FIRST Listen to Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band & Analysis - Still recovering from this...

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  • Опубликовано: 5 авг 2024
  • A day in the life...How about that? lol
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Комментарии • 3,2 тыс.

  • @crispwater7294
    @crispwater7294 2 года назад +1204

    As you're heading into The Beatles' final albums, I recommend you listen to Let It Be before Abbey Road, despite Abbey Road coming out first. They recorded 95% of Let It Be before Abbey Road, and they meant for Abbey Road to be their Goodbye album. Many Beatles fans agree that Abbey Road is their true final album, and me and many others recommend you listen to that one last.

    • @bfish89ryuhayabusa
      @bfish89ryuhayabusa 2 года назад +49

      Agreed. I always place Let It Be before Abbey Road. Actually, I use a version from Albums That Never Were that uses the original title Get Back.

    • @MrBananaCheeks
      @MrBananaCheeks 2 года назад +69

      Yes, I agree. Plus, having The End/Her Majesty be the last songs in their catalogue is just too poetic to pass up!

    • @billpranty
      @billpranty 2 года назад +27

      Let It Be is their worst album, so you don't want to end your career that way. Abbey Road is one of their best, a great swan song.

    • @lynottlives
      @lynottlives 2 года назад +72

      @@billpranty I have to say, I really like Let it Be. But I agree that Abbey Road is their true final album and should be listened to last.

    • @guyjerry
      @guyjerry 2 года назад +11

      100% CORRECT. That’s a must

  • @SpiderPotterFan
    @SpiderPotterFan 2 года назад +231

    Oh, her trying to figure out the lyrics of 'I Am the Walrus' will be so much fun

    • @appledane
      @appledane 2 года назад +56

      That's easy. The walrus was Paul.

    • @bluepeng8895
      @bluepeng8895 2 года назад +32

      And the lyrics to Revolution 9

    • @simonmarcotte2432
      @simonmarcotte2432 2 года назад +5

      @@appledane yeah but she'll learn that later on with the White Album 😄

    • @tomcochran6616
      @tomcochran6616 2 года назад +1

      Me also

    • @DaveRod76
      @DaveRod76 2 года назад +6

      @@bluepeng8895 That has lyrics? LOL

  • @krautgazer
    @krautgazer Год назад +233

    For me, "A Day in the Life" is the best song in the whole universe. It just conveys the human life experience in such an epic way - the mundane, the irony, the chaos, the futile, the melancholy, the spiritual (or dream state), and it is descriptive and figurative but also quite abstract (impressionist and expressionist at the same time).

    • @SunsetLights
      @SunsetLights Год назад +13

      I think I may just agree with you

    • @dctbass
      @dctbass Год назад +8

      Nailed it

    • @jayclick3225
      @jayclick3225 Год назад +3

      Very well put 👏

    • @Rowlph8888
      @Rowlph8888 Год назад +2

      I want you (she's so heavy), Strawberry Fields, Tomorrow never knows and oh, darling are better in my opinion. A day in the life was alwways my favourite from the beginning, but over time, the others still sound fresh, even Though I listened to them all roughly the same amount of times. Maybe it's because a Day in the life is not really saying anything, it's more of just a piece of art, a story, and the best of all, thier story songs, that they all created, and are still masterpieces, In many cases. Whereas the others have clear as well as ambiguous meanings open to interpretation, but are also art. For example, the meanings e.g. I want you, She's so heavy, seems to me to get to the point of different intensities, of desire, and also admiration, But in a totally unique way, even for the Beatles

    • @DerekDerekDerekDerekDerekDerek
      @DerekDerekDerekDerekDerekDerek Год назад +5

      ​@@Rowlph8888 no way is Oh Darling better... its an average blues song...

  • @RadCenter
    @RadCenter Год назад +102

    Fifty-plus years later, "She's Leaving Home" still makes me cry.

    • @relayerdave
      @relayerdave Год назад +5

      John's vocals on this track are superb...

    • @andreas.4764
      @andreas.4764 Год назад +8

      When I heard this song as a kid, I always viewed it from the girl’s perspective. Now that I have my own kids, I can empathize a bit with the parents.

    • @alonenjersey
      @alonenjersey 4 месяца назад

      The words can still be exact in today's world 57 years later.

    • @briandonovan1584
      @briandonovan1584 3 месяца назад

      That song still makes m3 cry every time. Not at first because I was only 3 and though I was in love w The Beatles some of their songs I just didn't understand.

    • @briandonovan1584
      @briandonovan1584 3 месяца назад

      That song still makes m3 cry every time. Not at first because I was only 3 and though I was in love w The Beatles some of their songs I just didn't understand.

  • @appledane
    @appledane 2 года назад +165

    Getting Better is the best way to point out the difference between Lennon and McCartney.
    Paul: "Have to admit it's getting better. It's getting better all the time."
    John: "Can't get much worse."

    • @HobGungan
      @HobGungan 2 года назад +23

      It's "Can't Get No Worse", which is a minor distinction with little difference but to me is better indicative of hope despite dripping with cynicism.

    • @Mr62Lincoln
      @Mr62Lincoln 2 года назад +1

      @@HobGungan You're correct in the wording - I'm glad that @Jesper Nielsen pointed this out - so many first time listeners miss this subtlety in the song.

    • @sarahfullerton6894
      @sarahfullerton6894 2 года назад +2

      @@HobGungan ...and I always thought it was "Can't get any worse".

    • @1monki
      @1monki 2 года назад +1

      They loved their reversals: hello, goodbye; within you and without you; etc. Why just tell you something is up when they can say it's both up and down at the same time. They love that trick

    • @yohannbiimu
      @yohannbiimu 2 года назад

      @@sarahfullerton6894 That'd be the proper grammar version of the song...

  • @nordvegfigg7746
    @nordvegfigg7746 2 года назад +320

    Ringo's drumming on this album is absolutely stellar.

    • @murphy6700
      @murphy6700 2 года назад +30

      And brutally difficult to conceive the percussion parts, but Ringo did it. The best drummer the Beatles could have had throughout their career. Very musical as Caroline has pointed out often..

    • @bassioelmucho
      @bassioelmucho 2 года назад +6

      Fantastic!

    • @grahammcbean6362
      @grahammcbean6362 2 года назад +12

      Right through to Abbey Road

    • @scottfrench4139
      @scottfrench4139 2 года назад +25

      Yes, but that can be said of nearly every Beatles album. One of the most underrated drummers, except by the Beatles fanbase and other drummers.

    • @frankdiscussion2069
      @frankdiscussion2069 2 года назад +25

      Ringo is one of the greatest studio drummers of all time. He'd work 16 hrs a day in the studio. Nobody ever told him what to play. He just happened to play with the greatest band of all time. How lucky they were to have him.

  • @redsquirrel1086
    @redsquirrel1086 2 года назад +312

    What The Beatles produced in under a decade and how they advanced popular music in that relatively short space of time is truly phenomenal.
    They are, and are likely to remain, the most important band in the history of the genre.

    • @itkojecockot
      @itkojecockot 2 года назад +2

      no doubt they are the most influential band in rock music, but certainly not the best...... there are bands which pushed the envelope even more than Beatles

    • @redsquirrel1086
      @redsquirrel1086 2 года назад +34

      @@itkojecockot
      That's a point of view, but 50 years from now will still be talking about The Beatles.
      Whether they will be talking about any of the bands that you are alluding to is another question.

    • @itkojecockot
      @itkojecockot 2 года назад +2

      @@redsquirrel1086 you're talking about popularity, I'm talking about innovation..... popularity doesn't mean anything.... Justin Bieber is more popular than Beatles now..... does that mean he is better :D:D

    • @redsquirrel1086
      @redsquirrel1086 2 года назад +18

      @@itkojecockot
      I haven't mentioned the term popularity. I'm talking influence and legacy, which are beyond question.
      Anything else, including "pushing the envelope" is purely subjective.

    • @itkojecockot
      @itkojecockot 2 года назад

      @@redsquirrel1086 no, it's actually the other way around :D:D pushing the envelope can be to certain extend measured from technical point of view.... legacy is subjective, because there are people who don't even like Beatles..... and if your argument is that many people do, then you're obviously mean popularity :D

  • @michaelblaydes2259
    @michaelblaydes2259 2 года назад +79

    In She's Leaving Home, Paul's melodic conclusion is some of the greatest music in popular music history.

    • @daleviker5884
      @daleviker5884 Год назад +14

      It blows my mind that Paul wrote this based on a story in the newspaper about a random girl who had run away from home. Many years later it emerged that in real life he'd actually met the girl, and it is recorded for history. In the early days of the Beatles Paul was a judge on some British talent program or whatever, and he awarded the prize to this particular girl, who was very young at the time. Surely the last thing on his mind at the time was that a couple of years later he would write one of his most beautiful compositions about this same girl.

    • @nza1804
      @nza1804 2 месяца назад

      @@daleviker5884that’s so crazy and I thought the coincidence about Eleanor Rigby was mad

  • @jaredf6205
    @jaredf6205 2 года назад +553

    Are we all in agreement that since this is a chronological listen she needs to listen to Let It Be before Abbey Road? It was released afterwords, but recorded before. Plus Abbey Road makes for a better ending anyway.

