Sgt Pepper Harpist Recalls Playing On 'She's Leaving Home' and Meets Ringo Starr For The First Time.

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  • Опубликовано: 31 июл 2021
  • This is a edited re upload of the original video first broadcast in May 2011.
    Sheila Bromberg recalls the recording session for the orchestral part of ' She's Leaving Home'
    BBC Copyright
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Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @michaelnotigan7796
    @michaelnotigan7796 2 года назад +1513

    So sorry to learn Sheila has passed on. Her moment and contribution to the greatest rock album ever created will live on, forever.

    • @kb6kgx
      @kb6kgx 2 года назад +23

      Yes, on August 17. Just last month.

    • @suwitekkawat6607
      @suwitekkawat6607 Год назад +20

      😥😥😥

    • @ANDROLOMA
      @ANDROLOMA Год назад +64

      She's leaving Earth, bye bye...

    • @G49V47D41
      @G49V47D41 Год назад +46

      YES!!! You are so right - this amazing woman contributed to one of the greatest songs ever on THE GREATEST ALBUM OF ALL-TIME!!! I am with you all the way.

    • @Larrymarx
      @Larrymarx Год назад +31

      Amen to that... What a sweet lady I might add. Now Heaven has another great musician on board, *May God Bless You Sheila †*

  • @vordman
    @vordman Год назад +170

    When I say She's Leaving Home is the best track on Sgt Pepper I often get met with howls of derision, but I stand by my words!

    • @KenNickels
      @KenNickels Год назад +3

      It's pretty darn good!

    • @BrianRAlex
      @BrianRAlex 10 месяцев назад +7

      It's great, all the tracks there are great, but A Day in the Life...... can't be described. .

    • @jackthalmayr281
      @jackthalmayr281 9 месяцев назад +3

      the most beautiful track on the project that's for sure

    • @tonymurphy8774
      @tonymurphy8774 7 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@jackthalmayr281Brian Wilsons wife Marilyn cried when Paul played it to them when he was in the US before it was released.

    • @noles9998
      @noles9998 7 месяцев назад +1

      It’s an underrated masterpiece

  • @grinsko6741
    @grinsko6741 Год назад +40

    Sheila is 83 here (she was born in 1928, and the clip is from 2011). She looks magnificent.

  • @3niknicholson
    @3niknicholson Год назад +4

    Sheila Bromberg, who died at 92 on Aug. 17, 2021, at a hospice in Aylesbury, England, was the first woman musician to perform on a Beatles song.

  • @jasona9
    @jasona9 5 месяцев назад +16

    0:54 Sheila had a BEAUTIFUL smile 😊! Rest in Peace.

  • @LeGrandeOrange
    @LeGrandeOrange 2 года назад +376

    Never tire of these behind-the-scenes vignettes about how Beatles tracks were created

    • @stephenhensley5631
      @stephenhensley5631 2 года назад +10

      Either do I.

    • @lisadc4681
      @lisadc4681 Год назад +4

      Me either..I live for this stuff actually!

    • @AlmostReady504
      @AlmostReady504 Год назад +2

      👍 agree 👍

    • @SPINNINGMYWHEELS777
      @SPINNINGMYWHEELS777 Год назад

      How you can you hear anyting but that scraping of the bottom of an old rusted barrel.

    • @lisadc4681
      @lisadc4681 Год назад +1

      @@SPINNINGMYWHEELS777 So why are you here then listening to it and even commenting??? Pathetic troll

  • @billparrish4385
    @billparrish4385 Год назад +152

    What strikes me in this clip is how Ringo, even at this age, shows that same youthful, feisty sense of humor they all had in those early session recordings between takes. But my favorite part is how Sheila gives it right back to him! He's not letting his greater fame go to his head, and neither is she! Just two professional musicians, cutting up together, getting on famously. So wholesome!

    • @thomaspalmentieri9118
      @thomaspalmentieri9118 Год назад +1

      Don't forget, the video is 11 years old.

    • @billparrish4385
      @billparrish4385 Год назад +14

      @@thomaspalmentieri9118 True, but I'm not seeing how that fact invalidates anything I said in my comment? I mentioned a time when Ringo and the other lads were young and in the recording studio in Abbey Road, cutting up between takes. Then fast forward to this interview, when they're both no longer twenty-somethings, and there's Ringo cutting up with Sheila in the same youthful way he would joke with the lads at Abbey Road, and her delightfully giving it right back to him. There's something a bit warm, even magical, in that. Two musicians, reunited from 'the old days', the years falling off of them as their good humor emerges. It was a very sweet moment.

    • @mrjimmcdaniels
      @mrjimmcdaniels Год назад +1

      @@billparrish4385 I don't think people that have been pampered since they were young, mature like those that live a more "normal" life. He hasn't had to absorb any real hard knocks and still show up for work and family the next day. He has definitely kept his good nature and sense of humor and that is lovely to see.

    • @foofookachoo1136
      @foofookachoo1136 Год назад +2

      Yes!! Ringo and the rest of the Beatles were just “somthing else, weren’t they??!!!

    • @vicinvesta8349
      @vicinvesta8349 Год назад +4

      I read up Ringo bio. He really pulled himself by the straps of his boots (he almost died from peritonitis, went into coma and spent days in a hospital learning to play drums while recovering) and was lucky to catch the Beatles train to fame. And he strikes me like he fully understands how lucky he was.

  • @vladmat7098
    @vladmat7098 Год назад +203

    I grew up behind the Iron Curtain. These sounds were like a breath of freedom. They were like an unattainable fairy tale. Thank you with all my heart.

