Abbey Road was The Beatles final album. It is a total masterpiece. Oh Darling shows Paul's ability to sing almost any type of song, and do an amazing job at it. I think this is one of his best.
@@CharCanuck14 The last album The Beatles recorded was Abbey Road. They recorded Let It Be, then shelved it for a year. In the meantime, they recorded and released Abbey Road. Then Phil Spector got a hold of the old Let It Be tapes, which at the time was called Get Back, over-produced them, and were finally released in 1970. But the last recorded album was Abbey Road.
@@mgonzales56 I wasn't aware that Let it Be was shelved for a year. Guess that's why I thought it was the last. Thanks for the info & cheers from Canada
It's astonishing to realize that the same lovely voice that sang "Yesterday" and "Here, There and Everywhere" can shriek this number.....and "Long Tall Sally"....and "Hey Jude:.....and "Helter Skelter".......and "Kansas City". Paul McCartney is the greatest, most-versatile vocalist of the 20th Century.
Paul was a master of those impassioned, shrieking vocals in the 60's, with songs like "Long Tall Sally", "I'm Down", and this one. By the summer of 1969, when this song was recorded, Paul admitted that it was getting harder to sing in that register, but he continued to do so into the 2000's. Sadly, he has tremendous trouble singing like he used to, but he's still impressive doing three hour concerts in his 80s.
To me, one of the Beatles' best qualities was unpredictability. You never knew what came next. Paul was a master of different genres. He could write something like this one day and the next he would write a song that sounded like it was written in the 1920s followed by a rocker and then a soft and beautiful love song. He was an absolute genius in those days.
Paul McCartney is one of the most amazing vocalists of all time with incredible range and power. Oh Darling is a masterpiece. The echo you think you're hearing is actually double-tracking - he performed the song twice and blended the two takes.
From close to the end of the Beatles era. Paul probably has vintage rock with Little Richard and others in mind as inspiration. McCartney's song "Maybe I'm Amazed" is from this same period.
John and Paul had an agreement from the inception of the band that, no matter how much or how little each of them contributed to a song, EVERY song would be credited as Lennon/McCartney. Experienced listeners can usually tell who the main contributor was.
That's just McCartney using one of his many vocal techniques. Biggest selling artists of all time for a reason. Two genius songwriters, Paul and John in one band. John could fry his vocals when he wanted to also.
Its Paul all the way through. You are right about the echo effect. Its called double-tracking or doubling which is an audio recording technique in which a performer sings or plays along with their own prerecorded performance, usually to produce a stronger or bigger sound than can be obtained with a single voice or instrument.
Im sure there ols school exho chamber use ,or something....but, paul was gifted like this....other examples of this singjng style would be other paul bealtes songs like "im down", & "helter skelter", & solo paul songs like "maybe im amazed" & "call me back again"....check them out, if u liked this song, youll like those paul songs too....again, he could sing sweetly in ballads, & he could croon it, like on "lady madonna" & he could belt it out like jim morrison of the doors at other times, very talented, ...paul could do it all.
Love the Beatles,as well as the Stones and the Who,part of British Invasion.. Small detail on the cover here Paul is walking across the street barefoot
One voice: McCartney. He (and Lennon) had multitudes in their voices--can sing soft, hard, blues, everything. Two of the greatest vocalists of all time. And all their songs were Lennon-McCartney, no matter who did most of the writing.
If you really want to hear what Paul can do, listen to the end of 'Monkberry Moon Delight' on the 'Ram' album. Also, the end of 'Nineteen Hundred- Eighty Five' on the 'Band on the Run' album. If you reeaally want to dive in, listen to the entire 'Wild life' album. But don't stop there. 'McCartney' and 'Red Rose Speedway' are well worth loving forever, too.
Early in the Beatles’ history, when the future Fab Four were still playing residencies the Star-Club in Hamburg, Germany, the band were on a split bill with Little Richard in mid-1962. McCartney added, “In the early days of the Beatles we played with Richard in Hamburg and got to know him. He would let us hang out in his dressing room and we were witness to his pre-show rituals, with his head under a towel over a bowl of steaming hot water, he would suddenly lift his head up to the mirror and say, ‘I can’t help it cos I’m so beautiful.’ And he was.” McCartney would later reveal he adopted Little Richard’s pre-show ritual as his own. “I do like a steaming before I go on, which I was told was probably the best thing to clear your larynx,” McCartney said in 2017. “I was taught that by watching Little Richard do it when we were kids in Hamburg. He used to do it before he went on.”“A great man with a lovely sense of humor and someone who will be missed by the rock and roll community and many more,” McCartney tweeted Sunday. “I thank him for all he taught me and the kindness he showed by letting me be his friend. Goodbye Richard and a-wop-bop-a-loo-bop.” Paul learned a lot about singing from Little Richard especially how to sing/shout.
