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Friday, December 29, 2017

Beatles Return Home After Stupendous First American Tour, 1964. Local fans waited on pins and needles unsure if the United States could lure away the pop-stars for good.


On February 22, 1964, the Beatles were interviewed by Pathe News upon their arrival in London, returning home from their first American visit. When this interview had ended, they then were immediately interviewed again by David Coleman for BBC-TV's Grandstand. While the news of their unprecedented success in America had already reached home, it was now time for Britain to get the full details first hand. Both the Pathe News and BBC Grandstand interviews are presented below.

It is interesting to notice, during the BBC interview, the early appearance of one of Ringo's famous malapropisms - as he jokingly utters the phrase "Tomorrow Never Knows" as an off-handed quip, so long before the days of the 1966 Revolver album.


PATHE NEWS INTERVIEW:

Q: "George, your fans obviously enjoyed it over there, I assume the press enjoyed it, did you enjoy it?"

GEORGE: "Yeah, it was marvelous. You know. Everything. Every bit of it was a knock-out."

Q: "Even the work?"

GEORGE: Yeah, we enjoyed it, you know. It was different working in different places with the audience all around us."

Q: "What impressed you most about the place? Did you have time to take anything in properly?"

GEORGE: "Oh, yeah. I think I enjoyed the sun in Miami most of all. You know-- healthy."

Q: "You're the healthy one of the four?"

GEORGE: "No, but the sun was sort of very healthy."

Q: "Did you have a chance to get away from anybody at any time on the trip?"

GEORGE: "Yeah."

RINGO: "He got away from me-- twice!"

(laughter)

Q: "What did you most like about the trip, Ringo?

RINGO: "Oh, I just loved all of it, you know. Especially Miami-- the sun. I didn't know what it meant till I went over there."

Q: "Don't you get it up in Liverpool?"

RINGO: "No, they're finished up there, you know. They've cut it out."

(laughter)

Q: "Did you ever have a chance, John, to just get away on your own without anybody recognizing you?"

JOHN: "Yeah. We borrowed a couple of millionaires houses, you know."

Q: "You could afford to BUY a couple of millionaire's houses, couldn't you?"

PAUL: "Naw."

JOHN: "Yeah, we'd sooner borrow 'em. It's cheaper.

(laughter)

JOHN: "And we did a bit of water-skiing. Well, sort of, anyway."

RINGO: "Yeah, we had a great time."

Q: (to John) "Did your wife enjoy it over there?"

JOHN: "She loved it. (comically) Who?? Who??"

PAUL: "Shh-Shh."

RINGO: "Don't tell 'em he's married. It's a secret."

Q: "What about the taste of the fans over there. Did you find the same stuff?"

PAUL: "Yeah."

JOHN: "He never bit any."

(laughter)

PAUL: "We expected them to be very different, but they weren't at all. The accent was the only thing, you know. That was the only difference."

Q: "Did they reckon you sang in an English accent or an American accent?"

PAUL: "No, some fella said, 'How come because you're from Britain, and you still sing in an American accent,' or something. We were trying to explain it to him.... oh, it was funny."

Q: "When you came back from France you told me that they like the sort of quicker numbers."

PAUL: "Yeah."

Q: "But what did you do? Did you just do all the same routine as you do here?"

PAUL: "Uhh, yeah."

JOHN: "We did the older song."

GEORGE: "Most of our records are hits over there."

PAUL: "Oh yeah, we had to do 'Please Please Me' over there. We hadn't been doing that for a long time here, but it's in the charts there."

Q: "That's history, here. What about the Beatles' styles-- all these wigs and suits and things? Are they catching on over there?"

GEORGE: "Yeah, they're selling well."

RINGO: (jokingly) "15 million a day!"

Q: "I hear that the four of you have been millionaires by the end of the year."

GEORGE: "Oh. That's nice."

(laughter)

Q: "Have you got time to actually spend this money?"

BEATLES: (in unison) "What money??"

Q: "Doesn't he (Brian Epstein) give any to you?"

GEORGE: "No, no. Have you seen that car of his?"

(laughter)

Q: "Is there any intention for you to go back to America-- or in fact, join the brain-drain and a big guitar-drain and stay there?"

RINGO: "We'd like to go back. We wouldn't stay there. We love England."



BBC-TV GRANDSTAND INTERVIEW:

Q: "Welcome back, boys. How does this reception here compare with America?"

RINGO: "Oh, it was great! It was every bit as good."

JOHN: "It was better."

PAUL: "Better."

RINGO: "It was better."

Q: "I must say even you boys looked surprised as you came down the aircraft steps."

PAUL: "Yeah."

JOHN: "Well, wouldn't you be?"

GEORGE: "It's so early in the morning."

JOHN: "Yeah, we only just got up."

RINGO: "We haven't got up, we haven't been to bed yet. Don't forget; it's four o'clock in the states now."

Q: "What do you think about America? Is it very different from your point of view?"

RINGO: "It's bigger."

Q: "Did you get lost then, George?"

RINGO: (jokingly) "I'll pass you on to George now."

GEORGE: "No, I didn't get lost, George."

PAUL: "Nobody let him out, you know. He was in the hotel the whole time."

GEORGE: "Yeah, as soon as we got there they strapped me up in bed."

(laughter)

PAUL: "But it's a marvelous place. We loved it."

Q: "Is it very different for performance over there than performing here?"

GEORGE: "Yeah."

Q: "In what way?"

GEORGE: "You don't play theatres over there, you know. The places we played-- Carnegie Hall and this place in Washington."

RINGO: "A big stadium."

GEORGE: "Yeah, a big stadium with the audience all around and the acoustics were terrible."

JOHN: "So we sparred up, you know before we got..."

RINGO: "Yeah, it was good."

GEORGE: "But it was good for, you know-- It was quite a novelty, wasn't it, John?"

JOHN: "Yeah it was. (jokingly) I'll pass you on to Paul."

(laughter)

PAUL: "It was, too. Yes."

Q: "Now Ringo, I hear you were manhandled at the Embassy Ball. Is this right?"

RINGO: "Not really. Someone just cut a bit of my hair, you see."

Q: "Let's have a look. You seem to have got plenty left."

RINGO: (turns head) "Can you see the difference? It's longer, this side."

Q: "What happened exactly?"

RINGO: "I don't know. I was just talking, having an interview (exaggerated voice) Just like I am NOW!"

(John and Paul begin lifting locks of his hair, pretending to cut it)

RINGO: "I was talking away, and I looked 'round, and there was about 400 people just smiling. So, you know-- what can you say!"

JOHN: "What can you say!"

RINGO: "Tomorrow never knows."

JOHN: (laughs)

Q: "George, how do you like being described as the Prime Minister's secret weapon?"

GEORGE: "It's great, yeah. The thing is-- I didn't get the bit where they said, 'Earning all these dollars for Britain,' like, are we sharing it out or something?"

(laughter)

Q: "But we're told that you've come back from America millionaires."

PAUL: "Naw, you're kidding."

JOHN: "Next time."

Q: "Now what about Miami? I mean, you were in the millionaire's playground."

RINGO: "Oh, that was marvelous-- Miami!"

Q: "You lived well, did you?"

PAUL: "Yeah. Well, we borrowed these houses, you see. These people rang-up and said, 'Do you want our house, lad?' So we said, (American accent) 'By gum, we do!'"

(laughter)

PAUL: "And we went across there, and we all water-skied, and fishing."

(Paul gestures a two-foot fish with his hands. John demonstrates a one-inch fish with his fingers)

RINGO: "He caught a monster!"

Q: "How did it compare with New Brighton?"

PAUL: (laughs) "With New Brighton? It wasn't as sunny, of course, as New Brighton."

RINGO: "Of course, we missed the docks."

JOHN: "And the people didn't have as much money."

GEORGE: "And there was more oil on the sand in Miami."

Q: "We'd like to hear what you thought about (meeting) Mister Clay." (Cassius Clay, aka Mohammed Ali)

JOHN: "Very tall."

RINGO: "Oh, he's a big lad."

PAUL: "He's a great laugh, more than anything. He's a big lad."

GEORGE: "He's gonna get Sonny Liston in three."

JOHN: "...he said."

RINGO: "So he said."

PAUL: "That's what he said. I don't think he will, though."

Q: "I hear you were creeping up to Harry Carpenter in the training camp, Paul, and whispering things to him."

PAUL: "Yeah. Well you see, the only thing was-- He asked me who was going to win! And I would have told him out that I thought Liston was gonna win."

JOHN: (jokingly) "You coward!"

PAUL: (laughs) "I'm a coward! And it was in Clay's camp, you see, and there was all these big fellas around. I had to whisper, you know."

JOHN: (starts singing, and Paul joins in) "'Liston, do you want to know a secret.'"(laughter)

RINGO: "Pluggin' you know. We're still trying to sell!"

Q: "How did Clay compare with you?"

RINGO: "He's bigger than all of us put together."

Q: "We're told that he was acting in a way that even the Beatles couldn't match."

PAUL: "Yeah. He was, actually."

RINGO: "He was good."

JOHN: "He was saying, 'I'z beautiful, and you'z beautiful, too!!'"

(laughter)

PAUL: "Yeah, he's a showman."

RINGO: "Oh, definitely."

Q: "Well now that you're back, you're out of the Top Ten for the first time for a long time."

JOHN: (comical choking sound)

Q: "What about it."

PAUL: "Uhh, I don't know."

JOHN: "What do you suggest?"

Q: "Have you got anything on the way?"

JOHN: "We could go straight, couldn't we."

GEORGE: "I'm going to try tap-dancing."

PAUL: "And Ringo's doing comedy on the high-wire."

Q: "But have you got anything on the way, apart from the film?"

PAUL: "We're doing recording next week."

JOHN: (to Paul) "Shhh!!"

RINGO: "Don't tell 'em."

PAUL: "We're not! It's a lie! Sorry! (whispers) We're recording next week."

Q: "We daren't ask you where."

PAUL: "No!"

RINGO: "We couldn't tell you."

JOHN: "Oh no. --DECCA!"

(laughter)

Q: "What about your impression of American adults? I mean, we hear your impression of teenagers and so on. I saw you, Ringo, being quoted as saying something about this."

RINGO: "What did I say?"

Q: "You tell me."

RINGO: (jokingly) "I don't know. You know, I'm quoted so much it's just ridiculous."

(laughter)

Q: "You tell him what he said, Paul."

PAUL: "I don't remember. About adults?"

RINGO: "They're older than I am!"

(laughter)

Q: "You said the adults were a bigger problem than the teenagers."

