The Beatles, You Won’t See Me - A Classical Musician’s First Listen and Reaction / Excerpts

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#thebeatles #johnlennon #paulmccartney #georgeharrison #ringostarr #virginrock
Oooooooh la la-la! I loved this one!
Here’s the link to the original song by The Beatles:
• You Won't See Me (Rema...
/ @amyscut
/ @littleliesel
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Amy Shafer, LRSM, FRSM, RYC, is a classical harpist, pianist, and music teacher, Director of Piano Studies and Assistant Director of Harp Studies for The Harp School, Inc., holds multiple degrees in harp and piano performance and teaching, and is active as a solo and collaborative performer. With nearly two decades of teaching experience, she teaches privately, presents masterclasses and coaching sessions, and has performed and taught in Europe and USA.
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Credits: Music written and performed by The Beatles
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Пікірлер: 222

  • @marcelqueiroz8613
    @marcelqueiroz8613Ай бұрын

    Amy, your sensitivity when analyzing songs is admirable. You are giving me an incredible journey reacting to my favorite bands. You are an enlightened human being. I love your work.

  • @fidge54
    @fidge54Ай бұрын

    The rest of them all said Paul was a workaholic, but as much as it drove them a little crazy, they all eventually gave him credit for pushing them on to what they all accomplished

  • @kmg2480
    @kmg2480Ай бұрын

    Great song! To my ears, McCartney's bass lines really seem to grow increasingly sophisticated and melodic from this song onwards.

  • @Haldurson

    @Haldurson

    Ай бұрын

    Rubber Soul, as a whole, in my humble opinion, is the Beatles most underrated masterpiece. It was a milestone in their maturation as a band. To me, it's like with Rubber Soul, they moved from ordinary greatness to an unsurpassed upward trajectory. It's like everything they did before was done by a completely different band.

  • @gmbenz2482
    @gmbenz2482Ай бұрын

    As the Beatles improved, so did Paul as a bass player. He's acknowledged that his main influence, at that time, was James Jamerson, a jazz musician who was a memeber of the in-house band at Motown Records.

  • @marco3islas
    @marco3islasАй бұрын

    Who else besides me rushes to listen to every song right after Amy finishes her analysis, but with fresh ears?

  • @9211goat

    @9211goat

    Ай бұрын

    Yes.... if it's Beatles or other music which I love.

  • @thomastimlin1724

    @thomastimlin1724

    Ай бұрын

    "Fresh ears." YES! That's the phrase!

  • @emmanuelmartin1238
    @emmanuelmartin1238Ай бұрын

    This is probably my favourite underrated Beatles tune, its great to play on the guitar. All the layers and parts tessellate like a piece of marquetry. R.E. the lyrics.. I had a point in my life where I was breaking up with a girl.. this song was on my mind for the duration.

  • @johna6767

    @johna6767

    Ай бұрын

    This one is a great example of how so many of the "filler" songs in Rubber Soul are really quite good.

  • @Michael-mm3fm

    @Michael-mm3fm

    Ай бұрын

    Time to get the dictionary out 😅

  • @oopswrongplanet4964
    @oopswrongplanet4964Ай бұрын

    "Like a kid marching around on stilts" -- you're the best!

  • @Deebhoy
    @DeebhoyАй бұрын

    This is a really great analysis. Possibly your best yet Amy. I've listened to it 1000s of times but you've thrown new light on aspects of You Won't See Me.

  • @zzzaphod8507
    @zzzaphod8507Ай бұрын

    Great video! LOVE the chromatic voice leading in this song, which is sometimes my favorite Beatles song (despite the suboptimal lyrics, as you mention). How clever to have several chords in a row that allow the A to stay on the same pitch while the other line goes down chromatically! You can see the drone vs the chromatic line more clearly in the guitar part in the live version, on KZread as "You Won't See Me (live 2016)"

  • @StarlightedWanderer
    @StarlightedWandererАй бұрын

    A hundred years ago? Not quite. Only fifty years ago, LOL! Seems like yesterday to those of my age. Ooh, the score! Love it! Thank you!

  • @thefowlyetti2
    @thefowlyetti2Ай бұрын

    underappreciated gem, this song

  • @richardfehlmann4593
    @richardfehlmann4593Ай бұрын

    Thank you for this awesome reaction ... again👌 I love when you use the piano to explain things. And the picture of "walking on stilts" is so striking, so well suited. I would never have thought of that before. And now I'm looking forward to your next Beatles reaction ... I know which song it will be 😉 the one that follows this on the album, a real masterpiece 🤞😃

  • @mauri_gno2467
    @mauri_gno2467Ай бұрын

    fantastic song in my opinion.... Paul.... genius at work

  • @jnagarya519

    @jnagarya519

    Ай бұрын

    A manipulative tantrum in the face of the fact that Jane Asher refused to give up her career in order to be Paul's house frau.