    • @jgunther3398
      @jgunther3398 Год назад +3

      @@pixiepete6431 people were shot in the barbed wire trying to escape from east berlin to the west

    • @didybopintitys
      @didybopintitys Год назад +7

      @Pixie Pete for a lack of a better word? Yes , I’m not going to act like some people do like I know more than I do cause I don’t, but what I do know is I’ve had friends parents who have lived under it and it’s certainly not the worst part of human history , but it’s also not a good one tho that’s putting it mildly probably best to look into it more if you’re actually interested rather then through opinionated comments on RUclips.

    • @petrpolach9234
      @petrpolach9234 Год назад +6

      @Pixie Pete It felt like a prison, but with a large ward. You could have fun when meeting others on your walk, but you were aware that sticking out might easily serve you a sentence in solitary confinement and a fatigue duty for your loved ones.

    • @jedijones
      @jedijones Год назад +3

      Back in the U.S.S.R....you don't know how lucky you are, boy.

    • @Peyote1312
      @Peyote1312 7 месяцев назад

      @@jgunther3398 Yeah, and Uncle Sam slaughtered at LEAST 2 Million civilians in Vietnam in the name of Capitalism. Whoops I mean Freedom & Democracy. That's just civilian deaths. Absolutely disgusting. Stop letting your thoughts be manipulated by Cold War era propaganda.

  • @home2624
    @home2624 2 года назад +852

    What a lovely woman. The world could do with a few more genuinely nice people like her. Your music lives on forever dear lady. 🎼🎵🕯️

    • @JonahNelson7
      @JonahNelson7 Год назад +19

      I think most people are like her honestly. I think we just notice the baddies

    • @davman115
      @davman115 Год назад +1

      It's like most peoples school days. The bad people get all of the attention and as a result the rest of us are in survival mode with our guard up. Plenty of good people but very cautious thanks to the type of I'm alright Jack society created by Thatcher.

    • @MrChristian
      @MrChristian Год назад +4

      Truly a lovely lady!!

    • @waynej2608
      @waynej2608 Год назад

      @@davman115 I'm torn between Zen and I'm Alright Jack.

    • @thomaselliott573
      @thomaselliott573 Год назад

      what a shame you do not know nice people

  • @richardreinertson1335
    @richardreinertson1335 Год назад +118

    She was a perfect studio musician - she could play music as written, and she could also improvise on request. That's why she got this gig. Also she does an amazing Paul McCartney impression!

  • @tubularfrog
    @tubularfrog Год назад +10

    "It was a bit good actually." That's really wonderful to hear her say that.

  • @megamcgee
    @megamcgee Год назад +211

    She didn’t just play on it, that melody is iconic. It sets up the mood for the entire song. Legendary

    • @SPINNINGMYWHEELS777
      @SPINNINGMYWHEELS777 Год назад

      She just played - they have something called charts. you're ready to lap up any left overs

    • @megamcgee
      @megamcgee Год назад +5

      @@SPINNINGMYWHEELS777 Who hurt you 😅

    • @SPINNINGMYWHEELS777
      @SPINNINGMYWHEELS777 Год назад +1

      @@megamcgee Because I see pop music as a garbage heap.. I'm hurt? Quite the opposite. Enjoy the programming !

    • @megamcgee
      @megamcgee Год назад

      @@SPINNINGMYWHEELS777 How did you even get to this video? To randomly put down fans? 😏
      There’s only one good kind of music, and I hear it’s whatever you listen to

    • @SPINNINGMYWHEELS777
      @SPINNINGMYWHEELS777 Год назад

      ​@@megamcgee that's right TreeMan ! OWN IT!!!

  • @rifyrafi
    @rifyrafi 2 года назад +236

    This is why I love RUclips. She was absolutely wonderful on that classic Beatles song.

    • @benmeltzer
      @benmeltzer 9 месяцев назад

      Dude, the song was recorded WAY before RUclips. And even if it weren't, I doubt RUclips would have done anything to affect her part.

    • @IsaacWale2004
      @IsaacWale2004 4 месяца назад +2

      @@benmeltzer I think they mean they love RUclips for making it easy to find this information...

    • @benmeltzer
      @benmeltzer 4 месяца назад +1

      @@IsaacWale2004 I see. Yes, you're right. Thanks.

  • @russellparratt9859
    @russellparratt9859 2 года назад +406

    She's Leaving Home is one of my favourite Beatles songs.
    It's a masterpiece.
    The lyrics perfectly capture the mood of the times, and the feelings of personal experiences.

    • @rafthejaf8789
      @rafthejaf8789 Год назад +12

      A masterpiece indeed! I loved a lot of bands in those times but I doubt any of them could have captured the levels of empathy and sorrow displayed in that song.

    • @lightningleaf23
      @lightningleaf23 Год назад +17

      Massively underrated never mentioned amongst their best

    • @bodichair
      @bodichair Год назад +4

      Well said.

    • @russellparratt9859
      @russellparratt9859 Год назад

      @@jimwood1584 The Beatles were too politically incorrect, and wouldn't stand a chance in today's "woke" environment.
      They would get "cancelled", possibly for being "too white", or some other deluded idiocy.
      "Too English", perhaps?

    • @kevinlakeman5043
      @kevinlakeman5043 Год назад +3

      Yes, it's a gorgeous piece melodically, and a wonderful recording as a whole. But that last line with 'She is having...fun/fun is the one thing that money can't buy' is just weak. You sure as hell can buy fun with money, and that line needed something more substantial that just 'fun'. Should've gone to Lennon or Harrison for help there.

  • @maxwellfan55
    @maxwellfan55 2 года назад +307

    We now know just how proud Paul was of this song. Also brilliant to get to see one of the "ordinary" musicians who also played their part, along with the orchestra.
    Only Shiela wasn't ordinary. Her harp made this song and don't we know it?
    Thank you Sheila, as lovely now as you were then, x.

    • @SherryAnnOfTheWest
      @SherryAnnOfTheWest 2 года назад +8

      She passed away last month at the age of 92.

