It must be remembered that there was no easy access to this video in 1967.
@Tom-hk6ub8 ай бұрын
I think it got played on Ed Sullivan .
@Hernal038 ай бұрын
@@Tom-hk6ub I believe this video was also aired on _American Bandstand_ in early 1967 (you might find it here on KZbin) --- you can clearly see that even some of the youth at the time just did not know what hit them and what to make of it and did not come to appreciate it till later on. Ahead of their time.
@peterrabbit71738 ай бұрын
I never saw the video before the 1990s. The song itself was all I needed.
@flubblert8 ай бұрын
@@Hernal03I think the point being that if you weren't around to catch one of only a few broadcasts of it, chances are you never saw it. No way to access it on your own.
@tracymitchell74948 ай бұрын
It did play on Dick Clark (American Bandstand). I watched it with my older sister in B/W. Clark was interviewing kids on the show. We were all shocked at how much they changed physically. It blew this 9 yr old way.
@petehealy98198 ай бұрын
I'm not a drummer, but I'm a 71yo lifelong Beatles fan, and I really appreciate your very insightful comments on Ringo's skills and creativity. He really is a master artist. Keep up the great work you're doing!
@JohnLedger-g4i8 ай бұрын
Critics always say each band gets the drummer they deserve. Ringo was their bonus
@davidfeltz86973 күн бұрын
Any true Beatles fan would agree. This was a true band.
@gonzalofuster64918 ай бұрын
I am 73. I was in High School. I grew up enjoying The Beatles's evolution. Every album or single was different fron the previous!!!! I wouldn't be who I am without The Beatles.
@joeybonin76918 ай бұрын
I always anxiously awaited the next release, and was usually surprised.
@os54848 ай бұрын
Thats is Evolution
@malikba80488 ай бұрын
When I started to listen to them they had broken up for 5 years. But they definitely changed my life
@DrStrangelove38918 ай бұрын
Ringo's weird off beat fills on this song fascinate me. He's such an atypical drummer.
@L33Reacts8 ай бұрын
Yeah he really is. But the whole band is atypical in a way... but together, they were the greatest band ever. Of course on their own they did great too but they were titans together.
@DrStrangelove38918 ай бұрын
@@L33Reacts absolutely, the sum is greater than the parts. It's the same with Pink Floyd. Sometimes I think it's fate that certain people met, like how John and Paul bonded over their childhood traumas, or how Stills, Nash and Crosby just happened to be at a party together and started singing harmonies.
@Michael-mm3fm8 ай бұрын
@@DrStrangelove3891they were round at Joni’s. So Graham says.
@thehotyounggrandpas82076 ай бұрын
Also the drums are double-tracked.
@darkcustomxxx72525 ай бұрын
@@thehotyounggrandpas8207 and backwards in some places.......it's genius and mindblowing at that time.
@diverdown6318 ай бұрын
The beatles weren't just music visionaries,they also lend the way with music videos
@anndale65552 ай бұрын
and elvis with jailhouse rock.
@ChuckDrennen8 ай бұрын
Everything began with the Beatles. Ringo was an integral part of their sound. No one else could have taken his place.
@louise_rose8 ай бұрын
Yep, he's certainly an unmissable part of their various sounds...Also, this song is an amazing feat of arrangement and production. It could so easily have become overloaded with strange stuff, but it manages to keep up the assured flow of a dream.
@ChromeDestiny8 ай бұрын
Listen to disc one of the Anthology in sequence, things start escalating rapidly once Ringo joins.
@billc.58618 ай бұрын
As a drummer I’m constantly defending Ringo’s talent His drumming was brilliant, listening to his drumming on “Something “ People say he wasn’t like Keith Moon , John Bonham, Neal Peart or some silly comment like that. That wasn’t the music he played to . He played the right beats in the right places Most other drummers would approach a song like “Come Together “ probably a straight forward 4- 4 beat without that great beginning he dose.
@Royale_with_Cheeze8 ай бұрын
Jimmy Nicol says hi.
@gettinhungrig88068 ай бұрын
@@louise_roseIt did become overloaded with strange stuff. The Anthology version pre the edit was superior in my view and could've been a standalone A-side single. This weird version could've gone onto Pepper. As it is Strawberry Fields got buried somewhat effectively becoming the B-side of the more commercial Penny Lane.
@terrysnyder85778 ай бұрын
Your instincts are on point. It was a TREMENDOUS time to grow up. Imagine going from pop to psychedelic in middle school! The world opened like a flower bloom ...
@ildaruk82938 ай бұрын
1 second ago How did The Beatles evolute from Love Me Do to Strawberry Fields Forever in the space of just 5 years is beyond me… How?!
@mikefannon69948 ай бұрын
How did they evolve? That's easy - LSD.
@garyrausch11848 ай бұрын
We didn't confuse our listening experience with these videos we just put albums on the turntable and sat back and absorbed the greatness
@firebird74798 ай бұрын
This is some of Ringo's best work.