RINGO: "Oh, yeah. Well, you know, they've sort of gone potty."

PAUL: "Yeah, they were."

RINGO: "I mean, the teenagers will ask for the autograph, and take it, and leave it at that. But the adults want to know where you've been, and..."

PAUL: "Yeah. Cut your hair, too."

RINGO: "Yeah. Well, I don't know if it was an adult, but somebody did."

Q: "Did you manage to get much time away from all this, and really get away by yourselves?"

JOHN: "We got three days at the end, after the 'Ed Sullivan in Miami,' you know, we stayed on. Was it three days?"

PAUL: "Yeah."

RINGO: "It was around that."

JOHN: "Three days, you know... nearly three."

Q: "Anyway, nice to see you back, boys. Thanks very much..."

PAUL: "Thank you."

RINGO: "Good to see you. Keep kicking."

JOHN: (giggling to Ringo) "Keep kicking."



Please feel free to leave any comments or corrections and share these articles plus the blog's website with your friends, especially Beatles’ fans. You and they might also enjoy knowing more about my Love Songs CD and my novel, BEATLEMANIAC. Just click on the “My Shop” tab near the top of this page for full details.






Friday, December 22, 2017

Relive Christmas Season 1963 And Read About The Beatles Thoughts On Their Initial End Of Year Success.


At the end of the first year of sweeping Beatlemania in Britain, the Fab Four gave an entertaining and enlightening interview to Dibbs Mather during a stop in Doncaster on December 10th 1963. Mather conversed with the Beatles in their dressing room just before their performance at the Gaumont Theatre. Topics of discussion included the changes that fame had brought into their lives and the origins of the name 'The Beatles.'

John Lennon displays his brutally-cool sense of humor, and also reads his poem 'The Neville Club' well-before the release of his first book. Lennon's collected poems and short stories 'In His Own Write' would not be published for another three months.

Meanwhile in America, on the same day as the Dibbs Mather interview, CBS-TV Evening News anchor Walter Cronkite showed a clip of an unknown group called The Beatles as an interesting story on the incredible mania-like fame they were experiencing in Britain.

Q: "Ringo Starr, it's been suggested that boys coming from the particular area that you've come from, if you'd hadn't found an interest in music, might have found it much more difficult to get out and make a go of life. Would you comment on this?"

RINGO: "I think it's true, you know. I mean, when I was sixteen I used to walk along the road with the rest of the lads, and we'd have all our trade coats on. You know, we'd had a few knocks with other rival gangs, sort of thing. But then I got the drums, and the bloke next-door played a guitar. And I got a job..."

JOHN: (sings) "'Teddy Booooy!'"

RINGO: (laughs) "...and we started playing together. And another bloke from work made a bass out of an old tea chest... you know them days. This was about '58, mind you. And we played together, and then we started playing on dances and things, you know, and we took an interest in it. Then we stopped going, you know, out to sort of hanging around corners every night."

Q: "Would you say that the enormous difference which your success in this field has had, has greatly influenced you, Ringo, as far as your philosophy of life or what you want to get out of it?"

RINGO: "Oh, yeah."

Q: "George Harrison, how different is your life now as a member of the Beatles to what it was, say, even four years ago?"

GEORGE: "Everything's completely changed. We don't have a private life anymore. And we, umm, are public property now. Not that we mind."

Q: "You don't mind being such public property with no private time at all?"

GEORGE: "Well, you get accustomed to it, and after a while, you just take it for granted, and you just do everything automatically... like signing autographs and (laughs) waving at people."

Q: "What about home life with your own family? Do you ever get any these days?"

GEORGE: "Yeah. Occasionally, say once every fortnight, we manage to get home. And, umm, if we're not appearing in our hometown then it's usually OK; they don't expect us to be there, and we... It's, you know, quite quiet."

Q: "Does this change the status for the family much?"

GEORGE: "Umm, not really. It makes 'em more popular (laughs) and people sort of after a while spot 'my' parents, anyway. You know, it's the same with the others. They'll say, 'There's George's dad,' whereas before they wouldn't know him from Adam. But, you know, they're just still the same as before."

Q: "What about the wealth that comes with this kind of success? Has that made a great deal of difference to the way you live... and the way your family lives?"

GEORGE: "No. It hasn't made... not so far anyway... it hasn't made any difference. Except for holidays and things like that. You know, we can just get the money out of the bank and go wherever we want."

Q: "You are one of the respective deep-thinkers in this group. How do you see it as a peak in your life? What happens to you after this is over?"

GEORGE: "Well, umm, I suppose we'll stay doing this sort of stuff for a couple of years. Whether we're... I mean, naturally, we won’t be able to stay at this level. But, umm, we should have another two years at least, I think."

Q: "What happens to George Harrison then?"

GEORGE: "I don't know. I'll know by the time that comes along. Probably I'll have a little business or something like that."

Q: "You don't want to go on in the profession?"

GEORGE: "Probably, yeah. I'd like to make records, you know, with other artists. I don't mean perform... I mean as a producer."

Q: "The technical side."

GEORGE: "Mmmm. But I don't know. You can't really tell at this stage."

Q: "Paul McCartney, you're one of the original Beatles. Where did the name Beatles originate?"

PAUL: "Well Dibbs, uhh, John thought of it first of all. Just as a name; just for a group, you know. We just didn't have any name. Well, oh yeah; we did have a name, but we had about ten of 'em a week, you know... and we didn't like this idea, so we had to settle on one particular name. And John came up with the name Beatles one night. And he sort of explained how it was spelled with an 'E-A,' and we said, 'Oh yes, it's a joke.'"

Q: "Since then, it's come to represent a large section of the young population-- called the 'Beatle People.' Do you people regard yourself as leaders of this particular group?"

PAUL: "No, we're not leaders of any sort of group. The thing is-- people always say, 'Well, you started great trends and things,' but in actual fact, all that we've done is gone along with the trends. And if in going along with it, we sort of encourage other people to go along with a couple of our ideas, you know; all very well. But we haven't tried consciously to start anything like a trend, you know."

Q: "Now, you were very much younger when this enormous success started, and you're riding the summit of it now. Do you see it as a peak... a mountain... interfering with the flow of your life?"

PAUL: "I don't really know what you mean by 'very much younger.' It was only a year ago."

Q: "But you've been working since '58, haven't you?"

PAUL: "Well, yeah... not working, you know. I mean, strictly speaking, we've been out of work since '58, and we've been doing this as a hobby. 'Cuz we've only been doing it as semi-pros. I left school and went right into it. And we were only sort of picking up a few quid a week, you know. It really wasn't work. I think the main thing is now that, as we've got ourselves a bit of security... we don't really have to worry, at the moment anyway, what we're gonna do after it. So we don't."

Q: "None of you are really concerned with going on in this field as a profession?"

PAUL: "Yeah, of course, we are. I think all of us really, if it suddenly flopped, then we would do something in this profession. But what we mean by Ringo and George's answers, that we don't really want to do... like the conventional answer is, 'I'd like to do ballads and films and straight-acting,' which is so corny. Because half the people who say that can't act or ballad or film. So, umm, we probably wouldn't want to do that unless we thought we could do it. We're having a bash at a film next year, and if we find that any of us can act, say, one out of us may become actors. But we haven't got any great hopes of being actors at the moment."

Q: "It's said, John Lennon, that you have the most 'Goon-type' humor of the four Beatles."

JOHN: "Who said that?"

Q: "I think I read it in one of the newspapers."

JOHN: "You know what the newspapers are like."

Q: "I don't know. What are they like?"

JOHN: "Wrong."

Q: (laughs) "This is going wrong... I want to get a nice 'Personality' bit."

JOHN: "I haven't got a nice personality."

Q: (laughs) "Is this evidence of Goon-type humor?"

JOHN: "No, I don't think I really have Goon-type humor. That's just an expression people use."

Q: "What has the success you've enjoyed with the Beatles meant to you personally?"

JOHN: "More money than I had before. That's the good bit."

Q: "Is it going to make any difference to your life the way you live it after, say, this calms down... the enormous excitement you're generating at the moment?"

JOHN: "I don't know, you know. Really."

Q: "Do you think your career as a comic might open up to you?"

JOHN: "No. (laughs) I don't stand a chance being a comic."

Q: "Why not?"

JOHN: "I'm not funny enough."

Q: "Umm, you were interested in poetry in school."

JOHN: "Who said?"

Q: "It's printed in a book compiled by the Beatles and entitled, 'The Beatles.'"

JOHN: (laughs) "I haven't read that book. We don't normally write those things."

Q: "Written any good comic poems lately?"

JOHN: "Yes."

(interviewer hands John a piece of paper containing one of Lennon's poems. The other Beatles giggle)

Q: (laughs) "I just happened to have it here by sheerest coincidence."

JOHN: "'Dressed in my brown...' Oh no, I've lost it. Hold on. I can't read it, you see. I've only just written it. (giggles) Well, that's how it starts, actually!"

Q: (laughs)

JOHN: (reads) "Dressed in my teenold brown sweater I easily micked with crown at Neville Club, a seemy hole. Soon all but soon people accoustic me saying such thing as 'where the charge man?'"

JOHN: "I'm turning it over--"

(reads) "All too soon I noticed boys and girls sitting in a hubbeled lump; smoking Hernia and taking Odeon, and getting very high. Some were only 4 foot 3 high, but he had Indian Hump which he grew in his sleep.'

JOHN: "But things like that just help me keep sane."

Q: "Is this business enough to drive you insane?"

JOHN: "No, I'm quite normal really. If you read in the Beatle books... it says I'm quite normal."



Please feel free to leave any comments or corrections and share these articles plus the blog's website with your friends, especially Beatles’ fans. You and they might also enjoy knowing more about my Love Songs CD and my novel, BEATLEMANIAC. Just click on the “My Shop” tab near the top of this page for full details.

Wednesday, December 20, 2017

ALL YOU NEED IS LOVE: USA’s MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR TRACK 11 – UNFOLDING ITS INCREDIBLE RECORDING PROCESS.




"The project came together so fast," Geoff Emerick explains about preparing for the "All You Need Is Love" broadcast, "that George Martin was unable to book the band into any of the EMI studios, so they had to record the backing track at Olympic; once again, to my frustration. I was unable to engineer it or even attend because I was an EMI staffer.”  The group's recent positive experience at Olympic Studios recording "Baby You're A Rich Man" made the choice of this studio an easy one.

