Thank you for nailing Lennon's intricacies spot on. Although a great early Harrison song, Lennon does not get recognized enough for being one of the greatest rhythm players of his day. Thanks for posting!
I remember when amps first incorporated tremolo... wow! You set both the depth and the speed with knobs; no more wiggling the stick. Yeah, I'm that old.
What makes you think the intro and verse parts are John? Where did you get that information? I'm very curious. It's obvious that the instrument track was laid down before George put his vocal on (and then double-tracked it).
Hi @tdrtx it’s often hard to work out exactly who is playing which guitar part, but in this case there are several published references that refer to John having a tremolo sound on his guitar, such as ‘Way Beyond Compare’ by John Winn.
Thank you for nailing Lennon's intricacies spot on.
Although a great early Harrison song, Lennon does not get recognized enough for being one of the greatest rhythm players of his day.
Thanks for posting!
I remember when amps first incorporated tremolo... wow! You set both the depth and the speed with knobs; no more wiggling the stick. Yeah, I'm that old.
Thank you so much..
What makes you think the intro and verse parts are John? Where did you get that information? I'm very curious. It's obvious that the instrument track was laid down before George put his vocal on (and then double-tracked it).
Hi @tdrtx it’s often hard to work out exactly who is playing which guitar part, but in this case there are several published references that refer to John having a tremolo sound on his guitar, such as ‘Way Beyond Compare’ by John Winn.
He doesn't say that he said John covers the chords while George plays his.lead riff . I admire this information.