@L33Reacts8 ай бұрын
It really is. He was doing some really different stuff here. It fit the dream like vibe very well. But my dreams are basically lsd trips anyway, so my dream is maybe psychedelia to others 😆
@orchidwave25748 ай бұрын
@@L33Reacts There seemed to be 2 Ringos...the Ringo who kept absolutely the right time, giving the song no more or less energy or tempo than it needed, but not choosing to do anything particularly noticeable, serving the song... then the Ringo who'd decide 'ok, this song is asking for something peculiar, let me invent something'...and then you get this funny, offbeat, trippy, playful drum track that it seems only Ringo would deliver. If you already knew this is what you wanted for your song, how could you explain it to the drummer??? Ringo plays like a precisely clumsy stumbling happy puppy. Stumbling, but stumbling precisely in time. Very fitting that Paul's beloved sheepdog Martha is in the video because Ringo's playing makes me think of a playful happy sheepdog..
@HareDeLune8 ай бұрын
@@L33Reacts Greetings, brother. I am the King of weird dreams. Shall we compare?
@firebird74793 ай бұрын
@@mikewa2 "Why can't you play it like Ringo?" ~ John Lennon. I'll consider Lennon's opinion before yours.
@hopeklemann18 ай бұрын
I think it's so beautiful how familiar you're getting with this generation and their music... much mad respect for you
@L33Reacts8 ай бұрын
Thank you Hope I truly appreciate that 🙏
@glenndespres53178 ай бұрын
Right? I can’t even say how much I love the fact that Lee is telling US how good Ringo is and WHY. He truly gets it! And it saves me from having to point it out. Great reaction to one of my top Beatle songs of all time. Something in this song and video set the course and tone of my life. Believe it.
@arnesaknussemm72948 ай бұрын
Ringo influenced a load of drummers. Now i name only one, as an example, his drumming Is so "Ringoso", i'm Talking about Pat Mastelotto (King Crimson...and non only KC)
@G-MAN19588 ай бұрын
😄That "low" lyric you heard at the end of the song was John saying, "Cranberry Sauce", but some people thought he was saying, "I buried Paul". What a time!!☮️
@DerekDominoes8 ай бұрын
I've never been convinced that he didn't say "I buried Paul." The cranberry sauce line just never rang true to me but who knows?
@cosybully8 ай бұрын
@@DerekDominoes I agree with you. To admit it would have spoiled the mystery they were creating, so they told one interviewer that they were saying "I'm very bored," and they told another interviewer that they were saying "cranberry sauce." It was easy enough to read between the lines.
@dhaibhcuin8 ай бұрын
There's a demo where he did say cranberry sauce. He said it clearly, doesn't sound anything like what he says here.
@quantanglement8 ай бұрын
"I'm very bored"
@0943408 ай бұрын
Debatable.
@RobertPandoliJr6 ай бұрын
One of my all-time favorite quotes is from this song, "Living is easy with eyes closed, misunderstanding all you see"
@deniseg8123 ай бұрын
John always had the words
@rk41gator6 ай бұрын
Not everyone loved the Beatles. They were too 'out there' for many and scared the older generation, but the Beatles moved music forward and affected everyone. They brought real ideas into pop music and were unafraid to blow people's minds......sailing into uncharted waters. We are all blessed for that.
@scottamichie5 ай бұрын
Yes. Their Ideas, their shared beliefs about love won and love lost-all that was what made Beatlemania a worldwide phenomenon.
@deniseg8124 ай бұрын
My father who would be over 100 had he lived. He played jazz and flamingo guitar. He loved them.
@mikewa22 ай бұрын
So true. This song in particular confused non Beatles believers, the lack of simple melody and simple words confused those not prepared to move with it.
@davidc58202 ай бұрын
Funny how now saying the Beatles are overrated is cool. But their footprints on the musical word is super obvious
@garrymercer7572 ай бұрын
They changed their generation radically to what generations were previously
@lawrencesmith65368 ай бұрын
The weird thing was; at the time, there was really nowhere to watch this video. As I recall, it played once on one of the three networks. There was literally no other infrastructure for videos to be seen. That said, I watched because it was kind of a big deal in Beatle fan world. Mind blowing. It was all we were talking about at school the next day
@junkersish8 ай бұрын
the video was certainly innovative for the time but the music was even more so but the thing is utube reactors always put up the video and focus on mostly only that just like this guy did on top of chatting throughout
@cliff4818 ай бұрын
It wasn't video. It was 35 mil film which is about the same detail as 4k today. As you say, there was nowhere to watch it for me either except BBC special (black and white in my family at the time). They advertised its airing for about two weeks before.
@throughmyeyes...8 ай бұрын
On a side note, the sheepdog that appears in the final shot belongs to Paul, Martha, who would be the subject for a later McCartney song "Martha My Dear". Strawberry Fields was a very real place in John's early life..
