@@RingoStarrOfficial1940 That hoax is so old it has moss on it. Even if they could have found a Paul doppelganger how could they teach him to sing, write and play bass like Paul when none of them could? That alone shows how impossible it would be to pull it off had Paul or anyone in that band had died and been replaced with a look-alike.
blah blah bleee blahh I believe it’s the actual solo from taxman just chopped up and accidentally put on backwards on the recorder but the Beatles liked how it sounded Indian and left it
Surprised it still kinda sounds good like this Actually the more i listen to this the better it sounds!. Would've been cool if they had added the first 40 seconds as a coda to the original
I put this on my celphone and my cat started to behave weird, at first gentle rubbing against the phone, but tried to bite me...John Lennon is that you?
I absolutely love tomorrow never knows backwards I love all Beatles music backwards this song is such a phenomenal song ever one of the best besides revolution nine that is one of the best avant-garde songs ever
Stone Roses did this with a few of their tunes, but gave proper lyrics, some really good stuff like Don't Stop, and particularly Guernica which is just incredible.
C'est très intéressant, car ce morceau comporte lui-même des sons passés à l'envers. Cette version inversée permet, du coup, d'entendre des passages de guitare à l'endroit !
Paul McCartney told Bob Costas in a 1991 interview, "We could've had a really Satanic message, and with the power WE had - boy, you know, we could've made quite a difference the OTHER way. But we always chose NOT to do that: Nobody was remotely interested in that." The reversed messages in Tomorrow Never Knows manifest this renunciation of the dark forces, and express the need for the divine power of the Saviour Lord Jesus Christ to overcome spiritual wickedness. I had published the entire transcription in a discontinued book entitled "REVERSER," focusing on the Revolver album, where the band first used backwards tapes; that could be re-released under a new title to include material created subsequent to the Revolver LP. The line I'm choosing for a sample here starts at 1:11: 'There's a fallen DEMON named Lucifer'
@@PaulFormentosThe lyrical repetitions reverse to emphasize statements of faith, as from 2:03: ”We NEED saving, We NEED saving - Since the fallen DEMON is SO WICKED! - We need OUR Saviour, We need OUR Saviour," etc. The guitar solo as intended to be heard forwards was reversed and instrumentally copied by Harrison before being edited in backwards, for a weird sound texture in the finished forwards recording of what was originally played normally, starting with the phrase suggesting, 'The Last Supper...' John Lennon was talked out of having a thousand monks chanting (George Martin said it was impractical), instead this song used super-saturated tape loops (recorded individually at home by removing the erase capability) held out with pencils while being fed through a mixing console, so the volume on each could be controlled with faders, as a unique process. John later expressed the opinion the production of some of his Beatle songs was sabotaged by an effort to make them sound more experimental than what he had wanted. The new twist with the 1966 album was reversible lyrics, allowing the backwards vocals to provide messages separately from the continuing instrumental-subliminal arrangement approach forward (which could also involve some vocal 'fool the ear' tricks) used from their debut LP, and throughout the entirety of their original song catalog (as well as being used for cover versions of others' songs). A panelist who had attended a White Album session admitted witnessing a discussion about how a lyric change would affect the reverse song being simultaneously composed. The organ work from Dr Robert has a dominant subliminal message based on a different concept from the associated gospel account, following the album theme format, but only registering subconsciously if not discerned, inducing a mystifying 'transference' effect, independent of the backwards vocal content (which could only be considered via reverse playback). Sometimes basing tunes on stories about real people like Dr Robert kept the endeavor contemporary. The line about taking 'a drink from his Special Cup' is clearly a Holy Grail reference, just as the scarlet clothing in "Yes It Is" had an obvious gospel source (the album stages were presented regressively, ultimately accomplishing a complete span from Ascension to Annunciation). They called tunes done to fill out the whole LP "slog songs," not meaning anything derogatory, since they could be as good or better than others already done covering other aspects of the Christian story portion getting focus. Lennon confessed, "We were putting out messages, alright," while lamenting most went unacknowledged, pointedly referring to The Beatles as a Christian band. Another effect is tangential crossover, causing Yoko Ono to describe the group as mediums, unware of all the implications to their sounds; Paul McCartney claimed to always be attempting two things at once, which became evident from Rubber Soul, formatted in tandem with the twelve Zodiac signs ("Nowhere Man" for the Gemini Twins having the lyrical hint, "Isn't he a bit like you and me?"), including an opening and closing tune to attain their fourteen-song quota.
I hate that George is staring into my soul while a very creepy reversed song plays
Like he's trying to brainwash you lol
He is telling you that Paul is dead
@@RingoStarrOfficial1940 Kinda ruins all those theories that Paul died late 66 when REVOLVER came out before his "DEATH" and has PID clues on it
@@RingoStarrOfficial1940 That hoax is so old it has moss on it. Even if they could have found a Paul doppelganger how could they teach him to sing, write and play bass like Paul when none of them could? That alone shows how impossible it would be to pull it off had Paul or anyone in that band had died and been replaced with a look-alike.