  • @1monki
    @1monki 2 года назад +207

    Lennon's lyrics become more poetic around this time. He's less interested in telling a story than using words and music to create a mood. Paul is getting better at telling stories like, "She's Leaving Home." And George is now expressing his spirituality in his music. It all expands the kinds of sonic adventures you'll find on a Beatles album

    • @Turtledove2009
      @Turtledove2009 2 года назад +7

      Yes, yes, yes.

    • @orchidwave2574
      @orchidwave2574 2 года назад +17

      Earlier Beatles: "You Can't Do That." Later Beatles....Let's try it anyway!

    • @cjmacq-vg8um
      @cjmacq-vg8um 2 года назад +13

      ... i think its more of a word salad kinda thing. dylan once told lennon - if you can't think of a word that rhymes, just make one up. and lennon goo-goo-ga-joob did. george martin compared lennons lyrical style with savaldore dali's visual style. lennon presented surrealism and lewis carroll fantasy word-play absuditues into his lyrics.
      mccartney did the same - keeps her face in a jar by the door - is a very surreal visualization.

    • @illadrobici
      @illadrobici 2 года назад +2

      Much more poetic to say "face that she keeps in the jar by the door" than "... the teeth that she keeps in the jar by the door...".

    • @eggman5106
      @eggman5106 2 года назад +2

      Ringo: bong bong bom pow

  • @raycornford283
    @raycornford283 2 года назад +222

    I remember vividly going to a party the day after Sgt Pepper was released and discovering that the album had been bought by one of the part-goers. Once the initial dancing had tailed off, the album was played. And repeated time and again. We could not properly get our heads round what we were hearing. Music changed that night.

    • @mgman6000
      @mgman6000 2 года назад +17

      When this album.came out I was overseas off Vietnam nam and didn't get back until August almost the first thing I did was buy Sgt Pepper we played over and over again trying to analyze it and then with headphones that it really opened up. I first heard. A Day in the life on the car radio in early 67 and didn't believe it I hope the version you are listening to is in stereo it makes a big difference

    • @ronniechilds2002
      @ronniechilds2002 Год назад +7

      I know what you mean. I was 15 when it came out, and I didn't quite "get it" until a little later. This marks the point when, instead of kids dancing to their music, they started sitting down and actually listening. Closely. Stoned, often.

    • @freddythecat3203
      @freddythecat3203 9 месяцев назад

      I agree. I was 18 ,I went round to my friends place, he lived in a caravan in the woods. there were four of us, we rolled a joint and put this one. By the end you knew you had just listened to apiece of musical history, and the theme album format had just been born. This was the first album to have one single continuous track as one side of the album.
      There were two other moments in my Youth when i got the same feeling. One was when i heard Mike Oldfields "Tubular Bells", and the second time was when I heard Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" . All three instances were new paragraphs in the history of music.

  • @cremetangerine82
    @cremetangerine82 2 года назад +183

    People who sleep on “Within You Without You” should have their ears revoked, this songs slaps and many have been many people’s introduction to classical Indian music. The duet between the “Western” (cellos, violins, etc.) instruments and Indian (sitars, dilrubas, etc.) instruments is sublime.
    “When I’m 64” makes me a little sad since half the band didn’t reach that age, am I the only one who thinks that?

    • @acslater017
      @acslater017 2 года назад +16

      Within You Without You is my favorite song! I think it helps to have done psychedelics to appreciate the lyrics.

    • @cremetangerine82
      @cremetangerine82 2 года назад +4

      @@acslater017
      I’ve take a couple of undergraduate philosophy classes, and the lyrics remind me of that experience.

    • @tcac1687
      @tcac1687 2 года назад

      I never used to like but now its so brilliant maybe I've caught up with it

    • @JC20XX
      @JC20XX 2 года назад +3

      Well now I'm thinking that :(

    • @johnmarshall2722
      @johnmarshall2722 2 года назад +1

      @@acslater017 or meditation

  • @dennydowling2169
    @dennydowling2169 2 года назад +275

    As many will no doubt have pointed out, the more negative lyrics of "Getting Better" were written by John Lennon with the more positive lyrics having been written by Paul (who was the principal write of this song.) John and Paul had different ways of looking at life. During their solo careers John and Paul would sometimes write lyrics intended as a message to the other. In John's final album, "Double Fantasy", there is a song that he wrote for his son Sean titled "Beautiful Boy". A line in that song says "Every day in every way it's getting better and better." Paul believes that this was a message to him from John saying that Paul's way of viewing life was after all the better way and that he was passing along that point of view to Sean. Sean has said that he treasures every moment he has with Paul as that is the closest he can ever feel to being with his father.

    • @gabriel38g
      @gabriel38g 2 года назад +23

      If you listen carefully, Paul sings "it's getting better all the time." while in the back vocals John sings "It couldn't get no worse."

    • @larryoishi6600
      @larryoishi6600 2 года назад +1

      0

    • @Talisman09
      @Talisman09 2 года назад +8

      We can work it out/life is very short. I also like to think that McCartney says hello and John says goodbye. That's not a joke about John dying btw! Why why why wha wha wha wha, do yer saaay goodbyyye goodbyyyye

    • @charlesbunch8383
      @charlesbunch8383 2 года назад +8

      @@Talisman09 I saw Alistair Taylor speaking at a Beatle Fest. He said Paul came up to him one day and said, "Let me show you how easy it is to write a song. Everything I say, you say the opposite. 'Hello!' 'Goodbye!" etc. So Alistair jokingly took credit for cowriting that song.

    • @debjorgo
      @debjorgo 2 года назад +4

      Beautiful Boy "Close your eyes, have no fear. The monster's gone, he's on the run, and your daddy's here." Band on the Run? Is Paul the monster here? Or is John talking about his somewhat tortured soul here, the scary one who used to beat his woman? Probably not either. All kids have their monsters under the bed.

  • @dennismason3740
    @dennismason3740 2 года назад +99

    Sorry, 'scuse me, coming through...can we just give a nod to Ringo's insanely brilliant work?

    • @brianjeffries1961
      @brianjeffries1961 2 года назад +9

      Totally! So much feel and variation. Also, I think this is the album where Ringo is quoted as saying "I learned to play chess during this album". (He sat around a lot while waiting for his parts to play)...

    • @Bassman2353
      @Bassman2353 2 года назад +5

      YEEEESSSSSS! The 50th Anniversary remix did wonderful justice to Ringo's genius work.

    • @dennismason3740
      @dennismason3740 2 года назад +2

      @@Bassman2353 - I've heard so many crap mixes in the last 30 years I could spit. Hard to tell which mix Caroline is listening to but it sounds good on the surface.

  • @tagoldich
    @tagoldich 2 года назад +54

    Revolver is almost always the critics choice album, but something some critics undervalue about Sgt. Pepper is how simply joyously fun and entertaining it is.

    • @analogblues
      @analogblues 2 года назад +5

      Excellent point! I hadn't thought of that before, but I agree.

    • @JordiPujadesGirona
      @JordiPujadesGirona Год назад +9

      Like John said: "a splendid time is guaranteed for all".

    • @davidfinn3362
      @davidfinn3362 4 месяца назад +2

      For about 30 years Sgt Pepper was regarded as their high point, but then some clever people who worked for the music press decided it would be fun to come up with a new theory that Sgt Pepper wasn’t really a concept album and that Revolver was more innovative. As is often the case, the critics were wrong.

    • @alonenjersey
      @alonenjersey 4 месяца назад +1

      Same here. Both LPs are still 100% MASTERPIECES. I'd give "Revolver" the edge as #1.

    • @alonenjersey
      @alonenjersey 3 месяца назад

      Both LPs knocked listeners on their butts after they'd first listened to them. However I'll never understand why Ray Davies didn't "Revolver" when he first heard it.

  • @drusilla3882
    @drusilla3882 2 года назад +97

    This album must have blown peoples minds back in 1967 (?) because it blew my mind back in 2019...it's so creative and complicated and yet so listenable.

    • @billh.1940
      @billh.1940 Год назад +8

      Yes, it did. A whole generation responded to them.

    • @pauldirac808
      @pauldirac808 Год назад +1

      @@billh.1940 Oasis comes to mind .

    • @rainblaze.
      @rainblaze. 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@pauldirac808
      You takin the piss??

    • @dennykeaton9701
      @dennykeaton9701 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@pauldirac808 Fair point. I love both bands

    • @redadamearth
      @redadamearth 8 месяцев назад +1

      It changed everything.

  • @Danjoker.
    @Danjoker. 2 года назад +317

    Crazy how much their sound developed in 4 years.

    • @niggato23
      @niggato23 2 года назад +44

      Exactly From Please Please Me oh yeah to Turn off your mind relax and float downstream in 3 YEARS

    • @KenOtwell
      @KenOtwell 2 года назад +17

      Just as crazy is how much of their willingness (and talent) to embrace such a huge swath of musical emotional landscape and bend it to their creativity - that we rarely see anymore. There are a few more bands who have attempted such feats (Pink Floyd... Jethro Tull... Moody Blues...) but they all followed the path originally blazed by the Fab Four.

