And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

Other than Pearl Jam, who else is there?
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McParadigm
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

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E.H. Ruddock wrote:I would definitely love it if they had this kind of footage for earlier sessions. In this session it seems like George is the only one willing to challenge Paul. John just sits there next to Yoko. I can't imagine John being like that through the whole career of the band, though.
To me, nine hours of Let it Be footage is interesting in the same way that nine hours of Vitalogy (or maybe No Code) studio footage would be: it doesn’t capture the band as they generally were, but rather how they were in a moment of crisis…how they were during a period of exceptional conflict and deviation from their norm.

George has finally started becoming a songwriter (versus someone who occasionally writes songs), only to find there’s no room for that. John is doped up and on an ego trip that opens him up to being taken in by shysters who flatter him (Magic Alex, Allen Klein). He now only has bouts of willingness to collaborate…like it’s a habit that he’s almost gotten rid of. Brian Epstein is dead and George Martin is reduced to a hanger-on. Paul is anxiety-ridden about the chaos that the resulting “schoolmaster” vacuum creates (watching him constantly lick his beard or pick at his teeth whenever emotions get hot in the documentary is something). He just can’t not try and control it all, no matter how often that backfires on him. Most of his songs from the era (Get Back, Two of Us, Long and Winding Road, Let it Be) read like open pleas for the band, and John in particular, to set aside their differences and be Beatles again before it’s too late.

Then, when this album is done, they make their Yield and break up.

The Let it Be footage is a fascinating glimpse of a band making music while in crisis. But it is in no way a look at the band’s typical dynamics or processes, and I agree…it would be amazing to have similar footage of an album like Pepper.
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

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McParadigm wrote:
E.H. Ruddock wrote:I would definitely love it if they had this kind of footage for earlier sessions. In this session it seems like George is the only one willing to challenge Paul. John just sits there next to Yoko. I can't imagine John being like that through the whole career of the band, though.
To me, nine hours of Let it Be footage is interesting in the same way that nine hours of Vitalogy (or maybe No Code) studio footage would be: it doesn’t capture the band as they generally were, but rather how they were in a moment of crisis…how they were during a period of exceptional conflict and deviation from their norm.

George has finally started becoming a songwriter (versus someone who occasionally writes songs), only to find there’s no room for that. John is doped up and on an ego trip that opens him up to being taken in by shysters who flatter him (Magic Alex, Allen Klein). He now only has bouts of willingness to collaborate…like it’s a habit that he’s almost gotten rid of. Brian Epstein is dead and George Martin is reduced to a hanger-on. Paul is anxiety-ridden about the chaos that the resulting “schoolmaster” vacuum creates (watching him constantly lick his beard or pick at his teeth whenever emotions get hot in the documentary is something). He just can’t not try and control it all, no matter how often that backfires on him. Most of his songs from the era (Get Back, Two of Us, Long and Winding Road, Let it Be) read like open pleas for the band, and John in particular, to set aside their differences and be Beatles again before it’s too late.

Then, when this album is done, they make their Yield and break up.

The Let it Be footage is a fascinating glimpse of a band making music while in crisis. But it is in no way a look at the band’s typical dynamics or processes, and I agree…it would be amazing to have similar footage of an album like Pepper.
Wait. Which one is their Yield?

Seems to me Abbey Road and Let it Be were basically written at the same time no?
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

Post by Strat »

I suppose Let It Be then duh.
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

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Strat wrote:
McParadigm wrote:
E.H. Ruddock wrote:I would definitely love it if they had this kind of footage for earlier sessions. In this session it seems like George is the only one willing to challenge Paul. John just sits there next to Yoko. I can't imagine John being like that through the whole career of the band, though.
To me, nine hours of Let it Be footage is interesting in the same way that nine hours of Vitalogy (or maybe No Code) studio footage would be: it doesn’t capture the band as they generally were, but rather how they were in a moment of crisis…how they were during a period of exceptional conflict and deviation from their norm.

