Great job Mike! I've been waiting for Daytripper. I thought I played George just right, but as usual you find the little notes & riffs that George does and only dogs and Mike Pachelli can hear! And you're sure he used the Strat? I've seen others say it was the Casino or even the Tennessean. But you DO have the right sound, soooo....winner goes to Mike P!
Mike Pachelli must be one of the very best RUclipsra at breaking down the guitar tracks ! Fabulous quailty presented in his inimitable style! Ty! ❤😂🎉😊❤😂
Mike, your breakdown and performance of these Beatles songs is always spot on and amazing to watch! Thanks so much for keeping their music alive and well. Hope that all is well in France! 👍👍👏👏
If it weren't enough that you give us all the guitar parts down to the most minute details like when someone does NOT play a particular chord or string in a chord, but then we get to watch your soundalike performances, which are a pure JOY for me to watch. I have to watch several times, because I'm so interested in all the different parts. Thank you!
Oh-boy, oh-boy, oh-boy! Mike has a new one out! Every time you break dow one of my many favourite Beatles songs, some things (and often a lot of things) are revealed that I haven't grasped for the last 50+ years. It still amazes me how some sounds are actually put together by their parts. In this case the solo/bridge - which I've always enjoyed immensely, but now have another level of insight into. And those pick-aparts never "destroy" anything. They only add to the value. Thank you, Mike!
You get this so right. I've seen many try to show how to play this and they get it wrong. I'm no guitar player but I know what I hear and your right on. Always. Just great.
I stunned by how close the main riff guitar's tone matches the original recording. Like, it's shocking. Very impressive. Thank you for yet another (typically) thorough and helpful examination, Mike.
@Raw - Thanks, I appreciate your ability to hear the similarity of tone. I spent a LOT of time experimenting with different guitars, mic placements, various pre-amps and compressors to find that sweet tone spot.
Fantastic video Mike! Loved the re-creation at the end. Great point about how well the guitar parts mesh and drive it along. The bridge is especially good.
An iconic riff, an iconic song by an iconic band, but also an iconic way to explain and teach the guitar parts, and an iconic sound-like...Mike thanks for this really great work....
Mike , thank you so much for your amazing videos where you teach every part of the great Beatles music and give us the back stories .. your contribution to music and music history is un quantifiable. Your playing and singing is magical…thank you so much 🙏🙏🔥
Mike, I'm not surprised the algorithms are going after your sound-alikes and especially this one. They just keep getting better and this is the best one yet. I too am blown away by your combined bass/singing skills, but also the rawness of your lead vocals and the feel of the drumming. As always, your lesson has given me a deeper appreciation of a much beloved song. Although it's the lessons that have made me a longtime loyal fan of yours, I will miss those sound-alikes if you should drop them. Thanks again, Mike, for another magical trip inside the music.
One of my favorites from the first time I heard it long ago, Thanks Mike I 've been looking forward to this one, and great lesson and performance as usual.
Another excellent job Mike, you really invest the time, resources and your talent as a musician to make these productions in a class of their own! Thanks
One of the most iconic Beatles riffs, if not THE best. Thank you Mike for bringing so much fun and enthusiasm to your lessons, always sensational. Thanks again!!
I got the 45 with the two songs for Xmas, 1965. So did my lil sis along with a small record player. We got it all early to help us get through the death of our mother.
For most of my life, when the opening riff is played, audiences go wonderfully crazy. I'm rather cheered that John's rhythm work followed his great work on I CALL YOUR NAME and YOU CAN'T DO THAT.
Mike, in your playing career, when did you learn this song? Was this one of the catchiest Beatles' songs you heard, and how influential was this song compared to other songs were learned?
BernieW's earlier commented about the great bass playing. Yes. And I find your drum work is yet another integral part that drives this song forward in power-mode. There are so many previous songs that I think of as "Every Beatle Is Integral" and DAY TRIPPER is one more, but maybe I think of it first in that list. How could that be done without Ringo's opening power-up run and all the other - even the tamborine work is all-but-required for bands.
@Cbcw - I learned it in December of 1965 when it was first released in the USA. It was QUITE an impressive feat to be able to play it back then. I got my sister her first date 'cuz I made a deal with a boy she liked that if I taught him the main riff - he'd ask her out - True story!!