@robertyoung45238 ай бұрын
Strawberry fields was a childrens home near where john lived.
@AlBarzUK8 ай бұрын
He spent some time skiving off there, even climbing a tree there.
@brucesavage84938 ай бұрын
I believe that the first music video was by The Beatles in 1966 for their song “Rain”.
@chrisgross20438 ай бұрын
And Paperback Writer
@gettinhungrig88068 ай бұрын
Garbage! First video of someone singing their song? Probably 1927
@joeybonin76918 ай бұрын
To be real, "soundies" were first Look it up.
@scottyhotty10036 ай бұрын
Anything Beatles on this channel gets a ton of views and deservedly so Fab Four are Leaps and Bounds ahead of anything of their time❤
@gerib42348 ай бұрын
I feel so lucky to have had a Dad that listened to The Beatles, Blood Sweat And Tears, The Who and Cream on his reel-to-reel. And a Mom who loved The Carpenters, Simon And Garfunkel and Led Zeppelin. Being introduced to great music at an early age truly does shape one's belief and character. I wish you could have been around at that time too. It was a magical time, great music everywhere, of all genres.
@gracedv8 ай бұрын
Not too late to start listening.
@DawnSuttonfabfour8 ай бұрын
Amen. Same here. I brought my daughter up the same. Worked like a charm.
@brianvernon2498 ай бұрын
My mom (Queens, NY) was current pop, even to the point of discarding the old. My dad (the token white boy in the black neighborhood) was a trifecta of prog rock, southern rock & DCI. Therefore while I was listening to Genesis @ age 9 (due to MTV @ age 4), my mom was like: I know you are listening to current stuff, but it is lame.
@joeybonin76918 ай бұрын
So mom like Zep. Wow, my mother couldn't handle Jimi, who was one of my faves, but thought Cream were OK.
@DawnSuttonfabfour8 ай бұрын
@@joeybonin7691 In 67, my mum went to Covent Garden, London to see Ravi Shankar. She wore a tangerine sari. She wishes my sibs and me would forget it. But,,,,we can't/won't. lol.
@runningsuperska8 ай бұрын
The best Beatles look.
@oliverwe408 ай бұрын
The best selling band in history and the greatest band in history
@johnfrancis44018 ай бұрын
This song is very appropriate for 2024....the lyrics fit perfectly.
@NVprods8 ай бұрын
A little Beatle trivia about this song. Strawberry Fields was the first song recorded for the Sgt. Pepper album, followed by Penny Lane. Because they were released as a single, they weren't included on the album. Can you imagine that album with those two songs included? John liked two different takes of this song, but each one was recorded in a different key. He told George Martin that he liked the first half of one the takes, and the second half of another take, They were in different keys and tempos,, so George Martin told John he couldn't put them together. John told him to figure it out. And he did, He altered the speeds on the tapes until they matched, that's why the song has its own incredible sound. The rumor was that the last words John said at the end of the song was "Paul is Dead", but he what he actually said is "Cranberry Sauce."
@damonhines81878 ай бұрын
It sounds like "I buried Paul", but as you say, John claimed otherwise. Cranberry sauce indeed! 😅😂
@L33Reacts8 ай бұрын
I haven't heard Penny Lane yet, but damn... if they had this on sgt. Pepper it would have made it even stronger! Idk where to put it, though (on the album figuratively)
I find "cranberry sauce" unlikely simply because it wasn't around in Britain until about a decade later, why the hell would they pick those words? The stupid Paul died rumours and conspiracy theories is what buried idea references.
@IvorPresents8 ай бұрын
Always thought it sounded like, "I'm very slow"
@tigerpinky8 ай бұрын
George Martin and the Beatles what a match!
@TerriKnight-x3sАй бұрын
George Martin was a genius
@douglaspensack34998 ай бұрын
Their use of discordant harmonics and classical instrumentation was wildly innovative on mid-1960s pop music.
@darkcustomxxx72525 ай бұрын
and backwards tracks.......nobody, but nobody was even thinking that was possible to release a track with that in it, then the Beatles just said "hold my beer..."
@Russ-gy7tx8 ай бұрын
Lee, this is when music on the radio became colorful from black and white. "Strawberry Fields Forever" was supposed to be on the Sgt. Pepper album but the label needed a single to release, George Martin would later regret not keeping it on it. Mel Evans was a longtime assistant to The Beatles.
@doplinger18 ай бұрын
And that story is told on the documentary “Sgt Pepper Forever”.
@SpuzzyLargo8 ай бұрын
Same with television -- which switched to color only the year before. Remember all those B&W shows that turned to color during the 1965/1966 season?
@papercup25178 ай бұрын
*Mal* Evans :-)
@Russ-gy7tx8 ай бұрын
@@doplinger1 Thanks, I look forward watching it!
@Russ-gy7tx8 ай бұрын
@@SpuzzyLargo I do remember the switch!