With only eleven days until the television show was due for broadcast, The Beatles entered Olympic Sound Studios on June 14th, 1967 (time unknown) to record the rhythm track for “All You Need Is Love.”  In Geoff Emerick's absence, Eddie Kramer (future producer of Jimi Hendrix and Kiss) was engineer along with George Chkiantz as tape operator and, as usual, George Martin as producer. Eddie Kramer remembers: “They came in and it was, 'Well, what are we going to do now?'  John had the idea for 'All You Need Is Love,' and he sat next to me in the control room. We rigged the talkback mike so that it could be used for vocals, and he sang through that.” But this was hardly a typical recording session, as John himself explained back in 1967: “We just put a track down because I knew the chords. I played a harpsichord and George played a violin because we felt like doing it like that and Paul played a double bass. They can't play them, so we got some nice noises coming out, and then you can hear it going on, because it sounded like an orchestra, but it's just those two playing the violin.” Eddie Kramer recalls:  “There was a bunch of instruments left over in the studio from previous sessions, including a double-bass that Paul played.” An invoice from that session revealed a fee of ten guineas crossed hands for John's use of the harpsichord. George Martin states: “I remember that one of the minor problems was that George had got hold of a violin which he wanted to try to play, even though he couldn’t! “With Ringo on his usual drum kit, the group went through a total of 33 takes of the rhythm track for the song with this unusual instrumentation, John's vocal being the only voice heard intended as a guide vocal only. The book “The Beatles Recording Sessions” explains, “Right from the beginning of take one 'La Marseillaise' (the French national anthem) was a vital part of the song, emphasizing the international flavor of the occasion.” Engineer George Chkiantz relates: “The Beatles were very opportunistic and very positive. At one point we accidentally made a curious sound on the tape and they not only wanted to keep it on the recording they also asked us to deliberately repeat that same sound again. Other groups would have been annoyed, but The Beatles capitalized on the mistake. “Eddie Kramer explains:  “They did the song from beginning to end for a good half-hour. They'd get to the end of the song and John would count it off again without stopping, doing it again and again until they got the one that they liked.”   It was determined that 'take 10' was the best, so a tape reduction was prepared of this take to be brought to EMI Studios for additional recording. “They did a four-track to four-track mixdown,” George Chkiantz continues, “with curiously little care we all thought – and George Martin specifically told me to keep any little chatter before the take began. “Five days later (only six days to go), on June 19th, 1967, The Beatles continued work on the song in EMI Studio Three from approximately 7 pm to 1:45 am the following morning. After the engineering staff of George Martin, Geoff Emerick and 2nd engineer Richard Lush prepared a tape copy of the previously recorded rhythm track onto track one of a new four-track tape, overdubbing began on the three open tracks. Onto track two was recorded more drums from Ringo, a piano played by George Martin, and a banjo played by John. Onto tracks three and four were recorded John on lead vocals and Paul and George on backing vocals. These lead vocals from John were apparently replaced later, as we'll see.

The first mono mix created for the song was done on June 21st, 1967 in Room 53 of EMI Studios between 4:30 and 5 pm by George Martin and engineers Malcolm Addey and Phil McDonald. This mono mix, however, was only of the rhythm track recorded at Olympic Studios (omitting the overdubs mentioned above done on June 19th) and was documented as “remix 1.”  Later that evening, in the control room of EMI Studio Three, a similar mono mix, this one unnumbered, was prepared by the team of Martin, Emerick, and Lush between the hours of 7 and 11:30 pm. An acetate of this mono mix was given to Derek Burrell Davis, director of the BBC broadcast team, in preparation for the upcoming June 25th show.

“So then we thought, 'Ah well, we'll have some more orchestra around this little three-piece with a drum,'” explained John in 1967. George Martin relates in his book “All You Need Is Ears,” “I did a score for the song, a fairly arbitrary sort of arrangement since it was at such short notice.”  The orchestra was planned to be a part of the live television event, but they recorded a sizable portion of their contribution beforehand, on June 23rd, 1967 in EMI Studio One between 8 and 11 pm.

Since all four tracks of the four-track tape were full at this point, a tape reduction was first made on this day to open up some tracks for overdubbing purposes. The orchestra overdubbed George Martin's score onto this tape reduction (still stipulated as 'take 10') these overdubs designated as takes 34 through 43 (continuing from the 33 initial takes The Beatles made at Olympic Studios on June 14th).

Around this time, some very brave decisions were made regarding the actual live broadcast. “In a fit of bravado,” relates Geoff Emerick, “Lennon announced that he was going to do his lead vocal live during the broadcast, which prompted the ever-competitive Paul to respond that if John was going to do that, he would play bass live, too. It seemed to me to be a foolhardy – though brave – decision. What if one of them sang or played a bad note in front of millions of viewers?  But they were supremely confident, and they could not be dissuaded by George Martin, who was adamantly opposed, but as was usual by this point, had no real authority.”

“In an act of further defiance,” Emerick continues, “John and Paul even talked George Harrison into doing his guitar solo live, which we all knew was a tricky proposition. To my surprise, Harrison gave in without a whole lot of argument; my sense was that he was afraid of being embarrassed in front of his bandmates. Only Ringo was completely safe, for technical reasons:  if the drums were played live, there would be too much leakage onto the microphones that were going to be picking up the sound of the orchestra. Ringo nodded his head solemnly when I explained that to him. I couldn't tell whether he was relieved at being absolved of the responsibility of playing live, or whether he felt left out.”

The next day, June 24th, 1967 (the day before The Big Event), EMI Studios decided to forego their usual 'closed door' policy and allow more than 100 journalists and photographers inside throughout the late morning. Then, from 2 to 4 pm, a camera rehearsal for the following day's events took place in EMI Studio One, which included The Beatles, the thirteen members of the orchestra and Mike Vickers, a former member of the Manfred Mann band who was recruited to conduct the orchestra (since George Martin would be too busy in the control room on that day).

It was during this rehearsal that manager Brian Epstein “came in and held a meeting with George Martin and the band,” Geoff Emerick recalls, “during which they debated the wisdom of rush-releasing the upcoming performance as a single. John, of course, was keen – it was his song, after all – and it didn't take much effort to talk Paul into it, either...Only George Harrison was reluctant; presumably, he was worried that he might muff his solo, even though it was only four bars long. He was finally persuaded when George Martin assured him that we could stay late afterward and do any necessary repair work.”

Geoff Emerick noticed something interesting happening during these camera rehearsals. “I noticed George Harrison engaged in conversation with the television director for quite a long time. I had no idea what they were talking about, but I did notice during the broadcast that the camera was not trained on George during his guitar solo. Perhaps he requested that specifically, either because he didn't have confidence in his playing, or because he felt it was likely that he would replace the part later.”

After this camera rehearsal was complete, four more takes of overdubbing (takes 44 – 47) were recorded for “All You Need Is Love” in preparation for this days' decision to release the song as the Beatles next single as soon after the broadcast as possible. Although we don't know for sure what these overdubs consisted of, Geoff Emerick's book “Here, There And Everywhere” may shed some light on this. “Adding to the chaos was John's insistence on making a last-minute change to the arrangement, which sent George Martin into a tizzy – he was doing the orchestral score and had to rapidly come up with new sheet music for the musicians, who milled around impatiently waiting for him. To his credit, George came up with a spectacular arrangement, especially considering the very limited time he had to do it in and the odd meters that characterized the song.”  These overdubs took place in EMI Studio One between 5 and 8 pm, they all leaving then to get a good night's rest before the eventful next day.

The day of reckoning arrived; June 25th, 1967. The Beatles, the orchestra, the engineering team, the BBC crew and everyone else involved arrived at EMI Studio One at around 2 pm for what became an arduous and nerve-wracking day of activity. Much rehearsal (all recorded) and troubleshooting was needed before the live transmission would take place later that evening.

“The day of the performance came,” George Martin explains, “with television cameras rolling into the big Number One studio at Abbey Road. But I was still worried about the idea of going out totally live. So I told the boys:  'We're going to hedge our bets. This is how we'll do it. I'll have a four-track machine standing by, and when we go on the air, I'll play you the rhythm track, which you'll pretend to be playing. But your voices and the orchestra will really be live, and we'll mix the whole thing together and transmit it to the waiting world like that.' The BBC's mobile control unit was set up in the forecourt at Abbey Road, and I was to feed them the mix from our control room inside the studios. Geoff Emerick, my engineer, was sitting right next to me but, even so, communication was rather hampered by the fact that a television camera was sitting right over us, watching our every move.”

At some point, possibly during these rehearsals, another last-minute addition was made to the orchestral score. “George Martin...wrote the end of 'All You Need Is Love,” Paul explains. “It was a hurried session, and we said, 'There's the end, we want it to go on and on.'  Actually, what he wrote was much more disjoined, so when we put all the bits together, we said, 'Could we have “Greensleeves” right on top of the little Bach thing?'  And on top of that, we had the 'In The Mood' bit.”  Trumpeter David Mason remembers, “We played bits of Bach's Brandenburg concerto in the fade-out.”

“When it came to the end of their fade-away as the song closed,” George Martin relates, “I asked them:  'How do you want to get out of it?'  'Write absolutely anything you like, George,' they said. 'Put together any tunes you fancy, and just play it out like that.'  The mixture I came up with was culled from the 'Marseillaise,' a Bach two-part invention, ‘Greensleeves,' and the little lick from 'In The Mood.'  I wove them all together, at slightly different tempos so that they all still worked as separate entities.”

But there was only one problem with this arrangement. “Unfortunately, there was a sting in the tail for me,” George Martin continues. “I was being paid the princely sum of fifteen pounds for arranging the music and writing the bits for the...ending, and I had chosen the tunes for the mixture in the belief that they were all out of copyright. More fool me. It turned out that although 'In The Mood' itself was out of copyright, the Glenn Miller arrangement of it was not. The little bit I had chosen was the arrangement, not the tune itself, and as a result, EMI were asked by its owners for a royalty. The Beatles, quite rightly I suppose, said:  'We're not going to give up our copyright royalty.'  So Ken East, the man who had by then become managing director of EMI Records, came to me and said: “Look here, George, you did the arrangement on this. They're expecting money for it.' 'You must be out of your mind,' I said. 'I get fifteen pounds for doing that arrangement. Do you mean to say I've got to pay blasted copyright out of my fifteen quid?'  His answer was short and unequivocal. 'Yes.'  In the end, of course, EMI had to settle with the publishers.”

