First Listen - A Hard Days Night by The Beatles Part 1 (Hip Hop Fan Reacts)

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  • Опубликовано: 5 май 2023
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Комментарии • 253

  • @ppaulisdeadd5879
    @ppaulisdeadd5879 Год назад +88

    Opening chord is legendary

    • @jordanrivers7736
      @jordanrivers7736 Год назад +9

      The “A Hard Day’s Night” opening chord is still being discussed and debated to this day. Attempts to recreate it have led to various degrees of success.

    • @TheDivayenta
      @TheDivayenta Год назад +6

      It’s two chords together said George.

    • @stevensprunger3422
      @stevensprunger3422 Год назад +2

      I don’t believe George Martin the producer ever figure out what that cord was but I didn’t know is 2 chords struck together I thought was just one cord that John Lennon’s single chord
      That George Martin could never figure out
      but maybe not I could be wrong

    • @damonhines8187
      @damonhines8187 Год назад +1

      I've generally approximated it with a G7sus4. Close, still no cigar. I don't particularly like cigars anyway, just wish I could kick the cigarette habit. 😊😬🙄🚬
      🖖😘🎵🎸🎶❤️✨️🕊

    • @stevensprunger3422
      @stevensprunger3422 Год назад +1

      That’s what I heard George Martin say in an interview
      it was just one cord struck by John Lennon and
      Martin never could figure out what it was

  • @michaelt6218
    @michaelt6218 Год назад +67

    From that stunning opening chord, to the back-and-forth lead singing by John and Paul, to those hot bongo licks (by their engineer, Norman Smith), then the groovy sped-up guitar-piano riff in the break, and finally to that incredible closing arpeggio on Harrison's brand-new 12-string Rickenbacker - *THIS* is how you kick off an album and open a movie!!

    • @scalisque5403
      @scalisque5403 Год назад +6

      George Harrison is still the only person keeping Rickenbacker alive. I know so many people who only got it to play The Beatles

    • @DandyLion662a
      @DandyLion662a Год назад +4

      Randy Bachman of Guess Who and BTO fame has a deconstruction of that opening note while on an Abbey Road studio tour with (I think) George Martin's son.

    • @DawnSuttonfabfour
      @DawnSuttonfabfour Год назад

      You mean "Hurricane" Smith?

    • @michaelt6218
      @michaelt6218 Год назад +3

      @@DawnSuttonfabfour That's right! The man, the myth, the legend...

    • @DawnSuttonfabfour
      @DawnSuttonfabfour Год назад +2

      @@michaelt6218 Loved him. Don't let it de!

  • @markhodge7
    @markhodge7 Год назад +36

    Imagine what it was like to be a young kid that got caught up in Beatlemania in 1963. Now they were your favorite band and you wanted to hear everything they did. 8 years later, and you're a teenager, having been brought on the most incredible musical journey with them. They shaped how you would listen to music for the rest of your life.

    • @lhcarter
      @lhcarter Год назад +3

      That was me

    • @lhcarter
      @lhcarter Год назад

      Elvis in Jailhouse Rock, music video.

    • @kjw2977
      @kjw2977 Год назад +1

      That was my childhood. An incredible gift.

  • @marceloliberatodesou
    @marceloliberatodesou Год назад +59

    in this album you cannot miss "if I fell" - it's probably the one that shows the biggest leap forward in songwriting

    • @michaelt6218
      @michaelt6218 Год назад +12

      Yes! 💯 "If I Fell" is definitely one of Lennon's most beautiful songs. The vocal duet between him and Paul is out of this world.

    • @dannygriffith6185
      @dannygriffith6185 Год назад +9

      ..The harmony interplay on this song is astonishing! John & Paul showing that vocal symbiotic pairing beautifully.

    • @aaronfledge
      @aaronfledge Год назад +6

      Yes, gorgeous melody and the intro chord changes are mad

    • @bartholomewclark9651
      @bartholomewclark9651 Год назад

      Check out this "music lesson" on the construction of the If I Fell harmonies. Makes on'e appreciation even more so. ruclips.net/video/VoKjXx0zcXU/видео.html

    • @sarahfullerton6894
      @sarahfullerton6894 Год назад +8

      Another on this album: "And I Love Her". Very sophisticated.

  • @epicycles700
    @epicycles700 Год назад +51

    You're really going about this in the right way, because that's exactly how we experienced it -- never knowing what they were going to do next and constantly being surprised by their growth musically, lyrically, and personally.

    • @TheDivayenta
      @TheDivayenta Год назад +1

      But without seeing the accompanying film ( I know he probably can’t) he loses a lot of the import of those songs.

    • @epicycles700
      @epicycles700 Год назад +2

      @@TheDivayenta Oh, I agree -- the film is still wonderful to this day.

    • @TheDivayenta
      @TheDivayenta Год назад +2

      @@epicycles700 do you remember when you first went to see it? The excitement! We had to sit thru Beach Blanket Bingo to get to AHDN!😄

  • @aaronfledge
    @aaronfledge Год назад +30

    Love that you picked up on how special the opening chord of the title track is. It became legendary, with guitarists all over the world trying to figure out what the hell the chord actually was. And the "jangling" sound you picked up on at the end also caught the ear of the Byrds, who by their own admission based their entire early sound on it 🙂

  • @ktrsBklyn
    @ktrsBklyn Год назад +22

    The movie is an absolute DELIGHT. Their charm and wit and charisma is undeniable. Stars.