@heartoftherose8 ай бұрын
No longer wanting to risk touring, they decided to send images of themselves out instead.
@mervincombs66408 ай бұрын
plus the crowds were so loud the band could not hear themselves play. got frustrating.
@ChromeDestiny8 ай бұрын
Plus they started making songs with more and more advanced production. If they had still done the odd live show they would have had start doing like The Beach Boys eventually did in the early 70's and bring extra musicians on stage.
@mattleppard19708 ай бұрын
Plus after the Jesus comments, they were in real fear for their lives. The Shea Stadium footage is scary
@stevedahlberg86808 ай бұрын
I know that KZbin is a nightmare of copyright bullshit but I'm glad that you persevere. This is some amazing stuff and you have the experience and the acumen and the curiosity to actually kind of understand it from a chronological distance, which I find not only impressive but enjoyable.
@scottyhotty10037 ай бұрын
Living is easy with eyes closed
@jjmarz10018 ай бұрын
George's outfit and sunglasses at the end is one of the greatest Beatle moments.
@JoseAntonioDuclaud8 ай бұрын
Perhaps the best way to explain things is that The Beatles were simply enlightened.
@dirtylemon33798 ай бұрын
I was eleven years old and a massive Beatles fan when this came out and they showed this on some tv show. It was like whoa, six months ago they were touring the US on stage in matching suits and haircuts. They just kept knocking over boundaries. It really was kind of supernatural watching them in real time just steer history into another direction. I’ve never seen anything like it.
@tjdomerny48476 ай бұрын
When the Beatles stopped touring, they created the "music video"
@raymondggoldstein8 ай бұрын
I lived thru this. “Help” got me hooked, “Strawberry Fields” took it to the next level for me.
@gettinhungrig88068 ай бұрын
'Help' the song or the movie?
@raymondggoldstein8 ай бұрын
@@gettinhungrig8806 The song! Heard it on the AM radio in 1965. Was so different from anything my parents were listening to. Those guitars, those harmonies!
@williamhinshaw68388 ай бұрын
John's chord progressions in 'HELP' are just classic.....Beatles always had memorable melodies.
@firaonoyus21128 ай бұрын
The quality of this video is stunning, like it was just taken yesterday.
@L33Reacts8 ай бұрын
Yeah, it looks like they just filmed it. So wild....
@cliff4818 ай бұрын
@@L33Reacts That's all we had in 1967 especially for location shots, That's why the old quality is so good. 35 mil film contains detail which transfers today to hi def at around 4k video without loss.
@carlgemlich16578 ай бұрын
Watch TV shows from the 60s, they hold their quality because they were shot on film. I believe they changed to digital in the 80s because it was available and, of course, less expensive. My choice for best picture quality for a Beatles video from this era is for the song 'Rain'.
@poptart42607 ай бұрын
Talk about being glad they did all these videos, man , am I glad
@jimmeltonbradley14978 ай бұрын
As a fully-fledged, 16 year old, beatnik/hippie, (we called ourselves "Heads"), the year this was released, I can tell you that the Beatles were, without doubt, the trailblazers. They didn't invent Psychedelia, but they did pick it up by it's pants and turn it into the real deal. Without them, and Dylan, we would have just carried on listening to two-and-a-half minute, bubble-gum pop. God-forbid!
@johngriswold22138 ай бұрын
Don't discount The Dead who pretty much single handedly forced the bands of the time into long format, improvisation based cuts...there was far too much cross pollination to accurately diagram. Everybody listened to everybody, the audience demanded a change to the standard set of record cuts, the greats of the age piled through the breach. I remember my first concert, '68 I think, and the Chambers Brothers doing Time Has Come Today. Procol Harum and the Grass Roots were there too;)
@terrycunningham81188 ай бұрын
We called ourselves "freaks". Same people tho.
@johngriswold22138 ай бұрын
@@terrycunningham8118 Yep, that's the question I asked my SLC friends before moving there on my 10 speed..."are there any freaks there?"
@cuebj8 ай бұрын
Long format... a way to fill up long player records.
@johngriswold22138 ай бұрын
@@cuebj Little to do with filling up vinyl sides , live music was exploding and the 2.5 minute AM radio format was dying. The better artists of the time had to make it with the Filmore, East and West crowds, a more sophisticated audience that came to listen, dance, and trip, and the bands had to offer proper fare;)
@stwbryfld15 ай бұрын
My love affair with the Beatles started when I was 15 years old, 30 years ago. AOL just started and I picked my handle to be StwBryFld...and has been the same all these years. It's brilliant and unique as hell.
@phillipmoore90128 ай бұрын
Feb 1967 a few months before Sgt Pepper album. Almost every artist at the time thought What the .....Glad you "got it" and well said.
@stayclean7775 ай бұрын
You are so right re. Ringo. Everyone is underrated to someone on KZbin but in Ringo's case it's actually true.