Three rehearsal takes were recorded first (takes 48 – 50), then three rehearsal takes for the BBC were recorded (numbered 1 – 3), then back to more dry run rehearsals (takes 51-53). “Paul had requested a working microphone so that he could shout out ad-libs,” remembers Geoff Emerick. “The problem was that the mic I had set up blocked Paul's face on the camera angle they wanted to use. In the end, I acceded to the director's request that a smaller mic be substituted even though it was not the mic I would normally have employed. I felt it was unlikely that whatever Paul ended up ad-libbing would be of significant importance to the record, and even if it turned out that it was, it was something we could easily overdub later.”

“Lennon was very nervous that day too,” recalls engineer Richard Lush. “He might not have looked it but I was used to working with him, and you get to know when someone is nervous.”  Geoff Emerick concurs:  “Richard and I were both struck by how visibly nervous John was, which was quite unusual for him:  we'd never seen him wound up so tightly. He was smoking like a chimney and swigging directly from a pint bottle of milk, despite warnings from George Martin that it was bad for his voice – advice that Lennon studiously ignored. One time as I passed by, I heard John mumbling to himself, 'Oh, God, I hope I get the words right.'  On this night he was forced to rely on his memory because his ever-present lyric sheet had to be placed off to the side due to the camera angle; if he turned his head to consult it, he'd be singing off-mike.”

There apparently was an hour or two break from rehearsals which allowed the engineering crew to leave for a well-deserved dinner. When they arrived back at around 6 pm, they saw that a large group of celebrity friends had arrived for the broadcast, all dressed in the colorful clothes of the day. According to reports, these friends included Mick Jagger, Marianne Faithfull, Keith Richard, Keith Moon, Eric Clapton, Pattie Harrison, Jane Asher, Mike McCartney, Graham Nash, Gary Leeds, Hunter Davies, Terry Condon, Allistair Taylor and Brian Epstein. “I had Keith Moon next to me,” Ringo remembers. “We decided to get some people in who looked like the 'love generation,'” George Harrison recalls. “If you look closely at the floor, I know that Mick Jagger is there. But there's also an Eric Clapton, I believe, in full psychedelic regalia and permed hair, sitting right there.”

Author George Gunby, in his book “Hello Goodbye, The Story Of 'Mr. Fixit',” recounts the eyewitness recollections of Brian Epstein's assistant Allistair Taylor: “Throughout the afternoon and early evening the musicians and technicians rehearsed constantly. It must have been the most rehearsed spontaneous performance ever!  The party guests arrived...they sat on the studio floor and waited as the clock ticked remorselessly towards 9:30 pm, the time set for the live transmission. Despite the relaxing effects of the 'whacky baccy' being smoked throughout the studio and the building, tempers became frayed and nerves raw. Then John threw everything out of kilter by claiming that he had lost his voice. Paul laughed at him and gently ribbed his songwriting partner. A glass of water and a few more barbed comments from McCartney put things right.”

“Paul strode into the control room at one point,” Geoff Emerick states, “and spent some time working on the bass sound with me. It struck me as a smart thing to do. Not only was he making certain that his instrument would come across the way he wanted it to, but getting out of the studio, away from the others and out of the line of fire, had a calming effect on both of us. It gave us both a little sanctuary where we could focus on just one specific thing and not think about the monumental technical feat we would soon be attempting to pull off.”

Four more rehearsal takes were recorded (takes 54 – 57) while they were waiting for the cue from the BBC that they were ready for broadcast. After some last minute technical problems regarding lost communication with the BBC truck parked outside (and the frantic hiding of glasses and a bottle of scotch in the control room during a last-minute toast between the engineering crew), the intercom speaker unexpectedly proclaimed “Going on air...NOW!”  The live broadcast caught 'take 57' of their rehearsal midstream, which was duly interrupted by George Martin in the control room, thanking The Beatles for their work on the “vocal backing,” and instructing the tape operator: “Run back the tape please, Richard.”  While the group waited for the tape to be rewound and cued up, and in between announcer Steve Race's comments to the viewing audience, The Beatles were heard nervously goofing around with their instruments with John singing “She loves you, yeah, yeah, yeah.” (During rehearsals, John is also heard singing “Yesterday” and “She'll Be Coming Round The Mountain When She Comes.”)

After John takes a sip of milk, roadie Mal Evans collects some empty teacups, and the orchestra enters into the studio and takes their seats, the previously recorded tape is cued up and begins to be played. So starts 'take 58,' the official take of the song for the “Our World” broadcast which spanned the globe thanks to the Early Bird 'space booster' and Lana Bird and ATS/B satellites.

The make-up of the four-track tape was as follows:  'Track One' contained the prerecorded rhythm track, 'Track Two' contained the live bass guitar, lead guitar and drums (they ended up being miked in order for Ringo to perform a live snare drum roll at the beginning of the song), 'Track Three' had the live orchestra, and 'Track Four' had the live vocals from John and Paul.

“The Beatles themselves gave an inspiring performance,” Geoff Emerick relates, “though you could see the look of relief on all their faces as they got to the fadeout and realized that they'd actually pulled it off. John came through like a trouper, delivering an amazing vocal despite his nervousness and the plug of chewing gum in his mouth that he forgot to remove just before we went on air. Paul's playing, as always, was solid, with no gaffs, and even George Harrison's solo was reasonably good, though he did hit a clunker at the end. Unsurprisingly, despite the complicated score and tricky time changes, the orchestral players came through like the pros they were, with no fluffs whatsoever, even on the most demanding brass riffs.”

Shortly after the momentous broadcast was complete, the engineers took off to the nearby Abbey Tavern for a celebratory drink while the orchestra, BBC crew and all the guests left for the evening. When they got back just before 11 pm, they worked with George Martin and maintenance engineer Martin Benge to put the finishing touches on the song in preparation for the soon-to-be-released single.

Geoff Emerick relates: “From the very first playback, the four Beatles were knocked out by what they were hearing. Harrison winced a little during his guitar solo, but Richard (Lush) took the initiative and reassured him, saying, 'It'll be fine; we'll put a little wobble on it, and it will be great.' In the end, all we had to do was add the effect and duck the last bad note.”  John related at the time: “There was no conception about how it should sound like at the end until we did it that day.”

Emerick continues: “John's vocal needed only two lines dropped in in the second verse, where, sure enough, he flubbed a lyric. The only other remaining task was to redo the snare drum roll that Ringo played in the song's introduction; it had been a last-minute decision for him to do it live during the broadcast, and George Martin felt it could be done a bit better...The only things that were replaced on 'All You Need Is Love' for the record release were the snare roll at the beginning, and two lines of the lead vocal.”  After these overdubs took place, the studio doors were finally shut by around 1 am the following morning.

Later that day, June 26th, 1967, the engineering team of Martin, Emerick, and Lush entered the control room of EMI Studio Two refreshed and ready to create the releasable mono mix of the song. While mixing out John's tambourine shaking at the beginning of the song, they made nine attempts at creating this crucial mix, only five of which were complete. Their fourth attempt was deemed the best, this being given to a young Ken Scott (who was apprenticing as a mastering engineer and would become a sought-after producer in his own right) to be transferred to vinyl. “Funnily enough,” stated George Martin, “although John had added a new vocal, Ringo had added a drum roll, and we had done a new mix, few people realized the single was any different to the TV version of the song.”

There was no intention to put out “All You Need Is Love” on an album at this point, so no stereo version was prepared yet. Capitol Records, however, did intend to include the song on their makeshift album “Magical Mystery Tour” so, with only the mono version available, they created a fake-stereo version of the song (probably in late October of 1967) for their stereo version of the album, placing the treble frequencies on one channel and the bass frequencies on the other channel.

On November 1st, 1967, the same engineering team of Martin, Emerick and Lush met in Room 53 of EMI Studios between 10 am and 1 pm to create a couple new mono mixes for songs that were to appear in the soundtrack to the upcoming “Yellow Submarine” movie, “All You Need Is Love” being one of them. This new mix, noted as remix 11, clipped off the last 13 seconds of the song, which omitted the final reprise of “Greensleeves” as heard on the released single.

In preparation for the soundtrack album release of “Yellow Submarine,” a stereo mix of “All You Need Is Love” was now deemed necessary. This was done on October 29th, 1968 in the control room of EMI Studio Three by Geoff Emerick and 2nd engineer Graham Kirkby (no producer was present). There are many notable differences between this stereo mix and the released mono mix. In this stereo mix, the brass is quieter, the drums are louder, the piano is heard more prominently, and a voice that appears to say “Check!” is heard at about the 25-second mark. George's guitar solo is a little quieter here and has a little less of the “wobble” effect. This guitar solo also cuts off just after the flubbed note in the fifth measure in the mono mix while it continues to be heard throughout the fifth and sixth measure in this stereo mix. The stereo mix is also substantially shorter that the released mono mix, also omitting the second playing of “Greensleeves.”

Sometime in early 1999, a brand-new mix of “All You Need Is Love” was created in EMI Studios for the album “Yellow Submarine Songtrack” which was put together to coincide with the re-release of the film that year. This new vibrant mix has the “Check!” voice panned out and also has the earlier fade as the previous stereo mix does. This mix was created by the engineering team of Peter Cobbin, Paul Hicks, Mirek Stiles and Allan Rouse.

Also, sometime presumably in early 2006, George Martin and son Giles Martin met in EMI Studios (now Abbey Road Studios) to create yet another stereo mix of “All You Need Is Love” for the album and project “Love.” This mix is generally the same as the original stereo mix until the fade out which combines elements of “Baby You're A Rich Man,” “Rain, “Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band” and “Ticket To Ride.” The song then ends with a combination of the orchestration of the song “Goodnight” and the sign off on their “Third Christmas Record."

Giles Martin then created yet another stereo mix of "All You Need Is Love" in Abbey Road Studios, along with Sam Okell, for inclusion on the re-release of the compilation album "Beatles 1."

For a song that was intended for an international audience, John kept to a simple song structure, this being '(introductory) verse/ verse/ verse/ chorus/ (instrumental) verse/ chorus/ verse/ chorus/ chorus' (or aaabababb) with a short introduction and long meandering conclusion thrown in. However, time signature changes abound as is sporadically usual on Lennon compositions in his later Beatles output.

A short three-measure introduction is heard first which mostly comprises the orchestra playing “La Marseillaise” along with Ringo's overdubbed snare drum roll. Lennon also played this French National Anthem on harpsichord during the initial rhythm track, but it is virtually, if not totally, indecipherable on the finished product. This introduction sets the 4/4 meter as a template for the rest of the song.

The first eight-measure verse then begins which is actually just used as an introduction, the only vocals being the words “love, love, love” repeated three times in harmony by John, Paul, and George. The second, fourth and eighth measures are in ¾ time while the rest are in the usual 4/4 time, this pattern repeats in all the verses of the entire song. John's harpsichord appears in earnest at this point playing simple chords throughout the verse while Ringo taps out quarter-note snare drum beats along with John. The violins kick in starting from the fifth measure and play throughout this verse while George squeaks out a few guitar notes in the final measures. We can also detect faint tambourine beats played by John from the live broadcast.