John Lennon had said he would have liked a shot at singing this (and he'd have surely done an awesome version), but Paul wrote it, it's Paul's song, and Paul sung it. It'd be nice to have had a John version of this one in addition, but that's asking too much...Paul was fantastic on it in any case.
I seriously suggest to you guys that please do good research on the works of these guys( they are some of the greatest musicians in the same lane as Beethoven, Mozart etc.)I am an Indian and I've heard great Hindustani Classical music too, which has no parrellel. But the Beatles give me great joy when I hear them.My listening journey of their work started with release in India of their film 'Hard days night' sometime in 1962-63 or thereabouts and I've had an upheaval in my life as a listener of music.
It is true that Paul was a bit underrated but he had an amazing versatile voice he actually showed during and after the Beatles split with groups such as Wings
If you go to earth cam abbey road, you can see the live cam they have set up at that crossing. Always fun to watch people trying to recreate that shot. It’s a pretty busy road. Lol
The Beatles wrote all of these great songs in about a 7 year period, doing separate singles and 1-2 albums per year...unheard of. Paul McCartney was a MASTER vocalist. He sings SO MANY DIFFERENT ways...it's unreal.
All of the vocals were done by Paul McCartney, with some backup by the other Beatles. Very early in their career, the Beatles performed with Little Richard, and they loved the blues. (And yes, they gave credit where it was due.) They did covers of Blue Suede Shoes, Roll Over Beethoven, Mr. Moonlight, and many other bluesy tunes.
"I wasn't expecting..." That's because you haven't worked from their catalog, first to last. Paul and John both have ripping voices (John's in the more famous TWIST & SHOUT, but Paul early on, too). Alas, you should start at their beginning. Otherwise, everything is misunderstood and backwards.
Especially the early days when one checks out Long tall Sally in 1962 and see how Paul McCartney was wailing. It's hard to hear the vocals cuz it's live in the bar scene but boy or boy. I can't think of too many white singers that were taking it up in the stratosphere and screaming like that back in '62
@@nthdegree1269 LONG TALL SALLY is NOT "live from the bar scene"!! It's from the studio on vinyl. Paul DID end the Beatles' concerts WITH "LONG TALL SALLY" during the 1964 tour. In the 1965 concert tour he ended it with "I'M DOWN"
@@patticrichton1135 I am referring to their performance in Hamburg in 1962...Type into RUclips "The Beatles Long Tall Sally Live Hamburg, Star Club 1962" to hear it
" I'm Down Long Tall Sally, Kansas City, Helter Skelter" Paul has a wider vocal range than John did. ( But John had a great unmistakable voice, of course) Paul always liked his " woos"!❤❤❤❤
I take it neither of y'all have heard Helter Shelter yet. Paul wrote and Performed the first ever Heavy Metal song. Ever. One of the guys from The Who told Paul his wish was to make the loudest rock song ever. Paul probably thought about for 30 seconds, then recorded it with the group.
I was 7 years old when this album came out, and even though I was so young ha I loved this album SO much I stole it from my 16 year old brother. I would stand up on my bed using a hairbrush for a microphone and put this record on and just belt out this song at the top of my lungs! My 14 year old sister would shake her head and call me a weirdo and throw pillows at me trying to make me stop singing cause we shared a room ha! Today I am 62 and I still belt out this song and have gone through half a dozen forms of this album over the decades as technology has changed; but I no longer stand on my bed singing into my hairbrush ha!
If you guys like a heavier sound, if you haven't already heard them, try the Beatles' I Want You (She's So Heavy) Helter Skelter Yer Blues Birthday I'm Down and their Little Richard cover: Long Tall Sally (Have Some Fun Tonight)
There was no echo back then just Paul's raw vocals and John in the background, they always raised the bar , until today they remain what an artist aspires to be for how they revolutionized music, artists of al genres look up to them
@@patcuvie If you're referring to the natural phenomenon, then absolutely. They're very few artists nowadays that can aspired to be like the Beatles, Aretha, a Marvin Gaye, etc . Their genius is unparalleled and it can't be denied.