George has finally started becoming a songwriter (versus someone who occasionally writes songs), only to find there’s no room for that. John is doped up and on an ego trip that opens him up to being taken in by shysters who flatter him (Magic Alex, Allen Klein). He now only has bouts of willingness to collaborate…like it’s a habit that he’s almost gotten rid of. Brian Epstein is dead and George Martin is reduced to a hanger-on. Paul is anxiety-ridden about the chaos that the resulting “schoolmaster” vacuum creates (watching him constantly lick his beard or pick at his teeth whenever emotions get hot in the documentary is something). He just can’t not try and control it all, no matter how often that backfires on him. Most of his songs from the era (Get Back, Two of Us, Long and Winding Road, Let it Be) read like open pleas for the band, and John in particular, to set aside their differences and be Beatles again before it’s too late.

Then, when this album is done, they make their Yield and break up.

The Let it Be footage is a fascinating glimpse of a band making music while in crisis. But it is in no way a look at the band’s typical dynamics or processes, and I agree…it would be amazing to have similar footage of an album like Pepper.
Wait. Which one is their Yield?

Seems to me Abbey Road and Let it Be were basically written at the same time no?
You mean like how Brain of J was a Vitalogy song?
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

Post by Strat »

McParadigm wrote:
Strat wrote:
McParadigm wrote:
E.H. Ruddock wrote:I would definitely love it if they had this kind of footage for earlier sessions. In this session it seems like George is the only one willing to challenge Paul. John just sits there next to Yoko. I can't imagine John being like that through the whole career of the band, though.
To me, nine hours of Let it Be footage is interesting in the same way that nine hours of Vitalogy (or maybe No Code) studio footage would be: it doesn’t capture the band as they generally were, but rather how they were in a moment of crisis…how they were during a period of exceptional conflict and deviation from their norm.

George has finally started becoming a songwriter (versus someone who occasionally writes songs), only to find there’s no room for that. John is doped up and on an ego trip that opens him up to being taken in by shysters who flatter him (Magic Alex, Allen Klein). He now only has bouts of willingness to collaborate…like it’s a habit that he’s almost gotten rid of. Brian Epstein is dead and George Martin is reduced to a hanger-on. Paul is anxiety-ridden about the chaos that the resulting “schoolmaster” vacuum creates (watching him constantly lick his beard or pick at his teeth whenever emotions get hot in the documentary is something). He just can’t not try and control it all, no matter how often that backfires on him. Most of his songs from the era (Get Back, Two of Us, Long and Winding Road, Let it Be) read like open pleas for the band, and John in particular, to set aside their differences and be Beatles again before it’s too late.

Then, when this album is done, they make their Yield and break up.

The Let it Be footage is a fascinating glimpse of a band making music while in crisis. But it is in no way a look at the band’s typical dynamics or processes, and I agree…it would be amazing to have similar footage of an album like Pepper.
Wait. Which one is their Yield?

Seems to me Abbey Road and Let it Be were basically written at the same time no?
You mean like how Brain of J was a Vitalogy song?

Ive only seen part one but i am a little confused and by no means a beatles historian. Seems like many of the songs for abbey road and let it be are coming from this same session.
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

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McParadigm wrote:
Strat wrote:
McParadigm wrote:
E.H. Ruddock wrote:I would definitely love it if they had this kind of footage for earlier sessions. In this session it seems like George is the only one willing to challenge Paul. John just sits there next to Yoko. I can't imagine John being like that through the whole career of the band, though.
To me, nine hours of Let it Be footage is interesting in the same way that nine hours of Vitalogy (or maybe No Code) studio footage would be: it doesn’t capture the band as they generally were, but rather how they were in a moment of crisis…how they were during a period of exceptional conflict and deviation from their norm.

George has finally started becoming a songwriter (versus someone who occasionally writes songs), only to find there’s no room for that. John is doped up and on an ego trip that opens him up to being taken in by shysters who flatter him (Magic Alex, Allen Klein). He now only has bouts of willingness to collaborate…like it’s a habit that he’s almost gotten rid of. Brian Epstein is dead and George Martin is reduced to a hanger-on. Paul is anxiety-ridden about the chaos that the resulting “schoolmaster” vacuum creates (watching him constantly lick his beard or pick at his teeth whenever emotions get hot in the documentary is something). He just can’t not try and control it all, no matter how often that backfires on him. Most of his songs from the era (Get Back, Two of Us, Long and Winding Road, Let it Be) read like open pleas for the band, and John in particular, to set aside their differences and be Beatles again before it’s too late.

Then, when this album is done, they make their Yield and break up.