  • @fromchomleystreet

    @fromchomleystreet

    Ай бұрын

    @@jnagarya519Even if that were true, it wouldn’t preclude the songwriting from being a work of genius. The certainty with which people assert what songs that they didn’t write are “about” is really quite astonishing. Until I hear Paul McCartney himself say “this is a song I wrote to manipulate my then girlfriend into being a ‘house frau’”, I’ll take such opinions with a grain of salt.

  • @jnagarya519

    @jnagarya519

    Ай бұрын

    @@fromchomleystreet If we don't understand a thing, but we approve it, let's throw the word "genius" at it, as if we are qualified to assess who is and isn't "genius". And I agree with your second point. But Paul has had decades to refute it; so I treat his silence on the point as assent. Perhaps his volume of song lyrics, in which he details his recent recollections about their origins, includes either affirmation or rebuttal.

  • @michaelwalsh2498
    @michaelwalsh2498Ай бұрын

    As a kid back in the 70s, before I could afford albums, I listened to two FM stations in Boston to hear deeper Beatles cuts--WBCN and WBZ-FM. This is one of the songs that I appreciated so much because it wasn't heard very often. Thanks for the analysis!

  • @dago87able
    @dago87ableАй бұрын

    Good one Amy! Your insight helped me gain more appreciation for this one in particular.

  • @nicklenz7030
    @nicklenz7030Ай бұрын

    This is one more inspiring videos of yours. I loved watching it.

  • @shadshowadradna
    @shadshowadradnaАй бұрын

    I try to resist but I can't pass a video like this without pointing out once again that this album contains both You Won't See Me and I'm Looking Through You: both Paul; both assumed to be inspired by his relationship with Jane Asher. They didn't need relationship counselling; they needed an optician. For all of her resistance to Paul's old-fashioned male chauvinism, Jane Asher ended up being most famous for her cake baking.

  • @garretteulett8600

    @garretteulett8600

    Ай бұрын

    And married to British cartoonist Gerald Scarfe

  • @user-pf7jm9go6o
    @user-pf7jm9go6oАй бұрын

    This was my favorite song for years. The complexity of the different vocal lines, each with a harmony within itself, is just so interesting and pleasing. Especially at the conclusion of the bridge, 'if I knew what I was missing..." Appreciate your breakdown. I was only 12 when this was released, but I knew it was great even though I couldn't articulate why.

  • @Inlanning
    @InlanningАй бұрын

    One of my favorite Beatles songs. Great that you appreciates it, too.

  • @martifingers
    @martifingersАй бұрын

    This analysis is wonderful on several levels. Being open to the meaning and the invention in the music whilst parsing the content in fine details is very impressive. It also shows how far The Beatles progressed popular music - and this is only mid-period Beatles!

  • @nickhopson
    @nickhopsonАй бұрын

    Can’t wait to see your mind blown by the next 6 albums. It’s about to get sublime.

  • @mcgreen6882
    @mcgreen6882Ай бұрын

    Amy, "Rubber Soul" is one of the greatest albums ever and my Beatles favorite. You honestly need to listen and react to every song on side -1 and you'll see why. Thank you for all of your amazing reactions.

  • @adlermeni
    @adlermeniАй бұрын

    Excellent (as usual)

  • @brianalmeida1964
    @brianalmeida1964Ай бұрын

    Amy, if you think these lyrics are dated, just wait until you get to Run For Your Life. It's the last song on this album. It was written by John, who later in life regretted writing it!! Stay safe 🤘 ✌️

  • @zzzaphod8507

    @zzzaphod8507

    Ай бұрын

    They're not doing all Beatles songs--maybe they skip that one (hopefully).

  • @beholdmessiah6526
    @beholdmessiah6526Ай бұрын

    Great track, glad you got a kick out of it.

  • @marysweeney7370
    @marysweeney7370Ай бұрын

    In Paul's defense, and also John's, about their "traditional" views on romance as expressed in their early to mid works, Well they were quite young guys. Women's lib wasn't thing. In any event, they moved with the times as social change got underway in the mid 60's. John and Yoko were quite unconventional. Linda, Paul's wife was his constant companion and played in the band, Wings. Paul wanted Linda to tour with him and trained her so they could be together. I think that was the main problem with Jane Asher, that they would both have careers that would take them to different places and they'd never be together . My feeling is that Paul had considered this problem and that is why he made Linda a part of the Band so she would be a part of his world. They raised the kids together on the road!

  • @marcuspi999
    @marcuspi999Ай бұрын

    You have officially surpassed "The Charismatic Voice" channel in my opinion. I'm learning more from you. Thank you!

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519Ай бұрын

    See _Revolution in the Head: The Beatles' Records and the Sixties_ (Chicago, IL: Chicago Review Press, An A Capella Book, Third Edition, 2007), by Ian MacDonald. And also his _The People's Music_ covering more of the music of the era.

  • @tonymaroni8773
    @tonymaroni8773Ай бұрын

    My favorite track on the Album

  • @susanaltman5134
    @susanaltman5134Ай бұрын

    Since you are covering "Rubber Soul", I am hoping you will eventually cover "Pet Sounds" by The Beach Boys, which was Brian Wilson's attempt to keep up with The Beatles.

