Deconstructing Sgt. Pepper

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  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2009
  • Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
    The Beatles
    John Lennon
    Paul McCartney
    George Harrison
    Ringo Starr
    Produced by George Martin
    Engineered by Geoff Emerick
    ☮♡☮♡☮♡☮♡☮♡☮♡☮♡☮♡☮♡☮♡
    Recorded in February 1967, using two Studer J37 Multi-Track Recorders.
    After recording tracks onto the first tape machine (Tape A, see below), the tracks were then combined and mixed ("reduction mix" or "bouncing") onto tracks of the second tape machine (Tape B, as shown in these clips).
    Bouncing freed up tracks to overdub additional instruments. This technique was devised to overcome a limitation of 4-track recording equipment. Modern multi-track and digital recording studios make such efforts unnecessary.
    Information is from "The Beatles Recording Sessions" by Mark Lewisohn.
    Additional information is from "Recording the Beatles" by Brian Kehew and Kevin Ryan.
    Individual tracks from Tape B ( the "bounce" tape ) are heard in this video.
    Each track is shown in a different color.
    ************ TAPE B **************
    Track 1 .. GREEN 0:00 .. REDUCTION MIX (See Tape A info below)
    Rhythm track
    [ A1 Paul and George* on guitars, Ringo on drums ] + [ A2 (Paul on bass) ]
    * possibly John and George
    Track 2 .. BLUE 2:20 .. OVERDUB
    Horns arranged by George Martin
    "Punched-in" lead guitar played by Paul
    Track 3 .. RED 4:40 .. REDUCTION MIX (See Tape A info below)
    Vocals
    [ A3 (Lead Vocal by Paul) ] + [ A4 (Harmony vocals) ]
    Track 4 .. YELLOW 6:54 .. OVERDUB*
    * Audience Sound Effect
    * Last video segment shows all four tracks together
    * Audience track (yellow) not shown alone
    Additional information:
    ************ TAPE A **************
    TAPE A, the 1st Tape Machine (not heard in these clips)
    A1 .. Drums + 2 Guitars
    A2 .. Bass
    A3 .. Lead + Backing Vocals
    A4 .. Additional Harmony Vocals
    *************************************
    DISCLAIMER: "Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976, allowance is made for 'fair use' for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."
    (Sections 107-118 of the Copyright Act; Title 17, U.S. Code)
    ☮♡☮♡☮♡☮♡☮♡☮♡☮♡☮♡☮♡☮♡
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Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @guyfawkes9951
    @guyfawkes9951 Před 7 lety +774

    When you stop and consider how primitive the technology was when this was recorded it's absolutely astounding. No 64 track digital ProTools going on here. Four tracks. Physical tape edits with a razor blade. Almost no EQ to speak of. Once four tracks were finished they were pre-mixed and moved to another machine, after which they were done with no more changes possible. No endless tweezing to get a perfect note. Physically moving instruments and mics around the room to change the soundstage. Geoff Emerick deserves a ton of credit for his work on this album as well.

    • @wangdangdoodie
      @wangdangdoodie Před 6 lety +46

      Necessity is indeed the mother of invention. The Beatles were the band they were precisely because of the lack of technology. They had to work out a way of achieving the sound they wanted with the tools at their disposal, and what a job they did! Nowadays most groups spend two years making an album and emerge from the studio with a highly polished turd.

    • @vsmicer
      @vsmicer Před 5 lety +25

      They could create a faux eight-track with a technique called 'bouncing', where you record and fill all four tracks, condense it down to a single track or a two track on a second machine and have 2-3 tracks more to play with...problem with this technique is of course balance, synching and the danger of degraded signal...however, had they NOT done this, we would never have had Sgt Pepper at all, let alone the miracle stitching together of Strawberry Fields Forever's separate parts and takes. What the Beatles had to work with was effectively no more than a well-set out but primitive and limited home studio by today's standards - and with few of the effects and none of the computers.

    • @maxsteele3686
      @maxsteele3686 Před 5 lety +2

      vsmicer Can you briefly explain the story you mentioned behind the strawberry fields recording?

    • @pleasepermitmetospeakohgre1504
      @pleasepermitmetospeakohgre1504 Před 5 lety +6

      Max Steele
      Strawberry Fields Forever is a stitching together of 2 or 3 takes, some in a different key and tempo, so speeds and tempo needed to be matched.

    • @MANDALAMUSICNYC
      @MANDALAMUSICNYC Před 4 lety

      Guy Fawkes the bouncing smooths the attack on the guitars kinda melds it all together even Paul says so

  • @tp10488
    @tp10488 Před 9 lety +922

    When the vocal harmonies kick in, you really hear what made The Beatles as great as they were.

    • @stefanomirra3612
      @stefanomirra3612 Před 7 lety +25

      tp10488 ...imitate the vocal harmonies of Beach Boys?

    • @joseorozco4152
      @joseorozco4152 Před 7 lety +18

      AmoK 19 that's exactly what they were inspired by!!

    • @ischmidt
      @ischmidt Před 7 lety +55

      Both groups were imitating the vocal harmonies of the Everly Brothers.

    • @suesjoy
      @suesjoy Před 7 lety +3

      Because the lead guitar is truly nothing spectacular! I love you, John! Sorry to be critical. It's not like I can play like that! 😃🙃😇😳

    • @bretmaverick9434
      @bretmaverick9434 Před 7 lety +11

      Sue DeSimone it wasn't meant to be "spectacular"

  • @danigarcia7531
    @danigarcia7531 Před 7 lety +219

    It's so clever that George Martin put the background noise onto its own separate track. It made me realize how constant the crowd chatter actually is throughout the song

    • @Funkopedia
      @Funkopedia Před 5 lety +2

      was that the yellow line?

    • @ugeanspyrll6816
      @ugeanspyrll6816 Před 4 lety +8

      Dani Garcia The same technique was used oddly enough in 1965 on the Beach Boys Party! album which used featured overdubbed “party” noises to make the recordings sound live.

