My song by song, album by album look at the work of the Fab Four, from Love Me Do to Let It Be, distilled from multiple sources and accessible to the most casual fans.
Monday, November 30, 2020
Only a Northern Song
Thursday, November 26, 2020
One After 909
On March 5th, 1963, in the first flush of their success, the Beatles reported to the studio to record their third single. The surefire hit From Me to You and its B-side Thank You Girl were efficiently completed during the afternoon session. An evening session had also been scheduled, so they decided to work on their oldie The One After 909. Anthology 1 allows us to hear parts of takes three, four and five from this date, starting with the breakdown of take three because Paul does not have a pick to play his bass. John then spoils take four by coming in to sing before George has finished his guitar solo, so they begin take five just before the solo. We then hear an edit of takes four and five, which would have served as the best overall performance. This is presumably how they had been playing the song all those years, but the tempo is slow and John's singing sounds flat, so the tape was never mixed for release at that time, and it sat on the shelf until the Anthology project in the 1990's.
The Beatles forgot about the song, as well, along with many of their other early compositions - that is, until the Get Back sessions in 1969, when John Lennon found himself short of material for the group's latest venture. It may actually have been the band's assistant Neil Aspinall who recalled the early rocker and suggested it as being ideal for a project supposedly about the group getting back to their roots. The 2003 album Let it Be...Naked contains a brief snippet on the Fly on the Wall disc of the boys ending a runthrough of the song in early January at Twickenham Film Studios, then discussing it in enthusiastic terms. They continued rehearsing it on multiple days in the early part of that month, then returned to it on January 28th at their new Apple Studios in Savile Row, adding Billy Preston on electric piano to the arrangement.
On the following day, the setlist for the next day's rooftop concert was finalized and rehearsed, with One After 909 being among the songs selected. The Beatles and Billy Preston attack the number with gusto during this famous concert on January 30th. John and Paul are clearly having a ball singing this blast from their past, while George and Billy add some tasty fills on guitar and electric piano throughout. The pace is brisk compared to the way the group played the song in years past, and George's guitar solo is far superior to the one(s) he attempted back in 1963.
When producer/engineer Glyn Johns was assigned the task of assembling a Get Back album that spring, he chose this song to open the album, preceded by Billy sliding his fingers down the keyboard, a shout from someone on the film crew and a count-in by John. This is, in fact, the only song from the rooftop concert that Johns included on that proposed album. His second attempt at a Get Back album in January of 1970 opened the same way, but both albums were rejected by the band.
Producer Phil Spector relegated the song to the second spot on side two of the Let it Be album, but it sits there quite well following a fine rooftop performance of I've Got a Feeling, which is actually the same order that the two songs were played on the day. And, of course, the performance is seen in the film Let it Be, allowing us to witness the Beatles absolutely relishing the moment, as they oh-so-briefly revisit the joys of playing live on their own terms.
Monday, November 16, 2020
Old Brown Shoe
On February 25th, his birthday, George went into one of the EMI studios with engineer Ken Scott and made demos of three of the overlooked songs, with Old Brown Shoe being the most elaborate. He began by recording the song on piano, as he had written it, singing the full lyrics at the same time. A basic guitar part was then overdubbed, before a second guitar overdub, featuring an early version of the solo, was added to complete the track. Anthology 3 allows you to hear how most facets of the master version recorded by the Beatles were already in place, including the arpeggios during the bridges.
Only a few months later, the group was suddenly in need of a song for the B-side of a single, after John and Paul had quickly recorded The Ballad of John and Yoko on April 14th. All four Beatles gathered on the 16th, but not before George taped yet another demo version of the number to help the others easily learn their parts. It therefore required only four takes to complete the backing track, with George singing and playing lead guitar, John on rhythm guitar, Paul on tack piano and Ringo on drums.
Overdubs began with Paul on bass, doubling the fast-paced arpeggios in the bridges which George played on guitar. John and Paul then threw themselves into the backing vocals with gusto, spending a good deal of time on some of the trickier harmonies. Finally, George made the curious decision to re-record his lead vocal by sitting in a tight corner of the studio, resulting in the muddied sound that obscures many of his delightful yin/yang lyrics.
George Martin had produced the April 16th session, but Chris Thomas took over the producer's reins on the 18th (though only Martin is credited on the single). Harrison first overdubbed some additional guitar onto the track on this day, including his impressive solo. He then decided to add a prominent Hammond organ part, but he needed one of the eight tracks to do so. Thus, John's rhythm guitar part was wiped from the master tape, thereby limiting his participation on the track to just being a backing vocalist. Since he declined to work on several of George's other songs in the latter years of the group's career, there is a certain irony in this, especially as he seemed to actually enjoy his involvement on this number.
At John's insistence, the single The Ballad of John and Yoko was released hard on the heels of the group's most recent single, Get Back, which was still high on the charts at the time. The B-side Old Brown Shoe did not even make the charts as a result. The song appeared in the US on the Capitol album Hey Jude in February of 1970. And it was chosen for inclusion on the Blue Album in 1973. When the band's entire catalog was released on CD, Old Brown Shoe appeared on Past Masters, Volume Two in 1988.
And, when Eric Clapton successfully persuaded George to make a brief tour of Japan in 1991, the song made the second slot on the setlist. A live version of the song thus appears on the 1992 album Live in Japan.