin genius if you ask me
I’ve always considered Paul’s voice the best, man had a gift
@@bcoldwell1 "Aloha" means both hello and goodbye in Hawaiian. Just ask the girls in grass skirts ;-) .............. (lyric sheets say helloa....wrong)
I’m obsessed with the drums
Idk how u can not....
I love the old school tight drum sounds
@@adensalazar3937 Richie does it right!
I ruined 69 likes
A picture of ‘Yellow Submarine’ George on top of the piano.
Magnifica ricostruzione
10:36 - There's a drawing of George from the Yellow Submarine cartoon on Paul's piano. I also see a wooden recorder on the piano, probably for The Fool On The Hill. There are also a couple of teacups up there. They were British, after all, so they must have their tea.
Ringo is fantastic here, so smooth and bassy. There are some pretty complex little subtleties here and there, too. That basic beat sound is something he brought to rock. People think he's too plain of a player, but he invented that basic sound that people take for granted. It's a rarer thing, when someone invents a new simple way of doing things, before Ringo all the rock players were more jazzy sounding.
Ringo is the best. Creative, efficient, and never loses the beat. He understood that less is more and he never made the songs about himself. He deserves all the love!
Da Vinci said that simplicity is the ultimate form of sophistication. This is totally applicable to Ringo.
He never adds more than necessary....here, he is more "free-form" than usual for a Beatles' tune....
This song stung me in the brain at about age 8 listening to the radio on my school bus, had to hear more, never turned back, bought every album.
1:19 is amazing! Ringo is a great drummer!
Oh
My goooooood
How I love Ringo's drum talent. He's so amazing!
0:00 - 3:26 Drums (Ringo)
3:33 - 6:58 Bass (Paul)
7:03 - 10:27 Guitar (George) and Orchestra
10:33 - 13:59 Piano (Paul) and Organ (John)
14:05 - 17:31 Vocals
Ringo sings in the coda
john creo que tocaba el solo de piano del final
@@ilovemusic7748 Do you have time code?
@bober_ yes
10:33 - 13:59 - I can also hear a shaker (or maybe maracas?) and a tambourine... Possibly played by Ringo
That last lick by George, before the song changes for the last few bars, is amazing!!
This is great. Really demonstrates how every instrument and the guy playing it are immensely important to make the song what it is. I remember listening to this when I was 13 years old and memorizing every part, including what Paul was doing at the end. This song was so creative for 1967.
Yep. Will always be one of my favorite songs :)
According to Geoff Emerick, McCartney started overdubbing his bass tracks last instead of on a rhythm or guide tracks when they recorded Pepper. Hence why there is no bleeding on his bass here. He would lay them down after everyone except for the engineers had left. This would be his method from that point on. Gave him more time to be creative and achieve what he wanted. Started out with him in the studio alone until he eventually moved up the steps into the booth with the engineers and ran a long cable down to the amplifier.
yeah on the original take hes playing Piano, overdubbing bass later
Paul McCartney Genius!
Interesting
Some people will demonize Paul until the end of time (over a breakup that was inevitable) but they can’t deny he was an extremely dedicated hard worker who gave his many talents to these boys for a decade. Paul helped make all their songs better with his unique touches, his basslines, piano and backing vocals were always quality stuff.
Yes, unless he played bass on the basic track which still happened often on the White Album (Yer Blues, Happiness is Warm Gun), Get Back sessions and on Abbey Road (Oh! Darling, I Want You, etc).
These wonderful "isolations" are "killing me softly". The sound we could not hear back in the day. ❤️
This is my favorite Beatles song strictly from a musicianship perspective. The drums and bass combo are simply perfection! The counter-play between them and the vocal melody is clearly from a group of very talented individuals. The Orchestra (George Martin), guitars, piano and organ are just cherry on the cake. Absolutely stunning.
Hearing "Hello, Goodbye" on the radio doesn't really give it justice. On a great set of headphones (or top-end audiophile speakers) one could simply listen for hours. Amazing song!
Yep, it’s hands down one of their best songs. People love to pick on Paul’s happy pop songs but this proves why they fascinate people-and especially listeners who are musicians themselves. All the well-constructed layers and exciting use of the most clever rhythm section in all rock music (I will die a Macca/Ringo fan).
This song and “rain” for me
Plus George Martin's exquisite harmonic sensibilities with string arrangements.
This is a great example of bass and drums working together to get a fantastic grove/beat!
I can't get enough of these Beatles deconstructions!
Thanks for your Work!
Cheers!
I love George’s vocals on 16:02
George was truly a great singer.
@@popkorn256 wanna say he really nailed harmonies in the Beatles! You can tell in “I Really Love You” sung by George Harrison in the album Gone Troppo the harmonies are really awesome and it gives you Beatles vibes so you know that he really carried Beatle harmonies!
That's George and John harmonizing together there.
@@sebastianmaharg I honestly believe it’s just George. I’ve been listening to the Beatles for a long time and I know how they each all sound. Unless there’s a interview or something said by John or written information that I missed.