    • @thomast8539
      @thomast8539 2 года назад +4

      Well, not four years, but 10. John and Paul met and began playing together in 1957.

    • @Danjoker.
      @Danjoker. 2 года назад +21

      @@thomast8539 I know that, I'm just referring to their studio albums.

    • @sourisvoleur4854
      @sourisvoleur4854 2 года назад +4

      @@thomast8539 I'd say their music changed much less between 1957 and 1964 than it did between 1964 and 1967. Like, powers of ten more. In 1957 through early 1962 they were a cover band.

  • @michaelt6218
    @michaelt6218 2 года назад +189

    Sgt. Pepper is easily the most important and most influential record ever released - and thus the greatest *album* of all time. Yes, there are other collections of songs on other albums that might be equally good, or even better, but nothing has ever equaled the powerful impact of this one. It's impossible to overstate how huge an influence Sgt. Pepper had, not only in the world of music, but in the world of fashion, art, and on popular culture in general. No one who lived through that time was quite the same afterwards.

    • @822nivla
      @822nivla 2 года назад +19

      Indeed it was. Let's not forget that it was the first album to open with a double sleeve and to publish the lyrics on the back cover. The cover art itself was also something else.

    • @deirdre108
      @deirdre108 2 года назад +17

      "All summer long we were dancing in the sand
      Everybody just kept on playing
      Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band."

    • @phila3884
      @phila3884 2 года назад +12

      @@deirdre108 Yes. And Johnny Rivers recorded and released that song in 1967, just months after the The Beatles dropped Sergeant Peppers on the world. Talk about impact.

    • @sx20Ramar
      @sx20Ramar 2 года назад +11

      I was 21 when Pepper dropped. It changed how I looked @ life and changed music & most other things, forever. The most important album in music.

    • @Meine.Postma
      @Meine.Postma 2 года назад +3

      With that logic shouldn't it be Pet Sounds which inspired The Beatles to do make it?

  • @ConglomerationCat
    @ConglomerationCat 2 года назад +60

    Caroline's reaction looking through her window when she studied "She's Leaving Home" actually brought tears to my eyes.
    You always hear songs you're own way but to see someone else's reaction brings it to a totally different level.

    • @beatletech1
      @beatletech1 2 года назад +7

      I agree. And 50 years from now another young lady will hear this song for the first time and turn and look out the window with thoughtful sadness. Then that will make it 100 years since this brilliant song was written .

    • @KebabMusicLtd
      @KebabMusicLtd Год назад

      I thought she would have been better served looking through her window (yeah) during the entirety of the album. Save the analysis for another day when you're more familiar with the songs.

  • @kirksworks
    @kirksworks 10 месяцев назад +13

    A Day in the Life is the greatest song the Beatles ever wrote (mostly John, but Paul wrote the center transition). There’s a number of orchestral versions of this song, which shows how well respected it is. I like the fact that it doesn’t just come right out and tell you what it’s about. It’s the tone of the song and the instrumentation that gives it the feeling of human life and the surprises that we live through, hence the orchestral rise and crash. It just doesn’t get any better than that. A masterpiece.

    • @johnorgan3
      @johnorgan3 2 месяца назад

      paul's idea for orchestra explosions.

  • @miklosittzes8901
    @miklosittzes8901 2 года назад +331

    In my opinion, A day in the life is one of the most breathtaking piece of music ever written. Loved the video as always!

    • @izzonj
      @izzonj 2 года назад +40

      I think it's Ringo's best percussion. It's off the charts good.

    • @timothybolshaw
      @timothybolshaw 2 года назад +20

      I have the same view. The song has a chaotic beauty that is unique, as far as I know, in popular music. The only comparable pieces are some of the more successful efforts by ambitious 20th Century classical composers.

    • @Alpha_7227
      @Alpha_7227 2 года назад +31

      @@izzonj Definitely Ringo's drumming on Revolver onwards is fantastic and has inspired many.

    • @Alpha_7227
      @Alpha_7227 2 года назад +6

      Indeed.

    • @alonsoquirosgranados7568
      @alonsoquirosgranados7568 2 года назад +4

      You wise man

  • @Shep139
    @Shep139 2 года назад +54

    Caroline, your reaction to "She's Leaving Home" reduced this sixty-five year old to tears. Your responses are a joy.

    • @aleg2716
      @aleg2716 2 года назад +1

      We all cried with that one. I still do sometimes

  • @lawrencegleason4666
    @lawrencegleason4666 2 года назад +71

    I never thought it would be so much fun to watch a young musician listen to the Beatles for the first time. You're a delight. Thank for posting. Just discovered your channel.

  • @CowmanUK
    @CowmanUK Год назад +12

    I watch these videos every month or so. It's my go-to videos to make me happy. Nobody does it better than Caroline.

  • @andrewdoubtfire4700
    @andrewdoubtfire4700 2 года назад +183

    You know, it's been a bit of a rubbish week with lots of problems to sort out, so I cannot tell you how good it is to see you post this Vlog. Your enthusiasm is very uplifting and your knowledge of music is a pleasure to listen to & learn from. Thank you.

    • @gribwitch
      @gribwitch 2 года назад +1

      Feeling down, Andrew ? You know the solution - slip on a Beatles CD. Guaranteed to cheer you up in no time. Always works for me.

    • @andrewdoubtfire4700
      @andrewdoubtfire4700 2 года назад +3

      @@gribwitch thanks Graham, exactly what I did on my drive home. Now, I Feel Fine!!

    • @gribwitch
      @gribwitch 2 года назад +2

      @@andrewdoubtfire4700 Better than any anti-depressant isn't it ?
      Need more Help?....you know my name, look up the number....

    • @bobblackburn2187
      @bobblackburn2187 2 года назад +3

      @@gribwitch number nine, number nine .....

    • @casaraku1
      @casaraku1 2 года назад +1

      Its like listening to them for the first time...she can also play and read music so her appreciation is duly earned... as none musicians can only go so deep... she can go a lot further.... another reason for music lovers to learn to play something... it gives perspective. Love her smile and energy.

  • @movienut710
    @movienut710 2 года назад +69

    Caroline, YOU are the girl with the sun in her eyes. Tell Your parents they should be very proud.

  • @randalovcen9811
    @randalovcen9811 2 года назад +66

    When you're finished going through their album library be sure to watch the just released Peter Jackson 3 part video project "Get Back." You will see the incredible minds and talent of The Beatles at work as they develop complete #1 hits from just a thought or a short sentence. Don't cheat by watching it until you've finished the album library!

    • @Turtledove2009
      @Turtledove2009 2 года назад +9

      Agreed but she should watch the Anthology first, don't you think?

  • @ohctascooby2
    @ohctascooby2 2 года назад +14

    The trippy thing is a true Beatles lover enjoys each new song they hear more than the last no matter what order they hear them in because they bring something unique and beautiful to each one. The journey is the destination.

  • @mst3ktemple421
    @mst3ktemple421 2 года назад +88

    Ringo's drum fills on A Day In The Life are the best ever. So good they make me tear up, and that is not my character, but I love it.

    • @davidbweiner
      @davidbweiner 2 года назад +2

      Also, on Here Comes the Sun on Abbey Road. In the bridge he has a 'regular' pop beat which becomes an Indian rhythm and back again all in one line. Absolutely incredible.

    • @sx20Ramar
      @sx20Ramar 2 года назад +2

      He Is a fantastic drummer and deserves his place in the greatest band that ever will be.

  • @TheBlackQueen
    @TheBlackQueen 2 года назад +51

    When this album came out, it changed EVERYTHING! There was so much innovation with tape loops, album themes, lyrics, instrument choices, compositional liberties, and technological advances. Everyone took inspiration from this album going forward as it pretty much invented Progressive Rock.

    • @goldtown6747
      @goldtown6747 2 года назад +1

      Absolutely! As Caroline herself said about the Beatles: They did what they wanted to do.

    • @patricknelson5151
      @patricknelson5151 2 года назад +2

      First rock album with printed lyrics and for good reason.

    • @karolk7711
      @karolk7711 2 года назад

      Yes, but prog rock is crap

    • @TheBlackQueen
      @TheBlackQueen 2 года назад

      @@karolk7711 No u

  • @analogblues
    @analogblues 2 года назад +15

    At some point during your listen to Sgt. Pepper, did you ever think "Wow! They've come a long way from "Love Me Do" just 4 years earlier!"
    I hope you're appreciating the extraordinary evolution The Beatles offer - it's one that has sent ripples of influence throughout all of popular music for the past 50 years.

  • @jaimetabilo2005
    @jaimetabilo2005 2 года назад +12

    A Day In The Life is my favourite Beatles song, it's a masterpiece

    • @analogblues
      @analogblues 2 года назад +4

      I think it's a masterpiece, too. I wish she had enjoyed it.

    • @Turtledove2009
      @Turtledove2009 2 года назад +2

      @@analogblues She may yet. It's only her first listen.

