The Craziest Edit in Beatles History

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  • čas přidán 25. 05. 2019
  • Strawberry Fields Forever is one of the Beatles' most well-known and beloved songs. But you might not have realized that the final version of the song is actually two completely different takes of the song, stitched together seamlessly by the talented team of engineers at Abbey Road Studios.
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Komentáře • 3,6K

  • @memelordmarcus
    @memelordmarcus Před 5 lety +10845

    Behold, the first beat drop in the world.

    • @inkgolfoscar715
      @inkgolfoscar715 Před 5 lety +160

      Underrated comment

    • @mr.mackey6012
      @mr.mackey6012 Před 5 lety +38

      Enter the site *big picture project . net*, click on The Present for the truth about life/death explained simply. It is life-changing from the start, and you can check it is true for yourself.

    • @Thkaal
      @Thkaal Před 4 lety +199

      That is if you ignore Beethoven Mozart Brahms

    • @tomskyrun8271
      @tomskyrun8271 Před 4 lety +39

      Mr. Mackey ok ploopy

    • @NightBazaar
      @NightBazaar Před 4 lety +18

      @@jasonvoorhees9190 Shhh! He's tripping.

  • @bron-yr-aur7990
    @bron-yr-aur7990 Před 5 lety +3628

    “Let me take you down cus I’m- GOING TO STRAWBERRY FIELDS”
    Woah, John, calm down!

    • @thealleys
      @thealleys Před 5 lety +78

      For some reason - THAT COMMENT WAS FUNNY.

    • @Shampoid
      @Shampoid Před 5 lety +83

      Cus im *G O I N G T O S T -*

    • @almishti
      @almishti Před 5 lety +32

      Strawberry Fields--the Pot Take vs. the Crank Take

    • @raymofarrell19
      @raymofarrell19 Před 5 lety +19

      Don't worry, he's just stoned from drugs.

    • @sexobscura
      @sexobscura Před 5 lety +2

      Danger 5

  • @Daniel-ou4fb
    @Daniel-ou4fb Před 4 lety +2648

    I've always noticed the sound changing throughout this song and thought it was intentional to make it psychedelic.

    • @dnr2089
      @dnr2089 Před 4 lety +14

      Daniel Me too!

    • @SonGoku-iw4zk
      @SonGoku-iw4zk Před 4 lety +55

      I love stuff like that. I live for mind-melting Psychedelic musical voyages.

    • @paulnolan4971
      @paulnolan4971 Před 4 lety +2

      @@SonGoku-iw4zk Amind brother Amind

    • @paulnolan4971
      @paulnolan4971 Před 4 lety +2

      @@SonGoku-iw4zk Gong, Floyd, Hawkwind, FSOL, Soft Machine :) lol loads

    • @bananasstuff3344
      @bananasstuff3344 Před 4 lety

      @@SonGoku-iw4zk I hate it

  • @thedude6710
    @thedude6710 Před 4 lety +1646

    Ringo's drumming - *intensifies*

    • @judebeddoe6733
      @judebeddoe6733 Před 4 lety +20

      Ringo's drumming - methodical

    • @RobMacKendrick
      @RobMacKendrick Před 4 lety +16

      I wouldn't call the drumming in the intro " methodical". Listen again; it's that great Ringo rolling lope that no one else can do. Dude's not phoning it in.

    • @hourshandhacker4194
      @hourshandhacker4194 Před 3 lety +3

      Paul bass drums - intensifies

    • @silasmarner7586
      @silasmarner7586 Před 3 lety +3

      I gotta ask... after it's all said and done.. could it have POSSIBLY sounded better and more bad-assed than this? I just don't think so!

    • @JK-xu9qc
      @JK-xu9qc Před 2 lety +6

      Yes, Ringo's drumming does intensify. He was banging his head against the walls more powerfully as each second passed

  • @firmanchristiansianturi4794
    @firmanchristiansianturi4794 Před 5 lety +3756

    I think John's deeper vocals is what made me like this song so much, consciously or subconsciously

    • @nikunia104
      @nikunia104 Před 4 lety +92

      Ikr it adds the high, dark, and intense element of the song

    • @pfcsantiago8852
      @pfcsantiago8852 Před 4 lety +51

      I noticed it but thought it was an intentional drop to darken the lyric.

    • @SansBinky
      @SansBinky Před 4 lety +7

      @duggie25 No no, he was unconscious when he first heard the song

    • @firmanchristiansianturi4794
      @firmanchristiansianturi4794 Před 4 lety

      @@SansBinky damn you

    • @grazo877
      @grazo877 Před 4 lety

      Beatles Club 4 Life

  • @josephraymondjohn
    @josephraymondjohn Před 5 lety +6916

    I always noticed this, but I just figured it was always intentional, like the drugs just kicked in and such.

    • @tannerjohnson7069
      @tannerjohnson7069 Před 5 lety +206

      Joseph John-Ramos yea, I noticed it too. the music is heavily free form and the perfect definition of psychedelic

    • @jenniferkonstant5920
      @jenniferkonstant5920 Před 5 lety +57

      Like a very commonly written key change, even.

    • @ajorsomething4935
      @ajorsomething4935 Před 5 lety +106

      I thought it was kinda like a getting suddenly blasted out of reality, like as you said "the drugs kicked in" I thought the voice pitching was part of a deprivation of senses or something.

    • @saps4756
      @saps4756 Před 5 lety +4

      @@ajorsomething4935 yeah same

    • @saps4756
      @saps4756 Před 5 lety +49

      Especially with the lyric "nothing is real"

  • @maxcohen13
    @maxcohen13 Před 4 lety +1002

    Basically, this is reiterating what most already knew: George Martin was the fifth Beatle.

    • @salmanuel4053
      @salmanuel4053 Před 4 lety +14

      The fifth but not the Best...

    • @williamvanbenschoten5150
      @williamvanbenschoten5150 Před 3 lety +12

      For further proof of this, cue the orchestral track of "I Am the Walrus." For starters.

    • @watkins_653
      @watkins_653 Před 3 lety +4

      @@salmanuel4053 agreed, George Best was the 5th Beatle, at least in '66

    • @deantreur248
      @deantreur248 Před 3 lety +2

      Stuart.

    • @Vpmatt
      @Vpmatt Před 3 lety +15

      Except the splice of the tape was the work of Geoff Emerick.

  • @mackdaddynutjob
    @mackdaddynutjob Před 4 lety +1539

    REMEMBER: Strawberry Fields is where they played as KiDS.. and the nostalgia resonated with them as they grasped at the bittersweet loss.. hence - not just "a drug song"

    • @36Jon36
      @36Jon36 Před 4 lety +59

      The narrator didn't say it was a drug song. He just mentioned that this was the period of time The Beatles were experimenting with LSD. But he even says that it wasn't what made their music great, it just explains the switch in mindset and vision they had when compared to their first albums.

    • @NickB-md1oy
      @NickB-md1oy Před 4 lety +38

      The thing is the drug itself is very much about revisiting memories you may have forgotten about entirely. It’s not some colorful world of giggles, lsd can take you deep into your own mind and give you insight you may never have had. With that said I think the point youre making here does not detract from the influence of lsd on the making of this song. It just shows how powerfully therapeutic the drug can be. The Beatles using lsd should be seen as a groundbreaking acceptance of psychedelics in modern society, but because of stigma and propaganda people would rather forget about the time the Beatles got a bit more “criminal”.