The Let it Be footage is a fascinating glimpse of a band making music while in crisis. But it is in no way a look at the band’s typical dynamics or processes, and I agree…it would be amazing to have similar footage of an album like Pepper.
Wait. Which one is their Yield?

Seems to me Abbey Road and Let it Be were basically written at the same time no?
You mean like how Brain of J was a Vitalogy song?
*no code
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

Post by McParadigm »

Strat wrote:
McParadigm wrote:
Strat wrote:
McParadigm wrote:
E.H. Ruddock wrote:I would definitely love it if they had this kind of footage for earlier sessions. In this session it seems like George is the only one willing to challenge Paul. John just sits there next to Yoko. I can't imagine John being like that through the whole career of the band, though.
To me, nine hours of Let it Be footage is interesting in the same way that nine hours of Vitalogy (or maybe No Code) studio footage would be: it doesn’t capture the band as they generally were, but rather how they were in a moment of crisis…how they were during a period of exceptional conflict and deviation from their norm.

George has finally started becoming a songwriter (versus someone who occasionally writes songs), only to find there’s no room for that. John is doped up and on an ego trip that opens him up to being taken in by shysters who flatter him (Magic Alex, Allen Klein). He now only has bouts of willingness to collaborate…like it’s a habit that he’s almost gotten rid of. Brian Epstein is dead and George Martin is reduced to a hanger-on. Paul is anxiety-ridden about the chaos that the resulting “schoolmaster” vacuum creates (watching him constantly lick his beard or pick at his teeth whenever emotions get hot in the documentary is something). He just can’t not try and control it all, no matter how often that backfires on him. Most of his songs from the era (Get Back, Two of Us, Long and Winding Road, Let it Be) read like open pleas for the band, and John in particular, to set aside their differences and be Beatles again before it’s too late.

Then, when this album is done, they make their Yield and break up.

The Let it Be footage is a fascinating glimpse of a band making music while in crisis. But it is in no way a look at the band’s typical dynamics or processes, and I agree…it would be amazing to have similar footage of an album like Pepper.
Wait. Which one is their Yield?

Seems to me Abbey Road and Let it Be were basically written at the same time no?
You mean like how Brain of J was a Vitalogy song?

Ive only seen part one but i am a little confused and by no means a beatles historian. Seems like many of the songs for abbey road and let it be are coming from this same session.
The writing, sure. But that's not the comparison I'm making.

Let it Be was made while the band was in a state of turmoil, not unlike No Code. Then, the band agreed to put their differences aside and make one last proper Beatles record. Everyone took a step backwards, they let their producer reassert himself, and there was a noticeable return to their in-studio creativity while they made Abbey Road...a record that feels calmer, kinder, and more lush than its immediate predecessors.
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

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Side/related note: I dont think anyone in Pearl Jam is as interesting personally or artistically as anyone in the beatles (not counting Ringo) so im not sure it would be as much to enjoy other than pure fandom.
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

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Ed: Uh its like a wave
Mike: is this where i shred
Jeff: Fuck you guys
Jack: its all about the time were having playing the song and what not
stone: yawwwwwwwwwwwn

BoB: *INSERT CGI HERE*
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

Post by Thurman Murman »

McParadigm wrote:
Strat wrote:
McParadigm wrote:
Strat wrote:
McParadigm wrote:
E.H. Ruddock wrote:I would definitely love it if they had this kind of footage for earlier sessions. In this session it seems like George is the only one willing to challenge Paul. John just sits there next to Yoko. I can't imagine John being like that through the whole career of the band, though.
To me, nine hours of Let it Be footage is interesting in the same way that nine hours of Vitalogy (or maybe No Code) studio footage would be: it doesn’t capture the band as they generally were, but rather how they were in a moment of crisis…how they were during a period of exceptional conflict and deviation from their norm.

George has finally started becoming a songwriter (versus someone who occasionally writes songs), only to find there’s no room for that. John is doped up and on an ego trip that opens him up to being taken in by shysters who flatter him (Magic Alex, Allen Klein). He now only has bouts of willingness to collaborate…like it’s a habit that he’s almost gotten rid of. Brian Epstein is dead and George Martin is reduced to a hanger-on. Paul is anxiety-ridden about the chaos that the resulting “schoolmaster” vacuum creates (watching him constantly lick his beard or pick at his teeth whenever emotions get hot in the documentary is something). He just can’t not try and control it all, no matter how often that backfires on him. Most of his songs from the era (Get Back, Two of Us, Long and Winding Road, Let it Be) read like open pleas for the band, and John in particular, to set aside their differences and be Beatles again before it’s too late.

