The Beatles: "Here There and Everywhere" -Vinyl Friday #71

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  • čas přidán 13. 07. 2024
  • This one requires a little time travel, folks, but don't worry, I'll make sure you're back completely intact.
    Although Sir Paul McCartney is clearly and obviously skilled at songcraft (and it appears to come completely naturally to the man), art rarely happens in a vacuum. So today we're going on a little reconnaissance mission to find young Paul McCartney's songwriting teachers.
    In this episode: Paul's father pays a visit (he's very clean), the crooners teach us a few tricks, AND (perhaps for the first time ever) we get both cats in the same video!
    For those of you with a burning desire to generally support what I do, I'm here to help you along in that journey: www.buymeacoffee.com/fathommu... (but no pressure, friends☺️)
    Happy Friday, folks!
    0:00 Hello!
    2:12 Good old-fashioned songwriting
    15:09 Some mighty pretty words
    18:02 A simple arrangement
    22:31 Goodbye!
    Want to look at pictures of what I'm working on? / fathommusicnz
    Interested in purchasing music I've made? fathomnz.bandcamp.com
    Fathom albums "The World to Breathe" and "Modern Reflections, Vol. 1" are also available on all streaming platforms. Tweed's album "High Brow Blues" is also ALSO available on all streaming platforms!
    Thanks for your sharing your attention with me. :)
    #beatles #thebeatles #revolver #vinyl #vinylcommunity #musicreview

Komentáře • 101

  • @fathommusicnz
    @fathommusicnz  Před 2 měsíci +14

    What, in your opinion, is the most beautiful Beatles love song?

    • @gabevillasenor7152
      @gabevillasenor7152 Před 2 měsíci +4

      THIS ONE MOST DEF

    • @davidcarter5038
      @davidcarter5038 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Absolutely this one. I think Sinatra claimed Something was his choice but while that is an excellent song, HTAE is simply sublime.

    • @Anarchouettisme
      @Anarchouettisme Před 2 měsíci +3

      This is the one. Or maybe If I Fell, but is it a love song? I never understood why these two were not included on the original edition of the red album.

    • @Anarchouettisme
      @Anarchouettisme Před 2 měsíci +2

      Side note about If I Fell: on a solo demo of John playing this song, he creates the youhou ouhouhou so famous from Imagine. Incredible. Sadly I don't remember where I heard it.
      Edit: found it on CZcams, check it out!

    • @alanclayton9277
      @alanclayton9277 Před 2 měsíci +3

      I would say here there and everywhere too. it might be expected that a love song be a ballad but i admire i've just seen a face also because of the way it captures a breathless quality mirroring the excitement of a love that is catching fire. i, because i'm the most objectionable romantic you could hope to meet, am placing i will third.

  • @kengause9259
    @kengause9259 Před 2 měsíci +7

    I always think of "Here, There, and Everywhere" and "For No One" as a pair of songs Paul sung from the heart.

  • @anonymusum
    @anonymusum Před 17 hodinami +2

    By the way: The most breathtaking progressions from minor to major - but also vice versa - were written by Franz Schubert, especially in his piano works. If you don´t know them, please check it out (for example in his Impromptu in c-minor, op.90/no.1)

  • @shadshowadradna
    @shadshowadradna Před 2 měsíci +10

    One other thing about structure: "Here, making each day of the year"; "There, running my hands through her hair"; "Everywhere, knowing that love is to share".

  • @Wintertalent
    @Wintertalent Před 2 měsíci +2

    My favourite song to sing and play on my acoustic.

  • @Anarchouettisme
    @Anarchouettisme Před 2 měsíci +7

    My sister sang this song at my wedding, accompanied by my father on guitar. Extraordinary moment (she's a professional jazz singer), a bit tough for my poor father, tricky chord progression 😅.
    Thanx for the video, and I hope that like for me, your love is there. (Or here? I dunno I'm french sorry).

    • @alanclayton9277
      @alanclayton9277 Před 2 měsíci +4

      didn't see this first time scrolling. that's a nice anecdote well told.

  • @autistickakarot
    @autistickakarot Před 2 měsíci +2

    I really love the way you present these videos, I have seen a few and you make them so informative and entertaining.