    • @maxwellfan55
      @maxwellfan55 2 года назад +8

      @@SherryAnnOfTheWest That's sad, I'm sorry to hear it. I didn't realise how long ago this interview was recorded. A remarkable and precious lady.

    • @damianbroderick3913
      @damianbroderick3913 2 года назад +1

      I was gonna say, what's ordinary about playing the harp?

    • @KimSenior
      @KimSenior Год назад +2

      @@damianbroderick3913 the comment was mad in inverted comas if you noticed or don’t you understand what they mean?🙄

    • @Talisman09
      @Talisman09 Год назад +5

      What year is this video from? She doesn't look 90 there. Edit* OK, 2011, it's in the description. Still, pretty (s)harp for being in her 80s

  • @whyyeseyec
    @whyyeseyec 2 года назад +175

    What a lovely woman. She certainly aged well over the years - as has Ringo.

    • @simpleman5688
      @simpleman5688 Год назад

      Numbskull

    • @whyyeseyec
      @whyyeseyec Год назад +12

      @@simpleman5688 Merry Christmas to you too!!

    • @bsvenss2
      @bsvenss2 Год назад +1

      @@simpleman5688 Thank you Sir.

    • @hellogoodbye4061
      @hellogoodbye4061 Год назад +9

      @@simpleman5688 What a horrid comment, not surprising that your user name is simpleman.....

    • @lamarravery4094
      @lamarravery4094 Год назад +1

      Ringo looks great for his age, he's older than Paul and is in far better shape.

  • @katethomas5712
    @katethomas5712 2 года назад +314

    Rest in peace Sheila, sounds like you had a great life 💕

  • @dbcopper10
    @dbcopper10 2 года назад +94

    Thanks, mate! She's so sweet, and Ringo is a gas as usual.

  • @ToniInSussex
    @ToniInSussex 2 года назад +168

    RIP Sheila Bromberg. We will continue to enjoy your harp.

    • @andydixon2980
      @andydixon2980 2 года назад +14

      Thanks to her wonderful contribution she is forever immortalised in a beautiful song.

    • @oldsensei8350
      @oldsensei8350 2 года назад +8

      Yeah i saw she recently passed away ....r..i..p..

    • @johnmorgan5495
      @johnmorgan5495 2 года назад +7

      Sad news, what a beautiful woman x

    • @waynej2608
      @waynej2608 Год назад +3

      Apparently, this news got by me. Bummer. She made it to her 90s, though, and clearly played with the top tier of artists. R.I.P. Sheila. 💙

  • @bluecamus5162
    @bluecamus5162 Год назад +59

    I always loved this beautiful song, but when Mom died at home in my arms and I stood there watching them take her away from her home of 45 years, I thought of this song and it took on a whole new meaning.

    • @gestebu
      @gestebu Год назад +5

      😢

    • @craigkdillon
      @craigkdillon Год назад +7

      Never thought of this song in that context.
      Yes. A whole new meaning.
      Still, sad, and reflective.

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 Год назад +2

      🙏 🙏

    • @jamesdavis3271
      @jamesdavis3271 Год назад +3

      That is an absolutely beautiful thought.

    • @SnapCracklePapa
      @SnapCracklePapa Год назад +2

      So sad, yet so beautiful. 🙏

  • @nycinstyle
    @nycinstyle Год назад +31

    She was actually very clever, when they asked her to play any song for them, she chose one of The Beatles songs in which Ringo sings the lead. Ringo is sitting right next to her, what the heck, she chose his most iconic song, ever. "Yellow Submarine."
    5:55. She turns 83 years old the year when this was filmed. I gotta say, she looks fantastic.

  • @glenndespres5317
    @glenndespres5317 2 года назад +79

    Perfectly lovely woman and I loved her story about how Paul knew what he wanted but just couldn’t express it; then when she heard it she was like,”aha! That’s what he wanted!” Love this.

  • @5roundsrapid263
    @5roundsrapid263 Год назад +35

    RIP, Sheila. You were so classy playing “Yellow Submarine” for Ringo. You’ll never be forgotten, especially because you helped make Sgt. Pepper what it was.

  • @willpennington5479
    @willpennington5479 Год назад +27

    A real feel good story. Paul's genius brought the harp in, and Sheila's interpretation of the intro gave us one of the most recognizable song beginnings in music ❤❤

    • @ereyes5582
      @ereyes5582 Год назад

      Truly a great time to be around. Watched them on Sullivan at 12 ,grew up with them , sadly never got to see them play.Didn't know till years later that the quiet one had so much beautiful things to say.l really miss him now.Also rediscovering his albums after the Beatles including the Willbury's.ELIO

  • @steveflor9942
    @steveflor9942 2 года назад +37

    She is absolutely adorable.

  • @g90tech-x1c
    @g90tech-x1c Год назад +33

    So sorry to hear that she passed away. She seemed like such a lovely lady, and what a musician! I hope Ringo knew he was sitting next to royalty!

    • @MichaelDWalsh
      @MichaelDWalsh Год назад +1

      I suspect Ringo did. Nice tribute to a lovely lady.

  • @FlamingoKicker
    @FlamingoKicker 2 года назад +43

    The list of people who have recorded with the Beatles gets shorter and shorter every day. It was very nice catching this.

    • @twotone3070
      @twotone3070 2 года назад +2

      In fact it got shorter by this one back in August.

    • @raycochrane3971
      @raycochrane3971 2 года назад +1

      The list of people who have recorded with the Beatles, and are still alive, becomes shorter every day.

    • @FlamingoKicker
      @FlamingoKicker 2 года назад +1

      @@twotone3070 so now its like Eric Clapton and Yoko Ono?