    • @NickB-md1oy
      @NickB-md1oy Před 4 lety +19

      The experience of lsd is far more profound than the concepts of bitter sweetness and nostalgia. It makes you feel like you never even scratched the surface of such emotions. Why do you think weak people can’t handle the drug? Because it forces them to face problems such as identity, guilt, loss, depression, with such deep realization, that it destroys their ego. I only write so detailed about this to show just how much deeper LSD goes than these surface level ideas.

    • @FlamingoKicker
      @FlamingoKicker Před 4 lety +18

      Only John played at SF.

    • @dwsperspectiveonreality.659
      @dwsperspectiveonreality.659 Před 4 lety +3

      The drugs were the Pointe dichotomy of the Reckoning of childhood choices now which makes it completely revolving around the choices made in their life that were revolving around the park the tempo of free expression into the drug culture and without the nostalgic reminiscence of the Innocence Lost it the song juxtaposed drug affiliation is only completed with ignorance uninformed

  • @Samtastictogo
    @Samtastictogo Před 4 lety +3974

    “You can’t unhear this”
    Do I want to finish the video?

    • @colinfrantz5453
      @colinfrantz5453 Před 4 lety +118

      Go for it. It's just some interesting context

    • @jochenstacker7448
      @jochenstacker7448 Před 4 lety +94

      Yes you do, it makes the song even better

    • @SweetSirenia
      @SweetSirenia Před 4 lety +95

      If you know the song, you've already noticed what he points out, so you won't have anything ruined for you. The video just takes what you've been hearing forever and explains how they accomplished it, in musician's terms.

    • @NikPub
      @NikPub Před 4 lety +48

      I paused at 0:20 to find this comment. Thank you, I shall continue

    • @hunter1586
      @hunter1586 Před 4 lety +4

      Yes

  • @Crazeyfor67
    @Crazeyfor67 Před 5 lety +2105

    I'm 65 and often I realize that being young and really alive during the time of the Beatles was a fortunate, lucky gift. Thanks for the cool info.

    • @robertallan6373
      @robertallan6373 Před 5 lety +42

      I am 62 and I have always said the same thing, we were certainly lucky.

    • @michaelszczys8316
      @michaelszczys8316 Před 5 lety +47

      63 and remember when ‘ I Am The Walrus ‘ hit the streets it changed the whole music world. That was the craziest, weird sounding thing ever and if it was anyone else but the beloved Beatles it would probably never have been played

    • @ruinouseffigy8308
      @ruinouseffigy8308 Před 5 lety

      @@michaelszczys8316 you dont know me yet

    • @robertallan6373
      @robertallan6373 Před 5 lety +10

      @@michaelszczys8316 That is one of my best ever songs, for me all the Beatles songs are like my children, its hard to say which one I love more than the other.

    • @philcollinshill2951
      @philcollinshill2951 Před 5 lety +21

      I'm only 25 and far from a big Beatles fan but it blows my mind how much innovation came from them in the studio making these classic masterpieces.

  • @bfish89ryuhayabusa
    @bfish89ryuhayabusa Před 4 lety +626

    The genius of George Martin. I always remember a BBC interview where he talked about the recordings he made with The Beatles. For this one, when John Lennon said he wanted to start with take 7 and end with take 26, Martin told him they couldn't do that because they were in different keys and at different tempos. Lennon said "I'm sure you can figure it out!" Martin then realized that the faster take was also in the higher key, so slowing it down with varispeed would bring it closer to the other take in both tempo and pitch. By a miracle, it just happened to perfectly match. Lennon got back, heard it, and said, "See? I knew you could do it!" and walked off, leaving Martin thinking, "...You cheeky bastard. You just regularly expect the impossible..."
    This edit (and most other Beatles edits where two takes are spliced together) is much more noticeable in earlier releases, as George Martin has since gone back and redone the edits to make them more seamless.

    • @raindrops21_9
      @raindrops21_9 Před 4 lety +20

      John, Paul, George and Ringo + George Martin = musical alchemy

    • @lecopianna6885
      @lecopianna6885 Před 4 lety +13

      ...and Geoff Emerick, of course.

    • @zq9m3xh8
      @zq9m3xh8 Před 4 lety +9

      BFisch ~ your comment almost makes George Martin sound like Scottie to Lennon's Capt. Kirk. :)

    • @salmanuel4053
      @salmanuel4053 Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks, phenomenal story.

    • @vaporman442
      @vaporman442 Před 4 lety +9

      This explanation has always seemed suspect to me. If the song had been in a different key, but the same tempo or a different tempo, but the same key-it wouldn’t have worked. It all just fell together too neatly. I suspect either George Martin planned it that way and never told John-or John planned it that way and never told George. Either way, someone intentionally changed both speed and tempo at exactly the same ratio, so that when the tape was slowed down it would match the other take.

  • @markrumbolo4682
    @markrumbolo4682 Před 4 lety +307

    I have always thought that John wanted you to feel as if you were entering "strawberry Fields" As he sings let me take you down cause I'm going to .....enter the fields and the magical enhancement of instruments and sounds. Like when you enter OZ in the wizard of oz, the movie switches from B&W to COLOR.

    • @pablorey9203
      @pablorey9203 Před 4 lety +7

      yes like the memory kicks,,, or fall inte the memories... or tha acid stats his thing... evrithing slowded, distorted... Jungian

    • @BaltimoreAndOhioRR
      @BaltimoreAndOhioRR Před 3 lety +4

      Same here!

    • @justalittlebitsilly
      @justalittlebitsilly Před 2 lety +2

      this is exactly how i feel listening to it

  • @til9518
    @til9518 Před 5 lety +5612

    “By this point the Beatles were experimenting heavily with LSD which,,,,
    probably explains a lot...”

    • @brodyc4114
      @brodyc4114 Před 5 lety +62

      Fuck off with your psychedelic stigma

    • @JamminClemmons
      @JamminClemmons Před 5 lety +33

      @@brodyc4114 --WHAT????
      Send me magic mushrooms, - *N O W!*

    • @cookiesontoast9981
      @cookiesontoast9981 Před 5 lety +70

      @@brodyc4114 She was just quoting the video...

    • @SecretAgentPaul
      @SecretAgentPaul Před 5 lety +109

      I think@@brodyc4114 has been experimenting with LSD which....
      ...probably explains a lot.

    • @Chickaqee
      @Chickaqee Před 5 lety +10

      I dont see how anyone could ever write a song on enough lsd to fuck u up

  • @oldredbarnman
    @oldredbarnman Před 5 lety +1304

    The "Engineers" you refer to was just ONE engineer, and his name was Geoff Emerick. It was HE who did the masterful work of joining the two pieces together. RIP Geoff!!

    • @robertdominguez6002
      @robertdominguez6002 Před 4 lety +8

      oldredbarnman didn’t both George Martin and Geoff Emerick work on the edit

    • @56gha
      @56gha Před 4 lety +34

      @@robertdominguez6002 both of them holding one pair of scissors?

    • @DavidAndrewsPEC
      @DavidAndrewsPEC Před 4 lety +75

      Wrong.
      Geoff Emerick - 1st engineer
      Richard Lush - 2nd engineer
      Also involved:
      Ken Townsend - technical engineer (responsible for solving the problem of syncing two Studer J37 four-track machines for A Day In The Life).
      It's definitely _engineers_.