The first proper verse starts afterwards as Paul's bass guitar bounces in and John's lead vocals wind throughout. The “love, love, love” backing vocals are still present as are the strings playing nearly the same arrangement as in the introductory verse. There are some unidentified percussion-like sounds heard throughout this verse that possibly were made by George on violin in the rhythm track (or from John's banjo overdub). The second vocal verse comes next which is quite similar to the previous one except for a more elaborate orchestral arrangement, a combination of the prerecorded score with a different live broadcast score. We can also hear George playing some actual bowed violin in the final measure.

The first chorus then appears, which is also eight measures long. All of the measures are in 4/4 time except for the eighth measure which is in 2/4. John's lead vocal is double-tracked throughout the chorus while the verses are all single-tracked. Lennon's is the only voice heard in this chorus while the orchestral score plays a much more melodic and dominant role, mimicking in part what John originally played on the harpsichord in the rhythm track. Lennon's live tambourine is also heard somewhat more prominently in this chorus.

The next verse that follows is used as the instrumental section of the song, the first four measures highlighted by George's live guitar solo, the flubbed chord heard at the beginning of the fifth measure. The “love, love, love” backing vocals reappear here as the orchestra continues to be featured dramatically, especially with the staccato sixteenth-notes heard in the seventh measure. The tambourine is still present throughout as is George's violin noodling in the eighth measure. The second chorus then follows which is primarily identical to the first chorus except for Paul's adlib “whoop”s heard in the third and fourth measure.

The final verse then appears which now features an engaging string arrangement not heard before. The backing vocals now sing the single word “love” held out three times and George's violin is heard playing a triplet-like pattern in the final measure which briefly continues on into the chorus that follows it.

The chorus now repeats twice, the orchestral arrangement altering once again from the choruses previously heard. Various additional elements are heard here, including an accordion, George Martin's barrel-house piano playing, backing vocals from Paul and George, and more fluid bass work from McCartney. The last chorus is noteworthy for featuring Paul's “all together now” in the second measure and “everybody” in the fourth measure. The strings climax in the fifth through eighth measures by playing ascending triplet patterns until they reach their highest pitch in the eighth measure which is then played with a swing beat into the first four measures of the conclusion.

This conclusion consists of 30 measures in the common stereo version and 34 measures in the mono version. Vocally, this conclusion consists of John repeating “love is all you need” with a prerecorded John, Paul and George harmonizing the same line afterwards continually in a 'row, row, row your boat' fashion. This vocalization continues this way until the twelfth measure, Paul yelling “woo-hoo” in the eleventh measure which encourages John to reply “yee-hay!”  The prerecorded harmony vocals of John, Paul, and George, continue through the rest of the song but, with John's solo vocals abandoned, it allows him to ad-lib whatever came to mind, singing “Yesterday” in the 14th measure and shouting “Woah!” in the 15th measure. Paul shouts “Oh yeah” in the 17th and 18th measures which prompts John to sing “She loves you, yeah, yeah, yeah” twice within measures 19 and 22. Paul yells “woo-hoo” both in measures 24 and 25 and an “ah” in measure 26, after which we hear some indecipherable mumblings until the song fades away.

Orchestral insertions in the conclusion consist of David Mason playing Bach's “Brandenburg Concerto” in measures five through eight, tenor saxophonists playing the introduction to “In The Mood” in measures nine and ten and then again in measures twelve and thirteen. The strings play “Greensleeves” for the first time in measures 15 through 20, which is quickly followed by David Mason's repeat of “Brandenburg Concerto” in measures 20 through 24. Then comes “In The Mood” two more times in measures 24 and 25 and then 27 and 28. Then, as heard in the mono mix, “Greensleeves” is repeated through measures 29 through 34 until the recording finally fades away.

As was usually the case, John puts in a stellar performance for one of his own compositions, propelling the proceedings with his harpsichord work from the rhythm track. His vocal work is performed with great aplomb, and his tambourine is simple but nicely done. We can't exactly say the same thing for his banjo playing since it's buried too far in the mix. Paul's bowed double-bass isn't very discernible either, but his bass guitar is proficiently performed as is his backing vocals. George's nerves brought out a suitable live guitar solo for the recording, and even his violin playing wasn't too bad. Ringo's role may have been rudimentary, but his overdubbed snare roll worked very nicely. George Martin's piano work in the final choruses are up to his usual high standards and are placed suitably low in the mix as not to detract from the simple message of the song. Coming off of the extravagant production of the “Sgt. Pepper” album, they still knew how to pull out all the stops to create a full and impressive arrangement to define the “summer of love” mentality of 1967.



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Monday, December 18, 2017

BABY YOU’RE A RICH MAN: USA’s MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR TRACK 10 – UNFOLDING ITS INCREDIBLE RECORDING PROCESS.



“The Beatles couldn't get into the studio for the next couple of nights,” says Geoff Emerick in his book “Here, There And Everywhere,” “which forced them to record 'Baby You're A Rich Man'...at Olympic Studios...It was around this time that The Beatles began frequenting outside studios more and more, for a variety of reasons.”

Geoff Emerick goes on to explain what these reasons may have been: “Perhaps they simply had cabin fever and were sick of staring at the same four walls. There weren't really any amenities at Abbey Road:  there were no couches or armchairs in our cramped control rooms, just a couple of uncomfortable, hard chairs. In contrast, when they went into Olympic...there would be large control rooms with plush leather sofas and comfortable chairs to sit in, all accented by low lighting and a modern décor...In addition, by mid-1967, every other major studio in London had an eight-track machine, and we still had only four-track, which really made us seem like we were lagging far behind...There was also a much more relaxed attitude toward drugs in other studios, and it wouldn't surprise me if the staff at those facilities would partake with clients, so perhaps The Beatles related to the other engineers better...I imagine they thought it was really cool to share a joint with the control room staff. In contrast, we must have seemed really straight and square.”

In any event, on May 11th, 1967, just days after the contracts were signed for the new “Yellow Submarine” film project, The Beatles entered Olympic Sound Studios for work on the first new song to be used for this movie. “Olympic was one of the top independent studios in Britain,” Mark Lewisohn explains in his book “The Beatles Recording Sessions,” “turning out many hit records. The Rolling Stones had taken to recording there, even though studio manager Keith Grant was equally keen to promote the venue's valuable film soundtrack work.”

George Martin was still used as producer of the session, although the aforementioned Keith Grant oversaw engineering duties. “The Beatles said that this was the fastest record they'd ever made,” Grant relates. “They were used to a much more leisurely pace. We started the session at about 9 pm.”

Twelve takes of a rhythm track were recorded first with the instrumentation being John on piano, Paul on bass, George on electric guitar and Ringo on drums. Keith Grant remembers, “They kept on playing, version after version, then we spooled back to the one they liked and overdubbed the vocals.” Take 12 was deemed the best rhythm track, onto which John sang lead vocals with Paul and George singing backing vocals. (Legend has it that John sings “Baby, you're a rich fag jew” as a reference to Brian Epstein toward the end of the song...listen carefully to see if you can detect it!)  Other overdubs included Paul playing an additional piano, Ringo on tambourine and then maracas, George and Ringo adding handclaps, John double-tracking his lead vocals in spots, and Eddie Kramer (future producer for Jimi Hendrix and Kiss who happened to be 2nd engineer on the session) adding a little vibraphone. A droning sound resembling a tamboura is also present on the finished recording, undoubtedly played by George.

Attending this session was friend and fellow musician Mick Jagger, who may have contributed something to the proceedings as well. Author Mark Lewisohn, while listening to the tape in preparation for his book “The Beatles Recording Sessions,” spotted the following notation on the tape box: “The Beatles + Mick Jagger?”. It has been speculated that he joined in on the sing-along choruses of the song, although never verified.

One other overdub at this session was a very interesting instrument called a Clavioline, played by John. Eddie Kramer explains: “We wanted to make sure that they walked out of (Olympic Studios) being completely blown away. Which they were...There was a Clavioline that happened to be in the studio, and John played it. This was a French electronic instrument with a small keyboard. It had a little strip which you put your thumb on and moved it up and down the length of the keyboard as you played, to get vibrato.”

Andy Babiuk, in his book “Beatles Gear,” gives more detail about this instrument. “The Clavioline was a monophonic keyboard – meaning only one note sounded at a time, precluding chords. It was in effect a predecessor of modern synthesizers...The instrument consisted of two units:  the keyboard, with built-in valve (tube) sound generator; and the separate amplifier-and-speaker box...A built-in octave transposer switch gave the keyboard's single oscillator a five-octave range. The overall volume was controlled by a knee-operated lever. The Clavioline's unusual sound, heard whirling intermittently through 'Baby You're A Rich Man,' had also been evident on 'Telstar,' a bit hit for the British group The Tornados on both sides of the Atlantic in 1962.”

As for John Lennon's use of the instrument on this day, one apocryphal story suggests that he achieved his rapid-fire wail by rolling an orange up and down across the keyboard. This, of course, still has zero confirmation but makes for an interesting anecdote when relating the details of the recording session on this day.

As far as the vocals were concerned both Keith Grant and Eddie Kramer discussed this evening's session with engineer George Chkiantz, who related:  “They were both amazed at John Lennon's voice. They'd long been wondering what it would be like to record and they were saying how great it was. They couldn't believe anyone could sing that well.”

After all overdubs were complete; everyone stayed a little longer to put it all together. A tape reduction occurred, so two attempts at this followed, the second one considered the better one. Then the one and only mono mix of the song was made, making “Baby, You're A Rich Man” the first Beatles song to be recorded and mixed for record entirely outside of Abbey Road. Keith Grant explains:  “It was finished and mixed by about 3 am.” Paul himself remembers this day in his book “Many Years From Now” as “a rather exciting recording session at Olympic, in Barnes, where Keith Grant mixed it, instantly, right there. He stood up at the console as he mixed it, so it was a very exciting mix, we were really quite buzzed. I always liked that track.”

“Whenever they did a track at an outside studio,” relates Geoff Emerick, “I usually had to do a lot of repair work to the tapes because they simply couldn't achieve the sound they were used to anywhere else. This time around, though, they actually got the entire song done – including the final mix – in a single session...It had been a long time since they'd been so efficient. I had to admit that the results were pretty good...Keith Grant did the session himself, and he knew what he was doing. In addition, Olympic's mixing console was a totally different design than ours and was capable of passing lower frequencies, so there was quite a smooth bass sound, which I thought was great.”