  • @1967PONTIACGTO
    @1967PONTIACGTO Год назад +13

    you have to watch the movie "A Hard Day's Night"... you will find that all four Beatles were also naturally gifted comic actors... they were so talented it's ridiculous.... "I Should Have Known Better" is one of Lennon's best vocal performances... his young voice is like the ringing of a bell

    • @patticrichton1135
      @patticrichton1135 Год назад +2

      Yes, but let's give Paul some credit on HIS voice too, his voice rings like a bell on "And I Love Her" in the movie, it was the ONLY time the audience in the movie theatre (which was mostly pre-teen and teenage girls) was actually quiet during "And I Love Her," everyone was mesmerized looking at him and LISTENING to Paul sing that song, with audible "sighs" going on with a scream here and there. I KNOW, because I was ONE Of them and my friends and I would sit through ALL the showings from the first to the last, each time we went. Back then, they didn't throw you out at the end of the film. Plus there was only about 15 minutes between shows. Also, if you got there late and missed the beginning of the movie, people would just sit and wait until it started again, and then leave at the point where they came in. You can't do that now, So if you MISS the beginning of a film, you are out of luck, OR you have to go back out and pay again to see it from the start.

  • @jasonremy1627
    @jasonremy1627 Год назад +8

    The opening chord may be one of the most analyzed chords in history. Volumes have been written trying to figure out what's being played there.

  • @Hartlor_Tayley
    @Hartlor_Tayley Год назад +5

    I think the phrase “ it’s been a hard days night” is another Ringoism

  • @papalaz4444244
    @papalaz4444244 Год назад +12

    That first chord has stumped people for years. It seem it is two different related chords on two guitars and then the bass plays a different root note. It's hard to pin down which makes it sonically fascinating :)

    • @netzahuacoyotl
      @netzahuacoyotl Год назад

      You could think of it as an Fmaj6 or Dmin7 plus maybe another dissonant note. It was played on two guitars, bass and piano, I believe.

    • @Panch21
      @Panch21 Год назад +1

      The bass is playing a straight D note. Guitar is playing an Fmaj7 and I think the piano is playing the same

    • @papalaz4444244
      @papalaz4444244 Год назад

      @@netzahuacoyotl I have never heard a piano mentioned but it might be in there. It would have to be an overdub though so I am not 100% convinced

    • @hifijohn
      @hifijohn Год назад

      @@Panch21 its an fadd9 on a 12 string with a D on bass.

    • @joemax4535
      @joemax4535 Год назад

      @@Panch21 Fmaj7 and fret the top E on the third fret.

  • @ziggymarlowe5654
    @ziggymarlowe5654 Год назад +12

    Elvis Presley's movie "Love Me Tender" was used to boost his profile in 1956, and I don't think he was the first to do so. In 1964, "Hard Day's Night" was certainly released to take advantage of the meteoric rise in popularity of the Beatles. At the time I just enjoyed the music and looking at the guys. Over the years I've learned to appreciate it more as a pretty good comedic film. My parents, after hearing the lyrics, gave my sister and I a lecture on not allowing boys to buy us gifts lest they expect us to give them "everything". We were pretty young and really didn't quite know what "everything" was. lol. Different times and we were sheltered. But this album is when I really started to get Beatlemania.

    • @beatlemaniacwaltdisneyfan4753
      @beatlemaniacwaltdisneyfan4753 Год назад +2

      Can't take it THAT seriously, i mean the song is about a marriage no random man there

    • @ziggymarlowe5654
      @ziggymarlowe5654 Год назад

      @@beatlemaniacwaltdisneyfan4753 I was trying to say MY PARENTS were alarmed that their young daughters were at risk of being led down the garden path.

  • @davidjones8647
    @davidjones8647 Год назад +10

    Just to note - you mentioned how covers were a sign of a band finding their feet, in 1962 before the Beatles, it was highly unusual for a band or artist to write their own songs at all. This was another thing we take as usual now, but something they really made mainstream, in that era very few artists wrote their own music - let alone an entire album. This was revolutionary in itself.

    • @patticrichton1135
      @patticrichton1135 Год назад

      @David Jones THANK YOU for bringing that up! Most bands and artists recorded songs written by other people, which WAS the norm at the time. EVERYONE doesn't have the talent to write their own songs. Plus a lot of writers, especially if there was two of them, one would strictly write the music/melody and the other would strictly write the lyrics. The Beatles didn't work that way at all.

  • @alansouthall8221
    @alansouthall8221 Год назад +6

    Three years between that opening chord and the last chord of a day in the life.
    Two iconic chords.
    Three years apart
    What a journey between them.

  • @tonydagostino6158
    @tonydagostino6158 Год назад +8

    The film was an award-winning combination of documentary style and music. The scene with Ringo reprising the "Little Tramp" of Charlie Chaplin is a classic.

  • @walterpanovs
    @walterpanovs Год назад +11

    The Beatles wrote the album (quickly) on demand before filming to accompany various sequences in their upcoming madcap film. Their brilliant producer George Martin also composed new material and arranged some of their songs in instrumental fashion to fill in the gaps, and his adapted score was nominated for an Oscar (as was the film's original screenplay). You need to see how these songs play in the film, as they are very important to the rhythm, style, and plot of the film.

  • @michaelbriefs9764
    @michaelbriefs9764 Год назад +14

    Please do the whole album! It's one of the best of their career! All the songs are bangers!

  • @stevedahlberg8680
    @stevedahlberg8680 Год назад +7

    John is doing some really amazing things with his voice in that second one but within that very defined simplistic setting that is totally designed to hook the audience.

  • @donlawson3330
    @donlawson3330 Год назад +12

    Remember that singles and album were two different things back then and many, if not most, of their best songs were released as singles and were not included on any album. You miss a big part of their development and popularity if you skip the singles.

    • @donlawson3330
      @donlawson3330 Год назад +2

      And they best mixes are the mono originals. They didn't do stereo until much later. These later stereo remixes, especially the 2009 ones, don't compare to the originals.

    • @bookcraver1
      @bookcraver1 Год назад +4

      You bring up a very good point about the singles and the albums. You know The Beatles had 27 #1 hits (UK and USA). I've always thought that if more album tunes had also been released as singles, they would have had about 50 #1 hits!