  • @Trendyflute

    @Trendyflute

    Ай бұрын

    Great idea to insert that between Rubber Soul and Sgt. Pepper, given how much Rubber Soul inspired Pet Sounds and Pet Sounds inspired Sgt. Pepper!

  • @lejoe48

    @lejoe48

    Ай бұрын

    Me uno a la moción.

  • @eccentriastes6273
    @eccentriastes6273Ай бұрын

    This may not be one of the Beatles' most famous tracks, but it's one of my favorites. So glad it was picked for this series. Delightful video.

  • @menopausalmusician414
    @menopausalmusician414Ай бұрын

    My Favorite Group and My Favorite Channel.

  • @eggman7527
    @eggman7527Ай бұрын

    Maybe a bit traditionalist, but he's a Beatle and she's an actress. With those schedules, they might be able to be in the same town for one day out of the year. I really don't think Paul was anti-modern or sexist by any stretch! He's not telling her to stay in the kitchen.

  • @zzzaphod8507

    @zzzaphod8507

    Ай бұрын

    "act your age" sounds a bit patronizing, though

  • @buddyneher9359

    @buddyneher9359

    Ай бұрын

    @@zzzaphod8507 rhymes with "line's engaged"

  • @zzzaphod8507

    @zzzaphod8507

    Ай бұрын

    @@buddyneher9359 Not a perfect rhyme--many words rhyme with "engaged" at least as well as "age" does: page, cage, stage, etc.

  • @mikaylabamber4686
    @mikaylabamber4686Ай бұрын

    If I didn't know the circumstances, I could interpret the lyrics as referring to any disappointment/disillusionment in a relationship and I could then appreciate the delightful play on "You won't see me"--you refuse to see me and I won't be around for you to see. As Amy points out, the contrapuntal chromatics reflect the "you go your way and I'll go mine" message; words and music are perfectly to each other.

  • @zzzaphod8507

    @zzzaphod8507

    Ай бұрын

    This may be one case in which reading the background material is not a net positive, as it can color one's interpretation of the lyrics. It may have been better to go in without so much information that pushes the interpretation one way or another (to start the process "more virgin", so to speak). These lyrics bring to mind disappointment and can even seem a bit needy, but it's only when the real-life relationship of Paul and Jane (with his possibly trying to control her) is layered on the top, that the lyrics seem a bit more obnoxious.

  • @LeeKennison
    @LeeKennisonАй бұрын

    Poor Paul. Amy you are once again taking Jane Asher's side in their relationship difficulties, as you did in "We Can Work It Out."😉 I agree though that at least Paul's relationship problem songs don't have the bitterness you find in John's. I guess we can blame Dylan's influence on John's way of expressing himself. Just remember though that the bass playing you often admire in these Beatles songs is Paul, so he can't be all bad.😉 Perhaps this is why you refer to "Ringo's" drums, but it is always just "the" bass, never "Paul's" bass.😉 Hopefully my excessive use of "wink" emojis shows I speak in jest. I am really glad you enjoyed and appreciated this so much (despite the lyrics), with your usual great observations and music lessons. Ooh, la, la.

  • @celt67

    @celt67

    Ай бұрын

    I think if she reviews 'Run For Your Life' I'll be watching through the cracks in my fingers.🫣

  • @LeeKennison

    @LeeKennison

    Ай бұрын

    @@celt67 Lol, yeah for sure. If she thought John was going to the extreme when he burnt down her house in Norwegian Wood, wait until she gets to this one.

  • @jnagarya519

    @jnagarya519

    Ай бұрын

    In object terms Paul was the ass, insisting his view of the relationship be obeyed. There is no evidence that she was attempting to dictate that her terms govern. Meanwhile, he was having countless affairs outside the relationship, but would never have tolerated her having them. It amazes how Paul could do no wrong. And that John's "bitterness" was not John's but someone else's "fault" -- in this instance Dylan's. In fact, John had a traumatic and confused childhood, which resulted in his "issues". He was also especially perceptive, as in the song "Girl": "Was she told when she was young that fame would lead to pleasure, Did she understand it when they said: That a man must break his back to earn his day of leisure, Will she understand it when he's dead?" It was another five years before women, as the women's movement, began critiquing women's traditional sex role. And that was based on the blind view that men's traditional role was all roses and unicorns. Try on the oppression of being male and subject to the draft during wartime.

  • @heero17v83

    @heero17v83

    Ай бұрын

    yes i really hope she reviews run for your life, dispite the lyrics it's such a good song

  • @jnagarya519

    @jnagarya519

    Ай бұрын

    @@heero17v83 Apparently the beginning lines to which there are objections were from an Elvis song. So I guess we can pillory Elvis too. I think the reaction to the lyrics is essentially nonsense. "Catch you with another man/That's the end" -- of the relationship? Why assume one's inference is instead literally in the actual lyric?

  • @hansaugustsson7288
    @hansaugustsson7288Ай бұрын

    Remember that the Beatles are humourists.

  • @charlesberton2581
    @charlesberton2581Ай бұрын

    Another example of Paul's genius, and Martin's expertise in keeping it preserved without anything stepping on any toes.