The next time attention surfaced to the song was on August 22nd, 1968, when George Martin made a copy of this mono master in the control room of EMI Studio Two. It was reportedly taken away by George Martin for some unknown reason.

Since the song was only released in mono as a single, a stereo mix wasn't made until October 22nd, 1971, by George Martin and Geoff Emerick at his AIR Studios in London. Certain differences are evident, most noteworthy is the presence of George Harrison's guitar part which is not as prominent in the mono mix. The end of a vocalized “eleven” which is present at the very beginning of the mono mix (possibly someone attempting to identify what take it was) was faded out of this stereo mix. Also, there is an effect referred to by some as a “spin” that appears at strategic places in the verses of the song (such as after the lines “eye can see” and “enough to know”). These “spin” effects are missing in the stereo mix. This stereo mix is also nine seconds shorter than the mono mix. In the U.S., this stereo mix was first heard on the CD release of the album “Magical Mystery Tour.”

A further stereo mix of the song was made in 1999 in preparation for the release of the album “Yellow Submarine Songtrack.” The engineering team working on this project comprised Peter Cobbin, Paul Hicks, Mirek Stiles and Allan Rouse. The technology of the 1990's made for a cleaner and more vibrant version of the song, the excitement of the recording session coming through very well for the listener.

The structure of "Baby You're A Rich Man" is quite standard for Beatles compositions, namely a 'verse/ verse/ chorus/ verse/ chorus' format (or aabab) with an introduction and repeating conclusion added to bring the tune home.

The introduction is eight measures long and consists of the basic rhythm track of piano, guitar, and drums with the overdubbed tambourine throughout all eight measures. Interestingly, George's guitar thumps propel the beat of the song nicely in this introduction, even slightly overshadowing Ringo's usual time-keeping role in the early moments of the song. The overdubbed maracas appear at the beginning of the second measure, Paul's bass emerges in the middle of the third measure, John's 'snake-charming' Clavioline appears first at the very end of the third measure, and then the handclaps come in in the fifth measure. All these elements are brought in one at a time as if to build up the arrangement layer by layer.

The first eleven-measure verse then appears as the Clavioline fades from view and John and Paul's unison vocals appear, sung partially in falsetto. The instrumentation of the introduction continues throughout the verse with the Clavioline filling in the open spaces of the lyrics in measures five and nine. John and Paul sing in unison during the entire verse except for two lines, namely “what do you want to be” (measure six) and “far as the eye can see” (measure ten) which are sung by John solo. Another feature is the two breaks that appear in the verse; the first is in measure seven with only a slight piano springs forth along with all percussion, the second in measure eleven which cuts out all percussion and only features piano chords playing an eighth-note rhythm that swells in volume as the measure ends.

The second verse begins immediately afterwards. Noteworthy differences include Ringo's drum fills in the first two measures and Paul's first harmony in the third measure on the word “people.” John's solo lines “often enough to know” and “nothing that doesn't show” are both mimicked by George on guitar this time around. The final piano swell in the eleventh measure is this time accented by a vibrant drum fill from Ringo in anticipation of the first chorus that follows.

The high point of the song is then reached in this first twelve-measure chorus with John and Paul repeating the song's title for the first three measures in an excitedly unison high pitch notes. Paul swings into harmony in the fourth measure for the word “too.” John's vocals are sung solo but double-tracked in the fifth through eighth measure while his Clavioline appears in the open spaces in measures four, seven and eight. Full instrumentation, as previously heard in the verses, continues throughout this chorus until the twelfth measure where another break occurs, the only elements present is the piano swell, a tambourine, and a stray hand clap at the beginning of the measure.

Then comes the third verse, which this time features a very mellow first line sung single-tracked by John until Paul joins in on the third measure with a harmonized “people.” Ringo plays some meandering 'lead drums' in the first two measures while the Clavioline appears in measures five, seven and nine this time. A droning sound which very much resembles a tamboura is heard quite prominently throughout this verse as well, undoubtedly played by George as he did in the song “Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds” which the band recorded two months prior. Ringo ends this verse with a snare drum fill to usher in the following chorus.

This second chorus is identical to the first in most respects, the most notable differences being more appearances of the Clavioline (measures four, seven, eight, nine, ten and twelve) and an extemporaneous extra “baby” from Paul in the eighth measure. There is no break at the end of this chorus, the instrumentation continuing in full force with Paul yelping out an “Oh-oh-oh-oh” in the final measure.

McCartney’s yelp moves directly to the conclusion of the song which is a continual repeat of the first four measures of the chorus sung with energetic spontaneity until it fades out. Full instrumentation appears throughout this conclusion, including uninterrupted Clavioline noodling from John. The conclusion in the stereo mix extends only eight measures until it is faded away while the mono mix extends for eleven measures.

All four Beatles were fully involved in the making of this song, playing on the rhythm track as well as multiple overdubs. With team spirit abounding, they all played in top form; John on piano and his wild Clavioline, Paul on bass and piano, George on guitar and possibly tamboura, and a very spirited Ringo on drums and percussion. This post “Pepper” track may not have been as masterfully written or recorded, but one thing that is obvious is the fun atmosphere of the recording session that easily comes through to the listener. Everyone involved was undoubtedly having a blast recording this song. And the undeniable hook of the chorus can't help but get you to sing along, even if you have no idea why anyone would keep all their money “in a big brown bag inside a zoo!”



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Join me soon for the Unfolding Process of "ALL YOU NEED IS LOVE."


Friday, December 15, 2017

PENNY LANE: USA’s MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR TRACK 9 – UNFOLDING ITS INCREDIBLE RECORDING PROCESS.


December 29th, 1966, marked the first day allocated for work on "Penny Lane” in EMI Studio Two starting at around 7 pm. This was the third song brought into the studio with the intention of taking part of their next album, which eventually became "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band." However, neither this song nor John's "Strawberry Fields Forever" ended up on the album, as we'll explain later.

With their new-found freedom to not rush inside the recording studio and get things exactly the way they wanted them, a new approach instituted for recording “Penny Lane.” In his book “Here, There And Everywhere,” engineer Geoff Emerick explains: “One of Paul McCartney's favorite albums of 1966 was The Beach Boys' 'Pet Sounds,' and he often played it on his portable gramophone during breaks, so it wasn't altogether unsurprising when he announced that he wanted a 'really clean American sound' on...'Penny Lane.'  I'd spent a lot of time mastering American records, and I was convinced that the best way to give Paul what he wanted was to record each instrument totally on its own so that there would be no leakage (or 'bleed,' as it was known) whatsoever. Paul's trust in me was such that he simply said offhandedly, 'Okay, well, let's do it that way, then.'”

Standard procedure had usually been that the Beatles would lay down a rhythm track together and then, with this accomplished, all overdubs would be added on top to create the finished recording, which changed dramatically for this song. “Unlike any other Beatles track recorded to that point,” Geoff Emerick continues, “it started with Paul playing piano, not with the four of them playing a rhythm track together; every single part except the main piano piece was an overdub. For days, the others sat at the back of the studio watching Paul layer keyboard after keyboard, working completely on his own. As always, his sense of timing was absolutely superb: the main piano part that everything was built on was rock solid despite the fact that there were no electronic metronomes to lay down click tracks in those days. In fact, Ringo wasn't even employed to tap out a beat on the hi-hat. It was that bedrock of Paul's original piano track that gave the whole song such a great feel.”

Mark Lewisohn, in his book “The Beatles Recording Sessions,” explains this day's events: “The most important contribution was the main piano piece, so Paul took great care in perfecting this, recording six takes until he was satisfied, although only the fifth and sixth were seen through to completion. This piano went onto track one of the four-track tape. Happiest with the sixth take he then began to apply the overdubs, working alone in the studio. Onto track two of the tape went another piano, played this time through a Vox guitar amplifier with added reverberation to give an entirely different sound.” According to Kevin Howlett's liner notes for the 50th Anniversary release of the "Sgt. Pepper" album, the effect used on the amplifier consisted of "the tremolo control set at a low speed."

Ringo was then apparently summoned to help out with the recording that went onto track three of the four-track tape. “Onto track three went yet another piano, played at half-speed and then speeded-up on replay to give another different effect. A shaken tambourine also surfaced for this overdub." Kevin Howlett details further about the piano on track three, saying that Paul used "the studio's 'Mrs. Mills' piano - a 'prepared' instrument that produced a honky-tonk sound."

Track four, the last on the four-track tape, may very well have gotten John and George in on the act as well. “Superimposed onto track four were two-tone high-pitch whistles from a harmonium, again fed through a Vox guitar amplifier, various strange percussion effects, one of them sounding at times like a machine gun, and extremely fast and sometimes drawn-out cymbal notes.” Undoubtedly, Paul played the harmonium, these high pitched sounds being heard in the finished song a little bit in the instrumental section and overwhelmingly during the song's final ringing chord. The machine gun-like percussion effects can be heard in the second chorus and at the conclusion of the third chorus (just after the lyric “meanwhile back”) and the fast drawn-out cymbals are most noticeable in the final seconds of the song. A sampling of each isolated track of this original four-track tape can be witnessed on the PBS Special entitled "Sgt. Pepper's Musical Revolution."

Regarding the sound effects used, Geoff Emerick relates about the “sound effects cupboard under the stairs in Studio Two. If the Beatles ever got stuck for an overdub, they'd head into that cupboard to find something – there was so much paraphernalia there: wind machines, thunder machines, bells, whistles – you name it. Whenever that door was opened, we knew that something fun was about to happen.” Upon listening to the isolated recordings contained on this first four-track tape, as included on certain editions of the 50th Anniversary release of "Sgt. Pepper," the "machine gun-like" effects sound somewhat like a quickly tapped bongo drum, but not fully verified.

Probably because no recorded vocals appeared as of yet, the title of the song was simply “Untitled” at this point. Although there was obviously much more to be done to the song, two mono mixes were created of the days' work by producer George Martin and engineers Geoff Emerick and Phil McDonald; no doubt created for acetate cutting purposes. By 2:15 the next morning, the session was finally complete.

The group met up once again in EMI Studio Two later that evening, December 30th, 1966, with many overdubs in mind for “Penny Lane.” Documents show that the session began at 7 pm, but it appears that this was one of the occasions that the Beatles didn't show up until much later, as Geoff Emerick indicated. “Not much was done on this day, the session beginning with engineering work being performed on the songs “When I'm Sixty-Four” and “Strawberry Fields Forever.” The book “The Beatles Recording Sessions” indicate that, when the proposed overdubs for “Penny Lane” did commence, it was already “well into the early hours of the morning.