    • @joahanramirez5811
      @joahanramirez5811 Před 4 lety +25

      Geoff was mostly or rather fully responsible for all the innovating sounds we can hear. Geoff describes in his book that he was the one that figured out how splice the two different takes and speed one up while slowing the other one down. Even then we know Geoff and George Martin where working very closely together. But I wish Geoff would get the recognition he deserves with the Beatles sonic innovations. I see George Martin get a lot of credit or people will never speak on how the Beatles achieved so many different sounds never heard before

    • @DavidAndrewsPEC
      @DavidAndrewsPEC Před 4 lety +8

      @@joahanramirez5811
      True, but Ken Townsend shouldn't be forgotten: the 'flange/ADT" thing was his, as was the syncing of two J37s with a VCO and a power amplifier driving the second machine from the first by using a 50Hz sine wave recorded on track 1.

  • @GC-fj4lc
    @GC-fj4lc Před 4 lety +894

    All I can focus on is the "Paul is dead" theory because he's facing backward on the album cover.

    • @pauliverson6005
      @pauliverson6005 Před 4 lety +102

      Lmao me too. I cant unsee all of the subtle references and hints that he is dead.

    • @asm42
      @asm42 Před 4 lety +178

      He just wants you to look at his bum

    • @name-vl7mg
      @name-vl7mg Před 4 lety +9

      M M
      I was thinking the same thing

    • @honeyholly001
      @honeyholly001 Před 4 lety +13

      Was thinking same thing. Plastic Paul I mean Plastic Soul.

    • @Mars-vc6xr
      @Mars-vc6xr Před 4 lety +9

      You mean, Faul. 🤔

  • @jaydenbrownman4181
    @jaydenbrownman4181 Před 4 lety +94

    Real reason:
    John had voice crack for a whole minute

  • @plasticage2085
    @plasticage2085 Před 5 lety +2793

    Living is easy with eyes closed, misunderstanding all you see.
    genius, just a genius. period

    • @NemorisInferioris
      @NemorisInferioris Před 5 lety +23

      That's John Lennon for ya

    • @MooScree
      @MooScree Před 5 lety +3

      ...Or hear. :)

    • @tash5540
      @tash5540 Před 5 lety +16

      Not that genius, it's only because he makes the lyrics more subtle like many rock bands do. Read some of Kurt Cobain lyrics and you'll realise he's a lyrical genius, mainly because he's not emphasizing his masterpieces.

    • @amyjoblevins
      @amyjoblevins Před 5 lety +16

      I had "living is easy with eyes closed" engraved on my first iPod when I started college. Always loved that statement.

    • @kian9783
      @kian9783 Před 5 lety +20

      Tash Cobain has nothing on Lennon despite how good Cobain was

  • @bluetortilla
    @bluetortilla Před 5 lety +1489

    It definitely sounds deliberate. Like when LSD starts kicking in lol!

    • @_sumina
      @_sumina Před 5 lety +13

      it most likely was

    • @quietdemon8138
      @quietdemon8138 Před 4 lety +5

      Because it was 2 different recordings they had to be matched pitch wise to maintain consistency but retain it’s unique intention which is music making genius imo

    • @danklordylord3783
      @danklordylord3783 Před 4 lety +15

      i noticed this about the song while on lsd haha

    • @epiphonium
      @epiphonium Před 4 lety +5

      @@danklordylord3783 same here man, it was abundant back then in high school

    • @tristenatorplaysgames6833
      @tristenatorplaysgames6833 Před 4 lety +3

      epiphonium same also here it’s such a different experience.

  • @turquisestones
    @turquisestones Před 3 lety +273

    As usual, if John says something bad about any of his tracks, then it's definitely a masterpiece.

    • @Kermit_T_Frog
      @Kermit_T_Frog Před rokem +7

      Only an expression of John's, not to mention George's, complaint that Paul was selfish. His belief that Paul, with complicity of George Martin, hogged studio time in favor of McCartney songs to the neglect of Lennon songs. Funny how McCartney was such a "perfectionist" with regard to his songs as a Beatle and so perfunctory as a solo artist.

    • @ibkristykat
      @ibkristykat Před rokem +2

      ​@@Kermit_T_Frog so they complained that Paul wanted his music to sound perfect to him? 😅 sounds like they just didn't appreciate good music production due to a difference in opinion. They kinda liked playing live and getting it done - for a long time. George even admitted later on he and Paul just have 2 different styles of practicing the song too.

    • @Kermit_T_Frog
      @Kermit_T_Frog Před rokem

      @@ibkristykat The production values on Paul's solo albums were nothing great. Often plain bad. And I don't know what you are talking about with regard to difference in style, other than that George didn't like Paul's much. As was the often the case with John and even Ringo. Most certainly when it came to Paul's solo work. Case in point,? "Back Off Boogaloo."

    • @ibkristykat
      @ibkristykat Před rokem +2

      @@Kermit_T_Frog have you never seen the Get Back series? You can kinda hear Paul say he wanted the song to be practiced and George wanted to riff and play along until they figured it out. I saw George H. Interviews in the 80s that summed it up as I already stated - "we have different styles in the studio. I prefer the live jams that get recorded and Paul will want to perfect everything first and I just don't like that".
      So yes most of them had different styles that maybe made them a little snootier about Paul's style. Instead of letting it be they would argue and insult at times toward the end. Kinda sad really. George was growing into his style and taking the reigns and insisting his stuff get heard too while John & Paul led as they always did. There was a level of hierarchy in the band it seemed while also being a real band. One person argued with me that it was John's band. It was in the 50s. Then it became a BAND with all 4 contributing and having a say. If they didn't why do you hear studio audio letting us hear them argue with George M. About the sound they wanted much less each other.

    • @ibkristykat
      @ibkristykat Před rokem +3

      @@Kermit_T_Frog anywho I like Paul's work regardless of your POV

  • @bmo1428
    @bmo1428 Před 4 lety +945

    The song is 60 years old, and I’m still listening in 2020, thats evolution.

  • @brianquinn989
    @brianquinn989 Před 5 lety +1754

    If Paul was sabotaging Johns work then I think he owes Paul a debt of gratitude. I wish someone like Paul would sabotage my work.

    • @EmileJoulbert
      @EmileJoulbert Před 5 lety +38

      It's an odd statement, especially considering John in many quarters still is regarded as the experimental Beatle. And in 1980 he appears to be whining about it.

    • @ChrisMaxfieldActs
      @ChrisMaxfieldActs Před 5 lety +112

      @@EmileJoulbert John was making excuses for his own wishy-washiness (and drug-addledness), for the most part. On the other hand, as George Martin said, John's imagination was always beyond what could be put on tape, at least in that period. If you hear it one way in your head, and it sounds different in the end, you might be disappointed. Blaming Paul was just spiteful and silly.

    • @psychorook
      @psychorook Před 5 lety +19

      He sabotaged the beginning of this song with his mellotron intro.

    • @charwest9449
      @charwest9449 Před 5 lety +50

      @@EmileJoulbert As I understand it, Paul is regarded in many quarters as the experimental Beatle. Paul is the one who was into the avante garde art scene, and was working with George Martin to come up with cool sounds. John seemed extremely bothered by all that, even said some nasty things about George Martin and refused to work with him again at one point. And you can see in John's solo work, trying to get back to just rock n roll. I mean, choosing Phil Spector in itself is a statement. And then this comment, which in that context makes perfect sense.