  • @andrewbaerm.d.3984
    @andrewbaerm.d.3984Ай бұрын

    Though John started the band, Paul was the driving force keeping the band working and together untill they finally disolved the band. Seeing this woman comment on a group I grew up with is a trip. She could be the dictionary picture of the word prude. Hmm. The Beatles wrote a song about her called Dear Prudence... Or perhaps it was Eleanor Rigby. Her affected , clipped, English combined with that hairdo! Priceless!

  • @andymccabe6712

    @andymccabe6712

    Ай бұрын

    Don't judge a book by it's cover.... .....you condescending Muppet......!!!

  • @debjorgo
    @debjorgoАй бұрын

    It wasn't about He/She, who's career mattered the most. It was about him being in the biggest act in the world. And as you say, the Beatles were constantly working; touring, TV, movies, promos, interviews, recording.... When he finally got some free time, she was out making movies/TV shows. There was nothing dated about Paul's attitude. Nothing like the Beatles had ever existed before.

  • @jnagarya519

    @jnagarya519

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah -- that explains how it happened that she came home unexpected and found him in their bed in her family home with another woman. He would not have tolerated her being in bed with another man. Yes: it was about his career mattering, and her being available at his beck and call.

  • @debjorgo

    @debjorgo

    Ай бұрын

    @@jnagarya519 It explains it exactly.

  • @jnagarya519

    @jnagarya519

    Ай бұрын

    @@debjorgo So his career was of paramount importance, but in his view hers was not because was constantly "reasons"? Except when he was sleeping with every available female? "The Beatles" were MALE CHAUVINISTS. George traded Patti to Clapton for Clapton's help in getting her sister in bed. George had an affair with Ringo's wife. Members of "The Beach Boys" slept with all the wives of the other members. MALE CHAUVINISM.

  • @debjorgo

    @debjorgo

    Ай бұрын

    @@jnagarya519 I don't know anything about him cheating on her in her home. I'm sure Paul was no angel. I would just think a guy working as hard as Paul was in '64 - '68, would need a woman who could share his free time. It was unfortunate that Jane was not the one.

  • @jnagarya519

    @jnagarya519

    Ай бұрын

    @@debjorgo Paul somehow managed to move into and live in the Asher home. He was sleeping with Jane. And she came home unannounced from a performance tour and found him in their bed with another woman. Imagine that: cheating on one's "fiance" in HER FAMILY'S home in the bed they shared. So, as said, Paul expected her to give up her career -- because HE was "working so hard [and getting laid all over the place]" -- and basically do nothing but sit and wait for him to show up when he wanted sex with her. It was fortunate for Jane that she discovered what he was and refused to be used by him. Stop the "Paul is God" self-deceit.

  • @JonManos
    @JonManosАй бұрын

    My favorite Beatles middle 8 is the one in this tune ❤

  • @gettingkilt
    @gettingkiltАй бұрын

    Anne Murray's cover in the early 70s was really big, bigger than the original. John Lennon went backstage at an Anne Murray concert to tell her it was his favorite Beatles cover.

  • @9211goat

    @9211goat

    Ай бұрын

    never heard it, so it couldn't have been THAT big. 😄

  • @peterzimmer9549

    @peterzimmer9549

    Ай бұрын

    Anne Murray’s version was a tedious dirge with absolutely no emotion.

  • @DayGloClam

    @DayGloClam

    Ай бұрын

    There’s a great live version posted on KZread of Anne singing this at an outside venue in 1974 with rock band, Chicago backing her.

  • @Mibbitmaker

    @Mibbitmaker

    Ай бұрын

    That's one of those songs I heard the cover long before the original. I heard Anne Murray's version from top 40 in 1974, but it was 1981 on a Beatles Weekend (a top 40 FM station flipping to album rock) when I heard the Beatles did it first.

  • @9211goat

    @9211goat

    Ай бұрын

    Lennon's sense of humor.

  • @heero17v83
    @heero17v83Ай бұрын

    i never noticed the relation between the piano and the harmony, good job. i also like this song because it's so fun and has an upbeat feeling. you have been always mentioning the 50th in this journey, i bet you'll like that one, it's a similar song like this one with better lyrics imo. you may will be listening to one more song about jane asher in the future, that one is very rocky, i like it so much so hope the man wouldn't jump that one haha. and run for your life is also this fun type actually though with even worse lyrics haha, but i hope you won't jump, i want musical analysis like this from amy

  • @user-pw7my3ns9t
    @user-pw7my3ns9tАй бұрын

    this is great- I think some people hit dislike because it's the only option and that was confusing.

  • @dVb9
    @dVb9Ай бұрын

    Hello Amy, not sure whether anyone else has already pointed this out, but this was actually your 50th Beatles reaction, as you appear to have counted both "I've Just Seen a Face" and "Yesterday" as number 45. Good luck with the rest of the series.

