Regardless of John's motives, I've always found a certain majesty in this number.
@ChuckDrennen2 ай бұрын
Ringo’s drumming was always perfect for every song
@sammybeck77942 ай бұрын
Ringo had a built-in metronome. He was good at keeping the beat steady
@stevecash97612 ай бұрын
So good that he told Paul that Yesterday needed no drumming.
@1after9092 ай бұрын
Actually Ringo was having problems with the timing on this song so Paul played the tambourine to help him with it
@venderstrat2 ай бұрын
I had to check that this wasn't my comment.
@satorified16122 ай бұрын
Lennon certainly put Ringo through the (no pun intended) ringer as a drummer, expecting him to muster up drumbeats for his bizarre psychedelic songs. And fortunately for music fans, he was definitely up to the task.
@tomsheets63992 ай бұрын
There's so much going on in this song, I've heard it 1000 times and never get tired of it
@jjs23512 ай бұрын
Agree ! I started listening to it over and over the day it came out and the years folliowng, and I still listen to the song several times a year.
@manuelgasse2 ай бұрын
A Masterpiece of songwriting and arrangement.
@stevenspringer15992 ай бұрын
still the most satisfying blend of classical and rock
@kevinblance2726Ай бұрын
A universe before their time one more aspect of such an innovative band that still stand head and shoulders above any other musician s now and then. Truly Fantastic.
@NVprods2 ай бұрын
So glad you heard the proper version. Another Lennon masterpiece. When this came out, no one had heard anything like it. Lennon wanted to top "Tomorrow Never Knows" and he did.
@RhettAnderson2 ай бұрын
yeah, the new version is trash
@robbyrob07232 ай бұрын
Me too! The other versions don't hold a candle to this
@Dr3amtime2 ай бұрын
Building the groundwork for Revolution 9.
@jonncockrell36062 ай бұрын
I don't know if this topped that but it's a great tune.
@AD652 ай бұрын
Did he ?
@6intheFixАй бұрын
I absolutely love that Ringo is getting the recognition he deserves! Finally I'm seeing it all over videos now. Ringo is the king of drumming. Oh, and Neal Peart.
@hopeklemann12 ай бұрын
🌸 you are absolutely correct, sir....John WAS trying to mess with people's heads.
@Kermit_T_Frog2 ай бұрын
Lennon's calling card was word play, nonsense lyrics. What he admired in Lewis Carroll. If Lennon had any beef, it was with bad poetry. Words which appear to mean something, but which don't. He was thinking of Bob Dylan.
@michaelmccloskey26062 ай бұрын
He messed with his own head too.
@TonyrayytАй бұрын
Keep the reactions on the Beatles coming. Much appreciated!
@s.c.63672 ай бұрын
Everybody seems to think they were flowery lazy hippie types when an actuality they were dedicated and driven musicians and masters at their craft and totally blessed. Their music will live on. It's also subjective to individual interpretation. Thank you great reaction as always.
@P.Galore2 ай бұрын
The Beatles never disappoint
@mysteriousplankton2 ай бұрын
Nobody plays like Ringo. He is the perfect drummer. He doesn't just play a beat but rather he invents parts for the song that makes it better. Not drum fills, but ear-catching original parts that change along with the structure of the song.
@alastairmcintyre47522 ай бұрын
Try and imagine as a 12 year old on Boxing Day 1967 settling down in front of the TV ( with your parents 🤣 ) in eager anticipation of this being aired in black and white for the first time . I seem to remember my mum and dad lasted about 10 minutes before they exited muttering " not listening to this rubbish ! " . Enjoyed it so much watched it again a couple of weeks later IN COLOUR !!!
@KenFullman2 ай бұрын
I really can't imagine that because back in the 60s my parents were in their 40s but they absolutely loved the Beatles. We had three pianos in our living room so, on Christmas we'd all jam together. My father, My brother and me. This would be one we'd play together and it was such great fun.
@frandeig66Ай бұрын
George Martin (the producer) does a fantastic job with the arrangement and the strings are brilliant. Martin worked easier with McCartney, but Lennon's tunes always forced Martin to go way outside his comfort zone an create some thing really special.
