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Beatles Timeline: 50 years on

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    Cry For A Shadow. Which had no lyrics.

    But, fact-fans, it's the only Lennon/Harrison composition.

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      Another one is She Said She Said.

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        Originally posted by Sheep View Post
        From their entire catalogue?


        The entire side 2 of the Yellow Submarine album
        Apart from being instrumental this is really George Martin's work.

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          Originally posted by Sporting View Post
          Another one is She Said She Said.
          It has lots of "she said"s though.

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            The Guraundiunan has an article on a “new” Beatles/Lennon song. “Radio Peace” recorded by four Danish school kids interviewing Lennon for their school magazine during a child custody trip to visit Yokosuka first husband. No indication of the date but The Beatles archivist types will be frothing at the mouth I expect.

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              Originally posted by Sporting View Post
              Another one is She Said She Said.
              I don’t think that’s a co-write between John and George though. It is possibly the only instance where they are the vocalists on a track which Paul played on but didn’t sing. He walked out of the session because of an argument apparently.

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                Originally posted by kokamoa View Post

                I don’t think that’s a co-write between John and George though. It is possibly the only instance where they are the vocalists on a track which Paul played on but didn’t sing. He walked out of the session because of an argument apparently.
                I wasn't referring to a Lennon-Harrison collaboration.

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                  Ooh, I do feel a fool!

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                    Yeah, the Lennon/Harrison reference was to the instrumental "Cry For A Shadow", which they recorded on Tony Sheridan's LP in Hamburg in 1962.

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                      I should have noted The Concert For Bangladesh, which was fifty years ago last month - considering it featured two Beatles in Harrison and Starr, plus two individuals who played on Beatles records in Billy Preston and Eric Clapton.

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                        Originally posted by G-Man View Post
                        Yeah, the Lennon/Harrison reference was to the instrumental "Cry For A Shadow", which they recorded on Tony Sheridan's LP in Hamburg in 1962.
                        Indeed, and I had assumed the thread had gone into talking about Lennon/Harrison Beatles compositions, but it hadn't. It was talking about Beatles songs which don't mention the title in the lyrics, which is true of both Cry For a Shadow and She Said She Said.

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                          Desperate click baiting from the NME, but I bring attention to it for their description of John Lennon as "the 'Imagine' hitmaker". Oh you mean that John Lennon...

                          https://twitter.com/NME/status/1444400507771133957?s=19

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                            This is brilliant:

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                              Like McCartney, I'm also a piano player who's never had a piano lesson. He's not a great piano player technically (and neither am I), but his use of chords is something special and a theme that music theorists can debate for a long time.

                              His bass playing is underrated though. Towards the end of the Beatles, he was doing some really inventive stuff. Check out the isolated bass on Lovely Rita.

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                                Dunno about underrated - he always features high on any list of top bassists. A quick Googling:

                                Music Radar ranks him #5 of all time
                                Guitar World ranks him #3
                                NME ranks him #14
                                Rolling Stone ranks him #9

                                Mind you, the latter does say 'It’s hard to think of Paul McCartney as being underrated in any category. But for all the praise he’s earned as a singer, songwriter, and live performer, it’s quite possible he hasn’t gotten enough for his low-key low-end verve.'

                                So maybe it was the case at some point that he was underrated, but certainly there's been a very strong 'Hang on a minute fellas, this guy was actually a genius with four strings, wasn't he?' movement for a good while now.

                                Paperback Writer and Rain for me, Clive, if you like it pumping on your stereo. (Rain also featuring some very strong Ringo action.)
                                Last edited by Kevin S; 16-12-2021, 12:32.

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