Saturday, January 20, 2018

"Her Majesty/ Golden Slumbers/Carry That Weight"

There are two early takes from the "Abbey Road" sessions at EMI Studio 2 taken from July 02 1969. It's been said that McCartney would always arrive to the studio slightly earlier than the rest of the band due to his close living quarters in St. John's Wood. On this day he was early and decided to run through his tune "Her Majesty" which was first introduced during the "Get Back/Let It Be" sessions earlier in the year. He recorded three takes on two tracks - one track for acoustic guitar and  the other track for vocals - with the third being eventually used on the commercial LP with an edit (more on that later) but we can hear the entire take with the last strummed chord in mono on the bootleg LP and CD "No.3 Abbey Road N.W. 8" as well as on the CD "Unsurpassed Masters Vol. 5".
After both George Harrison and Ringo Starr arrived for the session, attention was turned to a new McCartney tune entitled "Golden Slumbers" which segued into "Carry That Weight" recorded together with Paul on piano and guide vocal, George on bass and Ringo on drums. John and Yoko were still recovering in Scotland at that time.
The raw recording - take 13 - of "Golden Slumbers/ Carry That Weight" can also be heard on the above bootlegs. Overdubs would be added later in the sessions.

Saturday, January 13, 2018

An Early Version Of "You Never Give Me Your Money"

One of the very last basic tracks recorded at the very, very end of the "Get Back/Let It Be" era was at Olympic Studios in London on May 06 1969. The basic tracks were for a McCartney composition entitled "You Never Give Me Your Money" being fragments of leftover tunes in his head. This would be the beginning of a larger melody issued on a later album. Glyn Johns was present in the control room for the basic tracks.
Paul was on piano and guide vocal, George on an electric guitar going through a leslie speaker, Ringo on drums and John on another electric guitar. 36 takes were attempted and the take used for commercial release and overdubs would be take 30.
After this session, The Beatles took a bit of a break and went their separate ways for about a month and a half. It was during this break that Paul had contacted George Martin about recording a new LP like they had used to do it in the recording studios and the "Abbey Road" sessions got under way for the month of July and August.
Unfortunately during a trip to Scotland, John had been in an automobile accident with Yoko and therefore missed the first few recording sessions at the beginning of July.
The first order of business for the session (now at EMI Studios number 2) on July 01 1969 was overdubbing Paul's vocal onto "You Never Give Me Your Money". You can hear this version (pre-overdubs) on various bootlegs including the vinyl LP: "No. 3 Abbey Road N.W. 8" as well as the CD "Unsurpassed Masters Vol. 5" with a few strand notes at the beginning of the take.

Friday, January 5, 2018

"Give Peace A Chance"

In the late evening of May 30 1969 as John and Yoko were holed up in room 1742 of the Hotel Reine Elizabeth in Montreal, John grabbed his acoustic guitar and taught a few other people in the hotel room including Tim and Rosemary Leary.
Derek Taylor contacted EMI Canada and was sent a mobile recording unit through independant engineer/producer Andre Perry, a local. Andre brought up a four track Ampex that he had rented from RCA and arrived at the hotel room the next night (May 31 1969). While the recording and filming equipment was being prepared for the event, John and Yoko ran through the song with others in the room including Tommy Smothers, Timothy Leary and Rosemary Leary, Derek Taylor and some Krishna devotees.Rabbi Abraham Feinberg, Allan Ginsberg, Murray the "K" and others.Tommy Smothers played the second acoustic guitar and the Krishna people supplied some percussion.
After a couple of rehearsals with the singalong and John instructing the gang to "clap on the off-beat" - which is the two and four if you are musical - the recording used was taped at 11 in the evening with four microphones - two for the guitars and main vocals and two for the room crowd and ambience.
On June 01, Andre Perry took the tapes and transferred them from 4 track to 8 track. He had some session players sing along on the chorus and added a thumping drum beat to the song. Also, the tune was sped up a bit on the commercial releasse.
The song reached number 2 in the UK and number 14 in the us when it was released as an Apple single in 1969 along with Yoko's "Remember Love". The US release does not have a count-in. The original mix from the hotel room attributed to the promo film can be heard on the bootleg vinyl "The Lost Lennon Tapes Volume Twenty-Four".

Monday, January 1, 2018

"You Know You Know My Name"

In the spring of 1967, John Lennon visited Paul McCartney at his home on Cavendish Ave in London and spotted the London telephone book with the slogan "You know their name? Look up their number". This mantra would be repeated over and over in John's mind and he set music to it.
On a May 17th 1967 recording session, a rhythm track was recorded with acoustic guitars, bass and drums. After 14 attempts the ninth take was chosen and the session came to a close. Fast forward to another session on June 07 with overdubbed piano. The next day (June 08 1967) Brian Jones of the Stones appeared at EMI Studios after Paul had asked him to contribute to the track. Brian brought along an alto sax and many versions of the mantra were recorded which would be edited together to complete the track.
Along with take 09 of the first part recorded back in May, four other parts would be recorded on June 08 as well with Paul on piano, Brian Jones on sax (on the "ska" section and the "Jazz club" section as well). There was also a "nightclub" section with some latin type percussion and the final "Part 5" section featuring noisemakers. All of the five parts were edited together and called take 30. These parts were then transferred to one track of a four track tape and basically left there for the time being.
In the spring of 1969, on April 30 in EMI Studio 3, John and Paul added their silly voices to the backing tracks of the various parts of "You Know My Name (Look Up The Number)" along with some background bits such as shouting, applause, etc. Three mono mixes of the song were also completed on this date.
Fast forward to November 26 1969 and the original intent was to release the tune along with "What's The New Mary Jane" as a single and credit the songs to the Plastic Ono Band.
The mixed used was the third mono attempt with two minutes and seventeen seconds edited out. The song was eventually released commercially as the B-side to the Beatles' Apple Single "Let It be" in 1970.
The song remained in mono until the Anthology project when it was released commercially in stereo for the first time. Unfortunately, this edit removed 27 seconds including parts of the commercial release as well as fading out a few seconds before the ending. This stereo, edited version can be heard commercially on the Apple 3LP/2CD "Anthology 2". The entire unedited song can be heard on bootleg (lasting over six minutes) on the title "Upgraded Collection-Highlights" in mono/stereo.