It's incredible. I am listening to this Beatles video and it is GOLD. Thanks Bill. Wish I had time to go back and absorb and really apply. Fantastic that people are studying Beatles techniques. Better still, hearing all those cool licks and chord combinations again. They were truly inspired and an amazing combo of musos - getting it right at just the right time it seems ... for Beatles fans at any rate.
The Beatles - gone and lost in the mists of time?
Bill-Rosenberg this video is great!
Methinks we need a Beatles challenge ?
- Edited
I prefer these guys ?
studmissile Isn't it amazing how different this sound is and they were around in the same time. It seems they didn't have the same influences at all as the Beatles, or they did but interpreted differently - maybe it's a difference between US and UK culture (and that's complex). But what they shared to some degree was this positive, happy kind of vibe that they were sending out. Then along came slightly heavier sounds ... not knocking those btw.
Very, very different but Brian was/is a musical savant. I've always found his work aurally mesmerizing.
All this talk about the Beatles music, of course it was brilliant. Have a look on YouTube at "The MonaLisa Twins". They are two drop dead gorgeous really nice young girls who do their own versions of Beatles covers as well as other groups from that era. Both girls sing and compliment each other as well as play multiple instruments. They have an amazing webpage, will respond personally to you if you write to them and have a lot of videos on the net to look at for free. They also had a 2 year residency at the Cavern Club as well as playing with some major bands and a tour to Finland so can't be too bad. In one of their videos, you will see a busload of people travelling from Liverpoole to London just to see them perform again, quite a long journey. To me as a ballie from that generation, they breath life back into this music
For some reason these guys kind of have that Beatlesy thing going on. I especially like this version. Incidentally found this as the Outro track to a fantastic series 'Patrick Melrose' - Benedict Cumberbatch (Sherlock). Had never listened to Blur before. I think Lennon may have liked this back in the day ?
I'm just lovin' this cover - might seem like heresy to have a soprano doing the vocals, but I just dig the energy going on in this track. Drummer is particularly busy, yet with tasty dynamics.
Fantastic covers of Beatles songs - so respectful and tasteful (all of the above). Amazing to think that people with such talent were moved to go to the trouble of making this music.
I can just remember sitting around a radio with friends in a lounge somewhere listening for the first time to 'Ticket to Ride' and us all freaking out ? I don't think I could ever convey that magic. I guess it's the same as hearing Little Richie for the first time or Be Bop music, Big Band ... It was the fact that we could only hear them over the radio (and then later on vinyl). They were so distant from us and so rare. Factoring that into cover music is impossible. I wonder if radio is what created the magic - and all that scratchy tinniness. Whatever it was, the guitar went with it and always does. It travels so well.
lindsmuse I can just remember sitting around a radio with friends in a lounge somewhere listening for the first time to 'Ticket to Ride' and us all freaking out ? I don't think I could ever convey that magic.
I think you have managed to convey the ar of anticipation/special feeling of listening to great music. I recall being super excited about getting a pre-order of Smashing Pumpkins "Siamese Dream" back in 1989 - had to save up, pre-order and wait (and wait and wait) for it to arrive. No other way back then to get a copy or to listen to it (aside from 1hr a week when it was maybe getting a play on hard n heavy).
The anticipation and difficulty of getting music made it special then? But the emotive memories attached to finally getting the album and listening to it are priceless and will never fade - E.g. the Beatles reminds me of my parents cranking up some beatles on a sunday and having a boogie.
Alllll pre-internet...which has completely changed the way we perceive music and value it. Though I wonder if the Beatles will become a musical standard as we progress - Could "All you need is love" become the next "Autumn Leaves" in 20years time?
That thing of waiting for them to play it on the radio V8! - and then them playing ads before and then hearing your PRECIOUS MUSIC! Amazing to think that we were still battling to get our good stuff with great difficulty from overseas in the time of The Smashing Pumpkins. Maybe it was outlying countries like us that created revenue for bands - altho' even then, when someone got it, usually a whole lot of people copied it. Even copied music had it's thrill sad to say.
Today what happens is someone points me somewhere and I pick up some stream of music - a song that takes me somewhere and then find something else - and bingo - it's just the sound I need for this month/period. To be honest I have kind of lost touch with what is happening today(not mainstream have never listened to mainstream really) - since my son stopped playing I have no idea what's going on and how people attach themselves to music these days. (have music identities or whatever it is)
- Edited
lindsmuse That thing of waiting for them to play it on the radio V8! - and then them playing ads before and then hearing your PRECIOUS MUSIC! Amazing to think that we were still battling to get our good stuff with great difficulty from overseas in the time of The Smashing Pumpkins
101% - waiting for it to get some airplay made it feel special. This instant gratification comes with a down side - anything, anytime sounds good...but is that anticipation is the secret sauce?
iirc, it was around 1991/2 that I had that album on pre-order. Only commercial/mainstream things got pressed locally so importing for more obscure things was the only way. And they were still kinda obscure then (before the batman soundtrack :p)
I havn't listened to radio or watched terrestrial tv in a rather long time. It's all internet channels - soundcloud's recommendations suit me, youtube has some great jazz and very occasionally facebook serves up something palatable. On the rare occasion it's spotify and bandcamp - but I usually end up there because a mate sent me a link/recommendation.