  • @danmayberry1185
    @danmayberry1185 Před 2 měsíci +7

    Revolver and English Settlement in the first frame - be still my heart!

    • @dondevice8182
      @dondevice8182 Před 2 měsíci

      It’s like I’m looking in a mirror!

  • @ANTHONY_DIMAGGIO
    @ANTHONY_DIMAGGIO Před 2 měsíci +3

    The song is only 2 mins 24 secs long, it amazes me how much magic they can put into a song with such a short amount of time.

  • @IsaacWale2004
    @IsaacWale2004 Před 2 měsíci +6

    "John Lennon, Paul McCartney soul mate" 😂

  • @gustavofaveronpatriau1816
    @gustavofaveronpatriau1816 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Lovely video and extremely illuminating observations. I don’t know why you don’t have a million followers!

  • @albertquinlan988
    @albertquinlan988 Před 2 měsíci +6

    I discovered your show yesterday thanks to Vinyl Monday. And now that I discovered your brilliant channel, you are doing a video on the Beatles song that is the song for my wife and I. In fact my daughter had us dance to this at her wedding. Your show is amazing and like Abby, you are very informative. Keep it up.

  • @IsaacWale2004
    @IsaacWale2004 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Easily one of the best songs ever created.

  • @GIBKEL
    @GIBKEL Před 2 měsíci +1

    Gershwin anyone? Love it.
    Sounds like breathing, love and realization.
    The chromaticism of In bloom is just a louder, angrier and more cynical amp away and yet they get ya right in the tingles. I am carried away. Inks Spots, Yesh!
    The Abbey collab was great.

  • @strathman7501
    @strathman7501 Před 2 měsíci +3

    I appreciate your videos greatly. Thank you. One thing that struck me this time: the number of times the word "simple" comes up here. I fancy that I've often heard the same thing in others' discussions of McCartney: simple but beautiful, simple but very effective, simple but... It slightly puzzles me. To take the case in point, I think the composition and arrangement are - as demonstrated here, surely - quite sophisticated.

  • @bobtaylor170
    @bobtaylor170 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Why don't you have a million subscribers? You're marvelous.

  • @peterjetnikoff
    @peterjetnikoff Před 2 měsíci +1

    In an album that can stop its listeners with almost every track, this one does more than its share of breaking. When I first heard the album (as a 2nd gen. Beatles fan in the 70s) I did stop after this track because it took the record to another world and was such an advance on earlier songs in the same vein like Yesterday and I'll Follow the Sun, for all the reasons you mention. Brilliant celebration of a great song, for which, many thanks. PS it was Abby's Vinyl Monday that put me on to this so to apply some clunking wit and add an Australian tint, I'll have Vinyl Friday on my mind.

  • @davidrauh8118
    @davidrauh8118 Před 2 měsíci +2

    I think there are a number of correlations between The Beatles and XTC. I'd love to hear you discuss that topic. Comparing songs and musical ideas.

  • @michaelboyd-gj7gy
    @michaelboyd-gj7gy Před 2 měsíci +2

    i like you tee shirt. love xtc too

  • @alanclayton9277
    @alanclayton9277 Před 2 měsíci +2

    we're in agreement: this is the one. the line ' changing my life...' is one of the greats in the english language. i also like the way 'both of us thinking ' and ' each one believing ' suggest a mutual love, on an equal level.
    the part where you investigate how his melody is so unconstrained was great and you seemed deep in thought at the keys. another good example is martha my dear. the melody on 'never care' he also uses on the gorgeous 'love in the open air' from the family way music. hang on i'll just check to see if he's allowed. yeah it's ok he's allowed.
    you could write a nineteenth century russian type 800 page 😮 novel (bear with me) about your beloved, hang a gallery with 100 paintings, build a monument in stone. on the other hand you just write the 2.25 mins of here there and everywhere.

  • @ericallen774
    @ericallen774 Před 2 měsíci +1

    love the t shirt !!!

  • @catnameddog8776
    @catnameddog8776 Před 2 měsíci +2

    It’s news to me Here There and Everywhere dates back to Help days considering it was released August 1966

    • @Adam-qi7no
      @Adam-qi7no Před 2 měsíci +1

      Same here - I wonder why it didn't end up on Rubber Soul? Mind you, Paul has a notoriously unreliable memory for timelines (and who can blame him with all that going on?) and he could well have conflated that with something else.