    • @billdowney1487
      @billdowney1487 Před 3 lety +7

      @@ugeanspyrll6816 The Beatles or should i say Paul ----- was always listening to the Beach Boys. Paul had the knack of using one's idea's to create his own version--- which is what all the greats do.

    • @murphymoe753
      @murphymoe753 Před 2 lety +2

      Mr. G.Martin was a one off genius

  • @maplespak
    @maplespak Před 8 lety +328

    I listend to this about 20 times already. It makes you appreciate the song and the Beatles even more. I never realized how raunchy those 2 guitars are in the song. No wonder Jimi Hendrix played Sgt. Pepper live.

    • @victorarena23
      @victorarena23 Před 6 lety +5

      3 guitars

    • @victorarena23
      @victorarena23 Před 6 lety +10

      actually 4. The power chords in the middle are an over dub from supposedly george but here it sounds like it might be part of Pauls lead

    • @billdowney1487
      @billdowney1487 Před 3 lety +12

      When the Beatles first went to see Hendrix --- they had just released Sgt Pepper 3 days earlier. Hendrix OPENED with the song !!! Really blew their minds.

    • @tyrannosauruszeppelin2205
      @tyrannosauruszeppelin2205 Před 2 lety +8

      I agree it really sounds like a Hendrix song with the vocals and the guitars. You can see., Sgt. Pepper's influences began to affect everyone within days...the most important album in all of rock.

    • @aaronquist8125
      @aaronquist8125 Před rokem

      The production and mix is so perfect that the raunchiness blends in so well. They are so raw and visceral here isolated! Sounds so damn good.

  • @wcapshaw5424
    @wcapshaw5424 Před 7 lety +92

    3:12 Best distortion I've heard in a long time!!!

    • @FGirao
      @FGirao Před 4 lety +5

      Would call this a fuzz by the modern definitions, but it fits

  • @billybill174
    @billybill174 Před 9 lety +635

    Unbelievable rhythm guitar.

    • @marvy1118
      @marvy1118 Před 9 lety +18

      Bill Chunky and funky!

    • @DaFreezeey
      @DaFreezeey Před 7 lety +55

      Bill Hi Bill. its actually 2 guitars playing Rhythm. Both John and George are playing on the Rhythm track. If you listen closely you can hear a chunky Epiphone Casino with the treble rolled of just chunken along on the chords while George plays some pentatonic licks on top with probably his start or SG. and then you have Paul's super compressed distorted lead track , probably played on his Casino or Esquire. So in total there is 3 guitars on this track

    • @fingolfinz550
      @fingolfinz550 Před 7 lety

      For real

    • @metafis2490
      @metafis2490 Před 7 lety +22

      Actually. John played NO guitar on the final version this song, Just vocals. Its also Paul on the rhythm track(track 1) along with George. track 2 guitar is all Paul.

    • @rrrripbing
      @rrrripbing Před 6 lety +30

      It's surprising how out of tune and sloppy the guitar playing sounds yet in the context of the song it sounds right. That was part of their genius I guess.

  • @marcgambell2767
    @marcgambell2767 Před 9 lety +2429

    George Martin was The Beatles secret weapon

    • @lynnturman8157
      @lynnturman8157 Před 9 lety +126

      He was the 5th Beatle if anybody was...

    • @wiredbri
      @wiredbri Před 9 lety +43

      Lynn Turman Brian Wilson did the job of all 5 beatles and still made the better album

    • @lynnturman8157
      @lynnturman8157 Před 9 lety +46

      Bran Kep Almost true. Brian didn't play all the instruments on Beach Boy recordings. But yeah, I agree that Brian in one person encompassed all the talents of the Beatles plus George Martin. Plus I've always felt that the pinnacle of artistry in rock isn't Sgt. Pepper or Rubber Soul or Abbey Road or Revolver but SMiLE. The Beatles can't touch it. And I don't say that lightly. I'm a huge Beatle fan.

    • @NateRuvin414
      @NateRuvin414 Před 9 lety +18

      Lynn Turman He didn't play ALL of the instruments. On his most famous recordings in his peak (1965-1967) the tracks were played by the wrecking crew from LA, but Brian would often jump in on bass guitar or organ, during those sessions.

    • @HBSuccess
      @HBSuccess Před 9 lety +14

      Frank Campbell Well put - that's the understatement of the century. He really was the '5th Beatle to a large degree. Anything requiring a written arrangement - Eleanor Rigby. String Sections. Horn sections .. that's a GM. He also performed a great deal of actual parts on the later recordings. Without him - no Beatles as we know them.

  • @TheCamsmit
    @TheCamsmit Před 10 lety +426

    Unreal vocals of Paul

  • @SeaStarTea
    @SeaStarTea Před 9 lety +468

    Please do this for the whole album! I will marry you, whoever you are!

    • @vicoilsteems9764
      @vicoilsteems9764 Před 6 lety +31

      George Martin.

    • @nightcorenation8201
      @nightcorenation8201 Před 6 lety +20

      I found the stems to the entire album (as well as songs from all the albums, every song from Rubber Soul and Abbey Road), I'll make my own as soon as I find a good way to make the line thingies.

    • @williampowell6067
      @williampowell6067 Před 6 lety +4

      Marry me ;)

    • @nightcorenation8201
      @nightcorenation8201 Před 6 lety +9

      William Powell You didn’t upload anything -_-

    • @R1ppedM0nk
      @R1ppedM0nk Před 6 lety +4

      @@nightcorenation8201 put them in a Google drive and send them over lmao

  • @mikecummings3149
    @mikecummings3149 Před 7 lety +400

    astonishing stuff..its like deconstructing a beautiful dream..and when you hear every part..its just as beautiful..

  • @dwdeclare1965
    @dwdeclare1965 Před 5 lety +50

    i love the way john and paul's voices harmonize with each other.

    • @joeyb4ever
      @joeyb4ever Před 4 lety +4

      It's their secret weapon from the start.

    • @billdowney1487
      @billdowney1487 Před 3 lety

      Yes, totally agree.. On this song --- there are 4 beatles singing * and John's track is doubled at some places for a total of 5 vocal tracks.