Then, when this album is done, they make their Yield and break up.

The Let it Be footage is a fascinating glimpse of a band making music while in crisis. But it is in no way a look at the band’s typical dynamics or processes, and I agree…it would be amazing to have similar footage of an album like Pepper.
Wait. Which one is their Yield?

Seems to me Abbey Road and Let it Be were basically written at the same time no?
You mean like how Brain of J was a Vitalogy song?

Ive only seen part one but i am a little confused and by no means a beatles historian. Seems like many of the songs for abbey road and let it be are coming from this same session.
The writing, sure. But that's not the comparison I'm making.

Let it Be was made while the band was in a state of turmoil, not unlike No Code. Then, the band agreed to put their differences aside and make one last proper Beatles record. Everyone took a step backwards, they let their producer reassert himself, and there was a noticeable return to their in-studio creativity while they made Abbey Road...a record that feels calmer, kinder, and more lush than its immediate predecessors.
I mostly agree but i dont think that the Abbey Road sessions were void of any drama....didn't Lennon hate the medley which is basically 1/3 of the album?
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

Post by spike »

Do we know if film exists of other recording sessions? According to Jackson, the GB footage wasn’t lost or hidden away; rather, the remaining members were suppressing it until they felt comfortable enough with themselves/their legacies to let it be released as an important historical document.

Perhaps if footage of other sessions does exist, they feel it isn’t as compelling and will never let it see the light of day..
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

Post by EJ »

spike wrote:Do we know if film exists of other recording sessions? According to Jackson, the GB footage wasn’t lost or hidden away; rather, the remaining members were suppressing it until they felt comfortable enough with themselves/their legacies to let it be released as an important historical document.

Perhaps if footage of other sessions does exist, they feel it isn’t as compelling and will never let it see the light of day..

didn't someone say there's Abbey Road footage as well? and, that there's plans to eventually release that?
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

Post by wease »

What model of bass is that John and George pass back and forth? I never really knew that either of them played bass on any of that stuff. Seems like Jack Bruce may have used that same model.
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

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wease wrote:What model of bass is that John and George pass back and forth? I never really knew that either of them played bass on any of that stuff. Seems like Jack Bruce may have used that same model.
I thought it was just a guitar with a lot of low end that they used for "bass". Like a Jazzmaster or Jaguar type thing. I could be wrong though. I was really high.
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

Post by oasisfan35 »

Farmer John wrote:
wease wrote:What model of bass is that John and George pass back and forth? I never really knew that either of them played bass on any of that stuff. Seems like Jack Bruce may have used that same model.
I thought it was just a guitar with a lot of low end that they used for "bass". Like a Jazzmaster or Jaguar type thing. I could be wrong though. I was really high.
Not entirely sure as there is no further citation but Wikipedia has Lennon playing a Fender Bass VI on Dig It and The Long and Winding Road.
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

Post by ghost »

The clothes in this doc inspired me to dress my ass up at work today. I think I'm a Paul, fashion-wise. (And a Ringo in the sheets.)
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

Post by Chris_H_2 »

wease wrote:What model of bass is that John and George pass back and forth? I never really knew that either of them played bass on any of that stuff. Seems like Jack Bruce may have used that same model.
do yourself a favor and never focus specifically on the bass in the long and winding road. to say that john was bad is an understatement.
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

Post by wease »

oasisfan35 wrote:
Farmer John wrote:
wease wrote:What model of bass is that John and George pass back and forth? I never really knew that either of them played bass on any of that stuff. Seems like Jack Bruce may have used that same model.
I thought it was just a guitar with a lot of low end that they used for "bass". Like a Jazzmaster or Jaguar type thing. I could be wrong though. I was really high.
Not entirely sure as there is no further citation but Wikipedia has Lennon playing a Fender Bass VI on Dig It and The Long and Winding Road.
That’s the one. And looks like I was right about Jack Bruce, too.
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

Post by Birds in Hell »

You guys beat me to it, yes, it's a Fender Bass VI - a quirky six-string short-scale bass, also used liberally by The Cure.
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Re: And We Are All Together / The Beatles Thread

Post by doug rr »

starting episode 2 tonight
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