@@MPfrance And she's forgiven you? Er, at least let you LIVE?!! ha ha... I'd love to hear a personal anecdoate about your learning and/or playing experience with each song. Our band has 4 veteran musicians that are virtual jukeboxes. Plus we've got 300-400 own compositions for any setting. But I'm a relative baby in this stuff, but I am always blown away when our band decides "This audiene is now tired and dull - let's crank 'er up with ___" some standard opening riff. And watching the excitement spread like fire. Or occasional shockwaves as they are concussed awake again. I love seeing that audience reaction. I'd love to hear a performance-tale or goofs and re-learning experiences about any of these songs.
@@MPfrance Mike, I would not have guessed that you are the age you state! I’d never put you a day over 40! I guess playing Beatle songs keeps you young. And that is a cool story about your sister.
The F#7 reminds me of “I got a whole lot of things to tell her when I get home’’ As usual Mike a great job teaching this song from the back story to Ringo’s drumming! YOU ARE TALENTED AND GIFTED MUSICIAN AND A GREAT GUY!!!
The guitar riff was the first thing I learned to play on guitar. I was shopping for my first guitar in 1987 and the salesman taught it to me. It was on a Korean made Squier Strat, but I didn't know George played Strat on this song (or any Beatles song) until a couple of years ago. I still have that Srat - my favorite guitar because it's so easy to play on.
Hey Mike, thanks for providing the charts and tabs in your videos now! I'm keen to buy a few charts and tabs for some of the older lessons to help support the channel and I find reading notation more comfortable. However, watching your vidoes has definitely improved my ear 10 fold
Great lesson. I've always admired John's guitar part but like a lot of their early songs I just wish the dial was turned up a little higher so we could hear it more in the mix.
Lessons always look so easy it's so well broken down. Another amazing soundalike Mike. When you play the drums do you put yourself in a mind set to be left handed to get the Ringo sound? Sounds great to me.
@philib - Thanks and yeah! I have to work on the drum part the most 'cuz I'm not a drummer. Memorizing where to do what is not as organic (to me) as the guitar parts are. The drums are the first thing I record and whilst doing so - I'm listening to the original Beatles track and do my best to begin accents and rolls with my left hand.
I actually prefer your Sound-alike to the original Mike. The drumming is better and the sound you get from the other instruments is so crisp! Sterling effort😊❤️
@lewis - I appreciate that but ya know - most home studios (these days) have FAR better equipment than the lads were using. Plus - the powers that be (back then) were mixing for radio and didn't seem to understand the importance of making all the instruments heard. All they wanted to feature was the vocals.
Mike Pachelli that was an amazing breakdown! Hearing the subtleties in Lennon/Harrison guitar arrangements is so interesting. In your opinion, do you think Lennon intentionally wrote those rhythm guitar variations to be performed precisely or were his variations him playing by ‘feel’? Either way it’s incredible. George too, such a cool guitar tandem. Thank you for bringing light to this Mike!
Great as usual Mike. But the vocals were just beyond great. That's no easy song to sing. And that middle part with the "Ahhs", the Beatles had a hard time with that live. Sounded really good. Of course the guitars were excellent too.
Just read your email where you said you might stop sound a likes. Please don't do that. They are one of the best parts of your videos and bring it all together
hey Mike, would you mind if i ask some questions? what picks do you use, what gear, and would you like to talk about your settings? i grew up in the Beatles decade. still a fun hearing their songs. i subed your channel a while ago. thank you for bringing back the golden times of music ;). 👍 greets, bucca
You are amazing..thanks for this valuable help...but is it possible..at least for one second...we can pause the video...to show how is the amplifier in terms of bass, Middle, gain, etc?...I'm still learning and that would be great...greetings from chile
Playing aside, you really got an ear for tone dude. The three guitars that come in at the start are bang-on for tone color. The drums were a little more generic but holy fuck you could have tricked me on the guitar intro that it was an outtake.
Let's not overlook this: Mike plays the iconic riff on bass and simultaneously sings, which is definitely no mean feat!
@Bernie - Thanks for noticing that. It took me a while to get it right!
I just wanted to say the same thing. Even Paul had to think about it for a moment when his band proposed to do this one.
As always a very neat and accurate job Mike! Thanks! I would love it though if you also taught us the bass lines
And left-handed!