But anyway, I’m pumped for Revolver 2022 Mix
@@D3RPFR0G no, it's not just George, although he might have been slightly closer to the microphone. Check out The Beatles Vocal Harmony channel for a concise breakdown
The Bass is so good👍
The parts are more astonishing than the whole. The whole is mystically magical. Each part is as if made by wizzards boiling up something with a life if it's own. More stew please!
Hahaha mystically magical
@@LucyGoosey4636 You liked that?
Have other combinations of words that hopefully will be enjoyed by many in the future since the past is impossible to do anything about except either remember or forget.
To me the most revelatory of this breakdown of the musical parts the cello arrangement, which is much more interesting than I had realized.
There's no cello, that's two violas.
I was always amazed by their vocal arrangements.
These iso drum tracks are brilliant tools for beatles nerds who happen to be drummers. Thanks for doing this. 👍
Ringo: *Happy*
Paul: *Smiles*
George: *Wat*
John: *Piano/Organ Boi*
Piano (Paul)
Organ (John)
George Martin: straight up *_v i b i n'_*
Ringo: alcohol
John: weed
George: nicotine withdrawal
Paul: cocaine
@@engi1394 no
A perfect composition and arrangement. Utterly perfect.
Another legendary bass line By Sir Paul Mccartney.
Dingo, thank you for always playing what the song requires and not just having a fill fest , impeccable timing sir
Good old Dingo.
@@sratus Dingo Czarr
This Is Pure Genius. All The Marvellous Layers To One Of The Best Beatles Songs
Love Ringo’s snare sound. This is brilliant!!
Such simple drum beats giving so much soul to the song.. a dream to almost every drummer..
Incredible, and so interesting to hear the separate parts. The song has a magical quality, and to hear all the individual bits of magic broken down is incredible... the cello and guitar part gives me goosebumps 🥰
Heard this song a million times and I am still amazed by these guys. Very cool breakdown.
I thought I played the bass line well. Then I listened to this and I’ve missed loads of notes that I’ve never heard before. Thanks for this. 👍
Really great compression on the drum kicks
Ringo's part is so well put together. So great! Fantastic tune by the best band!
First heard this on my Brothers 4 track player he got for Christmas 1967. MMT still my favorite Beatles album .
What amazes me about Paul is that he could play bass and sing lead vocals at the same time.
He could but probably not on this recording, the vocals were done later.
His degree of coordination is superb.
The paul bass is awesome
I love that compressed snare sound!
Paul in the thumbnail is really giving a "Had to do it to 'em" face.
yeah i have that as my profile but with a mask
Stoned face
This is amazing, separated out an incredible arrangement
george’s guitar is excellent
I under appreciated ringo’s drumming until now
Ringos drum fills are amazing 👏 🤩
The second grade class at my school sang this for the winter concert last year.
BRILLiANT ! And the two cups of tea look like John & Yoko in white top hats hiding behind the piano !
So interesting to hear it broken down like this....Gotta love dem Beatles!
My favorite Beatles song
Yeah, Ringo!! 🖤
Just Fabulous. I can't tell you how exciting I find Ringo's drumming.
Ringo's drums are so perfectly in tune and recorded, you can enjoy them all by themselves
I like the snare tone/sound on this one, really crisp and cutting
Paul is such a good pianist
A bit late, but its John!
No it’s Paul.
@@erickmiranda4196John’s on organ, Paul is on piano.
Those heavenly backing vocals are amazing...those 3 were made to be ha la hay la lo la
I think the last word is "Aloha" which means both Hello and Goodbye in Hawaiian, and that's why the girls in the promo are dancing with grass skirts pretending to be Hawaiians.....
Amazing drum part at 1:19
Ringo's snare sound makes me feel warm & fuzzy inside.
While this is a great one, I'd urge all interested to look on TH-cam for take 1-Hello, Hello. It's an instrumental that runs about 5 minutes with Ringo on drums and Paul on Piano. Think about it; the piano is essentially a percussive instrument so these two combine to deliver an incredibly propulsive driving track.
I’m obsessed with these damn videos….love that Rickey sound 🔥🔥
I really love this song and hope you do this to every song you can. The Beatles were amazing huh? Love the drums so much and every Beatle sat at them. Love the vocals too separated.
Wonderful and refreshing! And fun! Thank you Fab Four and Sir George!! 🎼🎶
Thanks for this. This is my favorite Beatles' / Paul A-Side. Even though the lyrics almost make no real sense, philosophically. I've always loved it, as MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR was the first Beatles' album my brother and I ever had.
Failing relationship maybe?
You say yes, I say No,
You say goodbye, I say hello, I don't know why you say goodbye, I say hello.
This song has always been a favorite of mine. It’s so fun and groovy and the ending is paradise.
Sei lá cara, é muito legal ver isso. "Hello, Goodbye" tem uma pegada não infantil, como "Obla-di-Obla-da", mas nostálgica. Olha só, coloca no vocal e tenta lembrar da sua infância, agora na guitarra e na orquestra pensa um pouco no significado de juventude, no baixo é super calmo e gostoso de ouvir, como no piano.