@ohfour-seven62282 ай бұрын
I remember when this song hit the radio. Many DJ's refused to play it, saying it wasn't music and many breaking the record in half on air. Of course, we all loved it. This is one of the songs that helped pop muic leap forward into what we hear today. Brilliant song, one of my favorites!
@zendt662 ай бұрын
IMHO, the fadeout here foreshadows the build-up in "A Day In The Life".
@dirtylemon33792 ай бұрын
A Day In the Life came out first.
@jjs23512 ай бұрын
I remember having two reactions when this song came out originally - 1) The fact that it was over 4 minutes long which was very unusual for a single - even the back side of a single. 2) Most of the Beatles fans I knew at the time thought this was incredibly new, innovative, and creative. I couldnt get enough of it - playing it over and over. This is in my top 10 list of most-listened-to Beatles tracks.
@Tunachaz622 ай бұрын
The Beatles are the greatest band ever!
@pinball19702 ай бұрын
Ringo was such a natural musician, this is musical drumming at its best. What does this song need? Ringo. Check out Rain, Hello Goodbye and "a day in the life."
@TheReaperMan2752 ай бұрын
"Let the f*ckers figure that one out." -- John Lennon, 1970.
@bobbmarsАй бұрын
Awesome....
@WadeAustin-s2h2 ай бұрын
Now we're talking 🎶🍻
@arizrich2 ай бұрын
I have loved this song from the first time I heard it!
@lauraallen552 ай бұрын
To no one’s surprise, me too, Rich!
@Stacy55ish2 ай бұрын
The Beatles didn't shy away from surreal lyrics and musical experimentation.
@AndrewLoukidis-jr2bp2 ай бұрын
A simple but perfect groove for the song And that's what he did, play for the song.
@s.c.63672 ай бұрын
Service of a villain, sit me down, father, rescue? No idea. The voices at the end of the song came from a BBC broadcast of the Shakespeare play King Lear, which John Lennon heard when he turned on the radio while they were working on the song. He decided to mix bits of the broadcast into the song, resulting in some radio static and disjointed bits of dialogue. The section of King Lear used came from Act Four, Scene 6, with Oswald saying: "Slave, thou hast slain me. Villain, take my purse," which comes in at the 3:52 mark. After Oswald dies, we hear this dialogue: Edgar: "I know thee well: a serviceable villain, As duteous to the vices of thy mistress As badness would desire." Gloucester: "What, is he dead?" Edgar: "Sit you down, father. Rest you."
@genegarrett33722 ай бұрын
Don't try and figure it out Lee or make sense of it. The song was John's rebuke of people who tried to over analyze his songs. A lot of non sensical gibberish, "Oompa Oompa Stick in in your jumper" It was a TV film. The Shakespeare at the end was a BBC broadcast of King Lear. It has no significance, It was just on the radio and John taped it. Of course some listeners tried to make something out of it cause the walrus was symbolic in the play,
@Lwize2 ай бұрын
Among The Beatles' best. Even 57 years later!
@gillwaugh72122 ай бұрын
Ooh… don’t 😂
@ChuckDrennen2 ай бұрын
So glad you went back and did the right version
@perrymalcolm38022 ай бұрын
For ME, this is their greatest artistic achievement. Amazing
@pinball19702 ай бұрын
It helps having a genius composer!
@donnakubiski55722 ай бұрын
This is one of my top 5 Beatle songs and I'm so happy that you are reacting to the correct version. I hadn't known of your channel when you reacted the first time. After I found you, I started going through your reactions to watch videos I was interested in and had missed. I was so excited to see that you had reacted to this until I started watching the video and realized you did the wrong version. Sorry to say I clicked off of it right away. Another channel I watch reacted to first version that you did and it was just so off putting that I just couldn't listen to it again. They were raked over the coals in their comments about it, but nothing ever came of it. One thing that I really like is that you care about and pay attention to your listeners. Not all reaction channels do.
@genegarrett33722 ай бұрын
I am the walrus (john said) was an answer to reporters asking: "Paul is the cute one, George is the mystical one, Ringo is the everyday man, so, what are you? ' And he would say "I am the walrus." The two notes in the opening and thru the track is the two notes in a European police siren. No significance: it was on in the background one day. This is like a painting where nonrelated images and ideas are captures and form a collage.