@@whichgodofthousandsmeansno5306 they sold soul to the devil
This really shows how similar the guitar solo is to the Taxman solo if it were chopped up.
@2v_5r ur mom played both solos
@2v_5r Ur moms a great guitarist
It’s not though. It’s George playing the solo, and then reversing it. Paul plays the Taxman solo, while George played this one.
The guitar licks in 1:35 is catchy!
Aditya Arvian apparently in the original the guitar solo was backwards so this would be the actual solo. Idk if it’s true or not
It sounds like the tax man solo for a second.
blah blah bleee blahh I believe it’s the actual solo from taxman just chopped up and accidentally put on backwards on the recorder but the Beatles liked how it sounded Indian and left it
The power of minor pentatonic
@@voiddcxi2630 it was confirmed in mccartney 321 haha your right
I don't even need drugs to trip
Couldn't handle this on strong acid maan
@@davyroger3773 TNK on acid is the shit. The meaning of within.
Sure!
@@shapeyourmind9620 Echoes by Floyd on Sid
Surprised it still kinda sounds good like this
Actually the more i listen to this the better it sounds!. Would've been cool if they had added the first 40 seconds as a coda to the original
Bro got drained
I put this on my celphone and my cat started to behave weird, at first gentle rubbing against the phone, but tried to bite me...John Lennon is that you?
I was always interested what George was actually playing because it is reversed on the original version. Well, now I know what it sounds like forward.
It’s immediately recognisable, even reversed. It’s like good embroidery.
I absolutely love tomorrow never knows backwards I love all Beatles music backwards this song is such a phenomenal song ever one of the best besides revolution nine that is one of the best avant-garde songs ever
That’s why this song this album and the Beatles are sooo great, the only band who can make a song and in reverse still sounding so great
Bach also does this stuff in some of his work
@@joppevangent7488 They did say the only band
This song is on 🔥!
El solo de guitarra sigue siendo majestuoso.
It’s the bass in Taxman but reversed in Tomorrow Never Knows (it goes forwards in this video as the song is reversed)
Creo que esta canción queda igual de bien al derecho y al revés.
Ósea ¿oyes el como termina esto en reversa?
Suena alucinante!!!
T̴̛͎̅̀̏̈́̀̀ŏ̴̫̠̜͋̈́̃͑̍̽͝m̸̧͓̲̭͙̗̱̹̀̃o̷̢̼̱͈̗̺̝͐͗̀̓̌͠r̴͖̮͈̈͝ṙ̵̛͔̬͔̅̆ő̶͇͖̼͈̬͜w̸͔͕͕͙̤̝̗͖͈͑̉̒͊̆̑͠ ̸̥̞͉̠͐̂̽̓̑Ņ̵̗̔͒͑̃̏̀́̓͒͋e̴̛̤͎͈͊̓̈́̌͌͊̍v̵̧̧̛̫̲͈͚͎͠ě̶̡̳̜͙͉̗̣͎̐̅ͅṛ̷̘̩̟̰̘̜̺̼̋͂̆̈́̍͠ ̸̧̧̨͖͔̙̥̙̹͙̔̓͒̆̈̄͌̓͆͠K̶͖̤͉̂̊̊̒͋̾̓̀ň̴̢̛́̏̑̒̔̚̕o̵̮̰̗̬̼̦̤̼̫̺͊̈́͐͒͑͆̓̅͘w̸̼̜͎̗̹͈̟̩̮̳͗̓̓́̋̂̔̌̕s̶̨̻̺͆̀̾̃̓̀͛̄̆
Stone Roses did this with a few of their tunes, but gave proper lyrics, some really good stuff like Don't Stop, and particularly Guernica which is just incredible.
Yup.
Jeffrey Osbourne and Billy Cobham, respectively ?
At the end it’s sounds like “ it’s my fault,the sky is appon earth “
Jimmy Turner you mean the beginning
OB 1 You mean of the beginning.
Jimmy Turner they fell from the sky on earth
@@matthewm.1315 of the beginning... of the beginning...
I don't see any difference.
I was under the impression this particular sond would had some sort of cohesiveness to every day sounds played in reverse!
1.12 there a war in vietnam
Some songs have special messages when played backwards 👍
You should have written out the reversed lyrics.......so that we can see what subliminal messages they were expressing.
David Leystar check out my song nerve Anna
They were saying how they John could do it singing through parallel universes
Are you joking, or...
the message is "paul is dead lol"
None
''love and peace be in my heart''
sʍoN⋊ ɹǝʌǝN ʍoɹɹoɯo⊥
This is amazing.
Revolver. The album so good you can enjoy it backwards too.
0:42 "Rain is worse than the system at the edge of the Earth oh" ????
Not oh, but Paul
Yeah... 😂 @@PaulFormentos
The bass in this song is the same bass in Taxman but backwards. It goes forwards at the beginning of the album and backwards at the end.
Incredible!
This song is so 🔥*LIT*🔥
Al revés para escuchar los detalles de la canción que de hecho están originalmente al revés y aquí se oyen en su versión natural.
we can hear the solo, it isn’t backwards in backwards song
Fell from the sky landed on earth.....