  • @dondevice8182
    @dondevice8182 Před 2 měsíci +3

    I will hold you to your XTC, promise, dear!

  • @doppiopulso
    @doppiopulso Před 2 měsíci

    This is absolutely delightful!! Your analysis of the song is spot on!! Keep it coming!!

  • @lemontiki
    @lemontiki Před 2 měsíci +3

    I really enjoy your assessment of these Beatle songs. It’s truly entertaining. Keep up the good work!

  • @nvm9040
    @nvm9040 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I'm back from Vinyl Monday 🙂📀
    Revolver is a well arranged album and it really dips into psych but without going full psych but its still a rock/pop album with that indian influence

  • @wonder6789
    @wonder6789 Před 2 měsíci +2

    This is the ultimate serotonin song. (In my view, Paul is serotonin to John's dopamine).

  • @PeterBuwen
    @PeterBuwen Před 2 měsíci +1

    I've been a Beatles fan for almost 50 years. I grew up with the Beatles and left them for a short time as a teenager, as is the case. And then I returned to the family after I had experience with other music and was able to recognize what an incredibly gigantic quality there was in the music of the Beatles. Because I had never perceived such a quality in this breadth and depth in all the other music that I had heard in the meantime. With this preliminary banter I'm simply trying to clarify my competence regarding the Beatles in order to say with real enthusiasm: you're so good! Rarely have I seen someone speak so competently and intelligently about the Beatles. Thanks for that!

  • @glennandadriansrocktalk
    @glennandadriansrocktalk Před 2 měsíci +2

    Since I was a kid, I have noted those "stop/start" methods in this song, like everytime it goes into a new section with the minors and majors and key changes. Always found it to be very clever and a way to keep the song fresh. Really love your presentation here.

  • @MarcSebastian-pi5he
    @MarcSebastian-pi5he Před 2 měsíci +2

    Loved your analysis. You related the human aspect so well. Important to a non-musician but a music lover.

  • @31carrier
    @31carrier Před 2 měsíci

    thanks i enjoyed this

  • @robbielux8353
    @robbielux8353 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Love your analysis on the Beatles..they are also my favorite

  • @murdockreviews
    @murdockreviews Před 2 měsíci +1

    One of Macca's most beautiful tunes. Great dissection!

  • @bobbybroadway9513
    @bobbybroadway9513 Před 2 měsíci

    I could imagine a nice video of John and Yoko hanging around in various locations with this song playing in the background.

  • @DoctorInsomnia-qw7us
    @DoctorInsomnia-qw7us Před 2 měsíci +2

    You know there's a good back story behind this song. Paul was going to get together with John for a songwriting session, but when Paul arrived, John was alseep ( I'm only sleeping, right?), so Paul just started playing & writing, & this is the masterpiece he wrote while John was sleeping 😌😴. And I think the reason John has such a high regard for this one is that Paul is singing in John's style, right down to that falsetto, which closely resembles the in my life falsetto, so subconsciously it's a stylistic homage to John. And obviously it's a lovesong to Jane Asher, you can tell by the details you mentioned, wave of her hand, but there's a sadness & longing, and if she's beside me I know I need never care, so the joy of love is tinged with melancholy cause she's not there. The first time I heard it, I thought John was singing the high parts. Really enjoying vinyl Fridays, like the way you find an excuse to insert Charlie Parker and the Beach Boys into a Beatles episode. See you tomorrow, have a great day, and all your " correspondents" too....

    • @grimtraveller7923
      @grimtraveller7923 Před měsícem

      " subconsciously it's a stylistic homage to John."
      While that may be the case , this was written during the "Help !" filming. I think it came before "In my Life."

    • @DoctorInsomnia-qw7us
      @DoctorInsomnia-qw7us Před 15 hodinami

      @@grimtraveller7923 even if it was written before in my life, it was recorded afterwards, so it could still borrow stylistically from in my life. Just cause a song is written doesn't mean it's been arranged. That's still up in the air till they figure it out in the studio...