    • @charwest9449
      @charwest9449 Před 5 lety +2

      Brian Quinn, haha, great comment.

  • @JohnAlesi
    @JohnAlesi Před 5 lety +3095

    I'm still pissed that EMI never gave The Beatles access to better recording equipment and studios in the early days.

    • @walkonfire
      @walkonfire Před 5 lety +275

      John Alesi maybe a blessing? The engineering required to circumvent this limitation was masterful!

    • @yummyyum36719
      @yummyyum36719 Před 5 lety +149

      Right. There is an Abbey Road Paul's isolated bass floating around on CZcams. As wonderful as Paul's musical ideas for the bass were the actual sound of the bass is thin and disappointing. Imagine having the band's best instrumentalist on his primary instrument and not giving it the full, rich sound it deserved. Not sure what George Martin was thinking there. Paul's ideas alone save the lackluster recording quality.

    • @hiredgunscotty
      @hiredgunscotty Před 5 lety +9

      or their later days...

    • @doriandriver7968
      @doriandriver7968 Před 5 lety +160

      “The enemy of art is the absence of limitations.” - Orson Welles

    • @philipstearn4743
      @philipstearn4743 Před 4 lety +99

      In the early days the facilities at Abbey Road were state of the art for the early sixties, they were as good as they got at that time. It was not till around 67-68 that eight track recorders became available, and EMI had one of the first, which the Beatles and the engineers used before it had been fully tested by the Abbey Road technical department and approved for use.

  • @raindrops21_9
    @raindrops21_9 Před 4 lety +1512

    That evil genius Paul McCartney at it again, subconsciously sabotaging this song so that it would become one of the most epic songs ever recorded. John really needed to lay off the mind-bending drugs.

    • @dardoroth
      @dardoroth Před 4 lety +111

      John really needed to do whatever the fuck he wanted.

    • @Lucille_McCartney73
      @Lucille_McCartney73 Před 4 lety +24

      Freshcookies 21 Paul didn’t do anything leave him alone! :(

    • @raindrops21_9
      @raindrops21_9 Před 4 lety +68

      @@Lucille_McCartney73 try reading what I wrote again. This time s l o w l y...

    • @Lucille_McCartney73
      @Lucille_McCartney73 Před 4 lety +7

      Freshcookies 21 I did and my response is the same. Ik u said “sabotaging this song so it would become one of the most epic songs ever recorded” but I get upset when ppl say Paulie sabotaged or something. Also, love your profile pic! Just noticed!

    • @raindrops21_9
      @raindrops21_9 Před 4 lety +77

      @@Lucille_McCartney73 the narrator says something about John "being unhappy with the outcome of the song, even suggesting that Paul was subconsciously sabotaging the song..." so it's not how *I* feel, rather mine was a sarcastic response to John's crazy theory. Get it?

  • @SmilingAdvocate
    @SmilingAdvocate Před 4 lety +712

    I can’t hear this song without a recent memory haunting me: I went to The Beatles Story meuseum in Liverpool a month ago and in the Seargent Pepper section, I wasn’t looking where I was going and tripped and fell in the mock grave as Strawberry Fields Forever played

  • @jamesharwell
    @jamesharwell Před 5 lety +1618

    I don't prefer the original take 26. Final product was perfect.

    • @e32b61
      @e32b61 Před 5 lety +37

      James Harwell But it's not perfect. It's just what we're used to because it's the final official product. Quite frankly, I agree with George Martin who said to his dying day that it was purer and more emotional when it started with the first verse and not the chorus.

    • @e32b61
      @e32b61 Před 5 lety +9

      That being said, I think John's delivery in take 26 is too frenetic, which was probably a product of all the excitement involved. Slowing it down was for the best, but it should have been sung slower to begin with, not simply had the tape slowed down which muddied and slurred John's beautiful voice. Dare I say it - it did what Autotune does- it removed the human feel from the vocal performance.

    • @squmipusmcgrimpusstreamsac2645
      @squmipusmcgrimpusstreamsac2645 Před 5 lety +9

      I wish they kept the ending from take 7

    • @tash5540
      @tash5540 Před 5 lety +13

      Take 7 made sense, but the final product was so unique and dark that it was just pure innovation and a heavy experience for any listener who expected another happy beatles song.

    • @motorwayt-s628
      @motorwayt-s628 Před 5 lety +2

      I think take 26 sounded a little too fast and happy, I'm glad they went with the final

  • @nigelpufkin6352
    @nigelpufkin6352 Před 5 lety +362

    I've always noticed the transition, and always thought of it as an audio representation of the wavy, warping visuals you sometimes see on acid trips.

  • @hugodavies5470
    @hugodavies5470 Před 4 lety +160

    Imagine if strawberry fields forever didn’t have the beat drop

  • @rundoetx
    @rundoetx Před 4 lety +82

    In my humble opinion. "All You Need Is Love", "Strawberry Fields" and "Penny Lane" were the Beatles at their peak.

    • @stephanelarocque77
      @stephanelarocque77 Před 4 lety +5

      Magical Mystery Tour album :)

    • @rundoetx
      @rundoetx Před 4 lety

      @@stephanelarocque77 That's it. i keep going back to Side 2 these days.

    • @jacksons1010
      @jacksons1010 Před 4 lety +10

      @@stephanelarocque77 _Strawberry Fields_ and _Penny Lane_ were intended for _Sgt. Pepper's_ . The Beatles were pressured into releasing them as a double-sided single by the record company.

  • @FelixMarshFTW
    @FelixMarshFTW Před 5 lety +207

    I though you were gonna talk about the "fookin hell" in Hey Jude

  • @frankenz66
    @frankenz66 Před 5 lety +161

    It definitely makes it sound like you're on a "trip" when you listen to it. Not that I have been on one, literally, but have an imagination

    • @RedVynil
      @RedVynil Před 5 lety +5

      same here! I like the kind of psych that makes you see things BEFORE you take the drugs! Who needs drugs when you have an imagination?

    • @frankenz66
      @frankenz66 Před 5 lety

      @@RedVynil Some parts of their album Magical Mystery Tour were trippy to one's with imagination.

    • @RedVynil
      @RedVynil Před 5 lety

      Yes, I know! I've got most of it ready to go into The Enpsychlopedia. The only ones I'm not using are the two Paul songs.

    • @MarsAttack23
      @MarsAttack23 Před 4 lety

      @@RedVynil I'm sure you don't need drugs, but acid makes everything better man

    • @RedVynil
      @RedVynil Před 4 lety

      No, thanks. I'll stay straight.

  • @jesslesinski
    @jesslesinski Před 4 lety +405

    “John Lennon said that he wasn’t pleased when the final edit came out.”
    Really? John Lennon wasn’t happy about a thing? Then he blamed Paul McCartney? So out of character...

    • @braedynadams2827
      @braedynadams2827 Před 3 lety +6

      stop. just stop. john was a wonderful person. please stop acting like he isnt.

    • @jesslesinski
      @jesslesinski Před 3 lety +59

      @@braedynadams2827 What about John actually made him a good person? The part where he beat his wife? How about when he abandoned his son? How about when he cheated on Yoko? John was a legitimately terrible person. Good music does not equal good person.

    • @braedynadams2827
      @braedynadams2827 Před 3 lety +7

      @@jesslesinski he never beat his wife, you just havent done research, yoko forced him to stay away from julian, and he never cheated on yoko so..