@pmoran79712 ай бұрын
genegarrett Much in the same way as the Spice girls portrayed themselves
@santanamauricio2 ай бұрын
in "GLASS ONION" John says "the walrus was Paul"
@genegarrett33722 ай бұрын
@@santanamauricio In a question about that, John said I was feeling kindly towards Paul at the time. He had allowed me to play a solo or something.
@rogerkearns80942 ай бұрын
_I am the walrus (john said)_ *But* he left another clue for us all... ;)
@clarisseferreiradasilva9287Ай бұрын
@@santanamauricio Maybe he only wanted to make still more confusing.
@Bill_Jones.2 ай бұрын
George Harrison was one cool cat.
@venderstrat2 ай бұрын
Do you own a vinyl record of Three Cool Cats?
@lathedauphinot68202 ай бұрын
@@venderstratyes! From an LP ‘Silver Beatles’, recorded, it says, early 1961. I think it’s an audition demo.
@Bill_Jones.2 ай бұрын
@@venderstrat I wish I did ! Three cool cats, Three cool cats Are coming up in a beat up car, Spitting up a lift of candy bar Talking on about how sharp they are. Three cool cats.
@clivejones11522 ай бұрын
At least two
@BecomeConsciousNow2 ай бұрын
My suggestion is "Here today" by Paul McCartney and "All those years ago" by George Harrison. They both wrote a tribute song for John, shortly after he "passed away". The Beatles really did love each other and these songs gives you a sense of what John ment to them both.
@ronbock82912 ай бұрын
George’s brilliant When We Was Fab is a very cool tribute to Walrus, and the Beatles sound he helped to define. After many decades of loving the Beatles, George is my spirit animal. He speaks directly to my heart in a way that nobody else does. Which isn’t to say that I don’t love John and Paul, and Ringo, but George, well, he’s my guy.
@alrivers22972 ай бұрын
@ronbock8291 he's already done it
@hongfang23482 ай бұрын
This is one of my favorite Beatles albums, Magical Mystery Tour. It's almost like a greatest hits. For some reason, I don't see it ranked among the best very often. I'm in a minority probably, but I play this album way more than Sgt Pepper.
@thereunionparty2 ай бұрын
When you look at the track listing for MMT it compares very well to the other more revered LPs. I think the reason why it isn't higher on most lists is that it wasn't part of the official Beatles "canon" until long after the band broke up. In the UK the songs from the TV film were issued as a double EP (extended play) originally. In the U.S. Capitol Records decided to throw in an additional 5 tracks that had been A or B side singles in 1967. It was only in 1987 that the Beatles catalogue was standardised to include the Capitol L.P. version.
@thecreepyllama2 ай бұрын
@@thereunionpartyExactly. My thing with Magical Mystery Tour is that even if it hadn't been inducted into the official Beatles' discography after the fact, it was still one of the major, unified, cohesive musical art projects by The Beatles - one which carried huge significance for their career, just like every "proper" album did. That alone is enough for me to include it in their discography for me, whether that be as the UK extended EP or the US album. It being an EP doesn't make a difference to me, because it was still another impeccable Beatles art project, released on wax, as a collection of songs - it just happened to be shorter than most other collections of songs they had released. Why shouldn't it be accepted as part of the canon discography, even if only as an EP? Are only "albums" allowed? At the end of the day, an EP is just a short album!
@mattleppard19702 ай бұрын
Magical Mystery was one of my earliest owned Beatles products. Had the singles in the little sleeve and booklet courtesy of my parents
@Johnny_Socko2 ай бұрын
This is my favorite Beatles album. I grew up with it -- I was not into Rock music as a kid, but this album was so imaginative that my parents basically treated it as children's entertainment for my sister and me. The album is one of my earliest musical memories, which would place it in the very early 1970s, so as far as I'm concerned, the Capitol Records album is canonical.
@mattleppard19702 ай бұрын
@@Johnny_Socko Same - thanks mum and dad!
@davidwolf46772 ай бұрын
Imagine a song with lyrics including the words “semolina pilchard”… According to Pattie Boyd, Harrison's wife at the time, the words "semolina pilchard" refer to Sergeant Pilcher of the London Drug Squad, who waged a campaign against British rock stars and underground figures during the late 1960s.