A parte da orquestra e da guitarra remete à passagem de tempo. É como se fosse possível imaginar cada momento da sua vida passando como em um filme, mas com um ar de mistério.
Read somewhere John saying he played the piano on the outro.
7:26 Yes! Absolutely what I was looking for!
The brilliant drumming + orchestraion, guitar and vocals turned fairly basic lyrics into a masterpiece.
This was just CHILLING.
HOMBRE! AMO EL BAJO DE PAUL
Paul is brilliant. One of his very best songs. Not every song has to have some deeper meaning. The chorus is so good! George Martins instrumental should end the question on who the 5th Beatle is. So many of these songs just wouldn't sound the same without George Martin. Five Geniuses working together.
Yep, I don’t care what anyone says, I love this song and always have, always will.
Yup, GM was definitely the 5th Beatle!!
Pete and Stu : Are we joke to you?
Absolutely…. The Strings Arrangement Are Always brilliant
To me, Paul's lead vocals sound they were pitch shifted up a half-step which could mean the vocals were recorded with the tape slowed down so the pitch was a half-step lower when recorded.
I was thinking double tracked
i love the slight tape distortion on the drums
Stunning
Maravillosa canción del geminiano Paul.
piano so like for no one which was only a year before! you know those bits -the bits of the 'chorus' . still nifty piano!
Some piano, and organ parts are very reminiscent of Beach Boys tracks.
Wow amazing!! Loved it back then, so great to hear separated tracks!! Thanks man! 😁👍 Hoping for Penny Lane + SFF...
YES RINGO GREATLY WORKED OUT 👍
This is a very interesting concept - the only suggestion I would make is to have a final section where you put it all together (i.e the entire song, so that after you've heard it deconstructed you can hear the final result without having to look for it somewhere else - just suggestion
if i put the original track at the end the video would immediately get blocked
This is a great example of The Beatles actually double tracking their vocals instead of using ADT... You can hear Paul ending his notes differently from each vocal image he sang relative to each other at the end of each phrase... It goes to show that no human is perfect and it actually enhances the song!
Deliberate differences work the best.
16:42 Imagine being able to double track this section so flawlessly. What a singer.
Further evidence the above picture is from The Fool On The Hill session (as someone has said below) is the odd D variant chord the disembodied guitarist is playing, the first chord you hear in the song.
In the promo film/video for this song, Ringo's drums are tiny. Nobody has ever explained or even mentioned this.
They are also massive at one point too I think? Just a joke I reckon
Actually Ringo did. He said he wanted to do something interesting so he put the child’s kit and the jumbo kit in. You can find it on TH-cam. It is hilarious. Ringo is hilarious.
I'd like to see"She Loves You"isolated vocals on a video,show up here!Good luck with that one!!
I know they did separate tracks for the German version of that one and I wanna hold your hand.
I'm working on a catalog overhaul project that I want to send to Giles Martin and the Abbey Road crew for possible release.Since there is no Stereo mix of She Loves You currently issued,one is being worked on,the isolated mix would make it easier to complete for inclusion in the project.
Technology will eventually get to the point where every single instrument or vocal can be separated. Probably very close now. That's when true stereo mixes of the first few Beatles albums can happen. I think it will happen.
NUMBER 1 IN U S A AND ENGLAND.....TOP HIT AMAZING OF THE B E A T L E S.......another great song forever.....
Walter echeverry: NOT England please Walter. The name of our country is U.K. or Great Britain or even just Britain if you prefer. But England is only a fraction of our country. We’re all British.
@@sylviaroberts8103 O. K. ..SYL..... ANYWAY....YOUR NATION and of T he Beatles is the most grand of the W O R L D.....for many reasons......
@@walterecheverry4812 : Walter - you’re too kind. ❤️
@@sylviaroberts8103 ohhh....yes...you "re right...thanks for the red heart....I"m from Vasco Country, north of Spain....fan of The Beatles since 1980......Bye and good luck S Y L.....
@@walterecheverry4812 : Good morning Walter. Thank you for your reply. I’ve looked up some images of your Vasco region and it is certainly beautiful and spectacular. I live in North Wales and it is also lovely countryside - only about 30 miles from Liverpool. Best wishes - keep well, be happy, from Syl.
This is Beautiful pure BEATLES MAGIC Thanks.
Have you done ELEANOR RIGBY
AND we need other REVOLVER tracks
Obviously the Box will leave good stuff out
this an excellent job 😍😍😍
Ringo is off the wall, WOW
Brilliant.
Hi. I have your new ! Channel I like this 🎶 I Will put this in my library so kee the songs coming your new ! No.1.fan
i’m a violist and a guitarist, so it really helps to hear it separate from the other music. i really do like this song (especially the F to G# part, for some reason)
Viola for the win! I’m also a violist myself and play drums and piano as well.
There is also maracas and tambourine on the piano and organ track. Either that or the piano is making some weird sounds
ringo is amazing
I believe the piano starting 13:22 is actually John believe it or not.
yes
Thx Genius
Nice solo on the drums for this one.