  • @FiremanSam60
    @FiremanSam60 2 года назад +182

    "There are human years, dog years and Beatles years."
    Take a minute to consider what's gone on here in terms of rate of growth...the musical and intellectual evolution from Please Please Me in 1963 to this, 4 years later, is insane.
    George Harrison has just written Within You at 24, nailing some Eastern philosophical concepts for Western minds and doing it against an amazing interpretation of Indian classical music, while telling Indian musicians what to play. John is writing one of the most incredible songs ever, Paul's driving the album and finding new musical vistas, from psychedelia to pastiche, pushing himself, his mates and George Martin ever harder, and Ringo totally understands the assignment. It's a creative peak, but it's probably the last time John and Paul are emotionally and intellectually yinning and yanging so completely. It's not my favourite Beatles album, but it's a seminal moment in time, when the Beatles so perfectly reflect their world back at everyone.
    What the f***

    • @jnagarya519
      @jnagarya519 2 года назад

      As for George's "religiosity" and spiritual condescension -- "I'm enlightened -- but you ain't": how did it work out with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi?
      Eastern "philosophy" was already in the air from the 1950s-60s "Beat" "poets".

    • @roscius6204
      @roscius6204 2 года назад +6

      @@jnagarya519 and your contribution to the collective consciousness is....?

    • @jnagarya519
      @jnagarya519 2 года назад +2

      @@roscius6204 Critical thinking.
      I stopped relying on pop music for sound "philosophy" ages ago. The basic flaw in fans is the unexamined assumption that songwriters and writers are writing autobiography -- so the belief that George's "religious" songs were actual and accurate reflections of who he really was in real life and actual behavior.
      Have you actually LISTENED to the lyrics of "While My Guitar Genty Weeps"? He is being judgmental of OTHERS, from a SUPERIOR -- CONDESCENDING -- position, not of HIMSELF.
      It's said that when George quit "The Beatles" for that week or so it was because Patti had left, because he brought another woman with whom he was having an affair into the home. Meanwhile his IMAGE was as an anti-materialist focused on the spiritual.
      And his judgment concerning Maharishi Mahesh Yogi turned out to be seriously, even laughably, flawed. And one wonders why John, who finally saw through him, turned around and fell for Allen Klein.

    • @annakermode6646
      @annakermode6646 2 года назад +1

      @@jnagarya519 YES! This! He was SO condescending and such a freaking hypocrite.

    • @scottamichie
      @scottamichie 2 года назад +10

      Yes and yes. However…it’s time we all stop with the Beatles “as simple pop bubblegum artists” at start and THEN they “grew”, as if by magic. Everyone who parrots that needs to pause and give a fresh listen to their early songs. You’ll hear WHY they BLEW THE DOORS OFF popular music-from THE START. They had something to say to us from their very beginning. So many songs whipped your head around first time u heard it. “ I called you on the phone they said you were not home, that’s a lie.“ NO ONE in popular music was recording anything like that in 1964. And songs like The Word. “The word is love.” That’s what they were all about-from the start-and it GRABBED us.

  • @Kaleidoscopia
    @Kaleidoscopia 2 года назад +110

    With a band like The Beatles, having historical and cultural context only makes these already great sounding songs even better. You then start to realise that they're not just fun songs, they're iconic, groundbreaking, genre-defining, culture shifts neatly packaged into a brilliant album

  • @victortorrecillas8507
    @victortorrecillas8507 2 года назад +7

    A day in the life is probably the best song of The Beatles. Thanks You so much. It was great. You are very Smart.

    • @johnorgan3
      @johnorgan3 2 месяца назад

      what about You Know My Name?

  • @robertalenrichter
    @robertalenrichter Год назад +6

    I was seven when the song A Day in the Life hit the airwaves, and even at that age, I experienced it as a brilliant piece of work. Now 63, I still feel exactly the same way. Re-hearing She's Leaving Home, I'm struck at what a delicate, sensitive song that is.

  • @brianparker663
    @brianparker663 2 года назад +27

    Well, I'm 64 in a few weeks' time - and not a month has gone by, since I got this in '67, when I have not listened to it at least once. It was like it arrived from another planet at the time and let no one tell you any other album by anyone, ever, surpasses it.

  • @michaellewis9167
    @michaellewis9167 2 года назад +62

    This makes me recall once again Tom Petty's response to the question which has often been batted around, "Which is the better band, The Beatles or The Rolling Stones?" Petty famously replied that while The Stones are a great band, The Beatles changed the world.

    • @scottborenstein8291
      @scottborenstein8291 2 года назад +9

      The Stones along with just about every band in the 60’s were eclipsed by the Beatles at the time. And to this day we are still talking about them and they are selling more records then a lot of today’s artists because their songs are iconic. They will be listened to and appreciated forever.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver 2 года назад +12

      John Fogerty said "do you know how cool it is to hear YOUR song played between the Beatles and the Stones!"

    • @kevdmiller
      @kevdmiller 2 года назад +3

      Yeah The Stones are great, but I can't comprehend seeing them as competition for The Beatles.

    • @jippyhound
      @jippyhound 2 года назад +2

      Beatles owned the decade. Hard to know how the '70's would have played out had they held it together. The Stones best work came in the very late sixties and early seventies from Let It Bleed to Exile On Main St (I'm partial to the Mick Taylor era). And then, of course, there's Led Zeppelin's peak with Led Zeppelin III, IV & Houses of the Holy. Zeppelin, btw, also outsold the Stones by something like 100 million records in the end. You'd almost have to call The Rolling Stones - at the very most - the third best band of the era.

    • @waynemarvin5661
      @waynemarvin5661 2 года назад +2

      @@kevdmiller The Beatles had NO competition (I'm 69, and remember). As Paul once said, the only band he considered to be on their level was the Beach Boys, but "competition"? No. The Beatles led, and everyone followed. By the time everyone else caught up with them, they were on to something else. "I am the eggman, they are the eggmen, I am the walrus."

  • @beckygrant2258
    @beckygrant2258 2 года назад +10

    When this album was released, it had been a while since we had heard much from them. Rumors that they had quit were swirling. No…they were WORKING! Lol what a masterpiece. They played all the songs on this album endlessly on the radio for weeks and months. Like the greatest album anyone had ever heard at that time! Incredible.

  • @miltonyannis3719
    @miltonyannis3719 2 года назад +17

    And just to think that the singles Penny Lane/Strawberry Fields and All You Need Is Love were bookends to this album....the Beatles were simply astonishing!

    • @JStarStar00
      @JStarStar00 2 года назад

      As well as "It's All Too Much," recorded in the days following the release of SPLHCB.

    • @waynemarvin5661
      @waynemarvin5661 Год назад

      @@JStarStar00 What's with the abbreviations? When you're an adult, you'll know to just call it "Pepper".

    • @JStarStar00
      @JStarStar00 Год назад +1

      @@waynemarvin5661
      I've been an adult for 40 years, i do what I want.

  • @leninsanchez7167
    @leninsanchez7167 2 года назад +58

    Revolver was a groundbreaking achievement in music history, but sgt. pepper’s is an absolute masterpiece.

    • @karolk7711
      @karolk7711 2 года назад +4

      Revolver is too

    • @cuckoofan
      @cuckoofan 2 года назад +1

      I definitely agree. For me, their best album and one of the 5 best pop albums of all times. Just PER-FECT! But let's not forget George Martin who was just as important as the Beatles themselves for the creative evolution of this band and their sound. Without him, I don't think "Sgt Pepper's..." would have sounded so clever and brilliant.

    • @leninsanchez7167
      @leninsanchez7167 2 года назад +3

      @@cuckoofan George Martin is definitely the 5th beatle.

    • @ricardoidrovo7750
      @ricardoidrovo7750 2 года назад +2

      For me revolver was the ice breaker, but sgt peppers is just a better constructed album.

    • @Bubdiddly
      @Bubdiddly 2 года назад +2

      Revolver way better

  • @DavidTurchickVEGAN
    @DavidTurchickVEGAN 2 года назад +86

    That someone is able to convey such a musically and emotionally complex song like “She’s Leaving Home” is, in and of itself, a great feat of humankind. That a 24-year-old did that is just mind blowing.

    • @kurniadi9829
      @kurniadi9829 2 года назад +12

      and "When I'm Sixty Four" was written by Paul when he was 14. Crazy.

    • @scottandrewbrass1931
      @scottandrewbrass1931 2 года назад +1

      The tune was written when he was 16. The words came later in 1966.

  • @leonardblush2557
    @leonardblush2557 2 года назад +12

    This album is a "visual" album. With the exception of perhaps It's Getting Better and A Little Help..", each number connotes imagery. You can see Mummy and Daddy on the stairs, the circus of Mr. Kite's show, Rita and sisters on the sofa, digging the weeds, making the bus in seconds flat, painting a room in a Peter Max way and, of course, a boat on a river and girl with kaleidoscope eyes.
    BTW Caroline, the final sustained chord is 3 grand pianos and a harmonium. John, Paul, Ringo and George Martin.

  • @lejoe48
    @lejoe48 2 года назад +5

    Something Inside That Was Always Denied, For So Many Years.