@ddiamondr18 ай бұрын
I love your reactions! I watched this video played on American bandstand. The audience was pretty shocked by the change in The Beatles. A couple of people said they liked them the way they were before in their suits and playing their fun music. I remember one young woman in her early 20s saying, “they used to be so cute. “ But then there was a young man. Dressed in a black turtleneck, and looking a lot like Bruce Lee, who smiled and said. “That was great.” he got it immediately. The Beatles lead the way. Some could not follow. Most followed in time. Some followed immediately. It was a great time to be alive. You never knew what you were going to hear on the radio. The top 10 could consist of anything from instrumentals like Telstar to country crossover hits like Harper Valley PTA to hard rock like Born to be Wild to psychedelia like Strawberry Fields. It was great.
@akadros3103 ай бұрын
I was born soon after they broke up and their music has always been a part of my life. There one of the bands that I will always come back to. They had so many great songs but this in particular has always say up on the top of the heap. Such a wonderful song. This video is a little older now but I would highly recommend listening to "Strawberry Fields Forever (Take 7 and edit and piece; mono)" on Anthology 2. The extended drum solo on that version of the song is freaking amazing
@mikeb33658 ай бұрын
Ringo is the glue that held the band together both musically and relationship-wise. His light-heartedness softened the sometimes tense relationships between John and Paul. Google what Strawberry fields actually was and what the tree had to do with it. Real not make up places in John's youth.
@joeybonin76918 ай бұрын
He was mellow, cordial, patient, and a dedicated drummer.
@robinholland11368 ай бұрын
I was nearly 16 when this was released and it blew my mind. I'd never heard anything like it. It was revolutionary. So different from the mainstream 'pop' music of the time and fitted perfectly with the spirit of rebellion that was growing in young people of the time. The amazing thing is that, if it were released today, I suspect it would have the same impact, as is true of many of the Beatles' songs.
@tdgallagher2188 ай бұрын
I think that many would agree that The Beatles broke the mold when they did Strawberry Fields. I encourage you to learn about the accomplishments and the innovations they came up with during the recording session for this song. What they did was truly a remarkable feat that showed others what could be done in the studio. While George Martin gets (and rightly deserves) much of the credit, their recording engineer, Geoff Emerick, also deserves a lot of recognition. As you noted, this is what they called a 'promotional video' back in their day. They figured that distributing these videos was the perfect alternative to giving live performances to showcase their new songs. They didn't realize they were, yet again, creating a new trend in the music industry. At the time this was released, the critics were heavy-handed on the Beatles, claiming they had run dry and they were finally at the end of the road with respect to their creative streak. The Beatles typically released new songs every five to six months and there was some concern that they had been quiet for too long. As it were, they were working on Sgt Pepper and still had a long way to go, so they were pressured to come out with something to satisfy the demand. Being that both this, and Penny Lane, were near completion and intended to be on Sgt Pepper, they reluctantly gave in and released them together. It was tough decision on which song was better and which one deserved the honor of being on the A-side. It was a fitting that both songs were given equal recognition because they are both fantastic songs in their own way. They are essentially polar opposites of one another. Each song was unique and reflective of its author. John's song, Strawberry Fields, was eerily dreamlike and surreal while Penny Lane, written by Paul, was bright and cheerful. Releasing them together was an ideal decision that kept the wide spectrum of Beatles fans feeling wholly satisfied. Love your Beatles reactions, dude. I'm anxiously ready for more.
@mikewa23 ай бұрын
This is first time I’d heard this in at least 15 years. Such a treat. I’d forgotten how alternative this was to what was happening in music at the time. Ringo’s drumming sublime.
@debjorgo8 ай бұрын
The Beatles shot just about everything on film, making it easier to cleanup and present in HD. The Paperback Writer and Rain videos, released before this, are pretty great too.
@JaySpangler8 ай бұрын
Double A-side single, meaning that both songs were intended for radio and the charts. (Like releasing 2 singles on one disc.)
@dwhite8498 ай бұрын
Ringo is the most understood drummer of all time Just perfect for a band
@joejohnston35918 ай бұрын
I was twelve years old back then, a great time to be an Earthling!
@timfedroff13598 ай бұрын
They had no one to reference. They just created. Awesome stuff.
@newremote8 ай бұрын
Good reaction. As others have commented, for those of us in their teens at the time the promotional film clip (initially it wasn't a video) had almost no bearing on how we experienced the music. We just played the records over and over and looked at the covers. I have no idea when I first saw the clip and maybe never saw it during the Sixties. Things were different and there was no regular, easily accessible way to see such clips. I agree that George Martin was very important to the Beatles' sound and contributed his own ideas, but it needs to be remembered that his main role was to find ways to produce the sounds that the Beatles wanted and the ideas they came up with in their heads. You're right about Ringo and I think these days he gets the credit he deserves, although there are still a few who just parrot some old thing they heard from someone who knows nothing about drumming.