@@586bomin I don't know that we are talking about the same thing. I assumed by "echo" you meant a vocal effect. Echo effect has been around at least since the 50s as Elvis' Sun Session had a lot of echo.
True inspiration is genius, true genius is controlled madness, and this is the Beatles. Keep going. Don't forget Paul McCartney and Wings and McCartney's solo stuff, a very deep rabbit hole. Enjoy.
There was no technology back then. Its paul on vocals and John Lennon and George Harrison on backing vocals. The only technology back then was their voices.....nothing else.
There was plenty of Technology back then Reverb around for decades, Multi track also was used in the late 40's or early 50s. Tape loops were done Stereo. mixing consoles amplified instruments, electric piano, organs of many types, the Mellotron. It was early days for multitrack tape but it did exist. The dark ages were not the 1960's
What you heard was in the studio That's what the album sounded like live on the rooftop doesn't sound much different. Don't let me down you got to see it on the rooftop. It's cold as all get out and they're wearing their wives fur coats.
PLUS they need to see "I'VE GOT A FEELING" from the rooftop concert as well!! NO ONE EVER mentions that one, it's always "Don't Let Me Down" and I don't understand WHY. They are BOTH great songs, and BOTH should be heard.
A Beatles masterpiece. Sung by Paul.
oh yeah!
Paul on one of his interview said it is better that he let John sing this song.
Paul was the man of 100 voices....& each voice had its own separate recording contract worth millions of $$
Was? 😉
Still is❤❤❤❤
Correction, the man with the 1000 voices, you're doing him wrong here...
Abbey Road was The Beatles final album. It is a total masterpiece. Oh Darling shows Paul's ability to sing almost any type of song, and do an amazing job at it. I think this is one of his best.
My favourite Beatles album too......but their final album was "Let it Be".
@@CharCanuck14 The last album The Beatles recorded was Abbey Road. They recorded Let It Be, then shelved it for a year. In the meantime, they recorded and released Abbey Road. Then Phil Spector got a hold of the old Let It Be tapes, which at the time was called Get Back, over-produced them, and were finally released in 1970. But the last recorded album was Abbey Road.
@@mgonzales56 I wasn't aware that Let it Be was shelved for a year. Guess that's why I thought it was the last.
Thanks for the info & cheers from Canada
@CharCanuck14 You are welcome. And Greetings from San Antonio, Texas!
John said he should have sung Oh Darling!!, hahaha❤❤❤❤ love you John RIP
It's astonishing to realize that the same lovely voice that sang "Yesterday" and "Here, There and Everywhere" can shriek this number.....and "Long Tall Sally"....and "Hey Jude:.....and "Helter Skelter".......and "Kansas City". Paul McCartney is the greatest, most-versatile vocalist of the 20th Century.
What Paul does with his voice in "Why Don't We Do it in the Road" is crazy good. What an extraordinary vocal range
Paul was a master of those impassioned, shrieking vocals in the 60's, with songs like "Long Tall Sally", "I'm Down", and this one. By the summer of 1969, when this song was recorded, Paul admitted that it was getting harder to sing in that register, but he continued to do so into the 2000's. Sadly, he has tremendous trouble singing like he used to, but he's still impressive doing three hour concerts in his 80s.
Of all of those songs I always found Long Tall Sally to be the most difficult.
Vocals by Paul McCartney 😎👍
To me, one of the Beatles' best qualities was unpredictability. You never knew what came next. Paul was a master of different genres. He could write something like this one day and the next he would write a song that sounded like it was written in the 1920s followed by a rocker and then a soft and beautiful love song. He was an absolute genius in those days.
That's the McCartney roar. Nobody did that like he did.
Their best album IMO. NO ONE will ever compare ❤❤❤❤❤
Paul McCartney is one of the most amazing vocalists of all time with incredible range and power. Oh Darling is a masterpiece. The echo you think you're hearing is actually double-tracking - he performed the song twice and blended the two takes.
I saw Paul in 2017...amazing
Arguably Paul McCartney's best vocal as a member of the Beatles😮😊
Best Rocker Vocals...
FACTS! MACCA IS BAR NONE!
@@RoSaWa386-33 Helter skelter, I'm down and Long tall Sally are on the same level.
I don't know.... John's pretty good too.