@BernardHodgson2 ай бұрын
"Oompah, Oompah, Stick it up your jumper". Its a very old UK saying: it doesn't mean too much apart from showing contempt for something.
@stueyday2 ай бұрын
...the Joker laughs at you...' line is a nod to the Batman 60's show. It was showing on TV whilst John was writing this song.
@Turtledove20092 ай бұрын
It's so funny that John's song inspirations came from everywhere because he was so tuned into everything. What a mind he must have had!
@goonbelly58412 ай бұрын
A Goo Goo Ga Joob to you Lee, on this fine morning.
@L33Reacts2 ай бұрын
As to you, my good sir.
@jonathanmurphy31412 ай бұрын
The dialogue, at the end, was from a BBC broadcast of Shakespeare' "King Lear" that was broadcast when this was recorded in late Sept'1967. The Mono, and Stereo mixes are quite different. The film of MMT for this song was done at a UK Air Base,....which was later used for a 1985 episode of Doctor Who (just to note)
@jnagarya5192 ай бұрын
Lennon's favorite book AS A KID was _Alice in Wonderland_ and he had friends acting out the characters. And he was writing like that as a kid. The drug impacts are blown out of proportion.
@TodayImMaking2 ай бұрын
This song grew on me so much that it's now my second favorite Beatles song.
@marxlover1006 күн бұрын
What is first?
@TodayImMaking5 күн бұрын
@@marxlover100 A Day In The Life. What's your favorite?
@marxlover1005 күн бұрын
@@TodayImMaking Seriously, just about ALL of them! It's hard to pick just one song.
@TodayImMaking5 күн бұрын
@@marxlover100 I know what you mean but I just forced myself one day. LOL
@HiddenSymmetry2 ай бұрын
I A/B'd this single so many times I lost count, wearing out a phonograph needle was a real thing back then..a classic
@s.c.63672 ай бұрын
They're all great friends and we're always making jokes and messing with each other. Hilarious.
@fineasfogg14612 ай бұрын
I did hear the original one you posted. So many of these videos Ive never seen, but I did have this album back in the day. I think people just want to have you see the one that was the best of all for your reaction. Since the age of the Internet, I have been able to see so many things that I missed. And I played certain albums/singles on my old non stereo player over and over so much that if there’s one thing different, my brain recognizes it immediately. It’s almost 5 so it’s time…😶🌫️ have a happy evening Lee. The Beatles brought me to your site but all your quality music patrons and reactions keep me here. 🎉
@lauraallen552 ай бұрын
Same here!
@zeppelinmexicano2 ай бұрын
"Sitting in an English garden" .... amazing part if you have phones on.
@RichardSchaefer-zx9ig2 ай бұрын
George was always called "the quiet Beatle" and he really blossomed/matured and claimed his own voice w Abbey Road contributions+ his solo career.
@yoh532 ай бұрын
"yellow matter custard, dripping from a dead dog's eyes". 😅 There was some hoohah over this line back in the day.
@angie12432 ай бұрын
This is from an English "poem" we recited as kids in the 60s: "Yellow matter custard, green snot pie, All mixed up with a dead dog's eye, Get a piece a bread and spread it thick, And then wash it down with a hot cup of sick". Those were the days, ha! ha! No wonder we grew up daft! The Beatles lyrics might be confusing to some, but if you're English, you're in the know.
@michaelkeefe84942 ай бұрын
George was the baby of the group and that's how they treated him. He wanted to shred like Clapton and Beck but that really wasn't a Beatles thing. And he was the most deeply spiritual of the Beatles, borne out in his solo work.
@betsyab1212 ай бұрын
If you listen to George as a player, he was never a shredder. He was more about playing the right solo for each song. He loved the concept of improvising and following the chord changes as they occurred. His playing was very soulful and melodic!
@michaelkeefe84942 ай бұрын
@@betsyab121 you hear him in get back talking about wanting to do more but you're right, even in his solo work he was never a shredder...