Great job Mike! I've been waiting for Daytripper. I thought I played George just right, but as usual you find the little notes & riffs that George does and only dogs and Mike Pachelli can hear! And you're sure he used the Strat? I've seen others say it was the Casino or even the Tennessean. But you DO have the right sound, soooo....winner goes to Mike P!
Mike , you are the best at breaking down these iconic songs. Thanks for all you do.
Mike Pachelli must be one of the very best RUclipsra at breaking down the guitar tracks ! Fabulous quailty presented in his inimitable style! Ty! ❤😂🎉😊❤😂
Mike, your breakdown and performance of these Beatles songs is always spot on and amazing to watch! Thanks so much for keeping their music alive and well. Hope that all is well in France! 👍👍👏👏
If it weren't enough that you give us all the guitar parts down to the most minute details like when someone does NOT play a particular chord or string in a chord, but then we get to watch your soundalike performances, which are a pure JOY for me to watch. I have to watch several times, because I'm so interested in all the different parts. Thank you!
John's exact part has been a lifelong mystery for me. It's SO cool! Thanks for this!
I’ve always loved John guitar sound and strumming on this and you’ve captured it perfectly.
Oh-boy, oh-boy, oh-boy! Mike has a new one out!
Every time you break dow one of my many favourite Beatles songs, some things (and often a lot of things) are revealed that I haven't grasped for the last 50+ years. It still amazes me how some sounds are actually put together by their parts. In this case the solo/bridge - which I've always enjoyed immensely, but now have another level of insight into. And those pick-aparts never "destroy" anything. They only add to the value.
Thank you, Mike!
Mike. This was the song that got stated on my guitar journey. What an absolute joy to see you play this together piece by piece. BRAVO ❤
Well done Mike. Bring on Strawberry Fields - love your cover!
You get this so right. I've seen many try to show how to play this and they get it wrong. I'm no guitar player but I know what I hear and your right on. Always. Just great.
Your respect for the group and the instruments is exceptional.
Mike is all the Beatles at once, or am I definitely Tripping ❤😂🎉
The first Beatles riff I learned as a kid and still one of my absolute favourites to play, definitely one of the best guitar riffs ever
I stunned by how close the main riff guitar's tone matches the original recording.
Like, it's shocking.
Very impressive.
Thank you for yet another (typically) thorough and helpful examination, Mike.
@Raw - Thanks, I appreciate your ability to hear the similarity of tone. I spent a LOT of time experimenting with different guitars, mic placements, various pre-amps and compressors to find that sweet tone spot.
Fantastic video Mike! Loved the re-creation at the end. Great point about how well the guitar parts mesh and drive it along. The bridge is especially good.
The breakdown of the guitar parts during the middle/solo was majestic! Many people overlook the ascending B scale riff. You are the best on You Tube!
Great sound, great video. Best cover of this song I've ever heard.
FANTASTIC Mike so well researched and performed.
An iconic riff, an iconic song by an iconic band, but also an iconic way to explain and teach the guitar parts, and an iconic sound-like...Mike thanks for this really great work....
Mike , thank you so much for your amazing videos where you teach every part of the great Beatles music and give us the back stories .. your contribution to music and music history is un quantifiable. Your playing and singing is magical…thank you so much 🙏🙏🔥
This was great! I had no clue about John's rhythm part..thanks Mike.
It's 4am--haven't slept yet--and I'm here with my guitar out
5:00 am for me.
This is just BRILLIANT, Mike. You have great musicianship, and the soundalike recording is superb.
Many thanks!
I've played this 10 thousand times wrong great job Mike thanks
Mike, these videos are a true labor of love. Thank you!
Perfect as ever.
Marvelous, impressive and brilliant. I played the look-alike over and over on my sound system, and it’s just so amazing.
@alex - I'm humbled by your very kind words. Thank you!
Mike, I'm not surprised the algorithms are going after your sound-alikes and especially this one. They just keep getting better and this is the best one yet. I too am blown away by your combined bass/singing skills, but also the rawness of your lead vocals and the feel of the drumming. As always, your lesson has given me a deeper appreciation of a much beloved song. Although it's the lessons that have made me a longtime loyal fan of yours, I will miss those sound-alikes if you should drop them. Thanks again, Mike, for another magical trip inside the music.