I'd argue that. Listen to John sing Twist and Shout
From close to the end of the Beatles era. Paul probably has vintage rock with Little Richard and others in mind as inspiration. McCartney's song "Maybe I'm Amazed" is from this same period.
He absolutely does. Little Richard is one of his hero’s especially in the early days.
John and Paul had an agreement from the inception of the band that, no matter how much or how little each of them contributed to a song, EVERY song would be credited as Lennon/McCartney. Experienced listeners can usually tell who the main contributor was.
That's just McCartney using one of his many vocal techniques. Biggest selling artists of all time for a reason. Two genius songwriters, Paul and John in one band. John could fry his vocals when he wanted to also.
The Beatles never fail to transcend.
You have to learn to never expect any certain sound from the Beatles. They do ALL kinds of music! That’s why they were SO important to music!
Paul stayed in the recording studio all night singing this until his voice was raw enough to get this sound
For an entire week
Great reaction! Love this song and album. Paul's versatility is unmatched.
The lead singing was definitely sung by Paul McCartney, with the harmonies by the other members of the band.
Paul has no comparison !!!
Paul shredding chords. And shredding cords.
I see what you did there. 😉
Its Paul all the way through. You are right about the echo effect. Its called double-tracking or doubling which is an audio recording technique in which a performer sings or plays along with their own prerecorded performance, usually to produce a stronger or bigger sound than can be obtained with a single voice or instrument.
Many songs had double tracked vocals , recording on top of recording to give the fullness of the vocal .
They used to sing double tracks a lot back then. Also, John and Paul sang so well together you couldn't even tell it was two voices.
❤Love this song!! Great reaction :)
¡Saludos, desde Argentina!
Paul's favorite vocalist was Little Richard. You can hear some of that here.
Yes, Paul’s voice was layered in stereo 8 track. Prob some reverb and manipulation of playback speed to create different affects. Great ears!!😎
Im sure there ols school exho chamber use ,or something....but, paul was gifted like this....other examples of this singjng style would be other paul bealtes songs like "im down", & "helter skelter", & solo paul songs like "maybe im amazed" & "call me back again"....check them out, if u liked this song, youll like those paul songs too....again, he could sing sweetly in ballads, & he could croon it, like on "lady madonna" & he could belt it out like jim morrison of the doors at other times, very talented, ...paul could do it all.
Old** school echo** chamber use**.....sorry, i cant edit comments, my ipad is crappy/broken
This is a favorite of mine 😊
Love the Beatles,as well as the Stones and the Who,part of British Invasion..
Small detail on the cover here Paul is walking across the street barefoot
Paul's voice was double tracked and yes they ran his voice through an echo chamber. All of the Beatles were on the background vocals except Ringo.
One voice: McCartney. He (and Lennon) had multitudes in their voices--can sing soft, hard, blues, everything. Two of the greatest vocalists of all time. And all their songs were Lennon-McCartney, no matter who did most of the writing.
Their range was vast. From early songs to the end they kept evolving. Fantastic arc of creativity.
All the lead vocal is Paul, double tracked in places, with some 50s-style tape echo.
One of my favorites of their’s. ❤
They did have echo and reverb and all sorts in those days. This was Paul pushing his Little Richard vocals to another level.
Love the song.
Paul sang it. Check out his solo hit Maybe I'm Amazed. On the 1st release he plays all the instruments.
If you really want to hear what Paul can do, listen to the end of 'Monkberry Moon Delight' on the 'Ram' album. Also, the end of 'Nineteen Hundred- Eighty Five' on the 'Band on the Run' album. If you reeaally want to dive in, listen to the entire 'Wild life' album. But don't stop there. 'McCartney' and 'Red Rose Speedway' are well worth loving forever, too.
Early in the Beatles’ history, when the future Fab Four were still playing residencies the Star-Club in Hamburg, Germany, the band were on a split bill with Little Richard in mid-1962.
McCartney added, “In the early days of the Beatles we played with Richard in Hamburg and got to know him. He would let us hang out in his dressing room and we were witness to his pre-show rituals, with his head under a towel over a bowl of steaming hot water, he would suddenly lift his head up to the mirror and say, ‘I can’t help it cos I’m so beautiful.’ And he was.”