  • @jemahl123
    @jemahl123 2 года назад +95

    Lennon openly acknowledged his mysogny in his early life and became a real advocate for womens rights as he got older, I always saw this as a development from the jealous attitude of Run For Your Life, an admission of guilt and a promise to do better.

    • @jamesmarshall3521
      @jamesmarshall3521 2 года назад +4

      Lots of people feel the same way about the lyrics in the song but the line about doing his girl in is straight out of “Baby Let’s Play House “ by Elvis (and others). I’ve read this was the last track done and was rushed and Lennon just made reference to that ‘other’ rock song. This is a something he did often.

    • @NxDoyle
      @NxDoyle 2 года назад +2

      *misogyny

    • @jori1
      @jori1 2 года назад +10

      About a month before he died, John Lennon said this about Getting Better:
      "It is a diary form of writing. All that 'I used to be cruel to my woman, I beat her and kept her apart from the things that she loved' was me. I used to be cruel to my woman, and physically... any woman. I was a hitter. I couldn't express myself and I hit. I fought men and I hit women. That is why I am always on about peace, you see. It is the most violent people who go for love and peace. Everything's the opposite. But I sincerely believe in love and peace. I am a violent man who has learned not to be violent and regrets his violence. I will have to be a lot older before I can face in public how I treated women as a youngster."

    • @gibiscus
      @gibiscus 2 года назад

      Actually, it was the first Rubber Soul song recorded besides Wait left over from Help!...

    • @LawsonMovies
      @LawsonMovies 2 года назад

      I remember reading somewhere that Run for your life was meant as satire based on the Elvis Presley song Baby, Lets play house. It had the lyric, "I'd rather see you dead little girl, than to be with another man."

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519 2 года назад +38

    The contrast between Paul and John: Paul: "I have to admit it's getting better"; John: "It can't get no worse".

    • @user-rb8us2xh9t
      @user-rb8us2xh9t 2 года назад

      この後 Hello Goodbye が作られると云うね
      ザ・ビートルズは面白いねぇ

    • @ashith1297
      @ashith1297 2 года назад

      @@user-rb8us2xh9t ほんと

  • @JsscRchlDrsy
    @JsscRchlDrsy 2 года назад +11

    Being a musician, this album changed my life. I’m on this journey with you until the end. What I gift to experience it again through another’s ears.

  • @NoExitLoveNow
    @NoExitLoveNow 2 года назад +11

    After the final note, Lennon had producer George Martin dub in a high pitched tone, which most humans can't hear, but drives dogs crazy. This was followed by a loop of incomprehensible studio noise, along with Paul McCartney saying, "Never could see any other way," all spliced together. It was put there so vinyl copies would play this continuously in the run-out groove, sounding like something went horribly wrong with the record.

  • @joannevincent2035
    @joannevincent2035 2 года назад +22

    The best thing about your reactions is your new eyes and ears on an "old" work of art. We boomers need validation (at best) or fair criticism (at worst) to remind us that we also once lived through the fresh experience of these songs.

  • @alainakustyktak865
    @alainakustyktak865 2 года назад +30

    Remember how "old" they were when they composed all these songs... pure geniuses !

    • @kurniadi9829
      @kurniadi9829 2 года назад +2

      "When I'm 64" was written by Paul when he was 14

  • @tektoniks_architects
    @tektoniks_architects 2 года назад +113

    When the album came out, it was released on vinyl...there were no CDs. There was a groove in the vinyl so that when that final note in A Day In The Life was played, it would play infinitely, as long as you kept the turntable on. It would play that note forever.

    • @abc456f
      @abc456f 2 года назад +13

      I've heard that final chord, E major, as the sound that occurred after the big bang. Pretty cool idea.

    • @250278
      @250278 2 года назад +4

      @@abc456f And then your Mac OS starts running.

    • @mintybadgerproductions
      @mintybadgerproductions 2 года назад +6

      I'm not sure that's true, vinyl doesn't work like that especially as the final chord isn't the last thing you hear on the album anyway. The only way I can Imagine that would work is it if it stuck on loop, but then it's not a clean "infinite" loop, but a jarring repeat.

    • @250278
      @250278 2 года назад +1

      @@mintybadgerproductions Indeed.

    • @renonauta
      @renonauta 2 года назад +2

      @@mintybadgerproductions WHEN THE RECORD ENDS, THE RECORD IS CLOSED AND SOUNDS INFINITE UNTIL THE TURNTABLE IS TURNED OFF. WHY ARE YOU TALKING IF YOU DON'T KNOW???? BECAUSE YOU ARE NOT GOING TO SEE WHAT YOUR LADY IS DOING!!! ???

  • @JazzBuff23
    @JazzBuff23 2 года назад +7

    I remember a Friday evening, when The Beatles came out with the Sgt Pepper album, June 2th 1967, we had a party with about twenty or so people waiting as I went to the record shop to pick up the album I ordered.
    We all sat there in total silence listening to what we thought was the greatest work the Beatles had done to date.

  • @BigToeify
    @BigToeify 2 года назад +44

    I’ve had a very difficult week with a best friend of mine passing away suddenly. Your personality, passion and of course the Beatles have put a smile on my face today. Thank you.

    • @CallMeCaroline
      @CallMeCaroline  2 года назад +2

      I’m so sorry to hear about your friends passing. I send you all the good vibes that I can.

    • @johnbyrnes7912
      @johnbyrnes7912 2 года назад

      @@CallMeCaroline great send me some too ! 🤡

  • @Archipelington
    @Archipelington 2 года назад +45

    The story of She’s Leaving Home came from a newspaper story Paul read. Coincidentally the girl in the story, Melanie Coe, was someone he’d presented a prize to on the tv show Ready Steady Go a few years earlier.

    • @johnhenson8862
      @johnhenson8862 2 года назад +5

      Melanie is still around. She didn't meet a man from the motor trade but she says pretty much everything else in the song was about right. Sheer guess by Paul. The parents lines in the song were mostly John's. He said, "they were the things said around his house." He didn't have to invent them.

    • @kenttheaker7904
      @kenttheaker7904 2 года назад +1

      @@johnhenson8862 John basically transcribed all the things his Auntie Mimi had said to him in his youth.

    • @Archipelington
      @Archipelington 2 года назад

      @Leon Erin I used to have a VHS of some Ready Steady Go episodes from when they were repeated in the 80s. It was on there, and I watched that tape to death. Four girls miming to Let’s Jump The Broomstick and Melanie was judged best by Paul if I remember rightly.

  • @davegranville128
    @davegranville128 2 года назад +12

    Not sure if someone else has said this but She’s Leaving Home is based on a real story that Paul saw in a newspaper. Coincidentally the girl in the story was the same girl that Paul had judged to win a dancing competition on the TV show Ready, Steady, Go! in 1963. Amazing song.

    • @daleviker5884
      @daleviker5884 Год назад

      Apologies - I wrote the same thing elsewhere, didn't know you'd already said it.

  • @NiteOwl74
    @NiteOwl74 2 года назад +12

    I'd forgotten just how much I love this album. Ringo's drumming on this is SO good.

  • @johnwilson9483
    @johnwilson9483 2 года назад +26

    What makes this album a total masterpiece is also the context. In 1966 the Beatles helped create and solidify psychedelia with Revolver, which is why that album is also too revolutionary and important, although you may not have liked it as much as Sgt. Pepper. In 1967 good music was made but nothing new be it ballads, folk, country or classic rock and roll, what makes The Beatles the most revolutionary, influential and important band of all time is precisely that they dared to do new things and not staying in their comfort zone, which is what most would have done, you know? The Beatles the most successful band in history that in the 60's you could sell the saliva of one of them to the fans and they would buy it. Imagine that you have the fame and success of The Beatles, what would you have done? The easiest thing was to continue with her classics as she loves you or eight days a week, continue with her great fame and earn a lot of money, they did not have the need to change, on the contrary they risked that by making such a drastic change they would lose fans or would be harshly criticized by music critics, but that's one of the things that makes the Beatles the best, for daring to do things that no one would have thought to do, defying the barriers of popular music and doing things so experimental and beautiful while same time, introducing new instruments, introducing oriental music into western music. The making of this album that is considered the first Concept album, creating soundscapes in the songs and creating atmospheres in the songs. Who would create a circus experience in 1967 ??? Nobody These and many other reasons are what make this the best album of all time. And the Beatles the best band in history. Without the context it is an excellent album. But with the context it is an insurmountable masterpiece. That is why this is the most influential album in history because it was the album that changed pop music.

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519 2 года назад +68

    "She's Leaving Home" -- wonderful counterpoint between lead story and background singing -- how they are in response to each other, and also in conflict.

    • @stevebills5716
      @stevebills5716 2 года назад +3

      I love those lines "How could she treat us so thoughtlessly? How could she do this to me?" "She..." "We never thought of ourselves".

    • @jimc6486
      @jimc6486 2 года назад

      @@stevebills5716 Lennon's lines came from his childhood.....