  • @TallinnTadgh
    @TallinnTadgh Год назад +8

    I don't know why RUclips suddenly decided to bring this to my attention in Jan '23 but i'm very glad they did.
    A lovely lady who got her moment in the starlight, still playing beautifully.

  • @donitaforrest9064
    @donitaforrest9064 2 года назад +60

    The harp is perfection. She's leaving home - a particular favourite of mine, so much so that i taught myself how to play it on my recorder flute. The song is so very sad & terribly funny in that dry juxtaposed british way......and so delightfully freeing, yay!

    • @willemvandeursen3105
      @willemvandeursen3105 Год назад +3

      @Donita Forrest,
      He produced another gem like this (sans harp): "Eleanor Rigby". That one is beautiful and sad, too. And when I hear those two tracks, I am reminded of another monumental tearjerker: "I Can Never Go Home Anymore" by the Shangri-las.
      The 60s were so full of unforgettable records...pure magic. I'm grateful to have been there. Many of today's youngsters have a sincere interest in and knowledge of those times, but as a teen you also had to have been there. Knowing how it was when you RAN to the Record dealer for the next Beatles single or LP.
      "The Mono or the Stereo, lad?"
      "The Stereo of course!"
      Stereo was still quite new, and I had the idea that with stereo sound I got more Beatles!

    • @MichaelDWalsh
      @MichaelDWalsh Год назад +2

      Funny...
      We Americans don't comprehend you Brits, do we in the least? I suppose I would have to have lived there at the time to grasp such a nuance. Anyway - brilliant song, genius arrangement.

    • @ObnosisJones
      @ObnosisJones Год назад +2

      @@willemvandeursen3105 I always bought the mono as it was a dollar cheaper and my player was still mono. Later I discovered that George Martin spent more time getting the mono mix right as he was a kind of a mono purist at that time, and that the stereo mix had significant differences in places. The original monos are more collectible now.

    • @willemvandeursen3105
      @willemvandeursen3105 Год назад

      @@ObnosisJones
      I was so stereo-spoiled that I when I bought the first Procol Harum album and found out all the tracks were Mono, I was so disappointed. Decades later I read that the band members had complained about it too: "They didn't even KNOW how to mix stereo!"
      It wasn't perfect in those days. I recently heard Procol's "Repent Walpurgis" in digitalized stereo, and it was awful. But in general, I find that stereo sound is a bit fuller and richer in tones. It makes light, fragile sounds more audible.

  • @scottweisel3640
    @scottweisel3640 Год назад +23

    Ringo is so gracious in this clip. He treats Sheila as an equal musician. He understands how important these people were and are to The Beatles success and seems genuinely glad she is getting recognized for her contributions. As a person, he is my favorite Beatle, although I love them all. They never lost their touch with the common people. Maybe it was being from Liverpool. Tragically, it was John’s graciousness by allowing an autograph seeker to approach him in Greenwich Village, that led to his murder.

    • @gordeauxd
      @gordeauxd Год назад +3

      The Dakota, where John Lennon was murdered, is in the Upper West Side of Manhattan, not Greenwich Village.

    • @mannys1930
      @mannys1930 Год назад +5

      I was thinking.. he didn't have to show up, could have said no. He certainly doesn't need the exposure. But he did, out of love and care. Top bloke..

    • @percyfaith11
      @percyfaith11 Год назад

      John gracious?

    • @ketchuplike
      @ketchuplike 3 месяца назад

      Sure why not, no one is all one thing, at all time. He was human, he succeeded, failed, was loved, was let down, caustic on the outside, was vunerable inside.
      Wrote from the heart. Lx

  • @patrickbeck3285
    @patrickbeck3285 Год назад +17

    It's a fantastic song from a great album. Seeing who the actual musician was that played on it adds so much to its history. A very lovely moment.

  • @The22on
    @The22on 2 года назад +41

    I can't imagine what it would be like to be a first call sideman on the greatest band in the history of the world.

    • @jeddward9464
      @jeddward9464 2 года назад +6

      I'm glad she really enjoyed her day with the beatles, just fantastic to see her with ringo such a nice man.

  • @Me-ji2pn
    @Me-ji2pn 2 года назад +7

    She looks good for 82 here in 2011. She was 38 when she recorded the song.
    She died recently.
    (September 1928- August 2021)

  • @johntiggleman4686
    @johntiggleman4686 Год назад +16

    How cool is this, to see the woman who played on that iconic song? Just wow! Sgt. Pepper is and will always be my favorite Beatles albums.

  • @bassinblue
    @bassinblue Год назад +38

    I always loved the Harp on this track, especially with George Martin's genius idea of doubling or tape echo effect to make it more fuller. Seeing the comments, I see Sheila passed away last year. I'm sure she had an excitingly adventurous life. Not many people get to tell stories that she lived through. R.I.P

    • @InstantKarma1970
      @InstantKarma1970 Год назад +5

      Mike Leander did the string arrangements as George Martin was unavailable much to his annoyance would not wait - and yes George produced it added effects

  • @axnyslie
    @axnyslie 2 года назад +25

    What a great life to have been a session musician back then. Sadly another era long gone for the most part due to the digital age.

    • @abc456f
      @abc456f 2 года назад +1

      @Duncan Hackett Playing music for a living? You never work a day in your life.

    • @jmad627
      @jmad627 2 года назад

      I can’t tell ya how glad I am that I saved my vinyl. Sounds warmer and better in analog.

    • @patriciofernandez2711
      @patriciofernandez2711 2 года назад

      @@abc456f Are you daft? Music is a job like any other with its hardships and its pleasures.

    • @paacer
      @paacer 2 года назад

      @@patriciofernandez2711 Not to mention the many long hours and years learning and perfecting your craft .

