@@rickpiepers, from what I've heard, Paul wanted a Wurlitzer, but Fender gave The Beatles some gear, including the 1969 Fender Rhodes, which was used on a few songs, this one being one of them
You can find a Rhodes sound bank on most electric/digital pianos these days! Although I know it’s not the same as getting a dedicated Rhodes keyboard. Hope this helps. I have a Yamaha P45 and it comes with a Rhodes sound bank, as well as some others :)
Look at the channel’s name and the video’s description. The electric piano stem is from a 2009 Video Game “Rock Band” featuring Don’t Let Me Down, lol. So in this case, it is Billy Preston. It’s not the rooftop version, which everyone seems to know: which is why the solo is different.
@@andrea-mj9ce Most Rock Band and Guitar Hero stems come from the artist or their label. In very little instances, those working on the game will have to re-create a stem note by note. In this case, these are the original tracks. An example of a recreated track in Rock Band is Roy Orbison’s “Oh, Pretty Woman” it sounds completely different from the record
The star of the show on that one.
on both the Let It Be and Abbey Road albums
He sounds like this and plays like this.
Fine nuances are well understood. Although the performance is stopped in the middle, it is released as it is.
Billy Preston brought life back to music
Take it Billy!
Billy had to tell John Lennon that you don't need to tune an electric piano. He did a wonderful job enhancing the arrangements of their songs.
Actually the Fender Rhodes he played can go out of tune over time and need retuning.
RIP Billy
so much grace
Billy did awesome at the last part.
incredible
Billy is the best musician of the - group ...
Billy Preston had more than talent - musical genius
3:04
0:16
Want so bad to find a fender rhodes.
Is it a Rhodes, not a Wurlitzer?
@@rickpiepers i don't know , but i do know that i love the sound of a fender rhodes electric piano .
@@rickpiepers Rhodes definitely....
@@rickpiepers, from what I've heard, Paul wanted a Wurlitzer, but Fender gave The Beatles some gear, including the 1969 Fender Rhodes, which was used on a few songs, this one being one of them
You can find a Rhodes sound bank on most electric/digital pianos these days! Although I know it’s not the same as getting a dedicated Rhodes keyboard. Hope this helps. I have a Yamaha P45 and it comes with a Rhodes sound bank, as well as some others :)
Is this really Billy Preston or someone else playing to the song ,the ending sounds a little different then the actual version
Look at the channel’s name and the video’s description. The electric piano stem is from a 2009 Video Game “Rock Band” featuring Don’t Let Me Down, lol. So in this case, it is Billy Preston. It’s not the rooftop version, which everyone seems to know: which is why the solo is different.
@@PichuHasStems If it's from Rock Band, it's a recreation then not from Billy Preston, isn't?
It sounds like Billy Preston though
@@andrea-mj9ce Most Rock Band and Guitar Hero stems come from the artist or their label. In very little instances, those working on the game will have to re-create a stem note by note. In this case, these are the original tracks. An example of a recreated track in Rock Band is Roy Orbison’s “Oh, Pretty Woman” it sounds completely different from the record
What happens at 01:57 ?
most likely Billy preparing for the next chords too early or the tracks weren’t separated perfectly