    • @izzonj
      @izzonj 2 года назад +8

      As the father of a daughter (about Caroline's age) I cannot listen to this song without crying. It brings back the fears of losing her during her delicate adolescent years and tears of joy that we have a wonderful relationship with her now

    • @buddyneher9359
      @buddyneher9359 2 года назад +2

      @@stevebills5716 you have just made me notice for the first time how starkly these lyrics show the very lack of self-awareness of the parents here!

    • @jnagarya519
      @jnagarya519 2 года назад

      @@jimc6486 It seems probable. Brings back knowledge of his troubled childhood as if fresh.
      The overall tone of the song -- the theme -- is very much Lennon. Where Paul rarely sang about conflict, it was always raw with Lennon.

  • @NicholasWarnertheFirst
    @NicholasWarnertheFirst 2 года назад +3

    I subscribed just to see your reaction. As a 64 year old musician, a violinist I had the.privilege to do a concert in an orchestra that played the original score for all these tracks, hand written and conducted by the great composer and conductor on the day, the fifth Beatle George Martin, a sound man, musician and one time employee of the BBC Radiophonics workshop.
    Thanks for the video, well edited and wonderful musical analysis. Great Work. Thanks Again. X.

  • @broncodeviltexas
    @broncodeviltexas 2 года назад +19

    I get a bit testy when someone suggests Revolver is better than Pepper. I lived it. Pepper's blew everybody's mind.

    • @Talisman09
      @Talisman09 2 года назад

      I don't know why Sgt. Pepper is often called their best album (it's probably purely because of the innovative aspect). It absolutely does not contain their best songs. A day in the life is one of their best, though

    • @broncodeviltexas
      @broncodeviltexas 2 года назад

      @@Talisman09 Guess you had to be there.

    • @Talisman09
      @Talisman09 2 года назад

      @@broncodeviltexas You are implying that it was groundbreaking, and that's fair enough, but what about looking at all of their music for what it is now and not what it was at the time. The White album alone could fill Sgt Pepper with better songs bar one or two of them

    • @broncodeviltexas
      @broncodeviltexas 2 года назад +1

      @@Talisman09 The White album is awful. It'd be a really good single album.

    • @Talisman09
      @Talisman09 2 года назад

      @bronco devil Oh please.. while my guitar gently weeps, I'm so tired, blackbird, I will, Julia, martha my dear, happiness is a warm gun, mother nature's son, sexy sadie... could replace the majority of Sgt Pepper as better songs. A day in the life is the only irreplaceable one. IMO 😄

  • @nordvegfigg7746
    @nordvegfigg7746 2 года назад +25

    Sgt. Pepper is everything to me. It's The Beatles at the absolute pinnacle of their creative powers. This album changed popular music forever. Many new genres had their roots in Pepper. No one had ever heard anything like it before. I like to listen to it from start to finish rather than one song here and another one there. The album flows so beautifully from beginning to end. For me, A Day In The Life is the greatest song ever written. Its genesis was John reading a newspaper. Mr. Kite was literally a poster John had advertising a coming show from years and years before. The names and some of the lyrics were taken directly off the poster. The chaotic middle section was made up of random audio tapes of circus sounds that George Martin tossed into the air and all over the studio floor. He then instructed his assistant to cut the tape into random lengths, then randomly edit them together. The chaos part in A Day in the Life was an orchestra brought in to Abby Road and given sheet music that just showed a starting low point and a high end point. They were told to take their instruments from low to high any way they wanted. The middle eight in Day IN A Life was an orphaned bit of music and lyrics Paul had kicking around and offered it up to John as the middle eight. The ending Emaj chord is five (I think) pianos all hitting and holding an Emaj and being mic'd with the soundboard mixing levels going up as the pianos fade out. The audio levels are turned up so high that you can actually hear the Abbey Road studio air conditioning unit humming in the background. So much more to say, but I won't write War and Peace this time. So I shall stop. Just wanted to add, that I've come to really enjoy your video reactions. You have such a natural laid back feel and while you take the music seriously, you don't take yourself as serious. Oh and PS: your hair looks especially great that way. Completely random, I know.. but it just does.

    • @scottamichie
      @scottamichie 2 года назад +1

      Yes. Five pianos-with two ppl (four hands)-on the same chord on each piano, hence the power.

  • @rome8180
    @rome8180 2 года назад +148

    "She's Leaving Home" has some of the best lyrics Paul ever wrote, in my opinion. It reads like a brilliant short story. It shows you a situation from two perspectives and makes you understand and sympathize with them both.

    • @awol2602
      @awol2602 2 года назад +4

      beautifully put

    • @brianruppert1071
      @brianruppert1071 2 года назад +8

      This was based in part on a true story. Look it up on RUclips, because there’s a nice interview with the woman herself, who for a time had no idea it was about her!

    • @jamesmarshall3521
      @jamesmarshall3521 2 года назад +8

      I read that Lennon told Paul at one time that “Here, There and Everywhere “ was a great song.
      Yes; in 1970 John told Jann Webber that “Run for your Life “ was his worst song.
      Funny, but when I first heard the album (US Version that didn’t have “Drive my Car”) without paying attention to the words, it was my fave track cause it just rocked like so good, so much jump

    • @jerrytroyanna5090
      @jerrytroyanna5090 2 года назад +7

      Elenore Rigby was great too. Those lyrics are still studied to this day at the college level as a literary accomplishment

    • @paulevans9036
      @paulevans9036 2 года назад +11

      Paul Mccartney wrote this song after reading about a runaway girl in the Daily Mail newspaper. Unbeknown,Mccartney had actually already meet the girl,Melanie Coe,on an episode of the old tv pop show Ready Steady Go.He was judging some girls dancing. She won.

  • @bonnielennnox
    @bonnielennnox 2 года назад +5

    I didn't realize that watching people discover new music, especially music I love, would be so wonderful and joyous! I'm so happy to see this video!

  • @michaelbeckwith6177
    @michaelbeckwith6177 2 года назад +13

    Caroline you are so much fun and "That's the one thing money can't buy"!! On Monday my favorite album is "Sgt Pepper" on Tuesday it's "Rubber Soul' on Wednesday it's "Revolver" on Thursday it's "The white album" and on Friday it's "Abbey road". Honorable mention to "A hard day's night" and "Help"!!!! There will NEVER be another Beatles period!!

  • @dafmor
    @dafmor 2 года назад +56

    Congratulations for being able to hear the 'unpleasant high squealing sound' at the end - I'm 51, and my old cloth-ears can't hear it anymore - the air just feel a bit 'dry' at that point. Fun fact : It was included specifically as a bonus treat for dogs (honestly!).
    The 'never gives me any other way' bit was a jumble of nonsense cut from some tapes they recorded just being daft. It was originally located as a loop right at the end of the record - in the "locked groove' on the vinyl next to the record label - which, in theory, would mean the album would never end (until you took the needle off the record).

    • @patricknelson5151
      @patricknelson5151 2 года назад +8

      Yes, it’s a dog whistle that McCartney put in for his dog. I used to be able to hear it but can’t anymore.

    • @gribwitch
      @gribwitch 2 года назад

      @@patricknelson5151 You shouldn't have been ABLE to hear it, Patrick. Only dogs can. The frequency range is too high for the human ear to register.

    • @johnnytremp
      @johnnytremp 2 года назад +1

      @@gribwitch And yet the reactor in the video clearly heard it, as do I.

    • @gribwitch
      @gribwitch 2 года назад

      @@johnnytremp Then either you both have extraordinarily good hearing ability, or more likely the sound was not a true dog whistle.

    • @MrBananaCheeks
      @MrBananaCheeks 2 года назад +2

      @@gribwitch depending on the remaster, it may be more audible than other versions. But some humans are able to hear dog whistles, especially younger people. My entire life, I've been able to hear it in this song, regardless of the version I have playing. Though one mix in the 90s tuned everything down, so it's very loud.

  • @dk7934
    @dk7934 2 года назад +65

    This was a brilliant analysis and first listen. Sincerely, Mr. Kittle.

    • @Fuzcapp
      @Fuzcapp 2 года назад +3

      LOL - although I think it's spelt Kittel ....

    • @CallMeCaroline
      @CallMeCaroline  2 года назад +4

      LOL

    • @GrandIntellect
      @GrandIntellect 2 года назад +6

      @@Fuzcapp For the benefit of Mr Kittel, there will be a show tonittel?

    • @dk7934
      @dk7934 2 года назад

      @@Fuzcapp You are correct. I really should remember how to spell my own bloody name.

    • @jimwit8090
      @jimwit8090 2 года назад +1

      @@dk7934 I love Sgt Pepplers Hearts Pub Band

  • @paulsto6516
    @paulsto6516 2 года назад +19

    Sgt. Pepper's is still my favorite Beatles album. 'A Day In The Life' is a gateway drug to Prog, where I have lived ever since.
    Thanks for posting.

    • @mrnobody3161
      @mrnobody3161 2 года назад +1

      I can see that. I was a young musician who didn't find my comfort zone until I heard 'Music of the Spheres' recorded by Argent.
      Then it was Prog all the way. I co-founded a progrock band in 1980.