  • @nemo227
    @nemo227 2 года назад +83

    I remember the first time I heard the album. Some of us guys who worked together went to a co-worker's house during our lunch break and he played this new album he just got. We were pretty impressed. I bought the album a short time later. I played it for my son when he became interested in music. He has been a school music teacher for . . . 20 years. Music influences people.

    • @ednammansfield8553
      @ednammansfield8553 Год назад +11

      The very first time I heard this album was in a nightclub in Reykjavik in Iceland on the day of its release there back in 1967. It reached No 1 in their album charts. It was played on a jukebox and it was repeatedly played over and over again that night. I was ashore from a Fleetwood Deapsea trawler at the time. As soon as I got back from to Fleetwood I purchased the album on vinyl and also a musicassette copy so it could be played over the ships speaker system when at sea along with other music from the 1960's at that time. We didn't have television or video equipment then so we only had the ships communication system to entertain the sailors when not on watch.

    • @nemo227
      @nemo227 Год назад +3

      @@ednammansfield8553 I think you EARNED a Navy Commendation for doing that (but I doubt that you got it).😊

    • @wandarask8444
      @wandarask8444 Год назад +1

      Well done
      Mum
      Love Australia

  • @abc456f
    @abc456f 2 года назад +158

    This was fantastic! She's Leaving Home has always been one of my favorite Beatles songs. Its always evoked emotion for me. One of Paul's best lyrics, a great story teller. And that lovely harp played by such a lovely woman. Sad to know she's passed. RIP.

    • @andysongs9485
      @andysongs9485 2 года назад +2

      Got some good news. Sheila is still with us (today is Tuesday 14th December 2021) and she is aged 93.

    • @andysongs9485
      @andysongs9485 2 года назад +2

      Sorry I was wrong about Sheila still being alive. Sadly she did pass away aged 92 . :-(

    • @thetwogardens6048
      @thetwogardens6048 Год назад +2

      Fake Paul you mean . I doubt very much he wrote that song !

    • @abc456f
      @abc456f Год назад +5

      @@thetwogardens6048 You're delusional.

    • @thetwogardens6048
      @thetwogardens6048 Год назад

      @@abc456f look up , The Wrecking Crew Movie !

  • @sporkfindus4777
    @sporkfindus4777 2 года назад +13

    "Oh, so that's how they did it" Wow, so good that they researched and informed her of how her parts were laid down after all this time!

  • @davez4177
    @davez4177 2 года назад +28

    Just passed this week. Rest in peace, thanks for the beautiful music!

  • @marzzz1
    @marzzz1 2 года назад +10

    This popped up as a YT suggestion, and I now find out she just passed away a few days ago at age 92. Way to make your mark on the world, and RIP.

  • @erepsekahs
    @erepsekahs Год назад +5

    Brings tears to my eyes. I was part of all that is the old days.

  • @wildbill5670
    @wildbill5670 2 года назад +16

    Tripped on Owsley blue dot acid a few times to this album back in the day. This song is so poignant. Paul nailed this one for sure.

  • @Alpha_7227
    @Alpha_7227 2 года назад +76

    Such a fabulous track and it's all due to her and the magnificent string section. Magnificent.

  • @dr.scottgreenaway5982
    @dr.scottgreenaway5982 Год назад +14

    It gives me goose bumps hearing her play that, just like she did on the recording. Wow.

  • @noelroberts8199
    @noelroberts8199 Месяц назад +1

    Sheila really rocked that song She's Leaving Home, something to be really proud of........

  • @BonnieBlair-zm4uu
    @BonnieBlair-zm4uu 2 месяца назад +1

    Sheila was gorgeous at 83. Harp music 🎵🎶 is therapeutic for my Hospice patients and for the harpist as well.❤Let light 🕯️🕊️🌹 perpetual shine upon Sheila.🤩😍😻💖🎧🎼💜😃💛🌟❣️❤️💌🌻✨💛💙🙏

  • @calixa
    @calixa Год назад +3

    "feels a bit good actually" as her face lights up like a child.
    exactly how it would feel for most of us i assume. lovely story.

  • @stockholm3976
    @stockholm3976 Год назад +2

    What a story. Fantastic. I was born 1964 and I'm jelous for those who were "there".

  • @theoccupier1652
    @theoccupier1652 Год назад +2

    Probably the most listened to Harpist in the world ... and all from one song :)

  • @pauldhartley
    @pauldhartley Год назад +2

    I was in a student house when this came out. One of the students bought the LP and played it constantly for more than 24 hours, just turning it over and continuing on the other side. His name was Jim.

  • @philipsanders9192
    @philipsanders9192 Год назад +4

    I got a warm happy peaceful feeling watching this.

  • @blackbob3358
    @blackbob3358 2 года назад +10

    and so shoud be (proud of it) Sheila. that song was a masive testament "of the time", young un's leaving home, branching out, having a bash at "independance" for the first time in their lives.

    • @smkh2890
      @smkh2890 2 года назад +2

      That is a very positive spin you have put on an immensely sad song, Bob,

  • @FrankBaumann-cb8nh
    @FrankBaumann-cb8nh 8 месяцев назад +2

    This is music history. Thanks for this Clip. RIP DEAR SHAILA.

  • @pocopico7409
    @pocopico7409 Год назад +21

    This was wonderful and very interesting. This is exactly the kind of thing RUclips is so perfect for! Thanks for posting!

  • @Crushenator500
    @Crushenator500 2 года назад +55

    I swear every time I see a clip of Ringo he makes me laugh out loud at least once. Dude's hilarious.

    • @lamarravery4094
      @lamarravery4094 Год назад +4

      He's awesome. Can you believe he's like 80 yrs old? He's in fantastic shape.

    • @waynej2608
      @waynej2608 Год назад +5

      Same here. Next to John, I think that Ringo was the funniest and best wit in The Beatles. When he said to Sheila, "We overpaid." I immediately thought that would be something John would say. Lol.