  • @toussaid5340
    @toussaid5340 Год назад +5

    One thing I can guarantee to you Syed, is that the more you listen to the Beatles, the more you will appreciate and revere them.

    • @patticrichton1135
      @patticrichton1135 Год назад

      and they more you might really WANT to put their earlier music on your play list. That music just cheers me up and makes me feel SO GOOD!!

  • @steveullrich7737
    @steveullrich7737 Год назад +6

    You're doing this right listening in chronological order. Please don't skip any songs on the album. All the songs on this album are great and to understand their evolution you should hear all the songs as recorded. The show that they were master of melody and lyrics. George's playing on a 12-string electric guitar is a huge part of the sound on this album.

  • @TheDivayenta
    @TheDivayenta Год назад +7

    The music goes beautifully with the film and a lot of it is performed “ live”. The visuals to the songs are EVERYTHING.

  • @jeffmartin1026
    @jeffmartin1026 Год назад +6

    They need an opening song for the movie - John went home and wrote it overnight. They recorded it in three hours working off John's scribbles and notes. As for the impact of the movie: they broke onto America in February, this movie came out in August. People had seen them on (mostly B&W) TV or listened to them thru 2-3" speakers at home or on the radio. Suddenly they were 30' high and louder than you had ever heard them and usually in stereo at the theatre. The opening chord opens the movie and grabbed you and took you on the ride. People were screaming in the theatre as if at a concert. I was 14 at the time and I saw it over 20 times when it first came out. The movie perfectly captures the times, their life in the eye of Beatlemania and cemented their public persona as The Beatles.

    • @davidgagne3569
      @davidgagne3569 Год назад

      Sorry, but I have to point out the song was written by John AND Paul over night. ruclips.net/video/0MIAzJqZkX8/видео.html

    • @beatlemaniacwaltdisneyfan4753
      @beatlemaniacwaltdisneyfan4753 Год назад

      Wrong, June-July, and reached number 1 worldwide on August 1st

    • @jeffmartin1026
      @jeffmartin1026 Год назад +1

      @@beatlemaniacwaltdisneyfan4753 The movie was released in the US in August.

    • @davidgagne3569
      @davidgagne3569 Год назад

      @@beatlemaniacwaltdisneyfan4753 watch the video for proof. John AND Paul wrote the song. That is when they wrote it - not when it was released.

    • @patticrichton1135
      @patticrichton1135 Год назад +1

      WE used to sit in the theatre from the first showing through the last showing at night, watching "A HARD DAY'S NIGHT" I think we might have seen it more than 60 times during the theatrical run, because we DID sit there all day and into the evening, most times! SEEN it much much more than that since then until now, on TV, return theatrical runs, and owning it on DVD.

  • @kimberly3131
    @kimberly3131 Год назад +1

    When John reaches up into that falsetto voice, it makes him sound emotional ...vulnerable even. (at least on this song).

  • @glass2467
    @glass2467 Год назад +15

    As you listen more and more, probably eventually falling in love with their voices, especially Lennon's, since you have mentioned that you gravitate towards him more... you'll want to go back and hear a couple tracks you missed. Such as Money from the last album. It's not an original Beatles song, but Lennon's vocal performance on that one is killer and really a must at some point. Really an important vocal performance within the history of rock. Lennon is one of the best screamers in rock, and his scream shines here very early on.

    • @aaronfledge
      @aaronfledge Год назад +2

      Couldn't agree more on all fronts

    • @glass2467
      @glass2467 Год назад

      @@bobguitarlearner8007 I have faith in Syed

    • @glass2467
      @glass2467 Год назад

      @@bobguitarlearner8007 Oh, and your statement "the Beatles never became a hard rock band..." is not an accurate statement. They invented hard rock in part. Lennon's blood curdling screams are perhaps the most intense in rock. They also had some of the earliest heavy songs. Especially on the White Album.

    • @patticrichton1135
      @patticrichton1135 Год назад

      Uh, I can't believe that you don't know the McCartney is also one of the BEST SCREAMERS in rock and roll AND in the Beatles, Besides John. My goodness. Have you never seen or heard Paul's performances on "Long Tall Sally," "HELTER SKELTER" "OH DARLING" (and then compare THAT with his vocals on "HERE, THERE and EVERYWHERE," or "I WILL," If you didn't know, you would think those songs were sung by a DIFFERENT guy! Paul had the widest RANGE of all the Beatles, and the most vocal versatility of all the Beatles. At the beginning of their first recordings, (until we got used to how they each sounded) PAUL'S was the most difficult vocal to pick out. So both John AND Paul could scream with the best of them. YOu should listen to more of Paul's solo songs to see what I mean, and how diverse his vocals were. For "screamy/Gritty/rough type vocals, listen to "Monkberry Moon Delight," "SOILY," and "BEWARE MY LOVE" (especially for the last two when done LIVE in the "ROCK SHOW" movie which is a film of his concerts during his "WINGS OVER AMERICA" tour in 1976.) to name three. He wasn't always melodic, silky, smooth, gentle, sung in a high register, or falsetto like most people seem to think (and it's always THOSE people that have never listened to ALL Paul's music, that say that). Just as Lennon could also sing in a gentle, smooth way.

    • @glass2467
      @glass2467 Год назад

      @@patticrichton1135 Who's Paul McCartney? Was he in the Beatles too? Haha - of course I know Paul is one the best rock screamers of all time. I absolutely love all his songs and his solo work too. Every song of his. I was just pushing more on Lennon's intense side because I think Syed is gravitating more in that direction. Hopefully as he listens, he'll pick up on Paul's brilliance too. In terms of intensity, John took his scream to another level though - with Mother, Cold Turkey and others.