    • @buhlenkuna1800
      @buhlenkuna1800 Před 3 lety +8

      @@jesslesinski You're just spreading more lies about John! He never beat his wife, he never cheated on Yoko and he was forced to stay away from Julian! Also he was a peace activist who helped fight for equal rights and expose the corrupt politicians! He was a great person! You just don't do research. You're lying so I'd advise you to do more research before spreading such misinformation. Shut up!

    • @supportsquid
      @supportsquid Před 3 lety +47

      @@braedynadams2827 "I used to be cruel to my woman, and physically - any woman. I was a hitter. I couldn't express myself and I hit. I fought men and I hit women. That is why I am always on about peace." - John Lennon in All We Are Saying: The Last Major Interview with John Lennon and Yoko Ono.
      Also, I guess you've never heard of May Pang and the lost weekend?

  • @tonypurcell1049
    @tonypurcell1049 Před 4 lety +83

    Unless you were there, you can't imagine what it was like as a young boy in the sixties hearing this and having no idea how they did it, but knowing that it was special. Knowing how it was done just reinforces what we knew all along, The Beatles were the best band ever!

  • @ace-smith
    @ace-smith Před 5 lety +628

    This made me enjoy Strawberry Fields Forever even more.

    • @truthreigns3465
      @truthreigns3465 Před 5 lety +1

      same here, I just got a few new productions beatles albums basically for the quality, I don't always like to hear the crackling and popping of older original records, even though i do love them and own many originals. I played the sgt peppers lonely album for my 4 year old son and he absolutely loves it, his favorite songs are hello goodbye and strawberry fields, new beatles fan in the making

    • @Dannyboy92701
      @Dannyboy92701 Před 5 lety

      Same

  • @mattbanka7236
    @mattbanka7236 Před 4 lety +741

    If strawberry fields wasn't released like that, I don't think it would have been as good a song.

    • @bobbyjonkey13
      @bobbyjonkey13 Před 2 lety +4

      if it hadn't been done like that it would have been more like a simple ballad, haven't you heard all the takes of it yet?

  • @michman2
    @michman2 Před 10 měsíci +11

    I'm still crushed that in 2023, after a lifetime of devouring Beatles' hits that I've only now found that there was no harpsichord in "In My Life".

    • @rassilontdavros3004
      @rassilontdavros3004 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Once you realize that it's a sped-up piano, it's pretty much impossible to un-hear it!

  • @sto620
    @sto620 Před 3 lety +59

    I’ve listened to Strawberry Fields hundreds of times and never tire of it, owing much to the incredible production. It’s candy for the ears. Oh, and the drumming... how it builds and propels the song... quintessential Ringo and totally original.

  • @hebber1961
    @hebber1961 Před 5 lety +988

    Sabotaging?? I wish McCartney would "sabatoge" things I do.

    • @8rr725
      @8rr725 Před 5 lety +30

      +No,Isaidposse Honestly, that sounds like something Yoko would say. She probably put that in John's head.

    • @jpoeste
      @jpoeste Před 5 lety +3

      Maybe you mean Billy Shears...

    • @OldSchoolVibes1978
      @OldSchoolVibes1978 Před 5 lety +4

      @@jpoeste Billy Faul still fooling them all

    • @jpoeste
      @jpoeste Před 5 lety

      @@OldSchoolVibes1978 So true!

    • @lawrence-yx1ew
      @lawrence-yx1ew Před 5 lety +4

      I want Paul McCartney to sabotage my asshole

  • @EchoesonMars
    @EchoesonMars Před 5 lety +187

    This just shows why George Martin was the 5th Beatle

  • @LRayWilliams
    @LRayWilliams Před 4 lety +35

    Strawberry Fields Forever is a masterpiece

  • @mortis5150
    @mortis5150 Před 4 lety +381

    I have a feeling John and Paul get more credit than they deserve and Martin doesn’t get enough...

    • @raindrops21_9
      @raindrops21_9 Před 4 lety +68

      I think any self-respecting Beatle fan knows that Martin was absolutely vital - the 5th Beatle, but so much of what he did, came from the seeds implanted by the boys themselves. I often get the impression that people almost want to give Martin actual song-writing credit and I don't think that's appropriate.

    • @HBSuccess
      @HBSuccess Před 4 lety +10

      Freshcookies 21 Not all the time but In couple cases it absolutely would be IMHO. Eleanor Rigby for example. Martin’s string arrangements and orchestration is just as important as the words/melody.

    • @HBSuccess
      @HBSuccess Před 4 lety +14

      Fact. But it’s one of those rare synergies the universe creates once or twice a century... Classically trained Geo Martin was wasting his pent-up creativity and talent recording spoken comedy albums... in walk these four kids... We’re talking about it almost 60 yrs later and they will still be talking about it 600 yrs. later.

    • @raindrops21_9
      @raindrops21_9 Před 4 lety +3

      You said it: opinion. We'll never really know. But what I do know is that a lot of what was orchestrated by Martin were ideas and musical suggestions by John, and Paul in particular, and that is no way meant to detract from Martin's contribution. ETA: the idea for the strings on Eleanor Rigby came directly from Paul (who in turn, was inspired by Bernard Herrmann). Paul had just watched Psycho and he went into the studio and told GM that he wanted a similar violin sound on Eleanor.

    • @jeaniechowdury576
      @jeaniechowdury576 Před 4 lety +3

      Shawn Ryan 😩

  • @lucasbeer353
    @lucasbeer353 Před 5 lety +313

    John didn't like his voice. He thought it was too light. He wanted it darker. I think much more was slowed down in their catalogue.

    • @RedVynil
      @RedVynil Před 5 lety +2

      You're right! Slowed down and sped up.

    • @lucasbeer353
      @lucasbeer353 Před 5 lety +14

      Paul got much stronger voice than John. Listen to Sgt Peppers or A Hard Day's Night. HDN was actually written by John but he couldn't reach the notes in the bridge so Paul sang it. There's no comparsion man, Paul was much much better singer. But John got something in his voice that was alluring.

    • @RedVynil
      @RedVynil Před 5 lety +11

      So Paul had a larger vocal range than John! That doesn't make one any better than the other.

    • @lucasbeer353
      @lucasbeer353 Před 5 lety +8

      Actually it does, cos you can sing more stuff.

    • @RedVynil
      @RedVynil Před 5 lety +2

      But you can always train yourself to sing in another octave range! Wayne Newton always sounded like a girl until he got tired of Johnny Carson teasing him about his high voice so, he got someone to get him to sing in a deeper register.

  • @Alexanderrayman
    @Alexanderrayman Před 5 lety +701

    Fun. I've actually thought that it sounds slowed down. Nice to have it confirmed.

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 Před 5 lety +2

      Same here.

    • @maxcuthbert100
      @maxcuthbert100 Před 5 lety +15

      Slowed down works well for the mood of the song....wouldn't have it any other way.

    • @jesseedmondson2861
      @jesseedmondson2861 Před 5 lety +2

      Yeah I thought the same thing.

    • @alicegolightly9699
      @alicegolightly9699 Před 5 lety +15

      Yeah it makes his voice sound more trippy, which I feel adds to the lyric...

    • @eenavid
      @eenavid Před 5 lety +3

      its a piece of artwork ,,,edited or not ..very interesting tho,,,

  • @danobrien3695
    @danobrien3695 Před rokem +7

    What impressed me was, not only the PITCH matched, but the TEMPO matched also.