@Wired4Life219 күн бұрын
@@michaelkeefe8494 Idk, George says he wanted to be an improviser, but he ultimately tended to be a meticulous draftsman-like a student who revises their first draft.
@TheCornishCockney2 ай бұрын
We all thought he was describing an acid trip,the full 8 hour mindblown journey full of colours. (They were very strong in those days)
@KenHunter-lt8wm2 ай бұрын
Great that you're doing this again. I've often noticed that some of the video performances, while adding good visuals, have the sound quality go south. Machine Gun by Jimi is one good example - there is an incomplete and grainy (colourised I believe) video of that performance that is nice to see, but the sound quality is nowhere near as good as the album version you did. I Am the Walrus, is up there with Strawberry Fields and A Day in the Life I think as their psychedelic peak.
@genegarrett33722 ай бұрын
Yes this was a TV film afterall with very little if any professional oversight in its creation.
@johnnyfrederick012 ай бұрын
I also think the videos detract if you want to have a pre-MTV experience with a pre-MTV song
@genegarrett33722 ай бұрын
@@johnnyfrederick01 True, except The Beatles kinda invented MTV
@tixximmi12 ай бұрын
And yes that's Jimi on the cover of Sgt. Peppers.
@MrJimithee2 ай бұрын
Probably my favourite Beatles song... As a child, Ringo's fill at the start was the first piece of music that made me screw up my face like a rock star (!) TOO COOL
@jstock23172 ай бұрын
when George starts to unfold for you, that's special. you should watch the Beatles movies. they're actually good and they showcase their personalities.
@p-dru22052 ай бұрын
Thanks for the "trip down memory lane" - talk about a double entendre with "trip". This song, and these albums, were definitely a trip. Even tho I have joined your Patreon, I still like to listen to these on KZbin to keep the algorithm going - we appreciate your discovery of this great band we grew up with.
@trainman53232 ай бұрын
Beatles. Ground breakers. One hill after another. Imagine people hearing that in 1967.
@tixximmi12 ай бұрын
Zappa was even more bizarre. Remember while the Beatles were recording in 4 track, Zappa was using 16 track. And I loved Zappa's parody with the comparison of Zappa's, We're Only In It For The Money, album and the Beatles Sgt. Pepper.
@Ken-pi7qk2 ай бұрын
Good on you for listening to the right version. I only know of one other reactor who bothered to also find the correct version. Shows that you listen to your viewers.
@slavaukraini4042 ай бұрын
Fantastic chord structure in this song, especially in the intro. All major chords.
@jamesdignanmusic27652 ай бұрын
The strange spoken part deep in the mix at the end is from a radio performance of one of Shakespeare's plays. If you want to hear Ringo's finest work, check out the Beatles song "Rain", a brilliant song from the point where they went from being an excellent pop band to becoming a genre-breaking monster. If you want to find out more about George, there's a full-length documentary about him called "Living in the Material World" which is well worth watching.
@yankeeboyno72 ай бұрын
Magical Mystery Tour was also a movie that did not get great reviews. The end is quote from Edger Allen Poe and was used by many, at the time, to search into the 'Paul is Dead' theory - "Oh, untimely death.. Bury my body"
@ROUGHSEES25 күн бұрын
I love this channel so much. So much to watch ❤ you make my day every time. I love the beatles so much ❤
@realbser19562 ай бұрын
This is a great album Lee. Very trippy, always pushing the boundaries, they were. The Fool on the Hill should be next. Thanks Coquina and Lee
@gerhard_mammuth2 ай бұрын
Hello. That was my first self-bought single. "I am the Walrus" was actually the B-side and "Hey Jude" was the A-side. But I always preferred the B-side. Greets from Germany
@angie12432 ай бұрын
I thought Revolution was the B side of Hey Jude. x
@gerhard_mammuth2 ай бұрын
@@angie1243 perhaps it varied from country to country
@angie12432 ай бұрын
@@gerhard_mammuth It probably did. Beatles forever!
@jerrypost96512 ай бұрын
Magical Mystery Tour was a one-off, hour-long made-for-television film. The critics pretty well tore it to shreds. But I think today it plays better as just one of four Beatles films -- the only one which was entirely their creation. It included six original songs, with this one being the best known. The title track is also pretty epic, if you haven't given it a listen.