  • @DawnSuttonfabfour
    @DawnSuttonfabfour Год назад +6

    The thing is, here's the thing; if you are female, any age, and John tells you he loves you like that, you believe him.
    The "British-isms" are always cool but Hard Day's Night itself is a Ringoism.
    So glad you are doing this journey and I'm here for it BUT no more omitting any tracks (still trying to forgive you for not doing all of With the Beatles). Pinkie promise?

    • @steveullrich7737
      @steveullrich7737 Год назад +3

      Again, you need to hear all the songs to get the full effect of their impact.

    • @kimberly3131
      @kimberly3131 Год назад +2

      Pinkie promise at least or we will have to make him "Cross your heart and hope to die"!! Yikes!! Wonder who came up with that one or how//why kids our age said it. Lol

    • @DawnSuttonfabfour
      @DawnSuttonfabfour Год назад

      @@kimberly3131 Haha I got it from my daughter

  • @gsparkman
    @gsparkman Год назад +3

    In ‘64, when the movie was released, the theater wasn’t cleared out after each movie showing. As a 10-year old boy I paid my dollar when the theater opened and stayed through four consecutive showings. These songs were so infectious I couldn’t get enough. And to see the Beatles beyond a short set of songs on The Ed Sullivan Show or other TV program was extremely exciting. We had the album at home too; the first of their albums we purchased as I recall. A Hard Day’s Night was very influential for me, and I still listen to these songs with great affection.

    • @patticrichton1135
      @patticrichton1135 Год назад

      FINALLY, someone ELSE being brave enough to admit that THEY stayed through multiple showings of HDN!! My girlfriends and I did the very same thing. We were 16 and 17 years old, and we stayed from the first showing all the way through their last showing that night (we were older than you, so we could stay later) We did than just about every time we went to see it during the length of the theatrical run!

  • @cspaikido
    @cspaikido Год назад +2

    I've mentioned this before on other channels, the title comes from something Ringo said after a particularly long day in the studio. As they were exiting the studio he said boy it's been a hard day, night. Because as they opened the door they realized it was nightime.

    • @gsparkman
      @gsparkman Год назад

      Definitely. One of Ringo’s malaprops. An unintentional yet brilliant contribution to the band.

  • @oldmannick34
    @oldmannick34 Год назад +1

    The ending guitar on Hard Day's Night started an entire genre all by itself. "Jangle Rock" with the very bright jangly Rickenbacker 12-string sound.

  • @Richard2003
    @Richard2003 Год назад +1

    I grew up with the Beatles starting in 1963 and I still listen to them daily.

  • @michele-33
    @michele-33 Год назад +5

    The hair, clothes style and image was the idea of their manager, Brian Epstein.
    John Lennon later said that's when they sold out.
    He preferred leather their previous scruffy look of jackets, jeans...boots.
    Really enjoy your music choices, reactions and the interaction between the music lovers here in comment section.
    there's not many early Beatle tracks I'd have on my playlist either..i do enjoy watching you track their growth - and changes in other bands like Pink Floyd

    • @mgonzales56
      @mgonzales56 Год назад +1

      You're crazy!!! All Beatles are worthy of being on everyone's playlist. They are all amazing.

    • @michele-33
      @michele-33 Год назад

      @@mgonzales56
      didn't I say there's a few early songs I'd include?
      lol. Definitely not all !
      A good night to ya 🌛

    • @mgonzales56
      @mgonzales56 Год назад

      @Michele LOL. OK. But I have them all on my IPOD....Yes, IPOD. I started late with an IPOD, and I love it. Good night to you too.

  • @tryarea51
    @tryarea51 Год назад +1

    You know Ringo came up with the title. After filming all day, they came walking out and Ringo said, It's been a Hard Days, looked around and said, Night? He also came up with the title, Tomorrow Never Knows.

  • @mitchmitchell80
    @mitchmitchell80 Год назад +1

    Cool song!! Liking your journey. So many different sounds and tunes from this band. They are awesome! I can see why they are thought of as the greatest of all time! Thanks!

  • @brandbird
    @brandbird Год назад +2

    A Hard Day's Night is one of my favourite Beatles albums, definitely the best one before they made Rubber Soul.

  • @rikurodriguesneto6043
    @rikurodriguesneto6043 Год назад +2

    The movie is excellent too! All their movies are great.. A Hard day's night is considered the best, but I actually have watched Help! and Magical Mystery Tour much more.. at one point I was obsessed with the latter. Watched it every day for at least a week. I've probably seen it 15 times.. I'd say I've seen Help a few times too. A hard days night maybe twice. But it's definitely a classic. And the songwriting on this album is much better than on the earlier onces.

  • @scottlbroco
    @scottlbroco Год назад +8

    Very nice approach to your journey through the Beatles catalog, Syed.
    The early Beatles were the biggest musical revolution in the history of popular music. It's impossible for later generations to grasp how f***ing big they were. Name any artist - the Rolling Stones (the second biggest band ever - but a distant second), Led Zeppelin (third biggest band ever), Bruce Springsteen, Michael Jackson, even Elvis Presley - none of them could come close to the fever of Beatlemania that swept the world.
    You'll hear real growth by the Beatles with each successive album. However, while their earliest songs were amazing for their time, most of them don't hold up so well. The greatest bands have a unique problem - they have such wonderful synergy that they can make a mediocre song sound great - but it's still a mediocre song.
    The Beatles work on their 5th album (Help!) was a big leap up as they went from a good band with some good songs to a great band with some incredible songs. Then their 7th album (Revolver) through their 12th and final album (Abbey Road) were works of genius. An unprecedented run in just a little over 7 years from start to finish.
    You'll see...

    • @beatlemaniacwaltdisneyfan4753
      @beatlemaniacwaltdisneyfan4753 Год назад

      7 and a half years, but You are so on point mate

    • @scottlbroco
      @scottlbroco Год назад

      @@beatlemaniacwaltdisneyfan4753 I realized that later, but thanks.