  • @JohnFix
    @JohnFix Před 9 lety +246

    Finger snaps at 5:26 keeping time while singing...so cool to hear those little details on isolated tracks like this.

    • @BillMadeMovies
      @BillMadeMovies Před 5 lety +20

      And the out of tune vocals ar 5:37 on “sit back and....”

    • @candidoj
      @candidoj Před 5 lety

      @@BillMadeMovies Wow. Great ear

    • @carlosvelasquez3279
      @carlosvelasquez3279 Před 5 lety

      @@BillMadeMovies sounds like Paul the one

  • @ellielovesbands
    @ellielovesbands Před 7 lety +369

    0:47 haha Paulie's little scream

    • @candidoj
      @candidoj Před 5 lety +4

      I liked it very much !

    • @nickwarenda
      @nickwarenda Před 5 lety +7

      @@candidoj I bet ya do buddy

    • @ilmwemo
      @ilmwemo Před 4 lety +5

      ellielovesbands reminds me of Michael Jackson

    • @gooolixx
      @gooolixx Před 4 lety

      @@candidoj I bet so

    • @evyalley
      @evyalley Před 4 lety

      So cute!

  • @clarissamcpigeon7857
    @clarissamcpigeon7857 Před 9 lety +81

    Wow, on the blue track you can really hear fret squeak and crackling from the amp. It's amazing how well that can be covered up by layering.

    • @camcoop25
      @camcoop25 Před 8 lety +15

      +Clarissa McPigeon You can also hear how screamingly mean the guitar sound was.... Hendrix was never raunchier.

    • @ralphandnick
      @ralphandnick Před 6 lety +1

      His name is Billy. Read the book..

  • @shea086
    @shea086 Před 3 lety +15

    These are probably the best electric guitar sounds I've ever heard.

  • @soolan11
    @soolan11 Před 9 lety +589

    That was interesting, George Martin was indeed a genius. Reminder: he came from a classical background. Thanks for the video.

    • @eatingcatshit
      @eatingcatshit Před 9 lety +44

      I agree. Just don't forget at least Paul and John, especially Paul was enjoying making his own stuff with classical touches even if Martin may have taught him things. And Martin had to learn that from somewhere too. It gets passed on to those who can understand it.

    • @ralphandnick
      @ralphandnick Před 6 lety +1

      IT WASNT PAUL

    • @user-qt5eh9wb7g
      @user-qt5eh9wb7g Před 6 lety +4

      Actually isolated tracks like this show me personally how much the boys were in charge of their own sound. This track is rock solid, love it.

    • @markheller197
      @markheller197 Před 6 lety +2

      soolan11 George Martin was nothing without the Beatles Perhaps a footnote at best.

    • @carstarsarstenstesenn
      @carstarsarstenstesenn Před 5 lety +3

      Mark Heller The Beatles were nothing without George Martin

  • @bramleydragon
    @bramleydragon Před 11 lety +32

    Yes Peter, I think Ringo is THE most underrated man in rock. What he played suited the Beatles music perfectly.

  • @cyborgxero
    @cyborgxero Před 7 lety +136

    It's just music writing in its finest, plain and simple. Sgt. Pepper is the Mona Lisa in musical form.

    • @lexi-rb9cs
      @lexi-rb9cs Před 7 lety

      Reynaldo Dizon Completely

    • @toxic_teaaa7810
      @toxic_teaaa7810 Před 7 lety +2

      Reynaldo Dizon this song and album were anything but simple

    • @cyborgxero
      @cyborgxero Před 7 lety

      That's true, too.

    • @cyborgxero
      @cyborgxero Před 7 lety +4

      Got it wrong. It is not the music that is simple. The album is just SIMPLY MAGNIFICENTLY HARNESSED TO PERFECTION.

  • @petefaders
    @petefaders Před 7 lety +201

    6:02 I hear Ringo in the lower register

  • @gaetanpelletier7029
    @gaetanpelletier7029 Před 5 lety +26

    Paul McCartney solo voice! Ouf! What a voice from the young Paul!

  • @rexmundi1570
    @rexmundi1570 Před 10 lety +100

    As a lifelong Beatlemaniac it's very hard to be impressed by Beatles related stuff after all these years - but this is AMAZING. Like being right there in the studio sitting alongside George Martin and Geoff Emerick.

  • @aaronquist8125
    @aaronquist8125 Před 4 lety +7

    You don't realize how gritty and distorted the guitars are on this track until hearing them isolated. The finished product sounds so polished and smooth that it understates just how raw and rock'n'roll the guitars are.

  • @donlandstl
    @donlandstl Před 11 lety +11

    Fantastic raw sound. This was early 1967!? Nobody was doing rock this hard back then. Sgt. Peppers LHCB was. The BEST and leaving all others further and further behind.

  • @CultureJudge
    @CultureJudge Před 10 lety +58

    For me one of the most unique things about the Pepper sound is the snare. Gives the whole sound a sort of weird fairground dimension somehow. Or something.

    • @HandTheTalkingHand
      @HandTheTalkingHand Před 7 lety +8

      I agree man, it's a really characteristic light snare, not too soft, not too rough. Fits the Beatles' harmonies the best IMO. Really defined the '60s psychedelic period

    • @billdowney1487
      @billdowney1487 Před 3 lety +5

      Geoff Emerick gets all the credit. He revoultionized how drums were recorded.

  • @UncleNicLuciano
    @UncleNicLuciano Před 11 lety +17

    i think it's safe to say that regardless of how one may feel about ringo's technical proficiency, that he did in fact play the perfect drum parts to some of the best songs ever written and recorded ...

    • @billdowney1487
      @billdowney1487 Před 3 lety +3

      He handled Lennon-McCartney songs better than anyone else could have.