One of my favorites from the first time I heard it long ago, Thanks Mike I 've been looking forward to this one, and great lesson and performance as usual.
Thanks for listening
Another excellent job Mike, you really invest the time, resources and your talent as a musician to make these productions in a class of their own! Thanks
LOVE...Always Great, Mike..TY..
Well Done, as usual!!!! Totally enjoyable and educational...
Great job, Mike. Thank's.
You bet
Excellent and ever so meticulous Mike. Thanks.
Wow! Your breakdowns are high quality. Optimal cool and One Man Tribute Band at the end is great and should go on tour.
One of the most iconic Beatles riffs, if not THE best. Thank you Mike for bringing so much fun and enthusiasm to your lessons, always sensational. Thanks again!!
My pleasure!
I learn something new with every video you post!
I got the 45 with the two songs for Xmas, 1965. So did my lil sis along with a small record player. We got it all early to help us get through the death of our mother.
Very nice; one of the first our 6th grade garage band learned in 1976....you killed it Mike❤!
Fantastic Mike. Even though this is a guitar tutorial i really enjoyed the sound/mix you get on the drums!
@paul - Nice of you to notice - thanks! I take a LOT of time on the drum sound.
Great lesson Mike thank you
Very welcome
Damn! 👏👏👏👏👏You even nailed the bridge harmonies. Wow.
For most of my life, when the opening riff is played, audiences go wonderfully crazy. I'm rather cheered that John's rhythm work followed his great work on I CALL YOUR NAME and YOU CAN'T DO THAT.
Mike, in your playing career, when did you learn this song? Was this one of the catchiest Beatles' songs you heard, and how influential was this song compared to other songs were learned?
BernieW's earlier commented about the great bass playing. Yes. And I find your drum work is yet another integral part that drives this song forward in power-mode. There are so many previous songs that I think of as "Every Beatle Is Integral" and DAY TRIPPER is one more, but maybe I think of it first in that list. How could that be done without Ringo's opening power-up run and all the other - even the tamborine work is all-but-required for bands.
@Cbcw - I learned it in December of 1965 when it was first released in the USA. It was QUITE an impressive feat to be able to play it back then. I got my sister her first date 'cuz I made a deal with a boy she liked that if I taught him the main riff - he'd ask her out - True story!!
@@MPfrance And she's forgiven you? Er, at least let you LIVE?!! ha ha... I'd love to hear a personal anecdoate about your learning and/or playing experience with each song. Our band has 4 veteran musicians that are virtual jukeboxes. Plus we've got 300-400 own compositions for any setting. But I'm a relative baby in this stuff, but I am always blown away when our band decides "This audiene is now tired and dull - let's crank 'er up with ___" some standard opening riff. And watching the excitement spread like fire. Or occasional shockwaves as they are concussed awake again. I love seeing that audience reaction. I'd love to hear a performance-tale or goofs and re-learning experiences about any of these songs.
@@MPfrance
Mike,
I would not have guessed that you are the age you state! I’d never put you a day over 40! I guess playing Beatle songs keeps you young. And that is a cool story about your sister.
brilliant as always
Great story and brilliant rendition as always - thank you!!
Glad you enjoyed it!
The F#7 reminds me of “I got a whole lot of things to tell her when I get home’’
As usual Mike a great job teaching this song from the back story to Ringo’s drumming!
YOU ARE TALENTED AND GIFTED MUSICIAN AND A GREAT GUY!!!
Great video and tone on guitar with excellent vocal harmonies Mike. 👌☝️👏👏👍
Many thanks!
Bravo, Mike!!! 😊
The guitar riff was the first thing I learned to play on guitar. I was shopping for my first guitar in 1987 and the salesman taught it to me. It was on a Korean made Squier Strat, but I didn't know George played Strat on this song (or any Beatles song) until a couple of years ago. I still have that Srat - my favorite guitar because it's so easy to play on.
great breakdown and I enjoyed the sing alike very very much!
Awesome, thank you!
Fabulous. Superb vocals.
Thank you kindly!
Amazing, Mike! Thank you so much!
Nice puns too - "fret" and "anyroad"!
So great Mike
Bangers out the door, Mike ur him
Excellent Mike!
The fun facts cut was a nice touch
Thank you, Mike!