  • @kennethguilliams5207
    @kennethguilliams5207 2 года назад +5

    Lol ... Pardon me for laughing .. but I am old and can remember when all these came out and what was said back then .. now watching you ... Is great

  • @subconcioussongsvid
    @subconcioussongsvid 2 года назад +14

    "Fixing a hole" is probably one of my fav songs to sing myself.

  • @Dudlow
    @Dudlow 2 года назад +36

    There's a brilliant video on youtube where the harpist on She's Leaving Home, Sheila Bromberg, talks about recording the song, and how she had to work with McCartney to arrange the part. It's a really nice snapshot the life of session musicians in the 1960s.

    • @lazyatthedisco
      @lazyatthedisco 2 года назад

      Saving this comment

    • @johnhenson8862
      @johnhenson8862 2 года назад +9

      Sheila Bromberg died August 17, 2021. Three months ago aged 92.

    • @kennethlatham3133
      @kennethlatham3133 2 года назад +2

      @@johnhenson8862 Now available for duets with Harpo. Heaven just gets better and better.

  • @samguberman2288
    @samguberman2288 Год назад +3

    Another astonishing album , I'm addicted to your Beatles analysis, got a huge smile on my face You should be on our TV screens

  • @martinburch
    @martinburch 2 года назад +6

    Caroline: these videos are simply delightful. Watching and hearing you react to the music I've known all my life is helping me reconnect with The Beatles' music in new and positive ways. Thank you.

  • @braemtes23
    @braemtes23 2 года назад +99

    She's Leaving Home is up there with some of my favorite Beatles' songs. Paul had incredible insight into the struggles of women: Eleanor Rigby, Blackbird, Lady Madonna. etc.

    • @deepermind4884
      @deepermind4884 2 года назад +28

      Also, "Another Day", arguably the first song about the inner life of a single working woman.

    • @braemtes23
      @braemtes23 2 года назад +8

      @@deepermind4884 Forgot about that one. Thanks.

    • @thesilvershining
      @thesilvershining 2 года назад +15

      It might be blasphemous to most, but “She’s Leaving Home” is my favorite track on the album.

    • @naymello
      @naymello 2 года назад +2

      Daytime nightime suffering is on this list as well

    • @keithmills862
      @keithmills862 Год назад +1

      @@deepermind4884 - John trashed "Another Day", which is weird, considering at the time John was into his "femminist" phaze, and this was one of the first "femminist" songs. It's probably because, at the time, John and Paul were fueding, so John had to put him down.

  • @ezql_
    @ezql_ 2 года назад +14

    "When I'm Sixty Four" is especially funny when you realize that Paul McCartney is 79 and still touring

    • @davidcarter5038
      @davidcarter5038 2 года назад +2

      And not a Vera, Chuck or Dave among his grandchildren...

  • @Stonewall42
    @Stonewall42 2 года назад +2

    The ending of A Day in the Life is a fucking miraculous music experience

  • @murph69yum
    @murph69yum 2 года назад +1

    Just discovered your channel and you're absolutely delightful!!! Can't wait to go on the rest of this journey with you! 🙏❤️

  • @Turtledove2009
    @Turtledove2009 2 года назад +55

    I really enjoy Fixing a Hole both musically and lyrically. To me, he's doing a mundane task and following a stream of consciousness, letting his mind wander about his mood and current annoyances. He says fixing a hole keeps his mind from wandering but it's acutally doing the opposite. Love the flow musically too.

    • @phila3884
      @phila3884 2 года назад +2

      NIce insight. I love the dichotomy. I think there was some not-so-subtle drug implication about trying to concentrate on a task while under the "influence".

    • @stevenfimmel6933
      @stevenfimmel6933 2 года назад +2

      I've always thought FIXING was one of Paul's best. Such a unique melody, which that great George Martin keyboard intro that really sets an ethereal feel to the tune. I love the way Paul's vocal is so clear, yet strong and expressive in this track.

    • @Turtledove2009
      @Turtledove2009 2 года назад +1

      @@phila3884 Oh I agree knowing Paul's fondness of a particular substance for many years.

    • @Turtledove2009
      @Turtledove2009 2 года назад +1

      @@stevenfimmel6933 And the bass is wonderful and hypnotizing.

    • @Turtledove2009
      @Turtledove2009 2 года назад +2

      @@phila3884 I also thought that perhaps f"ixing a hole" and "filling the cracks" keeps the outside world at bay thereby insulating himself, while "painting the room in a colourful way" allows him to create his own comfortable environment, his own nest.

  • @LoaRicardo
    @LoaRicardo 2 года назад +23

    It's not controversial to like Peppers more than Revolver.. I think that every beatles fan change their opinion on what is the best album at least 3 times in life

    • @Bubdiddly
      @Bubdiddly 2 года назад

      Literally that’s like the most common popularly favorite album

  • @tgchism
    @tgchism 2 года назад +1

    Really been looking forward to watching you react to this one! It's a really great one! She's leaving home, yes, it can really grab you even after knowing for years!

  • @jefffisher1045
    @jefffisher1045 2 года назад

    I love your channel, you are so authentic, and I love when you speed up parts that we might be bored by.

  • @BensMusic
    @BensMusic 2 года назад +45

    caroline, once again, another lovely review. i am currently an 18 year old musician that has never known a time where i didn't have every beatles song memorized front to back. they were my absolute favorites as a small boy that knew nothing about music and they're still my favorites today. since i was 7 i have spent a lot of time learning how to play many different instruments and how to produce my own music. i'm slowly getting to a point in my time as a composer/instrumentalist where i've been able to pick out the different instruments/key changes and how they affect the songs as a whole. i find that i can listen to the beatles over and over and enjoy them endlessly because of how creative they were for their time and in general. every time i hear a little bass riff or vocal harmony or mixing choice that i've heard 10000 times before, i still get excited about it just due to how well everything works and how clever everything is put together. watching you react to these songs i know so extremely well, and pull them apart in a similar way to how i've been doing so in my head recently is MASSIVELY entertaining and it is so refreshing to know that there are people out there that admire their creativity in an extremely similar way as i do!! thank you so much for making these videos, caroline! they make me feel like i'm hearing them for the first time again, even though i'm anticipating every little riff i know you'll comment on and chuckling every single time i know you're getting a prediction wrong (or right!)
    i have a suggestion. after you get through the beatles discography, if you haven't heard them yet you should take a listen to the Beach Boys. mainly Pet Sounds, but it would be good to catch a few of their albums beforehand to experience their evolution. the arrangements and harmonies of the Beach Boys' music are much more symphonic and intricate in nature and i know you'd have a blast with them. people always held the Beach Boys up with the Beatles and i never gave them any thought until last year- but Pet Sounds finally clicked with me and i definitely think it's right up there along with this album.
    sorry for the gigantic comment caroline but something about your open-minded reactions and your thoughtful analysis just really connects with me from a composer and human standpoint and i really wanted to give you my kudos.
    i wonder what you'll make of the White Album!

    • @RobbiesVideoArchives
      @RobbiesVideoArchives 2 года назад +4

      I've been patiently waiting for Caroline to discover The Beach Boys, most especially the Pet Sounds album. From my own experience with Brian's masterpiece much of it is too complex to fully absorb on first listening but it should still make for a fascinating reaction video.👍😃👍

    • @emeraldcity_
      @emeraldcity_ 2 года назад +2

      I second the pet sounds suggestion. Also curious how she’ll like number 9 and also if she’ll break apart the medley in Abbey Road

    • @mrnobody3161
      @mrnobody3161 2 года назад

      Another Album that is bundled with Pet Sounds and Revolver is the Odessey and Oracle Album by The Zombies. Recorded in Abbey Road Studios 2 weeks after the Beatles finished Sergeant Pepper, features John Lennons Meletron which was left behind in the studio. Definitely worth purchasing.

  • @joebarlow1667
    @joebarlow1667 2 года назад +10

    From now on, the song is called "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kittle."

  • @georgehollingsworth2428
    @georgehollingsworth2428 Год назад +11

    iT IS LITERALLY impossible for those of you who were not there to imagine what this album did to music. EVERYONE lost it completely. For many years it was considered the most influential rock album EVER. Now it has diminished somewhat, but you ar ewalking around in the musical world they created.

  • @MichaelBCoats
    @MichaelBCoats Год назад

    Caroline, I am getting addicted to your Beatles experience videos. It is such a joy being along with you on the journey, Sweetheart. You are not only giving me a fresh look at music I have loved for years, you are teaching me some technical things that are very interesting. I love it, and love you! ❤

  • @loutowers6529
    @loutowers6529 2 года назад +9

    You don't recover from Sgt. Pepper's - you grow.

  • @bobbybrettel5422
    @bobbybrettel5422 2 года назад +43

    The magic of the Beatles is that the next song you hear is even better

    • @jeffreykamberos7524
      @jeffreykamberos7524 2 года назад +8

      Not if the next song is 'Maxwell's Silver Hammer'. :D

    • @cesarcaballero2499
      @cesarcaballero2499 2 года назад +2

      @@jeffreykamberos7524 I like Maxwell's silver hammer, it should be "not if thr next song id wild honey pie" haha

    • @jeffreykamberos7524
      @jeffreykamberos7524 2 года назад +2

      @@cesarcaballero2499 ... or "Honey Pie". ...or Rocky Raccoon".