@mattreynolds6126 ай бұрын
Been my favorite Beatles song since I was 10 in '81. So trppilly groovy🎶🎶🎵🎶✌️
@nicolascarey63308 ай бұрын
The Beatles had been making films for TV for a few years. That way Top of the Pops had somethng to show when they were on tour. This was just another step forward.
@Rawbtube8 ай бұрын
The Greatest. Ever.
@Devoted2Mariah3 ай бұрын
I’ve been loving your Beatles reactions.
@L33Reacts3 ай бұрын
I’m glad to hear it!! We got plenty on here! lol. I love the lads
@traherne67268 ай бұрын
What great quality on that music video, best one I’ve seen.
@jimbrown13038 ай бұрын
In high school when this came out. They had not put out a record in a while and then this mystical imagery of video and sound came out. Quite unique at the time
@scottbowers10008 ай бұрын
How is it possible to be that good!
@gaylelee40018 ай бұрын
So glad you mentioned Mal!!!!
@johnbyrnes79128 ай бұрын
Lee always enjoy the sixties psychedelia such as this and others they did such as I Am The Walrus , I'm Only Sleeping , Glass Onion , Flying , Being For The Benerit Of Mr Kite , Across The Universe -yes the Beatles were quite exceptional ! I'd like to offer an aussie one too by the Master's Apprentices known as Living In A Child's Dream Lee. Yer a suvivor so am I ! 🐨
@L33Reacts8 ай бұрын
I'm only sleeping is so good. Only Lennon could make a song like that work LOL
@Ken-pi7qk8 ай бұрын
Oh yeah!!! And “Turn up your Radio”!
@tdgallagher2188 ай бұрын
Funny, 5 out of 6 songs noted are Lennon compositions. Coincidence? I think not.
@kevinsebastian1207 ай бұрын
At the end, what was actually said is "cranberry sauce," but people mistook it as "I buried Paul" which became "evidence" to support the Paul Is Dead theory.
@tomedmonson5018 ай бұрын
Lee, thanks for the reaction. As multiple people have said in the comments here, SFF was made from two takes. The Beatles released a full version of take 7 (the quieter first minute of the final recording) on the Beatles Anthology, vol. 2. There is an edit piece at the end of that version that includes Ringo going a little bit nuts on the drums for a minute. Very cool.
@BaccarWozat7 ай бұрын
This song was played on the car radio of one Brian Wilson, who wept bitterly upon hearing it and lost all faith in finishing working on the Beach Boys' "SMiLE" album. He only returned to it 35 years later, after everyone had given up on it. Yes, the Beatles changed everything.
@jeffmurray16818 ай бұрын
Another first: The Beatles basically invented the music video. They couldn't keep going to TV shows to promote their singles, so they made music videos that were sent to the shows to be played.
@mark42628 ай бұрын
You had me when you said 'We're in for a show'..pure Gold..thank you
@L33Reacts8 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed Mark! 😉
@andyshan8 ай бұрын
There are several youtube videos of people trying to find the the precise location where this video was shot. The tree , the landscape. All good fun.
@DBCuzitis8 ай бұрын
So much pre-Beatles was about trying to capture the perfect “live” performance feeling on a recording. So a great recording was great musicians and vocals melding to the best performance. The Beatles (and G.Martin) opened people’s ears and eyes to the broader potential of the recording studio. Layers and instruments combined with studio tricks and processing to achieve unique sounds and experiences. They threw out the restrictions of capturing what could be done live on stage and re-invented what could be achieved in a studio. Revolutionary! Bands, musicians, and artists after the Beatles were challenged to find ways to play live what they’d achieved in the studio instead of the reverse. The Beatles blew up the old restrictive mentality of performance capturing and opened up the music world to imaginative realization through technology and innovation.
@Annie-hd3jx8 ай бұрын
It’s written in history, the Beatles changed the world forever. Absolutely iconic and I was one of the luckiest people to be around from the very beginning right through to the end. The sixties were awesome and Ringo remember, was a left handed drummer playing right hand drums 😊👍❤️
@davidmorris33128 ай бұрын
Another first of many firsts by this group videos.
@JamesKovacic8 ай бұрын
Eleanor Rigby and Strawberry Fields introduced me to a little thing called British melancholy
@L33Reacts8 ай бұрын
Isn't it wonderful?
@papercup25178 ай бұрын
Oh, I'd never really thought of it like that before. Don't other cultures have melancholic songs? Perhaps it's climate related...? In England it must go all the way back to John Dowland, at least. Sting has a wonderful album full of his super-melancholic love songs.