    • @katewarner1623
      @katewarner1623 Před rokem +2

      This is what I find almost hard to believe. How did they both magically match up?

  • @MisterBurgerBeachball
    @MisterBurgerBeachball Před 2 lety +15

    I'd just like to thank this channel. For making this video and introducing me to an absolute masterpiece of a song.

  • @MsTimothyswan
    @MsTimothyswan Před 5 lety +503

    after viewing this video, I am still convinced that Strawberry Fields Forever remains a masterpiece

    • @davidsaelens9168
      @davidsaelens9168 Před 5 lety +1

      I agree Timothy. David L. Saelens (drummer, Rock Island, IL.) Posted 30 May 2019.

    • @hiredgunscotty
      @hiredgunscotty Před 5 lety

      And youd be right. Along with about 20-25 other Beatle Masterpieces.

  • @jaymowil
    @jaymowil Před 5 lety +1691

    John, as much as I love him, said a lot of stupid shit about the Beatles after it was over. If only he’d lived to see his legacy.

    • @mattyc.9332
      @mattyc.9332 Před 5 lety +139

      Totally agree with you. He was a complex person...

    • @fifthbeatle
      @fifthbeatle Před 5 lety +176

      Self criticism and self awareness are very big signs of high intelligence.

    • @alfjgist
      @alfjgist Před 5 lety +132

      After the split, he just wanted to move on from the Beatles, as he felt his writing style had changed. His thought was he and the others had grown musically from “I Want to Hold Your Hand”, and he vocalized that. Of course, calling certain songs throwaway shit and trite was stupid, but he just wanted people to know each of the Beatles was an individual, and shouldn’t have their current work tied to the past.

    • @Vanderstein950
      @Vanderstein950 Před 5 lety +1

      alfjgist c

    • @spudwas
      @spudwas Před 5 lety +8

      It's not what Zephaniah says...It's how he says it.

  • @User-jk8wq
    @User-jk8wq Před 4 lety +49

    Just discovered this channel and I love it! I’m a massive recording geek so hearing all about how the Beatles and the engineers built the tracks is fascinating for me. If I may make one correction though, you say at 3:17 they used scissors to splice tapes together; they actually used razor blades. Excuse me being so pedantic

    • @notvalidcharacters
      @notvalidcharacters Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah, scissors would be strange. A single-edge razor blade, a splicing block, a grease pencil and gen-yoo-wine splicing tape. And save those tiny bits of tape just there in case we need to put them back.

  • @SydneyBorn04
    @SydneyBorn04 Před 4 lety +17

    That's why the first time i heard this song, I thought it was paul who was singing because the timbre of the voice was much closer to his than it is to john

  • @briangallagher2236
    @briangallagher2236 Před 5 lety +321

    I have a copy of Take 7, guitar, bass, mellotron,drums, John's voice not slowed down. Sounds great.

    • @tilesetter1953
      @tilesetter1953 Před 5 lety +4

      Where and how did you get it?

    • @Wijo_Koek
      @Wijo_Koek Před 5 lety +7

      @@tilesetter1953 It's on Spotify: Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Deluxe Edition)

    • @iliveinsin
      @iliveinsin Před 5 lety +4

      @@tilesetter1953 It's also on Anthology 2. I personally prefer take 7.

    • @gnomechompski7984
      @gnomechompski7984 Před 4 lety

      Take 7 is amazing

  • @nahuel_costa
    @nahuel_costa Před 4 lety +603

    Always thought that it said:
    Let me take you down cause im going too
    Strawberry fields
    (Like separated phrases)

  • @arturus
    @arturus Před 4 lety +3

    Speechless...terrific exposition, research and presentation. I can't unhear the splice and actually don't mind. Great content!

  • @dogf421
    @dogf421 Před 4 lety +27

    ive always found this moment overwhelmingly menacing

  • @guatemalantomcat
    @guatemalantomcat Před 5 lety +1101

    I noticed the switch up during a shroom trip but I thought it was just cuz the shrooms

    • @eliscar5147
      @eliscar5147 Před 5 lety +35

      how good did it feel to know it wasn’t just the shrooms?

    • @sinnedyarzepol4876
      @sinnedyarzepol4876 Před 5 lety

      guatemalantomcat
      👍🏽🤣!!!

    • @eliscar5147
      @eliscar5147 Před 5 lety +2

      NPC Slayer Interesting you would’ve been disappointed, I feel like I found a gem.

    • @andypetrovich2155
      @andypetrovich2155 Před 5 lety +9

      Mushrooms help us understand music.

    • @TheXxroquexX
      @TheXxroquexX Před 5 lety +15

      Shrooms and acid really make things stand out more

  • @GregoryLuce
    @GregoryLuce Před 5 lety +164

    Excellent analysis and explanation. “Nostalgic fever dream” is brilliant.

    • @MrUnderdog-vn3zf
      @MrUnderdog-vn3zf Před 5 lety +3

      Agreed. The perfect description. 😁👍🏻

    • @thorlivingstone6873
      @thorlivingstone6873 Před 5 lety +1

      Yeah,was that particular magic line that stood out for me too.Great words.World lacking of craftsmen hitting the nail.

  • @burbear47
    @burbear47 Před 2 lety +1

    So glad that I found this channel. I’ve been a Beatles fan since I was six in 1964. But I never had the resources to listen to the music in this manner. This is great work.

  • @vincebellisano1347
    @vincebellisano1347 Před 4 lety +28

    The song is an amazing peice that will last forever.

  • @mrmjb1960
    @mrmjb1960 Před 5 lety +300

    Also,if You listen closely,In Ringo's wild drum ending You will hear John's Cranberry Sauce,mistaken for I Buried Paul,spoken twice at the end.

    • @yummyyum36719
      @yummyyum36719 Před 5 lety +24

      In the original drum recording it is very clearly "cranberry sauce".

    • @lauvinqq5605
      @lauvinqq5605 Před 4 lety +3

      Damm at first i heard "im very bored"

    • @handle-schmandle
      @handle-schmandle Před 4 lety

      So if John says “I buried Paul”, then Paul is really dead? Is that your theory? There’s no other option?

    • @Rixxrox1969
      @Rixxrox1969 Před 21 dnem +1

      @@handle-schmandle Turn I buried Paul backwards and it sounds like ,Me, you , and John.

    • @handle-schmandle
      @handle-schmandle Před 19 dny

      @@Rixxrox1969 I didn’t know that one. My point earlier is that “I buried Paul” doesn’t mean that Paul is really dead. It was just The Beatles messing with us.

  • @sweetbermudaonions60
    @sweetbermudaonions60 Před 5 lety +389

    The song stands as a masterpiece regardless of what John said. John was a very moody kind of person, so depending on his mood when asked a question, any question, you just might get 10 different answers.

    • @carlosmatos9848
      @carlosmatos9848 Před 5 lety +13

      John also said Penny Lane was "granny music" so I take his criticism with a grain of salt, lol

    • @sweetbermudaonions60
      @sweetbermudaonions60 Před 5 lety +10

      @@carlosmatos9848 No matter what John might have said about any of their songs, he surely never complianed about the royalty checks coming in... :)

    • @JonathanNichollstechandsuch8
      @JonathanNichollstechandsuch8 Před 5 lety +6

      Carlos Matos Didn’t John also say that was what he said about Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da. If I remember the story correct, John hated Ob-La-Di Ob-La-Da, and came into the studio supposedly high and angrily played the opening chords of the song, which weren’t in there before, which Paul kept in the final song. Argument got pretty heated, and Paul almost punched John.