The first order of business with “Penny Lane” was to make a reduction mix of all four tracks of the previous day's take onto just 'track one' of a new tape, clearing three open tracks for more overdubs. This new reduction mix turned 'take 6' into 'take 7.'  “Four-track recording was a real limitation with this particular song,” Geoff Emerick relates, “so we were constantly having to bounce tracks together and do reductions (which we sometimes called 'premixes'). In the end, there were so many keyboards blended together; they ended up becoming a sound of their own; listening to the finished recording, it's hard to pick out individual instruments. Some of the overdubs even got buried altogether because of the density of the instrumentation and the number of bounces. Nonetheless, 'Penny Lane' contains a lot of great sounds.”

The only overdubs they got around to recording on this day were Paul's lead vocals and John's backing vocals (heard during the second line of the choruses), both of which appear on 'track four' of the new tape. The same engineering team of Martin, Emerick, and McDonald then made a pair of mono mixes of this song for Paul to review. Since the time had reached 3 am on what was now New Year's Eve, the session ended not only for the day but the year, holding off the rest of their overdub ideas until 1967.

On January 4th, the group resumed work on “Penny Lane” to start off the new year. Documents show this session, which was in EMI Studio Two, began at 7 pm once again, the overdubs made on this day filling up the two open tracks of the tape. Onto track two was yet another piano part, this one performed by John, and a guitar part played by George, which is barely discernible on the finished recording. On track three Paul overdubbed his lead vocals. Although all four tracks of the tape had filled, no tape reduction took place at the end of the session, which may indicate that they may not have been quite happy yet with what they accomplished on this day. At 2:45 am the next morning, their first session of 1967 ended.

Later that day, January 5th, 1967, the Beatles once again met sometime after 7 pm in EMI Studio Two for another recording session. It appears, however, that the primary purpose of this session was to create what turned out to be a sound effects tape intended for an upcoming “happening” called “Carnival Of Light.” Paul was approached by friend David Vaughan and asked if the Beatles would record some experimental music then played at this event at the Roundhouse in London. Most of this day’s' session laid devoted time to Vaughn’s project. However, Paul first decided to replace his lead vocal overdubbing for “Penny Lane” done on the previous day, this new performance also contained acceptance onto 'track three' of the tape. By 12:15 am, the session ended for the day.

The following day, January 6th, 1967, they reconvened in EMI Studio Two at around 7 pm. This time they were not distracted by other projects but focused entirely on adding overdubs to “Penny Lane.” Up to this point, the only primary instrument recorded for the song was piano, albeit mostly piano tracks overdubbed on top of each other. Today, however, they took to adding more key elements, namely Paul on bass guitar, John on rhythm guitar, and Ringo's main drum part. “None of the instruments were taped pure,” says Mark Lewisohn's book “The Beatles Recording Sessions,” “being heavily limited by engineer Geoff Emerick and recorded at 47 ½ cycles to speed up on replay.”

Also overdubbed at this point was John on conga drums, which was also limited and slowed down. “He just tapped idly on a couple of conga drums,” Geoff Emerick explains. “He actually liked doing that kind of thing because he could loon around; he never treated the recording process all that seriously. Overdubbing different kinds of instruments, things other than his normal six-string Rickenbacker electric or Gibson acoustic guitar, provided light relief for him: if he didn't have much to do, he'd get bored easily.”

All four tracks of the four-track tape were now full again, which meant yet another required tape reduction. Afterward, 'take 7' now became 'take 8,' with two open tracks available for more overdubbing. Interestingly, both John and George Martin overdubbed more pianos onto the recording (which now totaled six pianos on the song), as well as handclaps (undoubtedly by all four Beatles) and, during the instrumental break, John, Paul and George humorously scat singing where they knew brass instruments would fill in later. A good portion of this handclap and scat singing overdub arises on the "Super Deluxe Edition" box set of the "Sgt. Pepper" album along with another interesting overdub flown in which we'll detail later. The session ended at 1 am and proved a much more productive day for a single song that grew as a quite lengthy project.

The Beatles took off for the weekend, but George Martin was kept busy by Paul for these two days. “Paul had very definite thoughts about the instrumentation he wanted on 'Penny Lane,'” relates Geoff Emerick. “George Martin was tasked with creating an arrangement for flutes, trumpets, piccolo, and flugelhorn, to which were added oboes, cor anglais (English horn), and bowed double bass.” So, when Monday came around, January 9th, 1967, the session at EMI Studio Two turned ready for overdubbing the first portion of these classical instruments, using the score that George Martin had come up with over the weekend.

Four flutists and two trumpeters (Leon Calvert and Freddie Clayton) were recorded on this day, three of these musicians also overdubbing piccolos and a flugelhorn at this session. Two mono mixes developed at the end of the day by the usual engineering team of Martin, Emerick, and McDonald, no doubt to allow Paul to inspect the recording of the song thus far. By 1:45 am, the session was complete.

Another “Penny Lane” session occurred the following day, January 10th, 1967, this time in EMI Studio Three. Sometime after the usual 7 pm, the Beatles arrived for what amounted to a not-too-productive day. “The Beatles Recording Sessions” book describes the results of this days' work as “superimpositions of various effects including scat harmonies and a hand-bell, taken from the trap room and shaken whenever the lyrics mentioned the fireman or his fire-engine.” Since the session is specified to have been complete at 1:40 am the next morning, it's probably safe to say that the Beatles didn't arrive precisely at 7 pm and spend over six-and-a-half hours to record a hand-bell and some “scat harmonies,” the latter of which isn't discernible in the finished recording. Or maybe it did take that long...It may have taken Ringo all that time to get the hand-bell exactly the way Paul wanted it!  Or maybe they just hung out and smoked some doobies...who am I to say?

Two days later, though, on January 12th, 1967, a more productive session commenced. The second set of classical instrument overdubs took place in EMI Studio Three, between the hours of 2:30 and 11 pm. Two trumpets (including Bert Courtley), two oboes, two cor anglais and a double-bass were recorded onto 'take 9' of “Penny Lane.” The bassist, Frank Clarke, relates: “They wanted me to play one note over and over, for hours.” Interestingly, it was probably at this session that a decision was made to insert a small section of the classical instruments overdub played backwards in the open section of the final chorus, also heard on the above mentioned "Sgt. Pepper" box set. This backward instrumental section, of course, was decided against later and replaced by a final overdub and described below. After this session ended to satisfaction, two mono mixes followed by the usual engineering team just before the doors closed for the evening at 11 pm.

Geoff Emerick relates: “Combined with Paul's stellar bass playing and superb vocals...the track was beginning to sound full, polished, and quite finished to me.” Upon listening to the song at this point, as available in bootlegs, I'm sure that most listeners and record-buyers would have been quite impressed with these stellar results. The instrumental section, for instance (as evidenced on the compilation album “Anthology 2”), works quite well, and would be considered a good step up from their most recent album release “Revolver.”

However, Paul thought it could better progress. During this session, Paul kept talking about something he had seen on television the night before. He was watching “the second of a five-part, late-night BBC2 television series 'Masterworks' at home on the Wednesday evening of January 11th,” explains the book “The Beatles Recording Sessions.”

“Paul couldn't stop talking about it,” Geoff Emerick details. “'What was that tiny little trumpet that fellow was playing?' he asked us. 'I couldn't believe the sound he was making!'  George Martin's classical training never came in handier. 'That's called a piccolo trumpet,' he said, 'and the chap playing it was David Mason, who happens to be a friend of mine.'  'Fantastic!' exclaimed Paul. 'Let's get him in here and have him overdub it.'”

“He saw me playing Bach's Brandenburg Concerto Number 2 in F Major with the English Chamber Orchestra from Guildford Cathedral,” remembers David Mason. “The next morning, I got a call, and a few days later I went along to the studio.” That call was received on Friday, January 13th, 1967, and arrangements were made for him to come to a session in EMI Studio Two exactly four days later on January 17th. The session began at the usually scheduled time of 7 pm.

George Martin, in his book “All You Need Is Ears,” explains some technical concerns for this days' session: “Now, the normal trumpet is in B flat. But there is also the D trumpet, which is what Bach mostly used, and the F trumpet. In this case, I decided to use a B-flat piccolo trumpet, an octave above the normal. It was a difficult session, for two reasons. First, that little trumpet is a devil to play in tune, because it isn't really in tune with itself, so that in order to achieve pure notes the player has to 'lip' each one. Secondly, we had no music prepared. We just knew that we wanted little piping interjections. We had had experience of professional musicians saying: 'If the Beatles were real musicians, they'd know what they wanted us to play before we came into the studio.'  Happily, David Mason wasn't like that at all. By then the Beatles were very big news anyway, and I think he was intrigued to be playing on one of their records, quite apart from being well paid for his trouble. As we came to each little section where we wanted the sound, Paul would think up the notes he wanted, and I would write them down for David. The result was unique, something that had never been done in rock music before, and it gave 'Penny Lane' a very distinct character.”

David Mason concurs: “I took nine trumpets along and we tried various things, by a process of elimination settling on the B-flat piccolo trumpet...We spent three hours working it out. Paul sang the parts he wanted, George Martin wrote them out, I tried them. But the actual recording was done quite quickly. They were jolly high notes, quite taxing, but with the tapes rolling we did two takes as overdubs on top of the existing song. I read in books that the trumpet sound was later speeded up, but that isn't true because I can still play those same notes on the instrument along with the record...I've spent a lifetime playing with top orchestras, yet I'm most famous for playing on 'Penny Lane'!” As for his pay, the special Musicians' Union rate of 27 pounds, 10 shillings passed hands for his services.

“True professional that he was,” Geoff Emerick relates, “Mason played it perfectly the first time through, including the extraordinarily demanding solo which ended on a note that was almost impossibly high. It was, quite simply, the performance of his life. And everyone knew it...except, obviously, Paul. As the final note faded to silence, he reached for the talkback mic. 'Nice one, David,' Paul said matter-of-factly. 'Can we try another pass?' There was a moment of silence. 'Another pass?'  The trumpeter looked up at the control room helplessly. He seemed lost for words. Finally, he said softly, 'Look, I'm sorry. I'm afraid I just can't do it any better.'  Mason knew that he had nailed it, that he had played everything note-perfect and that it was a prodigious feat that he could not possibly top.”