@stevedahlberg86802 ай бұрын
There is absolutely a lot more to it than just confounding the critics. Although that's a hilarious aspect of John's personality. It reads like really good modern poetry for the time, and it's a bit like surrealism in art, in that this combination of words put together and the images that go with them evoke all kinds of connected things in the subconscious and in our sense of modern culture. And in fact the Hare Krishna reference was literally followed in The Next Breath by an Edgar Allan Poe reference. When he's talking about the pigs for the second time later in the song, I love how he re-appropriates the adjective "snide" to be a verb. One way to maybe understand the appeal of this even for us little kids on the playground, was kind of like kids today maybe learning rap lyrics or something, but we learned every single phrase from it and even laughed along with the laughs and the sound effects and so forth.
@mattleppard19702 ай бұрын
“See how they snide” - brilliant yes
@carolynschmidt54672 ай бұрын
Reminds me of e.e. Cummings. Anyone lived in a pretty how town with up so floating many bells down.
@marilyndurham7382 ай бұрын
Loveed and Love the chaotic creativeness of this song😂❤🎉🎉 always
@JohnJackson-si5bz2 ай бұрын
It wasn't a tv show. MMT was almost like a home movie the Beatles filmed to promote the album.
@ohfour-seven62282 ай бұрын
Oh, and from this album, another of my favorite Beatles song, Baby Your a Rich Man. It has an Indian vibe and also a funky beat with devastating lyrics!
@lauraallen552 ай бұрын
That’s on my request list!
@ohfour-seven62282 ай бұрын
@@lauraallen55 Laura, we must have very similar tastes! Baby You're a Rich Man was always one of absolute favorites. It was released as the B side of All You Need is Love, and I always thought it was so much better! Have you heard Thomas Dolby's I Love You Goodbye? I think it's one of the most incredible songs ever recorded. My other particular favorite is Just One Victory by Todd Rundgren. It's amazing as well! If you don't know either, having similar taste, I 'd love to hear your take on them!
@lauraallen552 ай бұрын
@@ohfour-seven6228 Hi, sorry to not get back to you before now. I've been really sick for the last 3 days. I'm not much better yet, so will just check in for now. I will get back with you soon though. :) Yes, we do seem to have a lot of the same taste in music!
@ohfour-seven62282 ай бұрын
@@lauraallen55 Laura, so sorry to hear you're not feeling well, I hope you are better soon. And absolutely no worries about getting back to me sooner, that's not a big deal. Just take care of yourself and recover at your own pace. 😃
@lauraallen552 ай бұрын
@@ohfour-seven6228 Aww, thank you. :) Still not back to normal. This has been the worst stomach bug I think I've ever had. ugh. Anyway, I didn't know the Dolby song, but checked it out. Very cool! I did know the Todd Rundgren song, though. Love him. He's absolutely brilliant!
@mariaportengen29592 ай бұрын
I really love this song song. Again a masterpiece. 🎶🎶🎶
@don-musicАй бұрын
Awesome to hear Musician listen to this and take it in for the first time! One of my favourite songs ever, and first time i heard it i was floored…. Incredible song and production and arranging and engineering
@nancyjameson75452 ай бұрын
Crazy the way Paul is talking at the end . All those nuts thinking it was a sign Paul was dead . I love your journey through their amazing careers. You are a joy ‘You may want to watch Rick Rubin’s interview with Paul. From last year . You’ll learn a ton about how songs were written . It’s fascinating. You’ll have a lot of your questions answered . It’s more than worth a watch .
@shanedavis31892 ай бұрын
One of my favorite Beatles tracks in 2027 I'll still be listening to this song if I'm still alive , if I'm gone I'll jam on it with John and George
@fidge542 ай бұрын
Magical Mystery Tour was a made for TV movie, not a "TV show." Pretty crummy too. But hey, it was the Beatles so we watched it
@marynelson2882 ай бұрын
We watched it because THE MUSIC WAS GREAT
@JJ8KK2 ай бұрын
Re: George Harrison's songs. His best song by far in my opinion was *If I Needed Someone* which benefited by one of Paul's best bass lines ever & perfect vocal harmonies from John & Paul. It's a must listen. I think a lot of reactors are missing it because it wasn't originally on the American version of Rubber Soul, where it belonged. Do check it out!