    • @silasmarner7586
      @silasmarner7586 Před 5 lety +3

      ...and he's exactly the only human on the planet that is entitled to opine. No, the finished song is a work of perfection. period.

    • @ninjabluewings
      @ninjabluewings Před 5 lety +4

      Yes I agree, John was a GENIUS! Asshole at times, but I guess when you mix a scouse guy with super stardom, super richness and drugs you occasionally get brainstorms but that is the nature of the beast I guess

  • @idaslpdhr
    @idaslpdhr Před 4 lety +12

    And what you forgot to mention (don't know why) is that the take 26 was slowed down by hand, ie putting your finger on the tape machine to slow it down, which is even more brilliant

  • @mbeth83
    @mbeth83 Před 4 lety

    Well, my mind has been blown. What a seamless transition. Thank you for this. I’ve been listening to Strawberry Fields nonstop for two days now. Take 7 is officially my favorite version of this song. It was like hearing a new Beatles song and it brings me such joy.

  • @mmjahink
    @mmjahink Před 5 lety +89

    The fact that it's "experimental" is just another reason why this track is so good. Just like most of the Beatles' other songs, it's always about the song itself as well as how it was recorded.

    • @TroyJakubiec
      @TroyJakubiec Před 5 lety +2

      When was the last time a track so innovative topped the charts? I think it speaks not only to them as artists but to the way society was willing to accept the experimentation

  • @yorgle
    @yorgle Před 5 lety +42

    "Nostalgic fever dream" is probably the best description of the song. It's remembering old times, but the memories are somehow a little wrong... love this song.

  • @dakinayantv3245
    @dakinayantv3245 Před 4 lety +35

    Back then nobody cared about having a "perfect" sound. People preferred music that sounded weird even if a bit uneven.

    • @SydneyBorn04
      @SydneyBorn04 Před 4 lety +3

      And that is how we arrived at EDM/dubstep

  • @surfghost9121
    @surfghost9121 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Knew about the splice, but never heard the original take of part two. So brilliant. Thanks so much for these videos.

  • @ktcarl
    @ktcarl Před 5 lety +98

    George Martin explained this a long time ago. So did Lennon in the Rolling Stone Interview in 1980. Thanks for bringing it back. It's an interesting subject.

  • @surroundgatari
    @surroundgatari Před 5 lety +58

    That's easily one of my favourite musical moments of The Beatles, it starts off so simple and quaint and it goes into a more desperate place where the longing for childhood goes into desperation and paranoia. Just great! Still more complex and nuanced than by far most of the rock bands that came after them...

  • @ericlewis217
    @ericlewis217 Před 4 lety +1

    my favorite song of all time and i love the edit. great work explaining this in great detail

  • @ericdebord
    @ericdebord Před 4 lety +2

    I love this song, I remember being a kid , laying on our red carpet in front of the living room window , the sun beaming threw.
    it's winter time in Michigan and I'm enjoying spring time in my mind listening to the Beatles

  • @gjermundification
    @gjermundification Před 4 lety +51

    This has puzzled me since the first time I heard the track; my impression as a child was that the first part was recorded in the countryside and that they suddenly reach a crowded square.

    • @liberatedhippything
      @liberatedhippything Před 4 lety +1

      I love hearing thoughts of when we were kids, this made me laugh. Kid logic is awesome. Ty for this

  • @quietdemon8138
    @quietdemon8138 Před 5 lety +22

    It’s so awesomely edited that you can’t tell there’s a 19 take difference this shows how ingenious both the Beatles and their producers were

  • @Mountlougallops
    @Mountlougallops Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for taking me back to the first time I played this album while listening on my big sad earphones. I was a young teen and the sound was new to us all. Beautiful. Dreamy. Real.

  • @matijakrunic7498
    @matijakrunic7498 Před 4 lety +2

    You have enriched this tune. What a gift. Magnificent.

  • @joeramirez709
    @joeramirez709 Před 5 lety +394

    Despite John's final opinion, it's classic. Martin's work is nothing less than genius. Great commentary by the way.
    P.s.
    John was a perfectionist, except when it came to Yoko's singing.
    P.s.s.
    They say love is blind.
    Apparently, for my favorite Beatle, it was also deaf when it came to Yoko's singing.
    😊

    • @Notalloldpeople
      @Notalloldpeople Před 5 lety +16

      Joe Ramirez I Geoff emerick needs crediting for the splice

    • @SonicRave1
      @SonicRave1 Před 5 lety +7

      Geoff should get a lot more credit than he does with everything he did to help bring the sounds the Beatles heard in there head to life!

    • @herconfession323
      @herconfession323 Před 5 lety +1

      @@SonicRave1 regarding Geoff, i completely agree

    • @devintariel3769
      @devintariel3769 Před 5 lety +14

      Paul was about implementation, John was about experimentation, George was about Spiritualism, Ringo was about realism. Heart Soul Body Mind all together it's what makes it so great.

    • @SuperNevile
      @SuperNevile Před 5 lety +2

      According to George Martin's book, John wanted to re-record everything the Beatles had recorded. Apparently, for John "most of what the Beatles did was rubbish", especially SFF.

  • @manuelgasse
    @manuelgasse Před 5 lety +66

    Probably my favorite Beatles song. The arrangements are so amazing.

  • @nezbit8989
    @nezbit8989 Před 4 lety +2

    Absolutely fascinating video, the edit apart from being insanely accurate creates a complete shift in atmosphere to the song which I had always noticed but didn’t know how or why it was so. The first minute of bright and positive sliding into intensity and deep ness is indeed characteristic of an acid trip, one minute your in the normal world and suddenly everything changes into a dreamy nature. Just brilliant and another example of why I love this band the most of all 💪😊

  • @curroleallozano2814
    @curroleallozano2814 Před 4 lety +1

    i recently discoverd your channel and i love it, also this is one of my favorite songs from the beatles and i apriciate your work of study

  • @sewell2777
    @sewell2777 Před 5 lety +55

    I’ve always noticed the cuts, transitions etc. It’s never bothered me, because I’ve always assumed it was intentional. Nice to see everything broken down though!

  • @violentshemp7776
    @violentshemp7776 Před 5 lety +137

    if take 26 isn't a sped up recording, i'll eat my hat.

    • @RockandRollWoman
      @RockandRollWoman Před 5 lety +4

      Exactly what I thought

    • @KabobHope
      @KabobHope Před 5 lety +6

      VS you win the internet for best name!

    • @violentshemp7776
      @violentshemp7776 Před 5 lety +6

      @@SikerScrapyard lol dude, it's SO obvious

    • @violentshemp7776
      @violentshemp7776 Před 5 lety +2

      @@SikerScrapyard i have played guitar and drums since i was 16, i understand tempo and key. and you are wrong

    • @pigknickers2975
      @pigknickers2975 Před 5 lety +4

      @@SikerScrapyard only way to solve this fellas, sample up the track take26 and start vari-speeding it around. My hunch would be it is as it is, faster and a key up but just my guess.