McCartney would later reveal he adopted Little Richard’s pre-show ritual as his own. “I do like a steaming before I go on, which I was told was probably the best thing to clear your larynx,” McCartney said in 2017. “I was taught that by watching Little Richard do it when we were kids in Hamburg. He used to do it before he went on.”“A great man with a lovely sense of humor and someone who will be missed by the rock and roll community and many more,” McCartney tweeted Sunday. “I thank him for all he taught me and the kindness he showed by letting me be his friend. Goodbye Richard and a-wop-bop-a-loo-bop.”
Paul learned a lot about singing from Little Richard especially how to sing/shout.
John Lennon had said he would have liked a shot at singing this (and he'd have surely done an awesome version), but Paul wrote it, it's Paul's song, and Paul sung it. It'd be nice to have had a John version of this one in addition, but that's asking too much...Paul was fantastic on it in any case.
I seriously suggest to you guys that please do good research on the works of these guys( they are some of the greatest musicians in the same lane as Beethoven, Mozart etc.)I am an Indian and I've heard great Hindustani Classical music too, which has no parrellel. But the Beatles give me great joy when I hear them.My listening journey of their work started with release in India of their film 'Hard days night' sometime in 1962-63 or thereabouts and I've had an upheaval in my life as a listener of music.
George' lead guitar, Ringo's drums!!❤❤❤❤
Sir Paul McCartney is in a league all his own!💖
Paul was the main singer, but I believe John may had joined in during some parts of the song.
No, John and George are doing the background vocal 'ahhhhas" and "oooo's"
No it's Paul and john singing the intensive part.
The greatest doing a great song
Most every song is credited to Lennon/McCartney in their catalogue.
But Harrison & Starr have their incredible moments too.
It is true that Paul was a bit underrated but he had an amazing versatile voice he actually showed during and after the Beatles split with groups such as Wings
good analyses
The Fab 4 ❤
Paul. Vocalist extraordinaire
That is Paul McCartney on the lead vocals.
There was a thriving blues scene in the UK in the ‘60’s. The Beatles didn’t dabble much, but totally crushed it with this attempt!
If you go to earth cam abbey road, you can see the live cam they have set up at that crossing. Always fun to watch people trying to recreate that shot. It’s a pretty busy road. Lol
I recommend you listen to their music as deeply as possible. It is eye opening and mind opening.
The Beatles wrote all of these great songs in about a 7 year period, doing separate singles and 1-2 albums per year...unheard of. Paul McCartney was a MASTER vocalist. He sings SO MANY DIFFERENT ways...it's unreal.
The contrast of the sweet backing vocals and warm, welcoming groove with Paul's distortion is like the perfume and thorns of a rose
All of the vocals were done by Paul McCartney, with some backup by the other Beatles. Very early in their career, the Beatles performed with Little Richard, and they loved the blues. (And yes, they gave credit where it was due.) They did covers of Blue Suede Shoes, Roll Over Beethoven, Mr. Moonlight, and many other bluesy tunes.
"I wasn't expecting..." That's because you haven't worked from their catalog, first to last. Paul and John both have ripping voices (John's in the more famous TWIST & SHOUT, but Paul early on, too). Alas, you should start at their beginning. Otherwise, everything is misunderstood and backwards.
Especially the early days when one checks out Long tall Sally in 1962 and see how Paul McCartney was wailing. It's hard to hear the vocals cuz it's live in the bar scene but boy or boy. I can't think of too many white singers that were taking it up in the stratosphere and screaming like that back in '62
@@nthdegree1269 LONG TALL SALLY is NOT "live from the bar scene"!! It's from the studio on vinyl. Paul DID end the Beatles' concerts WITH "LONG TALL SALLY" during the 1964 tour. In the 1965 concert tour he ended it with "I'M DOWN"
@@patticrichton1135
I am referring to their performance in Hamburg in 1962...Type into RUclips "The Beatles Long Tall Sally Live Hamburg, Star Club 1962" to hear it
I've never heard that saying but I'm going to use it.
Lennon/McCartney or vice versa. Love that they shared credit in ALL their songs as collaborators
this is a part of paul macca that not a lot knew about, look into his time with wings and he belted a few more out like this belter
" I'm Down Long Tall Sally, Kansas City, Helter Skelter"
Paul has a wider vocal range than John did. ( But John had a great unmistakable voice, of course)
Paul always liked his " woos"!❤❤❤❤
Paul is the man!
You guys should check out The Bee Gees cover of Oh Darling - lead by Robin Gibb.
I take it neither of y'all have heard Helter Shelter yet. Paul wrote and Performed the first ever Heavy Metal song. Ever. One of the guys from The Who told Paul his wish was to make the loudest rock song ever. Paul probably thought about for 30 seconds, then recorded it with the group.
