Deconstructing Girl (Isolated Tracks)
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- Опубликовано: 21 июл 2024
- Rubber Soul 1965
Thanks to Hjnintendofan for giving me this video
Link to Channel: / channel
00:00 Drums and Bass
02:31 Acoustic Guitar and 12-Strings
05:03 Vocals
Personnel
Drums: Ringo Starr
Bass (Rickenbacker 4001S): Paul Mccartney
Acoustc Guitar (Gibson J-160E): John Lennon
12- Strings (Framus 12 strings): George Harrison
Lead Vocals: John Lennon
Backing Vocals: Paul Mccartney and George Harrison Развлечения
I can't get over John saying that he had a terrible voice.His vocals are priceless.
Plot twist: The girl in this song is actually Michelle, and the person after meeting her decides to tell one of his friends his story about the the girl he met who is Michelle.
which was also the one owning the norwegian wood house
@@theefguitars Ha ! 😀
@@theefguitars She was a "day tripper"....what went n in her hear?
One of John's best songs IMO
Agreed 100%
We are unworthy!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
John’s voice sounds fantastic
Yes, Paul and George really were singing "tit, tit, tit, tit" during the bridge. Love to hear one of the outakes of "Day Tripper" where they supposedly sang, "She's a prick teaser"!
This and Michelle.... just wooow
Superb John vocal and harmonies.
Great guitar with the capo I love It 🔝
Capo in 8 😎
Priceless!
heard an old radio show that mentioned that the inspiration for this was french folk songs ..ones with accordion. i can hear it in the chorus chords a bit. does anyone know that genre well enough to be able to to pin point a specific song? it's such a beautiful melody. It wouldn't take away from John's genius if it was partially inspired (tho i doubt it was). It's all about how the lyrics, melody and vocal performance come together. and this is one of the best combination of tune/lyrics ever.
I think this was also influenced by old-time jazz recordings from the early part of the 20th century, it's the style of music their parents grew up with and most likely had several 78's playing on the Victrola during their childhood. So cool how they incorporated that simple 2-beat swing for the verse and chorus but changed to a straight-eighth feel for the bridge and ending. Just a simple chord progression with a pretty melody on top - brilliant!
The song was written in 1965 and influenced by greek style music from the 1964 film "zorba the greek" with German 2- step swing.
@@justplayguitar2797 Wow Thanks..gonna check it out
@@justplayguitar2797 Just heard the famous guitar piece from Zobra, if that's the extent of the influence, it certainly is more in arrangement than in actual chords and melody. the more and more i listen to beatles era John songs , especially his 64-66 songs, as opposed to his solo ones I think Paul's natural melodic ness brought out the best melodist in john that he ever was since...the competition. his solo output is interesting and at times very melodic..but purely from a melodic stand point, I think the absence of Paul and the need to compete with him is evident in John's solo career...tho I actually prefer the person he was to Paul
Fine song written,along with Pauls You Won't See Me,under tight pressure fir two new winners for Rubber Soul.As always uh A OK!
Fantastic channel
John is so sexy in this song. I love it
I'm convinced that George's guitar part is primarily a double-tracked Gibson J-160E, because of the lack of the octave-string sounds. Perhaps he used the 12-string on the harmonized part in the solo.
It’s a bouzouki not a 12-string
George and John probably used both of their Gibson J160E's and George also used the Framus Hootenanny 12-string. There are a lot of acoustic guitars going on in this! More than just 2 plus an overdub
@@mixdawg What makes you think it was a bouzouki? There's no evidence that EMI had one, or that George could play one.
@@elirosen1391 A bouzouki is tuned basically like a guitar, it would take him no time to play it. He played a sitar which is much more difficult. Anyway there were no bouzoukis at EMI probably, and it does sound like a guitar. The style of the solo was indeed inspired by some greek music they heard during a trip to Greece. Sirtaki dance music.
@@PaulusCaesar I thought so. I wish it had been a Bouzouki. Probably a double-tracked Gibson J-160E as what was his usual acoustic at the time.
4:31 John's Acoustic Guitar Solo
That’s George and Paul doing the solo.
Noooooo!! Is John playing the solo, Paul Is playing the bass
Look the pictures idiot!!
@@derekcastillo8549 You know those are just photos, not photos of the exact recording, right? The guy who makes these videos has been wrong multiple times. Paul even said in an interview it was him and George.
I don't believe you
I've always wondered if there's two guitars in this song.. One playing with a capo on 6th fret and the other one with one on the 3rd. Think it seems that way.
Did anyone else catch that mistake at the end after johns vocal? Someone says a single tit by mistake
Does it almost sound like an electric guitar is hitting on the same beat as the snare or is it just clipping from the isolation software?
Yes I notice that... I wonder why it would? Maybe it is an illusion? Either way this is a great track breakdown. These guys just waltzed into the world and put out hundreds of gems
Desconstruct thank you girl please
7:05 one last "tit" for the the road, is it? lol
What vocals
Where is the sitar?
rhythm guitar capo-ed high up the neck?
capo in 8
Do you have a link for the photos shown? They’d be useful in my presentation :)
facebook.com/BeatlesRecording
@@DLD2Music thank you!!