    • @blue-fj9ky
      @blue-fj9ky Год назад +2

      @@waynej2608 I remember after the Beatles first US tour a reporter asked John "So, how did you find America?" Immediate reply "We turned left at Greenland." LOL!

    • @foofookachoo1136
      @foofookachoo1136 Год назад

      @@blue-fj9ky was that Ringo or John??

    • @blue-fj9ky
      @blue-fj9ky Год назад

      @@foofookachoo1136 I'm pretty sure it was John. I could be wrong! But I think I remember the tape.

  • @paulodisano502
    @paulodisano502 2 года назад +14

    What a beautiful interview with this lovely lady and Ringo Starr. Much respect from Canada 🇨🇦

  • @1calvinfunny1
    @1calvinfunny1 2 года назад +11

    How songs are put together is so darn interesting....

  • @coolmacatrain9434
    @coolmacatrain9434 2 года назад +118

    Paul McCartney is the very definition of a Renaissance man ...we shall not see his like again.

    • @andylucas1175
      @andylucas1175 2 года назад +14

      Macca is stupendously talented but we've got Kanye West now, surely K.W.'s claim to being the greatest artist of all time must be true ? I wonder which medication he was taking to make such a vacuous declaration.

    • @abc456f
      @abc456f 2 года назад +13

      @@andylucas1175 Paul is a musician. Kanye is something else.

    • @robmarshall9026
      @robmarshall9026 2 года назад +13

      @@abc456f Kanye is a genius producer but he isn't as musically adept as Paul

    • @andreaagnes1298
      @andreaagnes1298 Год назад +16

      @@andylucas1175 yeah sure Kayne West 😂😂😂 Thanks for the much needed laugh

    • @B.R.0101
      @B.R.0101 Год назад +5

      @@andreaagnes1298 I still enjoy the laugh!!

  • @bobg6638
    @bobg6638 Год назад +17

    Lennon and Starr were only 26, McCartney and Harrison were only 24 when Sgt. Pepper was released. Incredible.

    • @hellogoodbye4061
      @hellogoodbye4061 Год назад +3

      Actually Starr is older than Lennon and McCartney older than Harrison.

    • @lamarravery4094
      @lamarravery4094 Год назад

      @@hellogoodbye4061 I was just commenting how Ringo looks really good and he's older than Paul.

    • @waynej2608
      @waynej2608 Год назад

      It's all quite humbling.

  • @logotrikes
    @logotrikes 2 года назад +54

    What a wonderful piece of music this lady infused into She's Leaving Home. Masterful, but probably for the lady herself, just another gig which would pay the standard fee, and then onto the next job tomorrow. I doubt she realised she was part of history. SPLHCB is just as good today as it was all those years ago. I was 17 when it was released and had to go to a mates place to hear it because he was the only one in our little circle who could afford the record...
    It's interesting that the first take was used, and double tracked to produce what Paul wanted...

    • @maxwellfan55
      @maxwellfan55 2 года назад +6

      Martoon. Ringo and the others might have joked about the fee but believe me as a musician, it hurts when we are grossly underpaid and undervalued, particularly when one wonders what Evans was paid for doing his "bit" in this interview. The hollow thanks and slap on the back means nothing when there's bills to pay and instruments to maintain.
      Let's hope Sheila was paid properly AND treated after making this special appearance.

    • @MARKETMAN6789
      @MARKETMAN6789 2 года назад +3

      Love stories like this

    • @logotrikes
      @logotrikes 2 года назад +1

      @@MARKETMAN6789 All part of the magic of the 60's....

    • @logotrikes
      @logotrikes 2 года назад +2

      @@maxwellfan55 I agree entirely Max, but the industry standard seems to be just the union rate for sessions musicians. I have no direct experience, only what I've read over many decades. Undervalued and underpaid without question, but I assume that all jobbing muso's just shrug collective shoulders and lament about the way it is in the industry. Imagine if for example Sheila was paid one tenth of one percent as a royalty fee on sales instead of a contract rate, wouldn't that be more equitable? Cheques dropping through the letterbox every so often. Would be recognition indeed...

    • @maxwellfan55
      @maxwellfan55 2 года назад +2

      @@logotrikes Drip-feed royalty cheques. Yes, a nice thought indeed! I just had another joker ask me to perform for nothing at all, you get it all the time, only they ain't joking! The assumption is that musicians live on air alone, we're saddled with it.

  • @genesmalley9112
    @genesmalley9112 Год назад +16

    She's leaving home..was magical.. And her harp made just the perfect emotion.... What a song..what an album...

  • @lucianfick2218
    @lucianfick2218 Год назад +5

    It's a heartbreakingly beautiful song that encapsulates a universal feeling and using the harp was a stroke of genius.

  • @ademirmarques4192
    @ademirmarques4192 Год назад +6

    In the 60's I was young. It was great to enjoy the music of that time, however it wasn't easy to buy the records. So I also like the present tense, it's much easier to listen to the songs I like. Now I discover amazing bands that I didn't know about when I was young. I am Brazilian.

  • @TheVagolfer
    @TheVagolfer 2 года назад +15

    Part of The Beatles genius is using different musicians as instruments. Using a Bach trumpet on "Penny Lane", a calliope on "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite" having George Martin play harpsicord on "In My Life", Using Indian instruments like sitar, tambura and dilruba on "Within You, Without You." Legend has it The Beatles seldom used what was charted, but allowed the musician to use their skill and produce something in the moment that fit what the music needed.

    • @craigeverhart4755
      @craigeverhart4755 Год назад +4

      The solo on In My Life wasn’t a harpsichord but an ordinary piano at twice speed.