@Hernal038 ай бұрын
Thanks for your great review, you're enthusiasm and intuitive feel for creative artistry (good to see in a young person) are wonderful. The Beatles were special (and still are!). There are those who are always saying that no one individual member of the group is near the top when it comes to technical proficiency. But that is exactly the beauty of the Beatles. If you really think about it, you just _can't_ imagine this band minus ANY one of them! That cannot be said of most bands. Hell, I can't even imagine them being exactly who they ended up being without their Producer George Martin, who played such a huge part in their sound. This is what makes them special. Yes, It's true --- NONE of those 5 individuals (including Martin) were technically the best at what they did, but what they did together, in UNISON, made them the best band of all time. As the old adage goes, *_The whole is greater than the sum of it's parts._* And that one phrase says it all about the Beatles, the most groundbreaking band of all time.
@stevedahlberg86808 ай бұрын
Just getting started but so glad you are doing this. Yeah it wasn't their first steps in this incredibly creative and groundbreaking direction, because you could easily go back to the album Rubber Soul at least on a couple songs to see that this was kind of a direction. And then of course the iconic Revolver album after that, leading ultimately to this.
@Hanssologuitars8 ай бұрын
The thing John mumbles during the fadeout is “cranberry sauce”. This was misheard by some as “I buried Paul” which was one of the key pieces of “evidence” in the Paul is dead theory.
@johnnyfrederick018 ай бұрын
Or “I’m very stoned”. I never heard “cranberry sauce” before. We would turn the volume way up on the record player to try to hear the words - listening for “clues” to whether Paul was alive or not. “I buried Paul” was a clue, as was playing some songs backwards, which we really couldn’t do on kiddie record players. Also Paul being the Walrus in “Glass Onion” and on the cover of Magical Mystery Tour. And the license plate on Abbey Road, which was supposed to mean Paul would have been 26 IF….
@chrisgross20438 ай бұрын
@@johnnyfrederick01it's cranberry sauce
@RobBCactive8 ай бұрын
I think you're imagining things .. we had strawberries then and it sounds like strawberry field slowed down which is far more logical, cranberries just weren't around until about a decade later.
@jonathanroberts89818 ай бұрын
Regarding cranberries, remember they’d toured the US extensively, and George’s older sister lived there.
@RobBCactive8 ай бұрын
@@jonathanroberts8981they worked in Hamburg for a long time, where's the Pils and Pilze references? But just change the song title and lyrics to Cranberry Fields if you want despite England having other berries, often with regional names. I know the Wiki article has Paul in 1974 telling somebody John said CS, but Paul would give silly answers to stupid questions. He knows the conspiracy theories and that must have been annoying. There's many references to crazy chit people spread in the US so I just think that was a sarcastic answer.
@emilymartinez69618 ай бұрын
Sweetie you represent yourself just awesome, I wouldn't come back to your channel every morning to watch you if you weren't💖✌️🥰
@BritIronRebel8 ай бұрын
This is a master class in drumming by Ringo. So many people don't appreciate his abilities. Nobody did a shuffle like Ringo... at just the right time. He always enhanced the song.
@alchabeta32376 ай бұрын
Ringo is unpredictable. I listen to his drumming now more than ever. Very instinctive, one-off experimental. Could change with every take. Very solid jazz-rock.
@captainsatellite21125 ай бұрын
The national music show American Bandstand showed the vid and a teen girl started crying. Dick Clark asked why. She cried, "they look so old!" The kids weren't quite ready yet. Pepper was released shortly after, the teens got hip to the new stuff and the rest is history. Music and the world were never the same. Great reaction vid.
@1rwjwith8 ай бұрын
A masterpiece…revolutionary indeed! You got it..
@anonamoose56737 ай бұрын
All our lives changed in those days. And Ringo kept the the beat for all of us.
@davidhampshire77238 ай бұрын
Thanks for your perceptive appreciation of this classic song…and with regards to your comment ‘what a time to be alive’…trust me , man it was….keep on rocking 👍🎶
@kevinpolito15298 ай бұрын
The opening notes are played on a Mellotron (which had a strip of tape and playback mechanism for every key) on the flute setting. It had a lot of wow and flutter, giving it a wavery sound. Back in the '70s, a friend's band was sharing a studio with John Lennon at The Record Plant in NYC. John had that Mellotron with him, and my friend got to play it. The big surprise was that the tape strip for the lowest key was the opening guitar arpeggio from Bungalow Bill.
@cliff4818 ай бұрын
Just noticed this after my comment. I used to work on them in Liverpool in the 60s and they were a nightmare. Great sound though.
@kevinpolito15298 ай бұрын
@@cliff481 The word "ethereal" comes to mind.
@gettinhungrig88068 ай бұрын
An arpeggio is just the notes of a chord played separately. I'd call it a guitar piece.
@jonathanroberts89818 ай бұрын
The Mellotron sounds different enough from its recorded source instruments to be an interesting additional sound in itself. Rick Wakeman has said one of his tickets to session work was that he’d figured out how to play it in tune. Mike Pindar of the Moody Blues had worked for the company that produced them, so he could fix his when it broke. They broke frequently. On “Seventh Sojourn” Pindar used the Chamberlin, the original tape keyboard. Reports say the musicians who played the recordings for that instrument were members of Lawrence Welk’s orchestra.