@L33Reacts2 ай бұрын
I will keep that in mind because I’m very keen on “figuring” George out since he continues to escape my mind 😂😂
@kweile43392 ай бұрын
Walrus!
@deepermind48842 ай бұрын
@@L33ReactsYou've REALLY got to listen to "It's All Too Much" written by George. On the Yellow Submarine album, it's my favorite Beatles song!
@tixximmi12 ай бұрын
I always thought Rubber Soul was the album that transformed the Old Beatles into the new Beatles. Back in the early '60s there were the Beatles. Our group in 5th grade at that time were the Cockroaches. Drums, one guitar (me) and horns.
@JohnJackson-si5bz2 ай бұрын
My favorite is I Need You.
@NoBeard-v8b2 ай бұрын
The EP came out in Mono & Stereo in the UK with just the songs from the film on it. The LP came out in the US in Mono & Stereo with extra songs from single releases but wasn't released in the UK as an LP until the late seventies [76 I think]. The film is really a long music video for the songs. For George, check out Here Comes The Sun, While My Guitar Gently Weeps or Something with the Fabs. Once he 'clicks' you'll see what a fantastic songwriter he became. I don't think he ever released a bad solo album but he just put them out there and wasn't too fussed about promoting them. Go through his solo work and I think you'll be blown away at why you've never heard it 🙂 LP is what the British call albums [or used to] - 'Long Player'. The term 'Album' came from the old days where long orchestral releases on 78s came in books ['albums']. Might have been the fact that the UK had Singles [45s] and EPs [Extended Play] so the 'big ones' were LP [Long Play]. There were EPs in the States but they don't seem to have been as big a thing and they often went into Jukeboxes so maybe that's why they became 'albums' in the States as they would have been in the days of 78s.
@keithwright16212 ай бұрын
"Ringo's snare is sacred!" Dude, you're awesome.
@L33Reacts2 ай бұрын
Haha thank you 😂👍
@Bluewizard71312 ай бұрын
Much better than the outtake version!
@richardwilley32462 ай бұрын
Mystery Tour is a movie. It was hated by the critics and so it was released on TV in England, but never in the states. You should watch it. As a Beatle fan since 1964, I think the movie is a must watch. It is weird. It has no story. It had no script. It was the Beatles making their own movie. Just a series of vignettes that they didn't even try to tie together. This was their LSD period after all.
@davidblantz2 ай бұрын
Clearly an innovative masterpiece. There was NO ONE that was on the edge like the Beatles. Incredibly way way way ahead of their time. Imagine living through every record dropped by them. I did, and it was a short but incredible journey, never to be repeated. So lucky we were.
@Hartlor_Tayley2 ай бұрын
Such a fun song
@mattreynolds6122 ай бұрын
Great song. Made me think a lot as a kid 😉😹
@DavidTateVA2 ай бұрын
I saw your startlement at the weird stereo effects. You have to remember that nobody was listening on headphones back then -- the stereo effects were from speakers with a few feet of separation, over there on the wall. It was much more common to have parts that were pure left or right, as an effect.
@visaman2 ай бұрын
That would be called, "True Stereo." Very few records today are in True Stereo.
@Turtledove20092 ай бұрын
The avante garde influence is also on display in this song. They seemed to throw everything at this song!
@firebird74792 ай бұрын
Check out the Monty Python parody, The Rutles.
@carolynschmidt54672 ай бұрын
You do a great job... musical understanding and emotional empathy.
@deanallen9272 ай бұрын
Ringo's grip on the groove is relentless. Spare but perfect fills. Those looped background vocals are like percussion instruments.
@wilmertelleria77162 ай бұрын
Remember, this was made in 1967, 1967, 1967. 57 years ago.... amazing sound for that time.
@corawheeler93552 ай бұрын
What a fun song : )
@polittek2 ай бұрын
Loving your Beatles journey. "There's no where you can be that isn't where you're meant to be, it's easy." All you need is Love.