  • @milescorporosus4058
    @milescorporosus4058 Před 3 lety +37

    John: "I'm really digging these two totally different takes done at different tempos and in different keys."
    George Martin: "Yeah, they both sound great. Let's do another take and see if we can combine some of those ide--"
    John: "Just go ahead and figure out a way to splice them together."
    George Martin: ...
    John: "Both takes. In different keys. At different tempos. Together. So it sounds like one take."
    George Martin: ...
    John: "I'll wait."

  • @laz0rama
    @laz0rama Před 4 lety +3

    this is one of the best psychedelic songs i ever heard. the increasing darkness and density of the song as it progresses used to literally blow my mind when i used to listen while tripping back in the 70s and 80s. the beatles did some pretty awesome psychedelic work. strawberry fields forever, rain, tomorrow never knows, lucy in the sky with diamonds, ... a good set of headphones and a hit of decent blotter will show these songs in a whole new light to anyone that hasn't done so already.

  • @lauriebluesguy
    @lauriebluesguy Před 5 lety +113

    Great work by George Martin. He really was class.

    • @petercook360
      @petercook360 Před 5 lety +9

      Let's not forget engineer Geoff Emerick! He also worked on achieving this bit of brilliance. It's also worth noting that Martin and Emerick were working on this just a few days before Christmas of that year. There's always work to be done in Beatle land.

    • @pigknickers2975
      @pigknickers2975 Před 5 lety +4

      You can guarantee that it was an engineer that made the edit and probably first found the varispeed trick for getting the two versions together. I speak as an old sound engineer and sometime producer.

  • @talichnitom
    @talichnitom Před 5 lety +42

    the song is absolutely beautiful, but i'll never stop wondering how lennon wanted the song to end up sounding like!

  • @ibookboyuk
    @ibookboyuk Před 4 lety +1

    That was an amazing video. I can’t unhear that and wouldn’t want to. Thank you so much.

  • @robtoc
    @robtoc Před 3 lety

    Love this song.....very cool information you have here. I'm enjoying your channel, I just discovered it yesterday, obviously I'm now going deep down the rabbit hole!

  • @mscloudherder329
    @mscloudherder329 Před 4 lety +28

    Strawberry Fields Forever was the first record I ever bought, and I bought it as a 45, with Penny Lane on the other side. I absolutely loved it and played it to death. I had never heard music like that before.

  • @GeoZero
    @GeoZero Před 5 lety +19

    There will never be another Beatles. Their brilliant songs, lyrics, arrangements and recordings are unmatched.

    • @oiudatropen9548
      @oiudatropen9548 Před 5 lety

      Geo Zero true. There'll never be another beetles, but there may someday, be another group which creates as much revolutionary work of such High quality, But society now is even more buttoned down and intollerant of stepping outside the accepted ataus quothan it was when the beetles started out and at least as far as I can see it isnt ready to seeiously shake things up as happened in the 60's, I dint think that aveen if a few pople of equivalat talent, creativity and drive got together today,they wouldn't even be alloeed time when get I the stattingbox, much less get it n the track and in the race. But then again I dint think people in the late 50's and early 60s sensed that society was nearing a tipping point and that so much would change as dramatically as it did. Tho things are pretty bad and many are unhappy with the way things are the powers that be have grown more adept at nipping in the bud anything new which might threaten their control. The beetles could aprout and grow as they did in no small measure because the soil of society had a sort of fertilitywhixh nourished the, but now they have herbicides which kill such weeds before they even break the surface and GMO music which can survive the poisons they spray time kill those unwanted pest that manage to begin to take root and flourish. Not. Great analogy, but the point is as things are, even the Beetles wouldn't become the Beetles if they were starting off today. Many cinditionsoutside the group itself has to be just right for them to be able to become what they did and I don't think such a phenomenon could happen now. But who knows, as I've mentioned an awful lot of people aredissatuafued wirh the way things are now, so it's not impossible some major attitude adjustments might start happening more rapidly rhan one might expect. One never knows until it happens, or even until it's over. Agreed, never another Beetles, but simsrhing just as fantastic may eventually arise, but when it might happen is difficult to inpossible to so much as hazard a guess and having said that um guessing it isn't going to be any time soon.

    • @bluecollarmusic
      @bluecollarmusic Před 5 lety

      @@oiudatropen9548 I remember when the Bay City Rollers hit the states. The Scotland fab four, (Or were there 5?) LOL. In any case they were hyped up as the next Beatles. Their fame was brief. Even briefer than the Beatles.

  • @pattip2788
    @pattip2788 Před 4 lety +2

    I’ve noticed the change in John’s voice since I bought the vinyl album. I notice every little thing in there singing and background noises and voices. I still have the 45 ‘If I Fell’, where Paul’s voice cracks. I just love them so much!

  • @legendskys8188
    @legendskys8188 Před 3 lety +4

    I literally can't unhear this, but you haven't ruined the song for me, you've made it so much better

  • @ANinjaDucky
    @ANinjaDucky Před 5 lety +20

    This is a great channel concept! I have watched everything thus far. Please make more!

  • @verticalfish
    @verticalfish Před 5 lety +71

    This is the video that got me into the Beatles. Thank you.

    • @NolalanD
      @NolalanD Před 4 lety +4

      That's really awesome, I'm sure the poster is proud. You are not alone we are all a big family of Beatles fans.

  • @nogunnofear6703
    @nogunnofear6703 Před 2 lety +2

    First time I heard Strawberry Fields I was on an aircraft carrier off the California Coast late at night laying on the flight deck chilling while listening to an LA radio station. Looking at the stars and rocking back and forth. Blew me away. Definitely one of my favorite memories out of many in my love for the Beatles. Beatles 4 Ever!

  • @mikehay6582
    @mikehay6582 Před 3 lety +2

    I bought this song on 45 when it came out and must have listened to it 100 times to try to figure out what are The Beatles where doing. We'd gone from I Want To Hold Your Hand to Strawberry Fields Forever in such a short time and there certainly was some listener adjustment required. Thanks for your fascinating analysis of The Beatles collection.

  • @michaelcombs8367
    @michaelcombs8367 Před 4 lety +22

    Had no idea how it was done, but have always loved that transition.

  • @fabiannacht1784
    @fabiannacht1784 Před 5 lety +35

    Just a small correction - reel-to-reel tape was not cut with scissors but with a blade.

  • @millennialanimal
    @millennialanimal Před rokem +2

    I’ve recently been trying to recreate Tomorrow Never Knows and when recording the drums I noticed slight time differences and not like what naturally happens when recording without a click track, like when someone has cut two takes together, great video!

  • @williamvandenberg2295
    @williamvandenberg2295 Před 2 lety +2

    I can't imagine hearing this song any other way than the way we hear it now, it was a mystery to me back in the 60's and remains so today, mysterious, marvelous, mystical

  • @MyFunDays
    @MyFunDays Před 5 lety +13

    So happy to have discovered your channel. Great work as always. Take care

  • @fatbelly27
    @fatbelly27 Před 5 lety +44

    Thank you for this. I knew about it but have never heard it so beautifully explained.

  • @mrcody333cam
    @mrcody333cam Před 4 lety +30

    As for this, and nearly every other Beatles song, I wouldn’t have it any other way. I loved them just the way they are for all my life.

  • @muddywolfrecords
    @muddywolfrecords Před 3 lety +1

    An absolute beautiful mess!!
    Its seems Hendrix took the high piched piano idea (outro) and used it in
    Are You Experienced (the song)
    Love your channel good stuff!