@williamhinshaw68388 ай бұрын
love the mellotron string sound that John Evan of Jethro Tull uses on 'Witches Promise'
@BRGKasumi77Main5 ай бұрын
Strawberry Fields Forever: recorded on November 24, 28, 29 & December 8, 9, 15, 21, 22 and it's based on both Takes 7 and 26!! Check out the Sgt Pepper's 50th Anniversary Edition on KZbin too.
@pattierichards73918 ай бұрын
To me, some of their vids from this era look like homemade amateur fun, whereas the music is sublime and complex and better listened to with eyes shut and giving full attention. You said a mouthful praising George Martin. It’s rare when things work out so well with just the right people. It was a miracle that lasted six or seven years, which I guess is amazing and I should have been happy instead of mourning my whole life lol
@ruby-rz9yi13 күн бұрын
I have often thought that I would not trade being young now for having been young then
@slavaukraini4048 ай бұрын
I consider this the greatest song ever made for lots of reasons. It is really it's own genre of one song.
@nwguitarist54853 ай бұрын
Another great one L33, enjoying the channel dude glad you're here.
@darost5 ай бұрын
I Don't think I saw the video until the 80s or 90s, but definitely not when it was released. Doing Xmas shopping in a Dallas mall in 1967 & hearing John singing "Nothing is real" just a few years after I Want To Hold Your Hand was mind-blowing. Excellent analysis,! Thank you, Thank you, Thank you!!!
@petebosheff881913 күн бұрын
“What a time to be alive” you are exactly right - no one ever heard sounds like this before it was released. i remember exactly the moment i heard this late at night in my bedroom radio on like 10:30 at night and … the world changed. Same with i am the Walrus. Same with Jimi Hendrix purple haze, these sounds did not exist in the universe nor were they imagined. Same with Marvin Gaye What’s Goin On?”. Stevie wonder Living in the City. respects
@craigreid71788 ай бұрын
Even though you weren't alive back then you can relive it through the music and videos and through those of us who DID live through it and were immersed in that magical experience.
@richardanderson33228 ай бұрын
The Beatles invented music videos to be a presence without being there. Their first videos were sent to Ed Sullivan who wanted them to appear on his show but they had too many commitments to go. You are wise beyond your years Lee. Great insight.
@kurtiklaas8 ай бұрын
I was 12 in 1976 and an aunt gave me the "Blue Album" as christmas present. The very first song on this album is "Strawberry Fields Forever". It changed everything. I never had listen to a sound like that. As 12 year old german boy I didn't understood a word. but the music was all I need. After 10 times listening to Strawberry I went on to the next song "Penny Lane". The next sound expirience - and so it goes with the whole album. What a band!!
@snakeinthegrass74438 ай бұрын
Thanks Bob for "enlightening" The Beatles. The world changed forever!
@canadianstudmuffin8 ай бұрын
For me, the best music video ever.
@Linda-y9h8 ай бұрын
Yes, it was a very interesting time to be alive. Thanks darlin for appreciating "our" music. We were weirder than you thought, huh? ❤😊
@mrbumble29865 ай бұрын
Great to see someone finally getting to grips with doing reactions to Beatles singles and b-sides rather than just album tracks. Some of their early b-sides were real gems, try listening to She Loves You/I'll Get You, I Wanna Hold Your Hand/This Boy, Can't Buy Me Love/You Can't Do That, Hard Day's Night/Things We Said Today, I Feel Fine/She's A Woman, Ticket To Ride/Yes It Is, Help/I'm Down, We Can Work It Out/Day Tripper, All You Need Is Love/Baby You're A Rich Man. These are classic songs of the era and need to be appreciated as much as the albums are revered today.
@bluetopguitar11048 ай бұрын
So much talent. And mostly radio play. They pioneered the video production but it was records and radio back then. Martin's production skills helped a lot. Genius on everyone's part. The leaders in the day. Look at the advancement from late 65 to 67. Pretty amazing. Thanks for the comments on Ringo, he played in a lot of different timings.
@mattleppard19708 ай бұрын
My goodness. Been busy with ongoing life management. This is so good to come back to. Man you’ll be blown away. Starting it now ❤❤❤❤
@Terry-dl4nf6 ай бұрын
Your analysis of the Beatles is always very good. Those of us who have been around for a while appreciate the insight you have. Yes, the Beatles made several of the very first ever music videos. It was because they were so enormously popular, and of course they had stopped performing live, that the world was starved of seeing them live and I can remember that anything at all that had videos or especially live performance was excitedly anticipated by fans all over the world. These days you can see videos of current music stars virtually at will, but back then there was so little available. L33, you may have already covered this, but I think the first ever world-wide LIVE performance was of All You Need is Love which was beamed live around the world in an historical landmark (1967). Would be great to have your reaction (if you haven't already). A true milestone and also we get to see the group together actually performing. Cheers L33