    • @louise_rose
      @louise_rose Год назад +1

      Yes absolutely, but many big stars give their sidemen and studio musicians the space to "come up with what you think could fit in here"- Bowie, Steely Dan, ABBA, Herbie Hancock etc all showed that kind of trust in their sidemen.

    • @vicvega3614
      @vicvega3614 Год назад +2

      @@craigeverhart4755 yea but it sounds like a harpsichord which is why i don't understand why they didnt just use a harpsichord, oh well 🤷 it works, everything they did just worked, unbelievable how creative they were

    • @MarkSeibold
      @MarkSeibold Год назад +1

      I'm surprised that Mary McCartney didn't use a short session to interview this woman playing the harp, and telling the story, for her new documentary If These Walls Could Sing.

    • @MarkSeibold
      @MarkSeibold Год назад

      I'm surprised that Mary McCartney didn't use a short session to interview this woman playing the harp, and telling the story, for her new documentary If These Walls Could Sing.
      I'm still wondering today when I come to all these great RUclips snippets showing some of the great history of The Beatles recording sessions, how many people commenting here have not watched the full, [nearly 8 hours,] of the documentary Get Back, that was released on Thanksgiving weekend 2021?

  • @normanrussell5526
    @normanrussell5526 Год назад +1

    I love looking back, to have that old looking glass that allows you to be shown how and when things were performed, just like magic.

  • @Zoologic21
    @Zoologic21 2 года назад +24

    Really humble of her to accept the vision McCartney had as being something that was ultimately dependant on the recording studio through editing and not through the sole use of one of the later takes.
    I can imagine many people getting paid to professionally sit and play, only to have most of their work glossed over, and the first attempt being what was good enough, save for some tinkering that came about afterward.
    They were disciplined musicians, but I still can't imagine how annoying and frustrating it has to be to work to a point where the person isn't satisfied, even though McCartney had a right to get the sound he was after.

    • @mumbles215
      @mumbles215 2 года назад +4

      Orchestral people didn’t jive like that as they wanted and needed all written out. Not other genres. We can wing it well but those types of trained musicians mostly don’t know how to wing it.

    • @sourisvoleur4854
      @sourisvoleur4854 2 года назад +6

      @@mumbles215 - I've heard that was definitely the case for A Day in the Life -- they were told to just start at their lowest note and play to their highest note over however-many bars, and they looked at George Martin like he was from the moon and said where is the sheet music?

    • @mr.crapper7197
      @mr.crapper7197 2 года назад +2

      Oh yes session musician have played a lot of music you wouldn't of known

    • @ewest14
      @ewest14 2 года назад +5

      @@sourisvoleur4854 Yeah Paul told them to start at the lowest note and work their way up at their own pace but they didn't like that. Then George Martin kept Paul's random idea but just told everyone what to play

    • @davidevans3227
      @davidevans3227 2 года назад +1

      mmm.. a huge glissando

  • @ronaldwolsey6082
    @ronaldwolsey6082 2 года назад +22

    What a fantastic memorable event to have in one's lifetime! An opportunity to contribute musically to such an iconic masterpiece. Awesome!

  • @deanallen927
    @deanallen927 Год назад +7

    Her talents made a permanent impression on my mind as a child, such a great musician.

  • @burkelong4376
    @burkelong4376 Год назад +2

    I love how you can just stumble upon little gems like this on You Tube.

  • @iancurtis1152
    @iancurtis1152 2 года назад +8

    She’s an absolute darling🙏🏻 great to have on your resume!

  • @ANDROLOMA
    @ANDROLOMA Год назад +16

    Such a beautiful song, and fit so well on Sgt. Peppers. That song and album will last 1000 years.

  • @moow950
    @moow950 Год назад +9

    The harp is such a beautiful ancient instrument

  • @dnorfed
    @dnorfed 2 года назад +28

    A wonderful instrument played by a wonderful woman. RIP Sheila 🙏🙏🎵🎵

  • @smokinhalf
    @smokinhalf 2 года назад +4

    couple of things i like about the interviewer

  • @vicinvesta8349
    @vicinvesta8349 Год назад +3

    She sounds so proper posh English. Such a lovely lady.

  • @RonRicho
    @RonRicho Год назад +5

    This is a precious piece of musical history.

  • @Trad63
    @Trad63 Год назад +1

    Seeing this on January 8, 2023. After all these years, it makes me smile and happy for her.

  • @leonardshevlin7260
    @leonardshevlin7260 2 года назад +8

    I'm glad she feels good about it and proud.

  • @philsarkol6443
    @philsarkol6443 Год назад +3

    Such a memorable intro...brings back memories of home, in the backroom , record on the turntable, cup a tea..listening to a complete story that unfolded itself in my head...

  • @schaddalton
    @schaddalton Год назад +3

    I can't imagine the feelings one would experience being booked for a studio session and having no idea who you may be recording with/for, only to have Paul McCartney stroll in.

  • @matthewjohngrabow9365
    @matthewjohngrabow9365 Год назад +1

    Two beautiful women. What an honor to play on that song!

  • @marcelyanez9045
    @marcelyanez9045 Год назад +1

    Dear Sheila: It's a privilege indeed for me to get to know the wonderful hands that played on "She's leaving home". So sorry to learn of your passing. Bless your soul. My heart thanks you for your memorable contribution. Lovely to see you, Ringo! Peaceandlove. [Merci,DJ].

  • @kdmdlo
    @kdmdlo 2 года назад +18

    Sheila is just fantastic. And, just out of question, does Ringo ever age? It's insanity. He looks great.

    • @JamesEis
      @JamesEis 2 года назад +3

      Absolutely! In 2011 he would've been 71, and he looks about 45!

    • @danduntz9112
      @danduntz9112 2 года назад +2

      @@JamesEis It’s the fact that he’s a vegetarian, or vegan, I can’t remember which. I’ve seen many documentaries and the people who are vegetarians look younger, have clear skin and have a glow about them.