  • @tonytjandra4798
    @tonytjandra4798Ай бұрын

    "If you want to know your thought 5 years ago then look at your reality now, and if you want to know how your reality is going to be 5 years from now, then look at your thought now" Deepak Chopra ( a quote from Hypnosis book ) Through The Barricades by Spandau Ballet. At the end of this song there is the sound of marching percussion as Mrs. Shafer explained. Thank's.

  • @Moonie804
    @Moonie804Ай бұрын

    I hope that one day you'll analyse 'God Only Knows' by the Beach Boys, just because Paul said many times it is the most beautiful song ever written (and I agree with him) - and if Paul, the greatest songwriter of the last century, said so... well, it's worth taking a listen to it! I'm sure Amy will love it too 🙂

  • @lejoe48
    @lejoe48Ай бұрын

    Una de las canciones más preciosas que hicieron los Beatles, con una melodía en cadencia sincopada, donde brilla maravillosa la voz de Paul en doble grabación, la instrumentación en una forma ya propiamente psicodélica... Me encanta que Amy se haya dado cuenta de lo interesante que es...Gracias.

  • @thomassharmer7127
    @thomassharmer7127Ай бұрын

    I never paid attention to the lyrics and didn't know the context. But I love counterpoint and bass lines that make their own melodic sense (not just filling in the dots). I've always admired Paul McCartney's playing from those points of view. Perhaps he was maturing musically at this stage, bur still had some way to go on the emotional level. It's great that you can put your finger in all of this in just one song. I wonder what Paul would make of your analysis now he is in his 80s?

  • @charleslascari7191
    @charleslascari7191Ай бұрын

    Hi Amy. I really enjoy your analyses and your personality. Of course I'm a huge Beatles fan. Can you tell where you get the music transcriptions of the songs you review. Thank you so much and keep it up.

  • @VirginRock

    @VirginRock

    Ай бұрын

    I got a book with all their scores.

  • @ractmo
    @ractmoАй бұрын

    You can call then Paul traditionalist in just relationship department but he changed his mindset after his relationship with Jane Asher and his upcoming wife Linda McCartney will work with him on the road often. Edit: You have to keep in mind that, at that moment he was just a kid only 23 years old. So, young blood had so much to learn and he actually learned. He had a very successful marriage with his wife too, which is unique in ultra celebs.

  • @IDLERACER
    @IDLERACERАй бұрын

    😎👍 The verses feature the exact same chord progression as "Eight Days A Week." It's the bridges where things get interesting.

  • @1967PONTIACGTO
    @1967PONTIACGTOАй бұрын

    to think he rattled off a great song like that "at the last minute"!!!!

  • @marcelqueiroz8613

    @marcelqueiroz8613

    Ай бұрын

    True, the guys' productivity was impressive.

  • @Zimtong
    @ZimtongАй бұрын

    10:22 Almost predicted the progression of Paul & Jane’s relationship haha

  • @EddieReischl
    @EddieReischlАй бұрын

    I really appreciate this reaction and the focus on chromaticism and counterpoint. This song is a great example of how Paul can create an ear worm for the listener without them realizing how much is going on in the music. I was running through this song in my head today at work, figuring this might be the next one you'd react to. That this was put together in a recording session, with the harmony parts that were worked out, well, I'll say it, it's just not fair to every other band out there.

  • @martinconnelly1473
    @martinconnelly1473Ай бұрын

    When Queen went to the record company with Bohemian Rhapsody there was still a reluctance to release it because it was over 3 minutes long at 6 minutes. That was close to ten years later than Rubber Soul.

  • @dago87able

    @dago87able

    Ай бұрын

    Well, yeah, but in between there’s Thick As A Brick, Child In Time, Echoes, Close To The Edge… but I get what you mean.

  • @fredneecher1746

    @fredneecher1746

    Ай бұрын

    @@dago87able Not to mention Dylan's Like a Rolling Stone, which they split into two 3-minute sides of the single. It was Dylan who pushed the longer song length.

  • @dago87able

    @dago87able

    Ай бұрын

    @@fredneecher1746 cool, I wasn’t aware that Dylan was the pioneer on that.

  • @fromchomleystreet
    @fromchomleystreetАй бұрын

    In tonal music, anytime a note from outside the established key is played, even if it’s only once, it’s an instance of chromaticism, because you’re stepping outside of whatever scale you’re in (eg the diatonic scale) and into the wider world of the chromatic scale of which every other scale (in standard western music) is a subset. The quality we recognise as chromatic is most noticeable and distinctive when you go up or down the chromatic scale, as in this song, but that isn’t necessary for a piece of music to be described as incorporating chromaticism. Most Beatles songs include chromaticism somewhere.

  • @user-qq73r44
    @user-qq73r44Ай бұрын

    I have a question: now that you are not exactly the rock virgin any more, how would you define “rock music”?

  • @fromchomleystreet
    @fromchomleystreetАй бұрын

    I love Ringo Starr for the character, quirkiness, and tastefulness of his drumming. But anybody who describes Ringo as “the human metronome”, or otherwise declares Ringo Starr to be an unerring master of precise time-keeping has presumably never heard this song. That last verse sounds like a wind-up toy winding down. Cue the people claiming it to be an “artistic choice”. Aaaaaad go!