  • @grimtraveller7923
    @grimtraveller7923 Před měsícem +2

    Paul McCartney is, and for close to 50 years has been, one of my favourite songwriters, mostly on the strength of his Beatles output {he did a few great songs with Wings}. John thought he was a lyricist that didn’t make enough effort but I beg to differ. I think all of the Beatles were really thoughtful lyricists. John’s main criticism of Paul was that Paul didn’t write about himself, whereas John did. But that’s not true.
    There’s a lot of Paul and his thoughts in the songs where he was the main writer.
    Personally, I think he comes across as one of the most misogynistic writers of the 60s {indeed, ever !}. That will surprise some people, but there’s an undercurrent of selfishness from Paul that funnily enough isn’t in much of John’s writing. You’d think that songs like “You can’t do that” “Norwegian Wood,” “Ticket to ride,” “I call your name,” Girl” and “Run for your life” would pitch John in that light but what they really reveal is his insecurity masquerading as the tough guy in control of his woman. Paul, on the other hand, was utterly selfish in his songs pertaining to women, especially in 1965-66. We think of “Michelle” and “Here, there and everywhere” as such sweet love songs but I’ve long seen a different side to them. It’s worth remembering that in the 60s, when English songwriters sang about love between a man and woman, what they were really singing about much of the time was sex and possession. As the English journalist Rosie Boycott pointed out, the real beneficiaries of free love in the 60s weren’t the women of the western world ! That came much, much later.
    “Here, there and everywhere” reminds me of the way many of us initially thought of the Police’s “Every breath you take.” It sounds like a passage of undying love. It’s not. It’s a sinister tale of control, a manifesto from a stalking maniac whose only interest in the object of his affection is to possess and starve the woman of freedom. Paul’s song reminds me of that and when you put it into context with songs like “I’ve just seen a face,” “I’m down,” “Another girl,” “You won’t see me,” “I’m looking through you,” “We can work it out,” and “For no one” you can see a side to Paul that was kind of chilling. It’s also very interesting that to the writer Michael Braun as early as January 1964, Jane Asher said “The trouble with Paul is that he wants the fans adulation and mine too. He’s so selfish. That’s his biggest fault.” While commenting on the song “Every little thing” in his book “A Hard Day’s Write,” Steve Turner observes “The girl’s needs are not even considered, the assumption being that she should find her fulfilment in serving her man. Ironically, it was precisely the attitude expressed in this song that Jane Asher later challenged when she told Paul she needed to find fulfilment in her acting career. It wasn’t enough for her to be the girlfriend of a desirable pop star…” Paul even admitted it when he told Hunter Davies that “I knew I was selfish….it caused a few rows. Jane went off and I said ‘OK then, leave. I’ll find someone else’.” This was in the context of saying that he’d always had women around, even when he’d had a girlfriend and that despite having a girlfriend that he lived with, he led the batchelor life.
    So for me, these things {they are well and numerously documented} shine a somewhat different light on Paul’s mid-60s songs in which he declares his love. “Michelle” comes across as the words of a bloke who can’t even communicate with Michelle but is happy to screw her royally. And that’s one of the sweet ones !!! People often criticised the Rolling Stones {and as the main lyricist, Mick Jagger in particular} for their misogynistic mid 60s output. Well, the Beatles got there first and were ready to show the Stones a thing or two !
    That all said, “Here, there & everywhere” is a lovely song, if not lyrical thought, although it’s my least favourite on “Revolver.” Which isn’t saying anything derogatory, because I think all 14 songs are at the very least magnificent.

    • @fathommusicnz
      @fathommusicnz  Před měsícem

      What a fascinating take; thank you for your detailed commentary. I'm well familiar with the discourse around John's misogyny, but it can totally be read that Paul's lyrical chauvinism is right out there in the open. I appreciate this contribution to the conversation.

    • @grimtraveller7923
      @grimtraveller7923 Před měsícem +2

      @@fathommusicnz I know this sounds ridiculous, given the common take on their history, but Paul was a worse misogynist than John, in my opinion. Paul was solidly in that direction until he married Linda. It comes out in so many of his songs in that period. But he didn't like it when Jane saw another guy. To me, that speaks eloquently about where Paul was at.
      If you haven't already, a great book to read is "Many Years From Now" by Miles. It is as close to an autobiography from Paul as we've ever got.
      It annoys me when Paul is regarded as a lightweight. He was deep and he had aspects to him that were horrible and he's never given credit for the full scope of a man going through the requisite 1960s changes.