    • @patticrichton1135
      @patticrichton1135 Год назад

      From just a "good band"??? They were a GREAT BAND from the start and their music THEN surpassed anything that we were listening to in 1962 - 1964, how do you think "Beatlemania" started immediately in the U.S. if they were just a "good" band? It makes them sound like they were mediocre.

    • @scottlbroco
      @scottlbroco Год назад

      @@patticrichton1135 Hi, Patti, thanks for challenging what I wrote, but I believe I'm correct. Let me clarify; when the Beatles redefined "breaking big' in 1964, they were the best rock and roll band the world had ever heard. As you pointed out, that's why they excited the world! However, they weren't truly great yet.
      During the first phase of their career, they released 4 albums and about a dozen other songs on singles. Almost half of their first phase were cover songs, many of which were mediocre, as were most of John and Paul's earliest songs - but the Beatles were always better than the sum of their parts, so they made even mediocre songs sound great.
      Sure, they wrote some great early songs - I Saw Her Standing There, Please Please Me, I Want to Hold Your Hand, A Hard Day's Night - to name a few, but rock and roll history already had artists with a handful or two of great songs.
      What happened next was unprecedented. John and Paul grew TREMENDOUSLY as song writers, and George, Ringo and George Martin helped the band leaders make their creations special. Their 5th album, Help! was better than any album before it, and their 6th album, Rubber Soul was even better.
      John and Paul blossomed very quickly and by the time Sgt Pepper's came out, people started to say they were both geniuses, like the Beethoven and Bach of modern time - and that didn't sound silly. The Beatles redefined what rock and roll could be, and what it became. A Day in the Life was rock and roll music because the Beatles made it so.
      What I wrote was mostly for Syed, because thus far on his journey through the Beatles history, I think he's more appreciative than adoring of their music. He's already heard some artists' songs that are better than the Beatles earliest works, but that's in large part because the Beatles were an inspiration for artists that followed, and REDEFINED WHAT GREATNESS WAS.
      The best that can be said about what great music is that it's still as important to people now as it was when it was new. The Beatles are.
      Thanks Patti, and I hope you don't feel insulted by what I wrote anymore.

  • @danielk2829
    @danielk2829 Год назад +1

    This is the start (like you said either the opening cord), of pure pop! Not a bad song on the album, and definitely an uplift projection from here!

  • @drewt.3120
    @drewt.3120 Год назад +1

    Keep going...in order. Its the evolution in every way that is so impressive. 🍺✌️

  • @liblit
    @liblit Год назад +6

    You're so right to single out the opening chord. Books have been written about it. Here's a link to Randy Bachman, the great guitarist of The Guess Who and Bachman Turner Overdrive, talking about breaking down the chord with Giles Martin at Abbey Road. ruclips.net/video/5b-awuNzko4/видео.html&ab_channel=Alterity

    • @michaelt6218
      @michaelt6218 Год назад +1

      Thanks for the link -- that's so cool!

  • @annehayes-grillo6600
    @annehayes-grillo6600 Год назад

    I was 11 years old when the movie came out. I still bounce on my seat with glee when I watch the title song come on.

  • @jamesdignanmusic2765
    @jamesdignanmusic2765 Год назад +2

    My mum and dad owned a copy of this album. As a kid, I played it until the needle wouldn't sit in the groove. I couldn't pick a favourite track... they've been ingrained in my head for as long as I can remember. "If I fell", "Things we said today", "I should have known better" - all killer, no filler. In my own musical career, this album has been a constant touchstone, and a goal to aim for and never achieve. It's a great movie, too. One of the best music films ever made. Well worth watching.

    • @elisaabolafia9542
      @elisaabolafia9542 Год назад +2

      Recently watched the movie after many years. Such a great goofy ride. Love their humor and heart. One of the best music documentaries ever.

  • @lisanowka8669
    @lisanowka8669 Год назад

    Yes this was the start of them coming into their own and they were everywhere at this point .Love it and them

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519 Год назад +1

    1964 was an amazingly busy year for them. In January they had an extended gig in Paris -- where they learned that "I Want to Hold Your Hand" hit #1 in the US. Brief return to UK then to US. Back home, making film, recording, touring, radio and TV, ten second tour of US.
    Meanwhile writing this entire LP.

  • @scottwyatt1691
    @scottwyatt1691 Год назад +3

    They had to write A Hard Days Night in one day because the title of the movie had changed. When some say that Paul and John were the best writing duo of all time this is one of the examples they use.

  • @tonyneal4716
    @tonyneal4716 18 дней назад

    This opening chord is one of
    the most iconic chords in pop music history (G extended 6th).

  • @joescott8877
    @joescott8877 Год назад +2

    Just some positive reinforcement here: Glad that you decided to "take it back a bit" at one point after pausing. So many reactors don't do the simple (and hardly time-consuming) thing of just going back 5 or so seconds. If not, you're liable to miss a cool transition, a kick-ass drum fill, or crucial lyric, and WE are liable to go" D'oh! He MISSED it! GAH!" LOL. Good stuff!

  • @damonhines8187
    @damonhines8187 Год назад

    The phrase 'A Hard Day's Night' was a Ringo-ism that inspired the song and became the title of the movie as well.
    'I Should Have Known Better' is another easily reproduced track that's a ton of fun to play 😅❤🎶✨️🕊

  • @jamescpotter
    @jamescpotter 11 месяцев назад

    Opening chord is a combination of George playing F add 9 with a G on the bottom and top on his Rickenbacker 12 string electric, John playing a D sus4 on his Rickenbacker 325, and Paul playing D note on his Hofner electric bass. It's quite the striking opening chord filled with energy and excitement beautifully teeing up the song.

  • @pizzarellayt
    @pizzarellayt Год назад +4

    Every guitar solo you've heard was played by George Harrison. However, the penultimate track of this album has John Lennon's first ever attempt at a guitar solo. He still plays rhythm, and George still plays his 12 string lead guitar, but John plays a solo that's easy to tell isn't played by George. In a later album, Paul gets his first lead guitar contributions. Multiple!