  • @double__4640
    @double__4640Ай бұрын

    Im so curious to see your reaction to she’s so (heavy), it is 10mins long and the longest beatles song

  • @zzzaphod8507

    @zzzaphod8507

    Ай бұрын

    Longest not counting Revolution 9, but under 8 minutes

  • @johnbyrnes7912

    @johnbyrnes7912

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@zzzaphod8507?! How long is that Beatle song on the net called THE PALACE OF THE KING OF THE BIRDS or something like that. It's a rather long one too and there's supposed to be a 20 minute version of Helter Skelter though It's not found its way onto the net yet. 🤡

  • @innertube47
    @innertube47Ай бұрын

    Paul as only 22 when he wrote this

  • @Bassman2353
    @Bassman2353Ай бұрын

    Where most pop album releases of the time had virtually unlistenable "filler", the least songs on this Beatles' album (most of them, actually) could have been standalone hits. I'm happy to hear your analysis, as you demonstrate how much musical intelligence pours forth in even the "minor" album songs. You have a stunning one upcoming!

  • @copilunio
    @copilunioАй бұрын

    Coming next...Nowhere man.

  • @drakeswarchannel2530
    @drakeswarchannel2530Ай бұрын

    The Temptations- I know I'm losing you

  • @BaxterThewall
    @BaxterThewallАй бұрын

    Hmm... let's see how you go with "Run For Your Life" lyrics... 😟

  • @danielfox6907
    @danielfox6907Ай бұрын

    AM radio limit was 3 minutes.

  • @MartinJijon
    @MartinJijonАй бұрын

    Hey there! I would love to recommend you a song by the Talking heads called “Born Under Punches” highly recommend it! Love your content ❤️

  • @anarcovision
    @anarcovisionАй бұрын

    Right Amy. I've always thought the genius in this song is that osstinato in the note of A through the whole piece, and everything revolves around that note, it's presence, it's absence, it's emphasis, it's getting too close to disonance... You can play A through the whole song

  • @zzzaphod8507

    @zzzaphod8507

    Ай бұрын

    Most of the time, but isn't there an E7 chord in the middle, though?

  • @anarcovision

    @anarcovision

    Ай бұрын

    @@zzzaphod8507 yeah! Thats the moment of highest tension to A

  • @zzzaphod8507

    @zzzaphod8507

    Ай бұрын

    @@anarcovision If you allow the half-step clash between the G-sharp in the E chord and the A, then it seems that any note can go with any chord

  • @jerryhelm7848
    @jerryhelm7848Ай бұрын

    There's that easily added missing harmony part again.

  • @cotoelciclondeboedo5064
    @cotoelciclondeboedo5064Ай бұрын

    Amy me gustaria que aparte de tu Brillante Reaccion de los temas de Los Beatles pudieras poner mas tiempo las Canciones como hacen otros

  • @wembleyford
    @wembleyfordАй бұрын

    Paul attitudes to his girlfriend are bad in this one? Okay.. The end of this album might cast in a comparitively better light I expect.

  • @fromchomleystreet
    @fromchomleystreetАй бұрын

    Doesn’t a “cross relation” denote a the relationship between two notes that are sounding simultaneously? What you’re describing there is just chromaticism, but the harmony at any given point is still highly consonant.

  • @stlmopoet
    @stlmopoetАй бұрын

    I know little about the structure of music. I learn a lot from your videos, if I can remember the information. Sometimes I think it's better not to know why a song was written. I had no idea of the background. It's well written and people can apply it to situations in their own lives (more worthy of the attitude 😁).. But knowing the origin kills that. After a song has been in your life a long time, hearing what the lyricist meant isn't as likely to kill enjoyment. We've had years of putting our own view on it.

  • @fredneecher1746

    @fredneecher1746

    Ай бұрын

    I agree, and I don't believe the origin of a song is what it is 'about'. Things in life suggest ideas to you, but what you make of them stands alone as an artistic creation with its own meaning.

  • @surferles589
    @surferles589Ай бұрын

    Beatles are THE gold standard by which all other bands are compared to. This chord progression is very Bach (not sure which piece)

  • @mc3067
    @mc3067Ай бұрын

    What's the problem with the lyrics? The Beatles used words as a stop gap to fill the musical spaces; but beyond that, what is the issue that causes the 'different era' or "100 years ago' comments? I suppose I know the answer.

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519Ай бұрын

    The first purpose of drums is keeping time for the entire band.

  • @vics8873
    @vics8873Ай бұрын

    Radios would not play longer songs...

  • @marknovaky
    @marknovakyАй бұрын

    Hey Baby, what about that OTHER song of Meatloaf?

  • @user-pw7my3ns9t
    @user-pw7my3ns9tАй бұрын

    where's the like button??