    • @Kieop
      @Kieop Před 28 dny

      I like to say that Paul wrote infatuation songs and John wrote love songs.
      I consider Here There and Everywhere to be one of Paul's better love songs lyrically, in that it at least contains the presence of the beloved. Many of his songs are about love, but the beloved is completely hypothetical or absent. But here she is at least real and tangible, and there is an expression of shared ideals, rather than imposed ones.
      But I agree with you overall and that is the reason why I am convinced that John and Paul wrote Ticket to Ride together, despite what John claims. In the verses, John is trying to process why she left. He is trying to understand what went wrong. But suddenly, the song lashes out at her. "I don't know why she ridin' so high; she oughta think right, she oughta do right by me." This is a basic Paul attitude. If she leaves, it's her loss, not his. She'll come back once she's seen the error of her ways. I interpret "do right by" here, not as if she owes him restitution for hurting him, but rather that she is in good hands with him and should reconsider. He thinks she's not going to find someone better out there and that her complaints against him are baseless. He feels he's been doing right by her, so she should be grateful and return. When John lashes out, it's more vindictive, but less judgmental. More, you hurt me, so watch out.

  • @trevorb6
    @trevorb6 Před 2 měsíci

    Actually, this was the only song that John told Paul he really liked by Paul.

  • @Mandrake591
    @Mandrake591 Před 2 měsíci

    I enjoy these song breakdowns! I think I prefer the version Paul did in concert with an accordion player, I’m a big George Harrison fan, but his accented guitar clank is obtrusive on such a delicate track. Imo.

  • @PhilRock889
    @PhilRock889 Před 2 měsíci

    It just is.

  • @FairMinded1
    @FairMinded1 Před 2 dny

    Great video. It's worth pointing out, though, that in AABA song structure, the B section is the 'middle 8'. In fact, that is where the term comes from. You seem to be confusing it with a bridge, which is not really the same thing as a middle 8, though the terms are sometimes used interchangeably.

    • @FairMinded1
      @FairMinded1 Před 2 dny

      That said, I would argue that this song is not an AABA structured song. The "I want her everywhere" part is actually the chorus. There just isn't a bridge or prechorus.

  • @gaizkasalazarrodriguez5054

    What about FOR NO ONE?

  • @dondevice8182
    @dondevice8182 Před 2 měsíci +2

    ENGLISH SETTLEMENT!!!!

  • @marcyfan-tz4wj
    @marcyfan-tz4wj Před 2 měsíci

    i think i'm going to do a 24 minute video about how well you coordinate the color "green"...can i be as articulate as you are about my favorite band? undoubtedly not.

  • @31carrier
    @31carrier Před 2 měsíci

    58th liked 257 views Posted 6 Hours Ago

  • @scottroloff7391
    @scottroloff7391 Před 2 měsíci

    You didn't play the song...

  • @voidio739
    @voidio739 Před 2 měsíci

    It was probably written by George Martin or Theador Adorno

    • @voidio739
      @voidio739 Před 2 měsíci +1

      The Beatles were a psy op

  • @michaelboyd-gj7gy
    @michaelboyd-gj7gy Před 2 měsíci

    dance hall

  • @michaelboyd-gj7gy
    @michaelboyd-gj7gy Před 2 měsíci

    tin pan alley

  • @Kieop
    @Kieop Před 28 dny

    I can appreciate this song, but I don't really like it. I think its lyrical construction is really clever (the way each verse starts with a part of the title and the last word of each verse is the first word of the next verse), but it doesn't resonate with me emotionally.

  • @scottroloff7391
    @scottroloff7391 Před 2 měsíci

    Too techy...

  • @pedrorocha9722
    @pedrorocha9722 Před 2 měsíci

    ...yet, a very sterile song.

  • @Schwumbel
    @Schwumbel Před 2 měsíci +2

    This is indeed a very beautiful song. But… They didn't draw on the full range of possibilities for the arrangement imo. The guitar should be acoustic, the accompanying vocals should have been arranged by Brian Wilson, the guitar solo is also not convincing and feels as if glued on. If they would have spent more time on it, they could have made it not a, but the most beautiful song.