  • @charliecochran3035
    @charliecochran3035 Год назад +2

    I Should Have Known Better is probably my favorite early Beatles track (first 3 albums). It's top 3 for sure. His vocal in the middle 8 sections is catchy as hell... "that when I tell you that I love you..."

  • @dennydowling2169
    @dennydowling2169 Год назад +2

    The director of the film, Richard Lester, decided he needed one more song, one to open the film. They had just recently come up with the name for the movie, "A Hard Day's Night", and overnight, John wrote the title track according to Lester's specs which were that it needed to be a lively rocker and to last long enough to play over the opening credits. According to film critic Roger Ebert, this was the first time in the history of movies that a title song (one having the same name as the movie) was played over the opening credits of a film. (Note that while James Bond films became famous for doing this, the first two Bond films, which were of the same era as the rise of The Beatles, did not have opening songs that matched the movie title. "Goldfinger", the third Bond film and the first of them to follow this tradition, was released two months after AHDN.)

    • @davidgagne3569
      @davidgagne3569 Год назад

      The song was written by John AND Paul. It wasn't wasn't written according to Lester's specs. ruclips.net/video/0MIAzJqZkX8/видео.html

    • @cazgerald9471
      @cazgerald9471 Год назад

      Did Mr. Ebert forget about these (and many others)?
      Rock Around the Clock (1956)
      ruclips.net/video/mycRexe-V1E/видео.html
      "Blue Hawaii" (1961)
      ruclips.net/video/t2TAPuIH470/видео.html

    • @dennydowling2169
      @dennydowling2169 Год назад

      @@cazgerald9471 I may have misinterpreted what he wrote. Here is the full context.
      “In his opening sequence, which shows the Beatles mobbed at a station as they try to board a train, Lester achieves an incredible energy level: We feel the hysteria of the fans and the excitement of the Beatles, intercut with the title song (the first time movie titles had done that), implying that the songs and the adulation were sides of the same coin. Other scenes borrow the same documentary look; a lot feels improvised, although only a few scenes actually were.”
      The first of the clips you provided is still pictures of the performers with names superimposed while the song is sung. The second is Elvis singing over film clips of Hawaiian scenery.
      The opening credits you pointed to did not contain scenes that could actually be considered part of the film, which is what I guess Ebert was saying. My bad.

    • @cazgerald9471
      @cazgerald9471 Год назад

      @@dennydowling2169 My film knowledge is too limited to understand what Ebert's trying to say. Is it the first opening sequence with intercuts, or first with intercuts over the title song, or the song itself is an intercut? Regardless, I'm sure he's right that it was the first 8-P

  • @a.dariuskamali8248
    @a.dariuskamali8248 Год назад +6

    The movie is considered the best music film of all time. You should read the late Roger Ebert's review. It showed the lads to be beyond witty and likable and etched their unique personalities into the minds and hearts of global audiences. It's been called a stepping stone between the Marx Brothers and Monty Python. Speaking of the Pythons, years later in the 70's, George would put his house up to finance Python's 'Life of Brian.' And John would say that he would rather have been a Python than a Beatle. The fact that the movie was shot in black and white has actually helped to keep it from looking dated. Made it more timeless. And it contains several hyper-stylish music video scenes. By the way, the title 'Hard Days Night' was taken from a so-called Ringo(ism) where he apparently actually said " It''s been a "Hard days --Night." ;-)

    • @patticrichton1135
      @patticrichton1135 Год назад

      It was also the FILMING TECHNIQUES that were used in "A Hard Day's Night," that Roger Ebert also praised and pointed out. HDN still being taught in college movie making classes as being a break through, especially for "teenage films" which were pretty awful at the time. Thank GOODNESS "AHDN" was not made like those were!

  • @steveclemons8191
    @steveclemons8191 Год назад +3

    Syed. You seem to be enjoying the Beatles as people more than the music. I think you would get a big kick out of the movie “A Hard Day’s Night”. You should watch it. It shows the craziness those guys were going through at the time. You could do a reaction the their first attempt at a movie

  • @sleeper9
    @sleeper9 Год назад +2

    Hard Days Night is such a fun and funny movie. I absolutely love it

  • @EG-ti8cg
    @EG-ti8cg Год назад +3

    By this time, Beatlemania was in full swing and the Beatles were constantly on the road and around the world touring. To be able to put together an album this amazing and so full of beautiful and groundbreaking music in such a short period of time is a testament to the genius of John Lennon and Paul McCartney. But to that effect, the brilliance and genius of George Martin mixing and producing such an amazing album in such a short time and their manager Brian Epstein keeping everything together and moving is often overlooked. In a sense, they were the fifth and sixth Beatle for all intents and purposes. I think you'll very much enjoy you can't do that, and happy just to dance with you. Amazing album..

    • @kimberly3131
      @kimberly3131 Год назад +2

      Don't think I've ever seen Brian Epstein's name mentioned in any reactions or comments. I haven't thought about him in years. But I think you're right about his roll. Since Get Back film came out, there has been some discussions on how Paul was pushing and trying to motivate the others to keep writing and making songs. Peers and siblings don't usually take well to that because they think he's being bossy. They may have eventually felt that way about Brian. Anyway, sorry for my blah blah blah. My rambling mind just go started.🤔

    • @patticrichton1135
      @patticrichton1135 Год назад +1

      @@kimberly3131 If it WERE NOT for BRIAN EPSTEIN never giving up on finding a label that would SIGN them, after many many rejections, we would have NEVER had the The Beatles, and THAT is a FACT!! Brian deserves so much more credit than he EVER GOT. After Brian died, they all said the were "lost" as Brian ran everything. They had NO clue what to do then.