Hey Mike, thanks for providing the charts and tabs in your videos now! I'm keen to buy a few charts and tabs for some of the older lessons to help support the channel and I find reading notation more comfortable. However, watching your vidoes has definitely improved my ear 10 fold
Great video as always Mike!
I appreciate that
Nailed it! Until I bought an electronic tuner I tuned my guitar by playing along with the opening riff of this.
That’s a good one. Cheers again.
I’m really surprised Tripper wasn’t done years ago. Great song and great lesson.
Brilliant as always...
Great lesson. I've always admired John's guitar part but like a lot of their early songs I just wish the dial was turned up a little higher so we could hear it more in the mix.
Sound-alike sounding incredible Mike !
Love you. Keep on rocking.
Nice 1 Mike , cheers
Excellent as always!
Thanks very much !
19:30 Wow! Now that you're suggesting Paul might have done the solo, I agree!
Awesome video Mike!
Was just watching season 8, episode 10 of Curb Your Enthusiasm. Saw a familiar face on the HOA board! Awesome!
Fab!
Let it roll Mike 🎸 🔥
Great drumming, Mike. You should include Ringo's part in the lesson.
Thanks for your channel :)
Lessons always look so easy it's so well broken down.
Another amazing soundalike Mike.
When you play the drums do you put yourself in a mind set to be left handed to get the Ringo sound? Sounds great to me.
@philib - Thanks and yeah! I have to work on the drum part the most 'cuz I'm not a drummer. Memorizing where to do what is not as organic (to me) as the guitar parts are. The drums are the first thing I record and whilst doing so - I'm listening to the original Beatles track and do my best to begin accents and rolls with my left hand.
You R Soooo Cooool ! 🎉
Thanks
Amazing
Fab work Mike 😊
Thank you! Cheers!
As usual accurate and impeccable Mike! Could you please also do the bass lines🙏🙏?
I actually prefer your Sound-alike to the original Mike. The drumming is better and the sound you get from the other instruments is so crisp! Sterling effort😊❤️
@lewis - I appreciate that but ya know - most home studios (these days) have FAR better equipment than the lads were using. Plus - the powers that be (back then) were mixing for radio and didn't seem to understand the importance of making all the instruments heard. All they wanted to feature was the vocals.
You’re doing god’s work mike!!
Great job, vox and all! Looks like you have a 4003s with binding or is it the lighting that makes it look like it has binding?…
Fantastic lesson Mike! Even though I have yet to see the video. I just know! 😊
Rock on!
Brilliant !
Mike Pachelli that was an amazing breakdown! Hearing the subtleties in Lennon/Harrison guitar arrangements is so interesting.
In your opinion, do you think Lennon intentionally wrote those rhythm guitar variations to be performed precisely or were his variations him playing by ‘feel’?
Either way it’s incredible. George too, such a cool guitar tandem.
Thank you for bringing light to this Mike!
Great as usual Mike. But the vocals were just beyond great. That's no easy song to sing. And that middle part with the "Ahhs", the Beatles had a hard time with that live. Sounded really good. Of course the guitars were excellent too.
@john - Thanks I appreciate that but ya know - it's much easier to get the "Ahhs" right on by recording one voice at a time.
@@MPfrance very true
This one you really got in the pocket!
Super tema!
Just read your email where you said you might stop sound a likes. Please don't do that. They are one of the best parts of your videos and bring it all together
hey Mike, would you mind if i ask some questions?
what picks do you use, what gear, and would you like to talk about your settings?
i grew up in the Beatles decade. still a fun hearing their songs.
i subed your channel a while ago. thank you for bringing back the golden times of music ;). 👍
greets, bucca
Hey Mike,
Can you do a tutorial on how to play " If I needed Someone" please?
That E power chord is what makes Led Zeppelins Whole Lotta Love…I never before put it together Page probably nicked it.. thx Mike
No hammer on for the main riff. Man, I've been playing that wrong for years. John's part is so unique. Clever on how he switches from the E to E7...
You are amazing..thanks for this valuable help...but is it possible..at least for one second...we can pause the video...to show how is the amplifier in terms of bass, Middle, gain, etc?...I'm still learning and that would be great...greetings from chile
Playing aside, you really got an ear for tone dude. The three guitars that come in at the start are bang-on for tone color. The drums were a little more generic but holy fuck you could have tricked me on the guitar intro that it was an outtake.
Wow!