  • @riel1674
    @riel1674 Před 7 lety +113

    The only working version of this song in CZcams

    • @gooolixx
      @gooolixx Před 4 lety +1

      Well no go on the beatles official channel bro

    • @_mat_hue3437
      @_mat_hue3437 Před 4 lety +8

      DazzXY the comment was 2 years ago

  • @sirwob
    @sirwob Před 10 lety +155

    Oh My fucking gawd, George's lead along with the horn section on the same track.......only 4 tracks? George Martin, you were truly a GENIUS

    • @cameroncooper4175
      @cameroncooper4175 Před 10 lety +24

      Three tracks really, if you don't count the audience sound effects... But you can;t give George all the credit - to make this all fit on four tracks required a lot of musical decisions that the group themselves definitely played a major role in - like the alternating between the lead guitar and the horns - they'd have had to work around the fact that both at once weren't technically feasible. Limitations give rise to innovation. 48 tracks give rise to indecision.

    • @rexmundi1570
      @rexmundi1570 Před 10 lety +3

      *****
      I doubt The Beatles had much involvement on the technical side. Recording, bouncing and special effects was all George Martin and his engineers.

    • @cameroncooper4175
      @cameroncooper4175 Před 10 lety +7

      Rex Mundi Perhaps the knob twisting, yeah, but my point was that they had to make musical decisions based on the technical limitations of the time. The musical and the technical had to dovetail together to make this track. It was a team effort. And the Beatles did get involved in technical stuff along the way.
      Engineer Geoff Emerick in his memoir talked about how he and McCartney worked together for ages on trying to get a specific bass sound - that finally involved putting the bass amp in the middle of the room (Abbey Road studio only had the one big room), and placing two mics, one close and one a little distance away to get the bass sound you hear on Sgt Pepper. Emerick didn't come up with the solution all on his own.
      Most musicians, after they have made six or seven albums, (as the Beatles had by the time they made Sgt Pepper), become somewhat tech savvy about the recording process. They start out by having to deal with their own gear - amps and guitars and such - and they end up hanging out in the control room for hours on end... you eventually learn a few things about how it's done - particularly if you are a clever bloke, which the Beatles were.

    • @rexmundi1570
      @rexmundi1570 Před 10 lety +1

      Yep. Agree more than disagree. They were heavily involved but still think their input was artistic rather than technical ie letting Martin know when something sounded right, or asking him if he could create a sound like monks chanting on a mountain top (or whatever). Emerick and other engineers probably played a much bigger technical role than even george martin is prepared to admit. He was arguably more of a musicallyu trained arranger and mentor with a great ear than producer (wooo! controversy) - The fact lennon/Macca didn't learn all that much from Martin is fairly evident on their solo recordings, although Macca did a pretty good job producing himself. - Just my opinion of course.

    • @tokowpc
      @tokowpc Před 10 lety +4

      people always forget to give geoff emerick credit

  • @miked.3673
    @miked.3673 Před 5 lety +38

    8:38 if you look at the yellow you can see that the applauding stops for a second. I never noticed that.

  • @JoshSitar
    @JoshSitar Před 8 lety +142

    Never realized that Paul sings, "WHEN Sgt. Pepper taught the band to play". Never heard the word "when" in that previously. It's really subtle. Also, where's the Billy Shears part at the end?

    • @notfound-rr6ph
      @notfound-rr6ph Před 7 lety +43

      Josh Zook The Billy Shears portion is apart of the track "With A Little Help From My Friends"

    • @asafcohen8796
      @asafcohen8796 Před 7 lety +9

      only on the cd and digital versions on the original record its part of sgt. peppers also he used the billy shears part in the end he just didn't put the vocals

    • @BarBQChips
      @BarBQChips Před 6 lety +1

      Josh Zook I don't hear him say 'when'

    • @jamesraymer1662
      @jamesraymer1662 Před 6 lety +1

      Asaf Cohen actually on my CD player Sgt. Peppers ends pauses for a second then with
      A little help from my friends starts with Billy shears

    • @NauticalStrings
      @NauticalStrings Před 6 lety +3

      From 6:16 he says "the one and only Billy Shears"

  • @robertavila3328
    @robertavila3328 Před 5 lety +84

    George Martin is definitely the 5th Beatle, hands down!

  • @niamhoconnor8986
    @niamhoconnor8986 Před 7 lety +295

    These are some of the albums released in 1967:
    The Doors
    Strange Days
    Between the Buttons
    Their Satanic Majesties Request
    Are You Experienced
    Axis: Bold as Love
    John Wesley Harding
    The Velvet Underground & Nico
    Smiley Smile
    Wild Honey
    Absolutely Free
    Safe As Milk
    Disreali Gears
    The Piper at the Gates of Dawn
    The Who Sellout
    Surrealistic Pillow
    ...and this one.
    I wonder if the Beatles even felt confident in Sgt. Pepper back then, given so many great albums that were made and released at the same time! :O

    • @richardeast3328
      @richardeast3328 Před 7 lety +14

      I'd probably guess, Yes.

    • @jamescleveland
      @jamescleveland Před 7 lety +23

      The Doors 1st album kicked ,67 off in January. Predating every thing. Peppers in June, Are you EXperienced in September along with Fresh Cream. Sell Out was a tremondous statement by the Who. But Revolver really was the turning point in popular music. For my money that was he most important game changer of all these masterpieces. Relesed on my birthday August 6 1966.

    • @kitnamedgran
      @kitnamedgran Před 7 lety +4

      Niamh O'Connor John Lennon always preferred Pet Sounds by The Beach Boys because he thought that that was more of a concept album as Sgt. Peppers.

    • @richardnixon8248
      @richardnixon8248 Před 6 lety +4

      Some really great albums there, but yes, I think the Beatles knew they were easily still on top!

    • @vragenstaatvrij777
      @vragenstaatvrij777 Před 6 lety +2

      Such a pity Brian Wilson's Smile project crashed. Smile is by far superior to that Pepper thing.

  • @wakajumba
    @wakajumba Před 7 lety +35

    Amazingly recorded on 4 track with overdubs. George Harrison, the silent one. George Martin, the invisible one. Simply amazing music that has stood the test of time.

    • @OWNWRIGHT
      @OWNWRIGHT Před 7 lety +1

      Do you know, is Harrison on blue line?

    • @chapter2467
      @chapter2467 Před 7 lety +4

      It isn't. That's Paul on guitar.