At the start it sounds like he's saying "They give a f**k"
la bateria en reversa suena fea, pero todo lo demas es una genialidad
Hi again! Can you please do the Anthology 2 version of this song? Thanks in advance!
That guitar does sound a lot more like Paul than George.
It still remains a song. Wo D:
Awesome!
"Come over here and take me love" I hear that in the beginning of this reversed track. does anyone else hear it?
This song is hot ! 😊
Much better...
Super psychedelic
C'est très intéressant, car ce morceau comporte lui-même des sons passés à l'envers. Cette version inversée permet, du coup, d'entendre des passages de guitare à l'endroit !
OH MY GOD I HEARD SATAN!!! 🤣🙄✌🏻🇬🇧🎸
No. See whatever you percieved as pure accident. See better things.
1:12 Is insane
I heard the lyrics "Do you think it's a lot? Do youuu think it's a lot? "
Wild
I write songs backwards
Now my brain Is working backwards
Why does the reversal 'eat' the drums?
Tomorrow never knows is a palindrome. like what the hell. How. I still love it.
What do you mean? A palindrome is something that’s the same foreword and back, Tomorrow never knows isn’t
@@levothy Indeed!
only 10% weirder than the original
The solo kinda sounds like the Fortnite default dance
It doesn’t sound that much different lol
Paul McCartney told Bob Costas in a 1991 interview, "We could've had a really Satanic message, and with the power WE had - boy, you know, we could've made quite a difference the OTHER way. But we always chose NOT to do that: Nobody was remotely interested in that." The reversed messages in Tomorrow Never Knows manifest this renunciation of the dark forces, and express the need for the divine power of the Saviour Lord Jesus Christ to overcome spiritual wickedness. I had published the entire transcription in a discontinued book entitled "REVERSER," focusing on the Revolver album, where the band first used backwards tapes; that could be re-released under a new title to include material created subsequent to the Revolver LP. The line I'm choosing for a sample here starts at 1:11:
'There's a fallen DEMON named Lucifer'
Doctor Robert has lots of messages
@@PaulFormentosThe lyrical repetitions reverse to emphasize statements of faith, as from 2:03: ”We NEED saving, We NEED saving - Since the fallen DEMON is SO WICKED! - We need OUR Saviour, We need OUR Saviour," etc. The guitar solo as intended to be heard forwards was reversed and instrumentally copied by Harrison before being edited in backwards, for a weird sound texture in the finished forwards recording of what was originally played normally, starting with the phrase suggesting, 'The Last Supper...'
John Lennon was talked out of having a thousand monks chanting (George Martin said it was impractical), instead this song used super-saturated tape loops (recorded individually at home by removing the erase capability) held out with pencils while being fed through a mixing console, so the volume on each could be controlled with faders, as a unique process. John later expressed the opinion the production of some of his Beatle songs was sabotaged by an effort to make them sound more experimental than what he had wanted.
The new twist with the 1966 album was reversible lyrics, allowing the backwards vocals to provide messages separately from the continuing instrumental-subliminal arrangement approach forward (which could also involve some vocal 'fool the ear' tricks) used from their debut LP, and throughout the entirety of their original song catalog (as well as being used for cover versions of others' songs). A panelist who had attended a White Album session admitted witnessing a discussion about how a lyric change would affect the reverse song being simultaneously composed.
The organ work from Dr Robert has a dominant subliminal message based on a different concept from the associated gospel account, following the album theme format, but only registering subconsciously if not discerned, inducing a mystifying 'transference' effect, independent of the backwards vocal content (which could only be considered via reverse playback). Sometimes basing tunes on stories about real people like Dr Robert kept the endeavor contemporary. The line about taking 'a drink from his Special Cup' is clearly a Holy Grail reference, just as the scarlet clothing in "Yes It Is" had an obvious gospel source (the album stages were presented regressively, ultimately accomplishing a complete span from Ascension to Annunciation). They called tunes done to fill out the whole LP "slog songs," not meaning anything derogatory, since they could be as good or better than others already done covering other aspects of the Christian story portion getting focus.
Lennon confessed, "We were putting out messages, alright," while lamenting most went unacknowledged, pointedly referring to The Beatles as a Christian band. Another effect is tangential crossover, causing Yoko Ono to describe the group as mediums, unware of all the implications to their sounds; Paul McCartney claimed to always be attempting two things at once, which became evident from Rubber Soul, formatted in tandem with the twelve Zodiac signs ("Nowhere Man" for the Gemini Twins having the lyrical hint, "Isn't he a bit like you and me?"), including an opening and closing tune to attain their fourteen-song quota.
0.75 its better ;)
At 0:15 I hear "Che Guevara" repeated many times ...
i thought it wont be weird if it was reversed.
i was wrong.
cant tell the difference
I tried playing Yoko’s music backwards and it’s still awful.
My ears bleed
Mother mary comes to me, speaking words of wisdom, let it bleed.
There’s definitely a language this translates to
It’s immediately recognisable, even reversed. It’s like good embroidery.