  • @PaulFernandoGarciaLopez
    @PaulFernandoGarciaLopezАй бұрын

    Innuendo by Queen

  • @9211goat

    @9211goat

    Ай бұрын

    What about Inyooutdoe? 😃

  • @eggman7527
    @eggman7527Ай бұрын

    I really don't see the sexism here. He's saying he's in tears because he can't get to see her. It is a quarrel about trying to make a basically long-distance relationship work. Knee-jerk Feminism is offensive--it's like trying to find the Waldo on every page--even books that don't have any Waldos.

  • @michaelwalsh2498

    @michaelwalsh2498

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah, I don't buy that sexist line either. It's a guy who's frustrated as hell wondering how he's going to get through to his girlfriend. I suppose "act your age" is a trigger? Well, he's unhappy and can't understand her. Nothing sexist in venting and trying to get through to someone. And in what I know of their relationship I've always sided with Jane Ashur.

  • @eggman7527

    @eggman7527

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@michaelwalsh2498Yeah, I thought the same thing about the "act your age" line, but that's the tension between fighting and crying that you would expect to see in a lover's quarrel song.

  • @zzzaphod8507

    @zzzaphod8507

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, "act your age" isn't good.

  • @eggman7527

    @eggman7527

    Ай бұрын

    ​@zzzaphod8507 Prince: "act your age, not your shoe size, maybe we could do the twirl..." It's fine. Don't simp on vacuous and disingenuous guilt trips!

  • @DayGloClam

    @DayGloClam

    Ай бұрын

    Nowhere near as bad as ‘You Can’t Do That.’ The,’how dare you talk to another guy,’ song.

  • @jeffreybell436
    @jeffreybell436Ай бұрын

    Thick as a Brick was in 1972, much later than this song.

  • @yes_head
    @yes_headАй бұрын

    Not a favorite of mine (Paul's vocal is a bit shaky, and I don't care for the emphasis on piano and tambourine), but it *was* an important addition to the catalog. The 70's cover by Anne Murray is the version I grew up with. Re: the lyrics, John is usually the one criticized for sexist lyrics, but they were ALL products of their generation. The fact that they could be of their generation while also serving as a catalyst for worldwide cultural changes is remarkable. I think those chromatic passing notes are often referred to leading tones in the singing world, because they lead the ear toward the resolution note or phrase. It's an example of what Paul had picked up from old Cole Porter-type tunes, which he was now starting to bring much more into his writing.

  • @9211goat

    @9211goat

    Ай бұрын

    A FABulous song from the Fab Four!

  • @rogerwitte
    @rogerwitteАй бұрын

    If you would like to understand John Lennon's apology for their attitude to women during this period, you should listen to his 'jealous guy'.

  • @stevenhiscoe7717
    @stevenhiscoe7717Ай бұрын

    Whenever I listen to this song, about three quarters of the way through, the music seems to slow down, anyone else?

  • @heero17v83

    @heero17v83

    Ай бұрын

    me

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519Ай бұрын

    "Not to mention" is one of those irrationalities -- invariably followed by mention of that which is declared not to be mentioned. The other is: "It goes without saying," invariably followed by saying that which is said to go without saying.

  • @9211goat

    @9211goat

    Ай бұрын

    Huh?

  • @jnagarya519

    @jnagarya519

    Ай бұрын

    @@9211goat If you'd LISTENED to the video you'd have heard Amy use the phrase, "Not to mention". As an educated person with healthy critical faculties, and as a professional writer, I point to those two phrases, in constant use, because they MAKE NO SENSE.

  • @9211goat

    @9211goat

    Ай бұрын

    @@jnagarya519 Gee, I didn't mean to step on your tail! As an educated person, you should know that one can listen to something and not necessarily HEAR the same thing as another listener. In other words, while you were judging Amy (a non-native English speaker, I think) on her use of a phrase, I was listening to her talk about the song. Also, remember: she may not even read your comment. Thus it is we, the listeners (viewers) who see your comment, which seemed to come from out of left field. Know what I mean?

  • @zzzaphod8507

    @zzzaphod8507

    Ай бұрын

    @jnagarya519 Clearly, for someone as intelligent as you apparently are, it goes without saying that

  • @jnagarya519

    @jnagarya519

    Ай бұрын

    @@9211goat Amy was born in the US, and is apparently from and in Tennessee. I listen to what people say so that I can respond to what they say, not to what I imagine they say. If a person says, "Not to mention," and one is listening, then one hears, "Not to mention",

  • @thomastimlin1724
    @thomastimlin1724Ай бұрын

    "Pop rock" was a label that started at the end or just after the Beatles era. So was the term "Bubblgum Rock." Jesus Lord, everybody wants to label things to the point of making my stomach turn. Many now dismiss the Beatles early mujsic as in consequential by labeling it pop rock or "Boy band." How convenient for them to find a way to dismiss musical history of any kind as inconsequential to their musical prefereneces, carefully trained bythe subcultural and media exposures they grow up with [assuming these people really grow up...]. But when the Beatles were new, rather than a historical study, their music was just plain phenomenal rock and roll and variety, hust as the music that came before them. Many of the masses who did NOT live in the era don't understand that. They don't want to, they are afraid to take the time and effort. That includes what we call "Classical music, "and as you know even that generic term is a false generic term to include severeral musical eras/styles of the past. Same for the generic term "Jazz." Labels are abound and plentiful today including historically mislabling music out of modern musical preferential convenience, and often modern critics label past music with the hackneyed term "Old School." Ya know WHAT? I'm 68 and when I went to school it was NEW! I can't wait for the young to one day be labeled "Old School" by their children and and grandchildren, so l hopeafter I am gone I will be somewhere laughing my head off at them, and I was a music teacher.