I was 7 years old when this album came out, and even though I was so young ha I loved this album SO much I stole it from my 16 year old brother. I would stand up on my bed using a hairbrush for a microphone and put this record on and just belt out this song at the top of my lungs! My 14 year old sister would shake her head and call me a weirdo and throw pillows at me trying to make me stop singing cause we shared a room ha! Today I am 62 and I still belt out this song and have gone through half a dozen forms of this album over the decades as technology has changed; but I no longer stand on my bed singing into my hairbrush ha!
Paul dang it
" wooo" ❤❤❤❤
If you guys like a heavier sound, if you haven't already heard them, try the Beatles'
I Want You (She's So Heavy)
Helter Skelter
Yer Blues
Birthday
I'm Down
and their Little Richard cover: Long Tall Sally (Have Some Fun Tonight)
There was no echo back then just Paul's raw vocals and John in the background, they always raised the bar , until today they remain what an artist aspires to be for how they revolutionized music, artists of al genres look up to them
They absolutely had Echo back then.
@@patcuvie If you're referring to the natural phenomenon, then absolutely. They're very few artists nowadays that can aspired to be like the Beatles, Aretha, a Marvin Gaye, etc . Their genius is unparalleled and it can't be denied.
@@586bomin I don't know that we are talking about the same thing. I assumed by "echo" you meant a vocal effect. Echo effect has been around at least since the 50s as Elvis' Sun Session had a lot of echo.
John AND George on backing vocals
True inspiration is genius, true genius is controlled madness, and this is the Beatles. Keep going. Don't forget Paul McCartney and Wings and McCartney's solo stuff, a very deep rabbit hole. Enjoy.
beatles were not genius
If you think this one has raw vocals, listen to his solo song “Monkberry Moon Delight” off Paul’s album “Ram”. He really shreds his voice on that one.
A McCartney tour de force!
When they recorded the background vocals was the last time all four Beatles were in the recording studio together!
THAT'S PAUL GOING INSANE ACE!!! LMAO 💯😊
That little nod to little richard🤘❤️and there are many many songs with a nod to the beatles famous line yeh yeh yeh😊
Oh, Darling was released in England in 1969 BUT was NOT released in the United States as a single. It is, of course, on the Let It Be album😮😊
No, Oh, Darling is on the Abbey Road album.
Want to hear more amazing vocals by Paul? Listen to I've got a feeling
The best place to get info for Beatles songs is the Beatles Bible website.
Double tracked Paul vocals on bridges!
If you want to really have some fun, give a listen to Paul McCartney's song; "Monkberry Moon Delight".
Exactly!! Super fun song!!
Yes! Go for it! 😁
It's Paul all the way through the song man!!!
I enjoy both of your reactions! You make a great team. 👍
I would have loved to hear Lennon perform this. Both of these guys were rave up masters and could bring the house down with this sort of song.
"The man with thousand voices": Paul McCartney.
OPENING TRACK ON ABBEY IS : COME TOGETHER 👍😊BANGGGERRRRRR ACE!
Try Helter Skelter, excellent
There was no technology back then.
Its paul on vocals and John Lennon and George Harrison on backing vocals.
The only technology back then was their voices.....nothing else.
There was plenty of Technology back then Reverb around for decades, Multi track also was used in the late 40's or early 50s. Tape loops were done Stereo. mixing consoles amplified instruments, electric piano, organs of many types, the Mellotron. It was early days for multitrack tape but it did exist. The dark ages were not the 1960's
Might be Paul's best vocal performance....
What you heard was in the studio That's what the album sounded like live on the rooftop doesn't sound much different. Don't let me down you got to see it on the rooftop. It's cold as all get out and they're wearing their wives fur coats.
PLUS they need to see "I'VE GOT A FEELING" from the rooftop concert as well!! NO ONE EVER mentions that one, it's always "Don't Let Me Down" and I don't understand WHY. They are BOTH great songs, and BOTH should be heard.
paul sings it all.
Paul loves Little Richard
It's Paul singing
This is raw McCartney. No improvements using technology. The technology wasn't even there at that time
That's paul..He gets intense here.
Where The Beatles are concerned, always expect the unexpected. They never liked repeating themselves.
Dirty Dancing in an outdoor shower while watching a tropical sunset with your Honey is definitely a thing.
Paul can really scream.