  • @caronspeas2888
    @caronspeas2888 Год назад

    It is strange to see a thoughtful young man enjoying and analyzing The Beatles. I lived them. I was 12-19 years old when The Beatles were writing songs. They took me from teenie bopper romance ❤️, to smoking weed 🚬, to dropping LSD and living in crash pads. The Beatles’ music was the most relevant and treasured thing in my life in those years. I know every word to every song. The Beatles and Pink Floyd created the very finest music to come out of the 1960’s, 1970’s. They were the originals. Everyone else was just emulating them or expanding on their original experimentation.

  • @daverowntree5737
    @daverowntree5737 Год назад

    Also, to get a sense of how insanely big Beatlemania was...an estimated 1 million people turned out to see them arrive in Adelaide, not far off the then total population.

  • @user-vo5th2km2s
    @user-vo5th2km2s Год назад +2

    I’m already looking forward to If I Fell, the next track by The Beatles❤

  • @PeterBuwen
    @PeterBuwen Год назад

    You got it. I appreciate your channel very much.

  • @AdamConus
    @AdamConus Год назад

    I'm so impatient for you to get to the Beatles I love. I have a similar view of the early songs as you, but once you get to Rubber Soul the and Revolver albums...oh, my, that's where my favorite Beatles music takes root and blooms. Everything from then on is next level for me.

  • @robertmills8640
    @robertmills8640 Год назад

    I hope you continue ur journey through each of their albums😁

  • @Annie-hd3jx
    @Annie-hd3jx Год назад

    That note is one of the most famous in music history so look it up how it was.made. You’ll be amazed!!

  • @jean-marcevans1439
    @jean-marcevans1439 Год назад +1

    As I mentioned before, don’t forget the singles, many of which weren’t on albums. Including She Loves You, I Wanna Hold Your Hand, I Feel Fine, (first use of feedback in a record). Also, the first four albums and the singles were recorded within 12 months, on top of near non-stop touring. Shows the speed of their early development in crazy circumstances.

  • @JohnReall
    @JohnReall Год назад

    I'm 10 years old sitting the movie theatre watching A hard Days Night and the girls are screaming so loud!!

  • @Hartlor_Tayley
    @Hartlor_Tayley Год назад +2

    I second the movie. You’ll like it it’s good.

  • @shemanic1
    @shemanic1 Год назад

    I am glad that you can appreciate the music I grew up with. The 60's into the 70's was a great time to be teenage & young adult, the music the festivals. If you haven't listened to "Heart Full of Soul" by the Yardbirds yet, please give it a try.

  • @reinacarbetta388
    @reinacarbetta388 Год назад

    The opening chord of AHDN was George Martin’s idea to open the MOVIE! Also, it wasn’t a John-lead compo - that one was a combo.

  • @reidsanderson4061
    @reidsanderson4061 Год назад

    There are a bunch of YT videos all about the opening chord in A Hard Days Night. It is considered by many the most famous opening chord in rock music.

  • @thomascamara8398
    @thomascamara8398 Год назад

    The greatest rock song ever recorded. the most iconic opening chord ,the greatest scream by John Lennon the most iconc break or solo by George, The most iconic fade out of an ending of a song

  • @danielcarroll3ify
    @danielcarroll3ify Год назад +1

    Gotta listen to When I Get Home. John's best early rocker.

  • @barryw2659
    @barryw2659 Год назад

    Interesting story about this song. Here it is quoted: "In the 1995 documentary "You Can't Do That! The Making Of A Hard Day's Night," producer Walter Shenson recalls his role in the writing of the title song. "I mentioned to John one night that we needed to have another song, one titled 'A Hard Day's Night.' His reaction was to ask what I was talking about. I explained by asking what kind of a producer would I be to have a film called 'A Hard Day's Night' starring the Beatles, and then not have a Beatles song called 'A Hard Day's Night.' I asked him to please write this new song. The next morning, he and Paul called me into their dressing room - we were still shooting - and they played and sang to me their new song, 'A Hard Day's Night.' Now, think about this: I got a hit song on demand! That's almost impossible. And it was one of their biggest hits ever."

  • @kimberly3131
    @kimberly3131 Год назад

    It's fun watching your face light up as you are getting it. Keep on

  • @jvblhc
    @jvblhc Год назад

    A Hard Day's Night is a fantastic album. They have most of the album tracks that were in the movie on side one, and then they have a bunch of brand new songs on the second side. This is one of the happiest albums they ever did. The next two albums are more transitional, whether they knew it or not. Some sad songs, and some that are leaning towards the kind of songs Bob Dylan was doing at the time. Then came Rubber Soul and it was a brand new kind of Beatles songs, and they never looked back.

  • @ritagryphon222
    @ritagryphon222 Год назад

    So much fun following you on this journey! Until Sgt pepper was released we listened to The Stones as much as The Beatles and it would have been fun if you listened to both in parallel

  • @stevensprunger3422
    @stevensprunger3422 Год назад

    Yeah that phrase
    “it’s a hard days night”
    that was something Ringo used to say
    And if you can find the film and watch the movie it’s incredible also all the wacky antics and everything

  • @johnhickman2033
    @johnhickman2033 Год назад +1

    You need to watch the film as you listen to the music. You can then understand the sense of time, history and context; it's so important when you analyse this music!

  • @Autorotate5
    @Autorotate5 Год назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @keymack2477
    @keymack2477 Год назад +1

    Before you finish reacting to this LP you must react to two great love songs - "And I Love Her" and "If I Fell"!