    • @OWNWRIGHT
      @OWNWRIGHT Před 7 lety

      Thank you, but which part plays George?

  • @robertochiang8057
    @robertochiang8057 Před 7 lety +75

    Enjoying it on his 50 anniversary

  • @TeekiesPlace
    @TeekiesPlace Před 9 lety +211

    I love Sgt. Pepper, and it's remained my favorite album ( by the Beatles or anyone else) since it was released. When it came out, it was just so DIFFERENT from what anyone else was doing (including being the first album to have the lyrics printed on the back cover). You really COULD sing along, as Paul invites you to do in the second verse of the theme song. The foldout, and the cutouts (including mustache and epaulets) really made you feel like you were part of the band. Plus, the Beatles and George Martin really raised the bar technologically. And, they raised the bar musically too...a lot of GREAT groups came out after Sgt. Pepper was released, because it inspired musicians to give their best shot. Sgt. Pepper Reprise remains MY favorite song of all time, and DAY IN THE LIFE is consistently praised as one of the best pop/rock songs ever recorded. Having said all that, individually these are generally not the Beatles' best songs. In fact, when SGT. PEPPER first came out, NONE of these songs were released as singles (George Martin himself didn't think they were strong enough). Personally, I have real trouble sitting through WITHIN YOU WITHOUT YOU and SHE'S LEAVING HOME and FIXING A HOLE. My favorite Beatle songs are actually from the HELP era, with some RUBBER SOUL and REVOLVER thrown in. So...PEPPER is great taken as a whole, as the "concept album" that it was...taken individually, the songs are easily bested by other Beatles songs.

    • @lexi-rb9cs
      @lexi-rb9cs Před 7 lety

      Buffalo Springthorpe I'm fixing a hole where the rain walks in

    • @beatlesloversprims
      @beatlesloversprims Před 7 lety +1

      Buffalo Springthorpe expertly said

    • @victorrosas6128
      @victorrosas6128 Před 7 lety +10

      Buffalo Springthorpe Great coment, but I love both She's Leaving Home and Within You Without You

    • @GuadalupePicasso
      @GuadalupePicasso Před 7 lety +3

      Buffalo Springthorpe my only real caveat with what you've said, is listing Sgt Peppers Reprise as your favorite song of all time.

    • @luckasn8975
      @luckasn8975 Před 7 lety +4

      My favourite in this album is hands down being for the benefit of mr. Kite

  • @mickavellian
    @mickavellian Před 11 lety +14

    Well this confirms Ringo had a metronome implant at some point during his many hospitals stays. Even after silences he pick up attacks at exactly the same dynamic as he left off. And Paul's vocals, why even bother. They were SCARY! Oh, the term is ping-ponging at least in the USA.

  • @NativeSonDC
    @NativeSonDC Před 9 lety +454

    Listening to this, I could make a ton of comments, but 2 things immediately come to mind: (1) George's guitar track has an absolutely wonderfully fuzzy tone that makes me want to shout from the rooftops (2) To people who ACTUALLY believe that Paul McCartney died and that an impostor took his place for Sgt Pepper, please play the Beatles cover of "Long Tall Sally" and then listen to Paul McCartney's iso vocal track here, and then try to convince yourselves that it's two different people.

    • @NativeSonDC
      @NativeSonDC Před 9 lety +44

      PicturesDexDimension When I wrote my comment I asked myself, if someone decided to reply in opposition, what would the argument be? I laughed when I read this because I could have almost written it myself as an exercise in debating both sides of an argument. It plays right into the need for myth making that is inherent in the human condition.
      You need another example? I could name a few, but listen to the vocal track on "Oh Darling". It was on the last album the Beatles recorded, hence no one could claim that James Paul McCartney (born 18 June 1942 and still very much alive, same guy who's been touring in South America for the past 2 weeks) had somehow managed to record a few songs before he was decapitated, as you 'Faulowers' enjoy believing. Same "sawdust" in the voice, as George Martin described. It's unmistakable, even with the echo on the voice (and don't start with the "they used echo to mask the voice" nonsense -- vocal echo had been used since the 1950's by almost every artist, and the Beatles were obviously using all sorts of effects in the studio on voices, instruments, and inventing effects-based sounds ever since 'Rain' used backwards tracking).
      As far as your "voice recognition studies": I've been playing guitar for 35 years and have a few CD credits under my belt, so I've logged some studio time. I am also good friends with someone who owns a recording studio. Using the latest in computer recording equipment, I saw a spectrogram analysis of multiple songs of both my own voice and the lead singers voice. They were all different, even within different takes of the same song. In fact, actual scientific studies -- that is, with strict controls, unlike the internet post that claims Paul's voice is different, which was done by some random person, not a scientist, with unknown motives, not using any standard controls -- have shown that the same singer, singing the same exact song on the same day, will produce different spectrogram patterns before warmup, then after stretching of throat muscles, then after warmup.
      To reiterate for clarity: Same singer, same day, same song, strict scientific study. The voice prints didn't match up perfectly.
      So when you are analyzing McCartney's voice (or any voice) from different years on different songs, you are going to get different patterns. I know the thing on the internet you read says that "If the voice prints do not match up, then the songs were sung by different people", but this is simply untrue. If you doubt this, go buy studio time at a local recording studio and (a) ask the sound engineer about this subject and (b) test it yourself.
      McCartney smoked a pack of cigarettes a day during the 60's, and his voice went though changes as all voices would from year to year even under the best of circumstances. But even if you'd have tested him from one day to the next, you'd see differences. The popular voice "analysis" regarding the 'Paul is Dead' theory is from 'Yesterday' (recorded 14 June 1965) and 'You Never Give Me Your Money' (recorded in stages from May - July 1969). So: FOUR YEARS separates the songs -- that's 30,000 cigarettes! -- and Yesterday is in the key of F while 'Money' is in A (specifically Am7).
      And gee. The voice prints didn't match up perfectly. So Paul is dead, according to you.
      I know this isn't enough to convince people, but it should be. With everything regarding the Beatles, every story, every lyric, every supposition gets blown out of proportion in nuclear fashion. People seem to have a NEED to believe Paul is dead. Read up on the need for human's to create myths and it becomes clear why this ever got as far as it did.
      But allow me to add one thing first. You will NEVER hear a serious, professional musician ever claim to believe in this. Why? Because they know how long it takes to become proficient at any musical discipline. You can't "fast track" it. You can't fake it. Musicians are like fingerprints, and they can spot phonies in an instant from a mile away, a la the 'Blink' principle. There are people out there who can do good celebrity impressions, sure. But there is no way to fool all the world's musicians about perhaps the most famous musician of the post-classical era. If you were a musician you would instinctively understand this and you'd feel embarrassed towards anyone who truly bought into this silly business.
      If Paul had been replaced, we'd know. Mick Jagger would know. Pete Townshend would know. Paul Simon, Ravi Shankar, Brian Wilson, Roy Orbison, Bob Dylan, Aretha Franklin, Roger Waters, Prince, Elvis Costello, Van Morrison, Jimmy Page, Ray Davies...they'd all hear it, see it, know it. And they wouldn't keep quiet about it.