    • @kdmdlo
      @kdmdlo 2 года назад +2

      @@danduntz9112 Paul is also a vegetarian. But he is showing his age a bit. He is trim and healthy looking ... but he definitely looks older in the face. But not Ringo.

    • @oldsensei8350
      @oldsensei8350 2 года назад +2

      And hes such a good guy too

    • @MuzixMaker
      @MuzixMaker 2 года назад +1

      @@oldsensei8350 I’m sure that’s part of it. He probably stays out of the sun as well

  • @quangdluong298
    @quangdluong298 Год назад +4

    She's Leaving Home was the song that got me to The Beatles. I could feel the tenderness and sadness at the same time, so I was trying to imagine what happened in the song. It made me believe me that the music of The Beatles has something behind every song. I dived deep into it, and it would never be the same.

    • @SonofFrenzi
      @SonofFrenzi Год назад +2

      That's exactly the same as happened to me. I remember at school when I was 15, a month or two after John's murder, one of our teachers played this song, asking us to talk about the story it tells. I can't remember what - if anything - I contributed to the discussion, because I was absolutely spellbound by the music, the harp and the lyrics. A truly beautiful piece. Keen to have my own copy of the song, The following day I bought "The Beatles Ballads" (the only Beatles record with She's Leaving Home I could find in our local W.H.Smiths), loved it and within 6 months had virtually all of their studio albums

  • @pawelpap9
    @pawelpap9 Год назад +2

    It was so gratifying to see the lady behind the sound I admired for the last 55 years.

  • @mitreswell
    @mitreswell 2 года назад +16

    What a lovely woman!

  • @leftchicago
    @leftchicago 2 года назад +7

    Ringo is such a good sport.

  • @bobloblaw8099
    @bobloblaw8099 2 года назад +7

    Sheila, wherever you are, thank you...... You contributed to one of the finest albums ever...... I bow (bough?)
    to you.....

  • @heathenwarrior2522
    @heathenwarrior2522 Год назад +2

    1987 our local Radio station was having a special playing the release of SGT. Pepper on CD. I remember being blown away by what I heard. Especially She's Leaving Home.
    At the end of the CD in it's entirety, they had interviews with George Martin and clips from the Beatles from past interviews. I had to get this album. We couldn't afford a CD player at the time. I played the hell out of SGT. Pepper. Still my favorite album.

  • @outerrealm
    @outerrealm Год назад +5

    One of the most instantly recognizable harp bits in history.

  • @bornagainbornagain6697
    @bornagainbornagain6697 2 года назад +5

    I wonder how much the classical musicians had to do with making Beatles music something else. George Martin and his touch certainly made a difference. The introduction of the harp, and strings in different songs just made such a difference in the music. Then came the mellotron and rock got so big. This band is where I went from MONO to stereo. Just AM radio when I was first buying there albums. Now we have Auro and codecs with 13 channels, plus 2 hieght channels on top. They still sound extraordinary 50 years later. I was so lucky to be alive at this time in history. Thanks for sharing and giving credit to a lovely woman.

    • @scottandrewbrass1931
      @scottandrewbrass1931 Год назад +1

      George Martin only waved a baton on this one.

    • @catherinewilson3880
      @catherinewilson3880 Год назад

      @@scottandrewbrass1931 Indeed, Mike Leander did the arrangement for this.

    • @vicvega3614
      @vicvega3614 Год назад +1

      Yeah but most of their songs could be played with just an acoustic guitar or piano and still sound great

  • @sodiumlights
    @sodiumlights Год назад +6

    She had a wonderful smile as well as beautiful talent.

  • @franciscolopez3229
    @franciscolopez3229 Год назад +7

    Wow, oh my God, that gave me goosebumps especially when she played the first few notes of the intro. It was like I was there in that studio personally listening to her story. I wish you can make more videos of the men and women session musicians behind the recordings of different big name artist like this one. It is interesting to hear their stories.

    • @benmeltzer
      @benmeltzer 9 месяцев назад

      There's a RUclips page called The Sessions Panel where they interview such session musicians: www.youtube.com/@TheSessionsPanel

    • @benmeltzer
      @benmeltzer 9 месяцев назад

      There's also four documentaries on studio musicians/singers (Muscle Shoals covers the studio musicians/singers and the artists with whom they recorded):
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/20_Feet_from_Stardom
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wrecking_Crew_(2008_film)
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muscle_Shoals_(film)
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standing_in_the_Shadows_of_Motown

  • @PlanetRockJesus
    @PlanetRockJesus Год назад +2

    That was so cool. And Ringo is always a hoot.

  • @Parloscope
    @Parloscope Год назад +4

    One of the best recordings of all time a masterpiece for sure !!

  • @Suddenlyits1960
    @Suddenlyits1960 Год назад +6

    It must have been wonderful to do something so fulfilling for a living,knowing that the contributions she made to such monumental pieces of work were enjoyed by millions and became a part of the tapestry of their lives. In a way these people have achieved immortality and a moment in time lives forever through the magic of recordings. There were so many incredibly talented studio musicians back then,who contributed immeasurably to the records that became the soundtracks of our lives. It’s nice to see some of them getting the spotlight cast on them.

  • @julianbates2040
    @julianbates2040 2 года назад +8

    Paul - has not got much of a Liverpool accent, the least of the fabs!
    But that harp was noticed by me as a formative boy. One of the best songs on Pepper!

  • @cambium0
    @cambium0 Год назад +1

    I'm really impressed with how much work she had ... what a life, playing harp professionally and being booked solid.

  • @johnreynolds6369
    @johnreynolds6369 Год назад +1

    I’d like to put in a thank you here for the interviewer.