@polittek2 ай бұрын
"All You Need Is Love" was Britain's contribution to Our World, the first live global television link, for which the band were filmed performing it at EMI Studios in London on 25 June. The programme was broadcast via satellite and seen by an audience of over 400 million in 25 countries. Lennon's lyrics were deliberately simplistic, to allow for broad appeal to the show's international audience, and captured the utopian ideals associated with the Summer of Love.
@lauraallen552 ай бұрын
I wouldn’t call the lyrics simplistic at all. I would call them simple though. Simple is all that’s needed at times. :)
@Turtledove20092 ай бұрын
@@lauraallen55 Absolutely!
@lauraallen552 ай бұрын
@@Turtledove2009 I think a lot of people don't realize that simplistic means treating a complex issue as if it's simpler than it is.
@Turtledove20092 ай бұрын
One of my top favourite Beatles songs! I love Lennon's songwriting - all over the map!
@robinfoster75972 ай бұрын
Great reaction Lee, thanks.
@firebird74792 ай бұрын
On the critically panned reviews of the "Magical Mystery Tour" movie, Paul McCartney had this to say: "This is the only time the Beatles perform 'I am the Walrus'...shut up!"
@warrenhughes9112 ай бұрын
Yessir.great reaction again.. P.s. Do more Dylan!!! Bob turned the BEATLES onto WEED ( true story).. P p.s. have you reacted to HURRICANE..my fav.!!
@passwordbosco4072 ай бұрын
You must remember a lot of people were sitting around tripping out on acid in 1967 which explains some of the music. I was 10 in '67 and the Beatles were everywhere. From albums to extreme merchandising to young people. My sisters had Beatle lunch boxes back then...
@DayRoom-o8y2 ай бұрын
Tears For Fears did a song called "Sowing the Seeds of Love", which they said was an attempt to make a song like "I am the walrus". They did a perfect job and it was a very powerful song as well. I especially like the roaring drum sounds. It's fun to listen to when you are aware if its Beatles' influence.
@John-et9yl19 күн бұрын
Al Stewart did the same with Terminal Eyes
@willswalkingwest72672 ай бұрын
This song was so wild when it came out. I remember putting it on my record player when I first got it, yeah, we had record players before we had sophisticated stereos. I had no idea what I was listening to, lol, but I LOVED IT. We didn't get to see the movie here in the USA till years after it came out. John said he was giving all the people who over analyzed their songs something to chew on, he certainly succeeded. That was a radio broadcast of King Lear playing at the end of the song. The chanting thing near the end, we used to think it said, "Smoke Pot, smoke pot, everybody smoke pot". It didn't, but we liked to imagine that's what it's saying. If you watch the movie, you get to see them play it live more or less, it's the recorded version but there they are, miming along. Damn man, they were such a great group. Thanks for doing this. You're the best!
@Coquinagirl2 ай бұрын
Good job, Lee! 🙂 Fun ride, right! It’s just John’s whimsy, too. It’s the right one. It sounds just like when I was 11 years old lying on the living room floor in front of the stereo looking at the album cover. 1967! “…a serviceable villain…” (?) was the last thing we could hear….
@wendyhall82362 ай бұрын
I've a reel to reel of the Beatles when they went to Germany it's got them all talking in the background along with laugh's and singing on it and also The Echo ( a Liverpool newspaper) the day Lennon was shot!
@kevinpolito15292 ай бұрын
The Beatles and several other musicians and luminaries went to India and spent time with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi to study transcendental medication. John's opinion of the Maharishi soured, which inspired the song Sexy Sadie. Prudence Farrow, sister of actress Mia Farrow, was particularly shy, which inspired the song Dear Prudence. Many more songs were inspired by the trip.
@bobrush42172 ай бұрын
My parents were fans of 50's artists like Elvis and Chuck Berry. They were young adults when the Beatles arrived. They weren't impressed and they wrote them off as moptops singing "Yeah, Yeah, Yeah". I became a fan the first time I heard them as a kid. There was so much more to them than their early love songs. As an adult, I played a video of a McCartney concert at my parents house during a visit. They heard the music and asked me what's that great sounding music. I told them it's Paul doing Beatles songs as well as his solo stuff. They had never heard many of the Beatles songs. People don't realize how much they progressed and music progressed as well because of them.