    • @NativeSonDC
      @NativeSonDC Před 9 lety +3

      PicturesDexDimension PS here's the CZcams ID for the 'Oh Darling' track separation: 0_CukD_tvA8

    • @masterjasonlasvegas2879
      @masterjasonlasvegas2879 Před 9 lety +16

      shoesheep The entire world owes you a huge debt of gratitude, shoesheep, and for those of us who are reasonably intelligent as well as intensely passionate about everything Beatles, even more so...your explanations, based on authentic real-world first-hand experience and knowledgeable insights as a musician and recording artist are simply the MOST concise, comprehensive articulate and all-inclusive truly factual responses to the ridiculous myth-mongers who, as you made so perfectly clear in your post, seem to have somehow become emotionally invested in perpetuating every possible shred of disinformation, twisted and distorted "clues" and ultimately end up sounding as if they derive some sort of sick satisfaction, a perverse pleasure even, in clinging to their beliefs, unable or unwilling to acknowledge just how absurd, irrational and illogical their collective mind-set is so obviously misguided, so absolutely determined to deny the truth. I wish your eloquent post could be copied word-for-word and re-posted ad infinitum throughout the entire internet, and included along with every single reference to anything and anyone even remotely related to any "Paul-is-Dead" claim.

    • @paulajone3509
      @paulajone3509 Před 9 lety +5

      *****
      Well, we can safely say, that very much like John and George; Paul - and indeed Ringo will NEVER die.

    • @JamesWalshBristolKids
      @JamesWalshBristolKids Před 7 lety +2

      Your daft. That's hype.

  • @latentAlchemist
    @latentAlchemist Před 9 lety +49

    This is so hypnotizing to stare at...great vid btw :)

  • @chuckandkonnie2415
    @chuckandkonnie2415 Před 4 lety +4

    Perfect imperfections. They put magic into every part. Having the EMI plate reverb printed on the vocal tracks, the UL Vox series amp sounds on the Casino and Strat and the sharing of tracks due to bouncing and mixdown instead of adding effects, cleaning up all the clams and extraneous noise and isolating everything made for the well blended sound we know and love.

  • @michellauzon1
    @michellauzon1 Před 9 lety +4

    I think that "Sgt Peppers" and "A day in the life" are two masterpieces They were at the top of the world in 1967. I'm old enough that I buy this album and listen to it on my turntable in 67. I was 12 years old. I'm still waiting for and album like this.

    • @billdowney1487
      @billdowney1487 Před 3 lety

      I was born in 1955 as well ------------ but I didn't hear it until 1970. I still listen to it a couple times a year.

  • @kabeceli
    @kabeceli Před 10 lety +13

    paul's voice amazing

  • @DyingLobster
    @DyingLobster Před 11 lety +3

    Hearing the song like this really makes you appreciate every little bit of detail and effort they put into this, which just makes the Beatles even MORE amazing.

  • @dlc54
    @dlc54 Před rokem +1

    Pauls little "Owww" at :47 shows how much fun they were having.

  • @davesheaff
    @davesheaff Před 12 lety +2

    This is spectacular. They created these recordings in the mid 60's using 2 or 3 4 track analog 2" magnetic tape machines, recorded
    individual instruments on separate tracks then mix them down onto 1 of the 4 master tracks. Then do that process again for the vocals and horns, etc. Getting everything to line up with a tape cutter and razor blade with no digital manipulation must have been tedious as hell. Thanks so much for posting this.

  • @EpididymisCowper
    @EpididymisCowper Před 4 lety +4

    Can't stop watching this-year was 1967..incredible even today.. 2020

  • @dougalmacrobbie1918
    @dougalmacrobbie1918 Před rokem +5

    When all 3 voices came in on the chorus, It gave me goose bumps. Nobody else can sing together like John, Paul and George.

  • @noahpeters6313
    @noahpeters6313 Před 5 lety +15

    Macca singing in his Long Tall Sally voice

  • @enesnok
    @enesnok Před 6 lety +5

    5:22 extreme complex part. This is art.

  • @jackstonge
    @jackstonge Před 6 lety +43

    Can you do one on I Am The Walrus?

    • @TheJayson8899
      @TheJayson8899 Před 6 lety +1

      Jack's Music Stuff Not that you were talking to me but sure. I may have the multitrack for it. Won’t get fancy colours for each wave form though like this one. I have no editing skills

    • @gooolixx
      @gooolixx Před 4 lety

      AHH hell yaeh

  • @themadtexan8982
    @themadtexan8982 Před 7 lety +16

    I was expecting something a bit less literal lol. Like analysis.
    Also holy shit, this video is 8 years old and JUST NOW went really viral.

  • @dirker4blood391
    @dirker4blood391 Před 4 lety +20

    3:26 lo que escucha el señor que se sienta al lado de ti en el camión.
    8:08 como lo escuchas tu en tus audífonos

  • @vegavairbob
    @vegavairbob Před 3 lety +1

    The best deconstructing job I've heard. Great job.