  • @johnathanstruble1064
    @johnathanstruble1064 Год назад

    Elvis, Sinatra, broke ground taking musical careers, into movies, then the Beatles..each in their own way!❤

  • @stratfanstl
    @stratfanstl Год назад +1

    The first four Beatles albums have an odd release history. The Parlaphone releases (non-US) were originally mixed in MONO. American releases on Capital chopped them up to yield more albums that mixed in a few different singles cuts. These were originally in MONO also but at some point (70s or later 60s?) were remixed in STEREO. When they were first released on CD starting in 1986, George Martin re-mastered them in MONO ("as they were meant to be"). The version you played here is in STEREO but it is a different mix than American ears are used to. There are a few cases with Lennon's manually doubled vocals where his second voice is singing a phrasing that was inaudible in the old STEREO and MONO mixes (at least the ones here in the US.) A Hard Day's Night may sound pretty tame to modern ears but I imagine this came across to 1964 ears much the way the first Hendrix album hit 1967 ears or the first Led Zeppelin album would hit 1969 ears. Music evolved INCREDIBLY fast from 1963 to 1970.

    • @lathedauphinot6820
      @lathedauphinot6820 Год назад

      It’s true. You can listen to any record in that time (1963-70) and tell what year it came out because the music changed so fast. Bands put out at least an album per year, sometimes 2 or 3. Cars were completely redesigned each year. Can you imagine that happening now? It had to be our creative peak.

  • @MartinFGayford
    @MartinFGayford Год назад

    It's interesting to follow the development without having heard these songs, kind of like how it must have been for Beatlemania people at the time. It's interesting comparing their songwriting here with Dylan's - in 1964 he wrote Chimes of Freedom and Mr Tambourine Man...

  • @aaronfledge
    @aaronfledge Год назад +1

    The band definitely sounds more polished on this one - the melodies are better, the guitar tone is much richer and there's plenty of acoustic guitar layered in. They were to get even 'folkier' on the next one (darker too - with a couple of notable exceptions, HDN is a very upbeat record).
    Strongly recommend listening to each and every song Syed - I know there are a lot of them and it's tempting to race on to the all-time greats, but they were diverse as hell right from the start and the contrasts on their albums are fascinating when you listen in sequence. And you gotta check out Not a Second Time from With the Beatles one of these days! Keep up the good work friend.

  • @blahblahblah7880
    @blahblahblah7880 Год назад

    Things really started cooking when The Beatles got to Rubber Soul, then they went into the stratosphere.

  • @bobmessier5215
    @bobmessier5215 Год назад

    A Hard Days Night was their final album of 1964 and shows the change to the style of 1965.

    • @rossjohnson5114
      @rossjohnson5114 Год назад

      Beatles for Sale was the last album of 64. Help and Rubber Soul were made in 65. Revolver in 66, Sgt. Pepper and Magical Mystery Tour in 67, White Album in 68. Let it Be was recorded in 69 but released in 70. Abby Road was recorded and released in 69.

  • @magnolia7277
    @magnolia7277 Год назад

    The Beach Boys were searching for a 'specific' sound, the Beatles released a song (can't remember which one) and it was the sound the Boys had been trying to find, they were gutted!

  • @olibertosoto5470
    @olibertosoto5470 Год назад

    Gaining confidence in their own ability. 👍🏼

  • @stevevalk4074
    @stevevalk4074 Год назад

    Nice review...

  • @kzinful
    @kzinful Год назад

    Reporter asking Ringo : " Are you a Mod or a Rocker?"
    Ringo : " I'm a mocker...
    Thats why I love em.

  • @billbitterman9487
    @billbitterman9487 Год назад

    Watch the film to see how the songs tied in. While other movies used music to promote and highlight artists (Elvis movies used songs a performance/production segments), It's easy to see how the songs in A Hard Day's Night are truly forerunners and blueprints for what would become MTV. Truly groundbreaking.

  • @albertoramirez6388
    @albertoramirez6388 Год назад

    Growth is most notable starting with Help! album, but especially with the follow-ups to it.

  • @georgeharrison5362
    @georgeharrison5362 Год назад

    Sound...HDN...is the 12 string Richenbacker album.
    First no1 prototype given to George on the first US tour.
    You hear George's 12 string ringing on every track.
    The Byrds made a career with it.

  • @cancionesdeestanoche
    @cancionesdeestanoche Год назад

    The best band. Thanks.

  • @sirslice7531
    @sirslice7531 Год назад

    Ringo came up with the phrase "A Hard Days Night".

  • @z0n0ph0ne
    @z0n0ph0ne Год назад

    That opening chord and the guitar solo were George with his first 12 string guitar.

  • @sourisvoleur4854
    @sourisvoleur4854 Год назад

    Signature Beatles ending: triple line "feel alright / feel alright / feel alright."

  • @tjdomerny4847
    @tjdomerny4847 Год назад

    Among the greatest comedies

  • @loadedorygun
    @loadedorygun Год назад

    There were a lot of films that included musical performances by contemporary artists, folks like Louis Armstrong and Lionel Hampton-but they were often something of an interlude, not really part of the story (or if they were in the case of Black artists they were relegated to menial characters). Elvis was really the first pop star to be a film vehicle on his own as a franchise, and to pepper the films with his songs. So it was by no means unprecedented to feature popular music in a film, but to make the whole film center around the artist was maybe a decade old by the time Hard Day’s Night came out? BTW for both films they basically just used their existing material except for the title track, if I’m not mistaken. Now that I think more on it, I believe HD’sN was titled after the existing cut, but they had to write Help for the movie.

  • @alansmith7626
    @alansmith7626 Год назад

    the greatest super power, to me, would be Spocks mind meld...how many of us have tried to explain an experience and wished we could just show them! I grew up with all this...still is trippy to me, lol

  • @hifijohn
    @hifijohn Год назад +1

    You have to check out the movie its very good

  • @danielabbott3975
    @danielabbott3975 Год назад

    I am interested to see what you have to say about Rubber Soul , Revolver and Abbey Road … they are amazing albums and demonstrate the bands growth and creativity like no others
    Especially tracks like “Tomorrow Never Knows”
    I think it will. Blow your mind … great videos so much fun to watch
    Cheers