    • @cesarcaballero2499
      @cesarcaballero2499 2 года назад

      @@jeffreykamberos7524 Sorry but no, haha, the only songs from the White Album that I genuinely wouldn't listen more than once a year are Wild honey pie and Revolution 9, I dont think I'm forgetting another, I really like most of their songs tbh

    • @jeffreykamberos7524
      @jeffreykamberos7524 2 года назад

      @@cesarcaballero2499 ..."Why Don't We Do It In The Road"? ..."Don't Pass Me By"?...

  • @trevorp9886
    @trevorp9886 2 года назад

    Your enthusiasm is infectious. It's a real pleasure to see you enjoying these classic songs.

  • @jimcomvideos
    @jimcomvideos 2 года назад

    Thank you, Caroline. You are lots of fun to watch listen to my favourite band of all time and I like your take on the music. I also enjoy your guess (usually wrong, lol) of what the song is actually about. This is the first I listened to any of your reviews. I will definitely continue. Keep up the great work.

  • @instadc
    @instadc 2 года назад +51

    The discordant orchestral crescendos were Paul’s idea-he had each instrument in the orchestra start from its lowest note and work its way up to its highest note, with the pacing at the discretion of the player. It’s a wild, chaotic effect-then that tension is released with the final chord, which was played on multiple pianos simultaneously by members of the band. It just goes on and on.
    Then that final odd noise is actually a recording in the runout groove of the record, so it will repeat over and over (it’s the shiny part in the center of a record where the needle stays at the end of the album). John wanted to see if they could intentionally put sound in that portion of the record, and they could! He also put a dog whistle leading into it, to prank listeners with dogs.
    The idea behind the album was that because the Beatles didn’t want to tour anymore, they’d send the album (and the Lonely Hearts Club Band) on tour for them, and really pump up the creativity in the studio.
    I’d say they succeeded, wouldn’t you ?

    • @dj71162
      @dj71162 2 года назад +1

      Baby stuff compared to what Brian Wilson was doing. Youre talking about the ending of one song. Brian was working with the top studio band (The Wrecking Crew) and as a kid, telling them how to play an entire album of groundbreaking and intricate arrangements in pop music while also producing the album. Just on another level.

    • @korganrocks3995
      @korganrocks3995 2 года назад +11

      @@dj71162 You must be fun at parties.

    • @dj71162
      @dj71162 2 года назад

      @@korganrocks3995 Whats that supposed to mean? You dont have any response so you just make a joke.

    • @q-man323
      @q-man323 2 года назад +3

      actually, George Martin vetoed Paul's idea for the orchestral section as it was almost unbearable to listen too. He arranged that every member of the orchestra play a rising melody, 4 beats at a time, and end on a particular note, but start on any note they pleased. This created more of a controlled chaos, it's very fascinating

    • @pfarden5836
      @pfarden5836 2 года назад +2

      @@dj71162 Sgt. Pepper actually drove Brian Wilson mentally ill.

  • @martinrenzhofer8241
    @martinrenzhofer8241 2 года назад +20

    Can an album be underrated as well as overrated? People have discussed Sgt. Pepper to death and have forgotten to listen to it. Anyway, A Day In the Life is one of the greatest ever songs.

  • @PogieJoe
    @PogieJoe 2 года назад

    These never fail to make my day when you post them!

  • @jessicapesso7978
    @jessicapesso7978 2 года назад +6

    A day in the life is such an interesting song. John found a bunch of different newspaper stories and that is actually where you get most of the verses from. He was also filming a movie for the book "How I Won The War" and that's how you get the other verse. The crescendo was an experiment with the orchestra they had. Basically directed the musicians to start at one note and end at another within a certain amount of bars but didn't tell them when to switch from note to note. Finally, the part that Paul sings is supposed to resemble how the rest of the song is a "dream" and that is reality. I took a semester-long music theory course on just Beatles music, so I have an unlimited knowledge base on basically everything when it comes to their music!

  • @glenponse3303
    @glenponse3303 2 года назад +47

    "She's Leaving Home" is arguably the definitive "generation gap" anthem. This was when 'youth culture' was firing up - many young people wanting independence, possible in the booming economies, split from their parents, who had fought their way out of the shambles after WWII and had no idea why their children were so negative. The kids, for their part, often realised what was driving the mutual misunderstanding, but couldn't convey their feelings effectively (the note she'd hoped would say more). The girl in this story knows she's hurting her parents, but can't handle the restrictions, and leaves in both hope and sadness. The parents are just devastated.

    • @Raoaone
      @Raoaone 2 года назад +1

      The last chorus about “fun” is a little lame especially following the narrative depth of the verses. Having said that, I couldn’t think of anything better

    • @glenponse3303
      @glenponse3303 2 года назад +4

      @@Raoaone I know what you mean, but I always took that to imply the girl's inarticulateness (the note she hoped would say more, again), rather than Paul getting lyrically lazy. There's something of a satirical edge there. "Fun" is a childish term, and I think that he was getting that there was a certain immature aspect to that sixties party-party aesthetic, which we still see playing out today. For a similar reason, that hope that hooking up with the "man from the motor trade" was going to make all the difference seems to strike a note of unease to me. There was a reason the older generation regarded chasing happiness as a bit problematic.

    • @realfingertrouble
      @realfingertrouble 2 года назад +2

      @@glenponse3303 yes I always heard "man from the motor trade" as a bit sarcastic or tongue in cheek. Even back then, running off with a guy who sold cars was Not A Done Thing.

    • @jimwit8090
      @jimwit8090 2 года назад

      @@Raoaone I agree they should have thought a little more about "fun" as a lyric. Actually you can buy fun. Can't buy me love though! Also in Baby You're a Rich Man" I thought John was a bit lazy with "keep all your money in a big brown bag inside a zoo" A zoo? Under the bed would have been better..or just about anything else but zoo sounds a bit too random. Otherwise their lyrics are pretty good in general! Ha Ha

    • @Noycey64
      @Noycey64 2 года назад +2

      @@jimwit8090 baby you’re a rich man was a mix of John and Paul’s lyrics. The verses “one of the beautiful people” etc were John’s, the chorus: baby you’re a rich man, keeping the money in a big brown bag etc was Paul’s bit.

  • @TTM9691
    @TTM9691 2 года назад +26

    We all couldn't wait for you to get to "Revolver" because that is the entrance point into their more progressive work. The diversity. The using the studio as an instrument. We all knew THIS album would blow you away! It's a dazzling album! For me, it has two of my least favorite Beatle songs back to back: Lovely Rita and Good Morning, Good Morning (although I love the end of Lovely Rita) and those two follow "When I'm 64" which I like, but not as much as I love the rest. "Mr. Kite" also is a fantastic production, but not my favorite song. But I still love the album, I wouldn't trade those songs for anything! "Revolver" is a little more consistent on repeated listens (for me, anyways). Anyways, Caroline, I'm in my studio right now, I've been recording all night, and taking a break to watch this was VERY inspiring! You are the BEST!

    • @hippojuice23
      @hippojuice23 2 года назад +4

      Yeah, I think Revolver is a more consistent album. Pepper sags in the middle a bit - a victim of its own excesses!

    • @karolk7711
      @karolk7711 2 года назад +2

      How can you dislike lovely rita tho, it s one of my faves

    • @Zackasaurusify
      @Zackasaurusify 2 года назад

      Interestingly enough, George Harrison always considered RUBBER SOUL/REVOLVER as The Beatles first double album!!!

  • @aj9c
    @aj9c 2 года назад +2

    Your comment "wow" after She's Leaving Home. You get it now don't you. You get The Beatles now. You had fun listening to this one. I had fun listening to you. You are right, so much to unpack.

  • @jerrymoyers7496
    @jerrymoyers7496 2 года назад +2

    Oh my dear, I totally enjoyed you, your reactions, ... your love for the special touches, the bits of wit they tossed in. I will remember your actions forever when I listen to Sgt. Pepper. Thank you

  • @davidbaise5137
    @davidbaise5137 2 года назад +6

    Caroline again, thank you for sharing your thoughts and feelings about music that has meant so much to so many. You are a genuine sincere presence on YT, and your smile is terrific!

  • @st.armanini9521
    @st.armanini9521 2 года назад +11

    ah ah I bet you're still recovering... it will probably be a neverending feeling!

  • @squidkid2
    @squidkid2 2 года назад +4

    Love to watch you youngsters hearing a classic rock album like this for the first time. Don't worry if you don't understand it on first listen. You'll get it when you're 64!!

  • @scottdouglasmusic4245
    @scottdouglasmusic4245 2 года назад +1

    I thoroughly enjoyed this, I have the same Beatles scores book (since probably 1992)... I really can't imagine someone your age listening to Sgt. Pepper's for the first time in this day and age! 💕 Sgt. Pepper's was my first Beatles LP when I was 7 or 8 (around 1984)... I have seen my lifelong hero Paul live twice. Blessings to him and you to just continue. ❤