  • @marvy1118
    @marvy1118 Před 14 lety +5

    I keep coming back to this vid, playing it loud. Track 1 is the most rawly funky, chunky, rockin' thing I've ever heard, and I've been around the block a few times.
    Was there anything even remotely like it in terms of raw funk-rock before this? Then on top of it they laid down brass band music reminiscent of something from 1912. Who else would have thought of putting those two motifs together?!
    All hail the Beatles!

    • @canalesworks1247
      @canalesworks1247 Před rokem

      Horns in F in four parts, like a real Lonely hearts Club Band would have sounded from that era.

  • @bigfootpegrande
    @bigfootpegrande Před 9 lety +8

    A pleasant, intuitive and visual lesson in music and music production. Thanks.

  • @larydixon4824
    @larydixon4824 Před 5 lety +3

    The most amazing part of this is the vocal harmonies.. Outstanding! Lary

  • @TheRedJokerrr
    @TheRedJokerrr Před 7 lety +15

    It starts with some pretty basic pop rock structure but goes to a whole other solid level.

  • @givemelove71
    @givemelove71 Před 14 lety +2

    I had NO IDEA this track was so FUNKY! I had always heard it as a rock n' roll track...but that's some SERIOUS GROOVE going on in the green line...motown level stuff. Brilliant.

  • @micheledemontis
    @micheledemontis Před 7 lety +3

    The first track, the green one where the Beatles play all together is simply
    thrilling

  • @DavidBrou
    @DavidBrou Před 6 lety +13

    The best rock album ever only record with 4 tracks

    • @billdowney1487
      @billdowney1487 Před 3 lety +1

      Three tracks. The 4th track is only the crowd. Fascinating.

  • @williamsmith1108
    @williamsmith1108 Před 9 lety +1

    I just came across this and I was amazed at the subtle nuances brought out listening to this isolated 4 track cut. Absolutely beautiful, thank you for posting this as it reflects very accurately the genius that was and still is Sir George Martin and of course the Lads.

  • @nickesposito312
    @nickesposito312 Před 7 lety +1

    I really love the effort put into this. Good work man, it's people like you that keep the music community thinking and understanding things.

  • @multilinkacs
    @multilinkacs Před 10 lety +48

    As someone who was recording with bands at the time let me just say that 4 tracks was cutting edge. Some studios, Regent Sound in Denmark Street, London for instance, only had 2 tracks so you did the entire backing track for 4 to 6 musicians and then pre-mastered them and bounced them onto another recorder along with the vocals and sometimes did it again. Loss of bass response was a major problem along with tape hiss, but hey we got on with it. By the way, you couldn't drop in sections of go record the guitar later, it was all on the tape and that was it. Sometimes it worked sometimes it didn't. The BBC did "live" recordings of bands in the way for many years. Would I go back and do it the same way ?, in a heart beat !

    • @JamesWalshBristolKids
      @JamesWalshBristolKids Před 7 lety +9

      According to the Abbey Rd engineers who were there they synced up two 4 track machines for A Day in The Life and it was like using the studio as an instrument - even for the helpers like Geoff Emerick and a bit of luck played a role .

    • @DavidAndrewsPEC
      @DavidAndrewsPEC Před 6 lety +1

      Indeed.
      Strawberry in Stockport was two 2-track machines for a long time. I started out using a bunch of cassette players in the 1970s... had to sync two up together. Simultneous pause-release was not really simultaneous so another method was needed. Remember those old massive double-adaptors? I'd read about the Geoff Emerick thing of syncing two 4-tracks, and I thought this'd be my version of that solution. Plug two of the three machines into the adaptor, rewind both and then switch both off. pres pause and play on both, and then release pause; switch on at the wall ... climb over mum and dad's bed to get to the school percussion stuff I'd nabbed for the weekend ... and off we go! :D
      Used that for three of the four songs in my music project. One was done using two mono Tandberg decks at school. Four original songs, one lead sheet. One reel-to-reel tape. Two months later, tape comes back from exam board: the examiners enjoyed the songs very much. They liked the fact that I'd done most of it myself on very limited equipment. 'Get in touch with the Denmark Street boys' was their PS.
      I got the highest examination mark in our region that year for music CSE.
      For ages, I was using 4-tracks on cassette; walk in the park, compared to the bedroom sessions (ooh-er!). Recently, a pal lent me his Zoom R16.Moped up and down an airport runway! Got some results from the R16 on my channel. Only used 8 tracks ... all I needed.
      What you say about the having to be get it right in the process ... even with 4-track, that's spot on. Can't fix it in the mix, really. I actually think that trainee recording engineers should be taken through the whole thing of 2-tracks x2 first, and then one four-track machine. After that - an 8-track. I think that the learning to make creative decisions in the process would get them keener, really. More oriented to getting things right earlier on in the recording process. What do you think?

  • @demonsbutterfly
    @demonsbutterfly Před 14 lety +11

    So the Beatles weren't a Heavy Rock Band Hey.
    Sure they were, they just also liked doing heaps of other things as well.
    The Beatles Rocked Hard. Thanks for this so much.

    • @frisk4520
      @frisk4520 Před 6 lety

      demonsbutterfly Huh, is actually consider this a harder rock track of theirs.

  • @sanji_kudo
    @sanji_kudo Před 3 lety +2

    0:47 just wow. I never thought the guitar lick sounds this cool when isolated. They truly are masters.

  • @jlr022159
    @jlr022159 Před 4 lety

    Absolutely mesmerizing to hear this! I loved every second... thank you so much!

  • @schmevil4697
    @schmevil4697 Před 6 lety +11

    0:47 “AAAAAAOOOOOOO!!!!”

  • @ZilnichProductions
    @ZilnichProductions Před 10 lety +29

    Crazy how the tracks are cut and other instrument parts are put together like that. Much harder to put songs together back then. Being limited makes you have to be more creative. To everyone with limited resources in any situation,keep on keeping on. The most important part is not the newest technology.