“Quickly George Martin intervened and addressed Paul emphatically, one of the few times in recent weeks that I saw him assert his authority as producer. 'Good God, you can't possibly ask the man to do that again...it's fantastic!'  A dark cloud gathered over Paul's face. Even though the exchange was occurring in the privacy of the control room, out of earshot of Mason and the other Beatles, George's remark clearly embarrassed and angered him...For an uncomfortable moment, the producer and his headstrong young artist glared at each other. Finally, Paul returned to the talkback mic. 'Okay, thank you, David. You're free to go now, released on your own recognizance.'  Handled with typical McCartney humor, the confrontation was over.”

David Mason recalls, “Although Paul seemed to be in charge, and I was the only one playing, the other three Beatles were there too. They all had funny clothes on, candy-striped trousers, floppy yellow bow ties, etc. I asked Paul if they'd been filming because it really looked like they had just come off a film set. John Lennon interjected, 'Oh no mate, we always dress like this!'”

This session finally completed the recording of “Penny Lane,” three full weeks being needed to get it to its' complete state, which was a huge amount of studio time for one song in those days. With this complete, the usual engineering team made three mono mixes of the song, the third one ('remix 11') deemed as the best. A tape copy of this mono mix was made and quickly dispatched, along with a mono mix of “Strawberry Fields Forever,” to Capitol Records in the U.S. Management had already decided that these two songs be pulled from the forthcoming album and released as a long-overdue single (to divert attention back to the Beatles and away from the new teenage heartthrobs, The Monkees). Capitol quickly printed promotional copies of this new single and distributed them to radio stations across America.

However, a decision was made to further improve on this mono mix. “After some contemplation, Paul decided that Mason's piccolo trumpet flourish at the very end was superfluous,” explains Geoff Emerick. “And so, a week later, the song was remixed and the piccolo removed from the end of the song.” This new mono mix was created in the control room on EMI Studio One on January 25th, 1967 between 6:30 and 8:30 pm by the usual team of Martin, Emerick, and McDonald. Three attempts at this mono mix were made, the third ('remix 14') deemed as best, a tape copy of this mix developed between 9 and 10 pm on this day to be dispatched to Capitol Records in the U.S. immediately to replace the previous mono mix. This new mono mix is the one that was released worldwide for purchase by the public. However, the aforementioned promotional copies that Capitol distributed with the rare piccolo trumpet ending was what American radio listeners became acquainted with at the time.

Since “Penny Lane” was not included on the “Sgt. Pepper” album as originally planned, there was no pressing need to create a stereo mix, singles being released only in mono at that point. Capitol Records decided to include the song on an album they put together entitled “Magical Mystery Tour” and, since no stereo mix was available, they created their own mock stereo version by panning the high frequencies to one channel and the low frequencies to the other channel.

A true stereo mix finally appeared on September 30th, 1971 by George Martin in his AIR Studios in London. While this mix still did not include the ending trumpet flourish from David Mason, it did include a trumpet flourish not heard before, which appears just after the phrase “clean machine.” While this new mix appeared on the U.K. version of the compilation album “The Beatles/1967-1970” (“The Blue Album”), it apparently didn't find its way to Capitol in the U.S. They, instead, created yet another mock stereo version from the mono mix they previously had, using this new mix for the American “Blue Album” release, this version having a little less treble-bass separation from the one they created for the “Magical Mystery Tour” album.

The true stereo mix finally appeared in the U.S. on the 1980 released album “Rarities,” although Capitol artificially inserted the ending trumpet flourish to make this version a true rarity. Future Beatles compilation albums that appeared in the states, as well as all CD releases, feature the unadulterated stereo mix as created by George Martin in 1971, with one exception.

Sometime in 1995, George Martin and Geoff Emerick created yet another mix of “Penny Lane” for “Anthology 2” which combined different takes that highlight various rare or unheard elements. These include the original instrumental passage as recorded on January 9th, a single-tracked vocal from Paul in the verses, the ending trumpet flourish of January 17th, and some extraneous instrumental noodling and vocal 'clowning around' that got faded out of the released version. After this ridiculous conclusion, Paul states “A suitable ending, I think!"

Giles Martin (son on George Martin) worked with Sam Okell at Abbey Road Studios in 2015 to create a new stereo mix of "Penny Lane" for inclusion on a re-release of the album "Beatles 1." Then again, in 2016 or 2017, they paired up again to create yet another new stereo mix of "Penny Lane" for inclusion on the 50th Anniversary Editions of the "Sgt. Pepper" album, this stereo mix patterned after the released mono mix of 1967. And while they were at it, they created mixes of the first four-track tape of the song ("Take 6 - Instrumental") and the January 6th handclaps and scat singing overdub ("Vocal Overdubs and Speech"), both of these included in various editions of the Anniversary releases for the album.

“Penny Lane” was also recorded live for Paul's live album “Paul Is Live,” which took place sometime between March 22nd and June 15th, 1993.

Amid all of the elaborateness of the recording, "Penny Lane" follows a somewhat usual structure, this being 'verse/ verse/ chorus/ verse/ verse (instrumental)/ chorus/ verse/ verse/ chorus/ chorus' (or aabaabaabb). The lyrics are encapsulated within a lighthearted swing beat, exhibiting a breezy but surreal recollection of Paul's childhood memories which can't help but engage the listener.

Without the need of an introduction, the first eight-measure verse begins immediately with a double-tracked lead vocal and bass guitar first entering the landscape. The plodding and multiple-overdubbed piano keeps the tempo while bass guitar quarter-notes descends down the scale as an interesting counterpoint to the melody line Paul is singing. Chirping quarter-note flutes are quietly heard among the piano chords for the first three measures. A sudden change occurs in the fourth measure (on the word “know”) as the key changes to minor, the bass changes to holding out whole notes, and a single-note flute enters the scene for the first time. The minor key continues for the fifth and sixth measures, creating a somewhat mystical atmosphere as the flute temporarily fades away, and the bass descends on whole notes as the measures change. The major key returns in the seventh and eighth measure, as does the solo flute with an echo to Paul's words “say hello.” The bass plays a cheerful riff during these final measures as a nice backdrop.

The second verse then commences which is also eight measures in length (as they all are). The drums kick in with a simple drum pattern at this point to complete the rhythm section of the song. Otherwise, this verse is instrumentally similar to the first verse throughout except for the final measure. During the lyric “very strange,” Ringo plays three prominent accents with open hi-hats while the bass falls down the scale. All instruments stop at this point, leaving the fourth beat of this eighth measure open for Paul to highlight the song's title, which works nicely as a segue into the first chorus.

The first chorus is also eight measures in length (as they all are) and features multi-tracked piano, bass, and drums primarily. One of the overdubbed pianos, presumably the one played through a Vox amplifier with added reverb, is used to hold out chords on the downbeat of each measure. The third and fourth measure bring in harmonized trumpets to fill in the space left in the vocals. The fifth and sixth measures feature John on harmony vocals which go back to solo vocals in the seventh measure with the lyric “I sit and.” The final measure utilizes the same final three beats from Ringo, along with the piano and bass, accenting the words “meanwhile back.”

The third verse appears next and is strikingly similar to the first in most respects. However, there are no chirping flutes in the first three measures this time; a single flute playing held out notes in the first and third measure instead. The fourth and sixth measures also feature a solo flute, each of these measures containing a triplet to fill in the gaps left by Paul's vocals; measure four having a descending triplet and measure six having an ascending triplet. A tambourine is added to this verse as well, accented on the two and four beat of every measure. An ascending trumpet part is heard in the seventh and eighth measures (in the stereo mix of the song), as well as Ringo's handbell in the eighth measure to highlight the reference to the “fire engine.”

The fourth verse then follows, which is strictly instrumental apart from Paul's “aah” accents and are heard periodically. The tambourine disappears for this verse but is replaced by John's conga drum playing. Ringo opens up the presence of this verse by riding on the cymbal instead of the hi-hats. And, of course, the most prominent feature of this verse is the superbly performed piccolo trumpet solo by David Mason, with his high note climax heard on the third of the three-note drum accents as repeated from the second verse.

The second chorus then follows which mimics the previous chorus rather closely. Differences include the sound effects (fast bongos?) that occur in the fourth beat of both the first and second measures. John's harmonized vocals now occur on the newly added lyric “four of fish and finger pies in summer.”

The fifth verse then follows, which brings in the tambourine once again while trumpets play staccato blasts on the two and four beat of the first six measures. The cor anglais (English Horn) then hits a single high note that holds throughout the seventh and eighth measures. Otherwise, the general instrumentation sounds the same as the third verse.

The sixth and final verse then commences which still includes the tambourine and the staccato trumpets in the first six measures. The bowed double-bass comes in on the third measure with a descending line that holds out its final note throughout the entire fourth measure. The sixth measure brings in Ringo's handbell once again in reference to the “fireman.” The eighth measure has the three beat accents with Paul's lyric “very strange” as was heard in the second verse.

The third chorus is then heard which is quite similar to the first chorus but with the trumpets playing a different pattern throughout. David Mason here returns with a simple quarter-note melody line in the third and fourth measure. The other trumpets highlight the three note accents with the rest of the instruments in the eighth measure this time, while the “machine gun-like” sound effects (bongos?) occurs at the end of this final measure.

The fourth and final chorus is different than the rest in that it raises its key. A piccolo plays the melody line in unison with Paul's lead vocals in the main body of the entire chorus this time around. The tambourine also appears here, the only time it's been played in a chorus. David Mason's piccolo trumpet appears again with a rather complicated line in the third and fourth measures, and then a simpler one in the seventh and eighth measures. To finish off the last measure, Paul repeats the song's title, this evolving into the final chord of the song. This final chord prominently features the highly reverberated piano played through a Vox amplifier, the high-pitched squeal of Paul's harmonium, and Ringo's rapid-fire cymbal work, all three of these elements from the original four-track tape.

As related above, Geoff Emerick had to admit that “some of the overdubs got buried altogether because of the density of the instrumentation and the number of bounces.” This is definitely the case here, being that no evidence of either John's or George's guitar work appear in the finished product, nor can the Beatles handclaps be heard anywhere.

Nonetheless, after three tape reductions, what is heard was arranged meticulously and breathtakingly performed. Paul takes center stage with great vocal work, bass, harmonium, piano, piano, and piano. We can hear John's piano (two overdubs), conga drums, and harmony vocals done flawlessly. Ringo's drums, tambourine, and percussion overdubs work beautifully with the song as well. It's unfortunate that we can't hear any contribution that George made to “Penny Lane” during this three-week period, apart from the percussive effects done at the first recording session and any handclaps in the song. Since he admits that his “heart was still in India” at this time, I don't think he cared all that much anyway.



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