  • @dowunda
    @dowunda Před 2 lety +1

    The 2-singer part of the vocals is soo amazing. Amazing Everly Bros-like harmony or something akin. What an strange and amazing song and such disparate pieces and when reassembled, sounds just perfect. Hearing the parts separated like this gives me new appreciation as well.

  • @johnnyvlee
    @johnnyvlee Před 11 lety +2

    I love how you can hear the bleed from the headphones when everything else is quiet

  • @beatlesloversprims
    @beatlesloversprims Před 7 lety +13

    The Beatles were such gods.

  • @hmaren
    @hmaren Před 12 lety +4

    Just crazy that Martin and Emerick managed to get basically the whole thing onto only 3 tracks. Modern producers with Pro Tools and dozens of tracks at their disposal could learn a few things from this.

  • @V3ganaA
    @V3ganaA Před 4 lety +2

    Its sad there aren’t more of these I love them

  • @apollo1534
    @apollo1534 Před 3 lety +1

    man I really wish he did more of these, it makes learning the separate instruments of each song way easier

  • @LeadVocal2010
    @LeadVocal2010 Před 5 lety +3

    This was ahead of it's time

  • @jesvramone
    @jesvramone Před 9 lety +16

    My fave fab is George. Thanx ha ha

  • @EtcEtcAndEtc
    @EtcEtcAndEtc Před 12 lety +1

    If only everybody still had to work like that - it would focus the process enormously and force performers and engineers to get their work right in the first place! Also introduces a healthy dose of fairchild compression and tape distortion into proceedings, which in combination with expert playing adds up to records that sound gloriously saturated and thick. I love digital recording technology but it is so open ended and versatile that it can completely sidetrack a band's creative process.

  • @robertwinters7144
    @robertwinters7144 Před 10 lety +1

    Brilliant. I have always thought that this is one of the most harmonically interesting and rich rock tunes ever. AND the reprise.

  • @ravenmaddgarcia3420
    @ravenmaddgarcia3420 Před 9 lety +18

    great lessons in recording

  • @swacbro
    @swacbro Před 9 lety +4

    the vocal track is incredible...solo & harmonies...The Beatles rule

  • @jamesmarkjackson1979
    @jamesmarkjackson1979 Před 5 lety +1

    Fascinating! Having played about with four tracks in youth, it is mind blowing to me what they able to achieve with such basic technology.

  • @JoeD60
    @JoeD60 Před 14 lety

    Another truly awesome music listening experience on CZcams. Thanks.

  • @hubertvale5132
    @hubertvale5132 Před 6 lety +6

    This should put to rest the question of Ringo being a good drummer. He was great!

  • @evilclown99
    @evilclown99 Před 10 lety +3

    1000 years from now people will still be listening to the beatles.

  • @aunthaumv3711
    @aunthaumv3711 Před 7 lety

    it all. omes together so well. musicians are amazing

  • @ultramet
    @ultramet Před 12 lety +1

    Thanks for posting...amazing deconstruction....it's amazing what great music was created with only 4 tracks (+ some bouncing)...

  • @gordonfreeman6497
    @gordonfreeman6497 Před 7 lety +5

    they change the concept of rock band for ever!!!!

  • @jbfonfrias9133
    @jbfonfrias9133 Před 4 lety

    The deeper & behind the scenes of their arrangements I go, the more I discover a new love & appreciation for these guys - even with 6 plus decades of history, The Beatles are still happening right now !

  • @HSMiyamoto
    @HSMiyamoto Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks a lot! The Blue track reveals that Sgt. Peppers is as modern a piece of acid rock as anyone recorded in 1967. The Red track reveals the fantastic vocal work by Paul, and the great harmonies on this piece. CSN&Y eat your heart out!!

  • @VietVuHunzter
    @VietVuHunzter Před 5 lety +3

    It was the 60s... Damn it has to be mind blowing back then.

  • @iost5459
    @iost5459 Před 7 lety +16

    I love 3:05-3:23

  • @tadeodewiesent8092
    @tadeodewiesent8092 Před 2 lety +1

    ¡El summun de la creatividad, de la belleza, de la perfección, del Arte, de lo maravilloso, de lo fantástico!
    ¡Verdaderamente, estremecedor!

  • @imkluu
    @imkluu Před 6 lety

    This is really cool, It is amazing how much was put into this one track, and yet for some reason it all seems to simple and easy when you listen to it.

  • @Heynowville
    @Heynowville Před 9 lety +6

    Revolutionary! How about that George Martin? Produced each and every record they did.

    • @RDYC
      @RDYC Před 9 lety

      He was the Fifth Beatle, along with Geoff Emerick.

    • @lynnturman8157
      @lynnturman8157 Před 9 lety +2

      He didn't produce the original LET IT BE album. That was Phil Spector.

    • @lynnturman8157
      @lynnturman8157 Před 9 lety

      ***** Thanks for the clarification. I grew up listening to the original LP so to me, that'll always be the "best" version. :)

  • @xscale
    @xscale Před 6 lety +5

    This is utterly amazing - effectively a new Beatles track! Have you done this for any of their other songs?

  • @sly2392
    @sly2392 Před 6 měsíci +1

    this was the very first album i ever purchased when i was just a young lad. and the rest is rock and roll history. 🪲 🎼 🎵 🎶 🎸

  • @kairohrbach7283
    @kairohrbach7283 Před 7 lety

    Videos like this make me appreciate them so much more.

  • @ElliotRose
    @ElliotRose Před 6 lety +6

    From someone who uses Protools,
    the idea of 4 tracks just seems impossible. I guess it's 2 x4 tracks though. So 8-track ultimately. I still can't believe they nailed it so well with such basic tools. Wild.

  • @Gerrock45
    @Gerrock45 Před 8 lety +3

    EXCELLENT!!!!!!!

  • @jaelge
    @jaelge Před 7 lety

    All done with four tracks. My Roland VS-840EX is considered archaic using zip drive and I can ping up to 36 tracks total. The lads did it all with only four. Remarkable. Everything I ever learned about production and recording I learned from the Beatles and George Martin.

  • @rgsjr100
    @rgsjr100 Před 12 lety

    More! Much more. Amazingly good. Thanks for posting this. I love it!