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519Ай бұрын

    Lennon's anger/aggression was expressed as his love of dissonance and "off-note" nuance.

  • @user-yk1xy3wf2y
    @user-yk1xy3wf2yАй бұрын

    Thank you for sharing the Beatles song, but you kept stopping too many times🤦🏻‍♂️

  • @steveleblanc7983
    @steveleblanc7983Ай бұрын

    Not to give them a pass but all the Beatles were a product of their northern working class backgrounds and faithful to their partners. The women's liberation movement was yet to start but was on the horizon..

  • @9211goat

    @9211goat

    Ай бұрын

    That's okay.... I'll give them the pass.

  • @steveleblanc7983

    @steveleblanc7983

    Ай бұрын

    @@9211goat Well, girls are the reason they said they to into music in the first place.

  • @fromchomleystreet
    @fromchomleystreetАй бұрын

    All that stuff about what the song is “about”, that ascribes to him some attitude re women with careers, is just speculative bullshit from people who can’t conceive of the “I” in a song lyric being anything other than a literal self-portrait of the writer, and the situations described in the song bearing anything less than a one-to-one correlation to something that must have been happening at the time to the writer. More importantly, none of it is inherently present in the lyrics as they actually manifested, even if the speculation about their inspiration is correct. It should be treated with the degree of seriousness it deserves: absolutely none.

  • @BigSky1
    @BigSky1Ай бұрын

    Ringo’s high hat was overdubbed.

  • @robertbowman7395
    @robertbowman7395Ай бұрын

    I think you’re brilliant and you really know what you’re talking about…. But…. But the constant interruptions make it really hard listen too….5 seconds of song to like 5 minutes of you talking lol….

  • @bobtaylor170

    @bobtaylor170

    Ай бұрын

    Pay attention to what she says about copyright strikes. I don't understand copyright law, but I suspect she'd like to play whole pieces. Apparently, she does on her Patreon.

  • @AppleCorp3
    @AppleCorp3Ай бұрын

    This is tame compared to some of Taylor Swift’s lyrics. But because Paul is male he isn’t allowed to have those feelings? He’s just a Neanderthal from the older days?

  • @strathman7501
    @strathman7501Ай бұрын

    The one thing that lets this track down is the very thing that was supposedly "groundbreaking" about it - its length. Shave a minute off and it wouldn't outstay its welcome.

  • @BigSky1

    @BigSky1

    Ай бұрын

    I agree. It is too long but also it is not soulful enough. Kind of Rubber Soul which for me doesn’t work.

  • @robertfmorton

    @robertfmorton

    Ай бұрын

    Very few Beatles songs outstay their welcome.

  • @fredneecher1746

    @fredneecher1746

    Ай бұрын

    Couldn't disagree more vigorously. There is so much energy and so much going on that it justifies its slightly longer length than the norm.

  • @johnbyrnes7912

    @johnbyrnes7912

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@fredneecher1746yes you're truly correct. You'd have to be an opinionated wanker to whinge like those two ( and one I know for a fact is !) 😹

  • @9211goat

    @9211goat

    Ай бұрын

    I'll give it another listen and get back to you.

  • @jnagarya519
    @jnagarya519Ай бұрын

    The song was POPULAR, and is ROCK. That DOES NOT make it "pop-rock" as a "genre". The unwillingness to learn is appalling. I'll ask AGAIN: The POP Charts on which "The Beatles" had hits were the very same POP Charts on which, and at the same time, "The Rolling Stones" had hits. Does that mean "the Rolling Stones" are "pop"?

  • @bobtaylor170

    @bobtaylor170

    Ай бұрын

    Oh, yeah. She certainly demonstrates an unwillingness to learn. What an@$$.

  • @EdWilson-zj7uf
    @EdWilson-zj7ufАй бұрын

    Amy, you shouldn't look at this as some kind of misogynist song full of outdated attitudes. Anne Murray covered this song and had a sizable hit with it. If you listen closely the only pronouns used are "you" and "me" which means any gender can sing it.

  • @osomdaran
    @osomdaranАй бұрын

    John tops off McCartney´s spoiled brat sexism in this track with femicide lyrics in the album closer "Run for Your Life".

  • @MOLLOYALLOY
    @MOLLOYALLOYАй бұрын

    To my ears this DOES sound like filler. That's why Rubber Soul isn't one of my top Beatles albums- you can tell they rushed it so while it has some of their best material (In My Life, Girl, Norwegian Wood) it has a few too many lesser songs (What Goes On, I'm Looking Through You). The next album Paul REALLY turns it around and all of his songs are superb so Revolver is arguably their best. They had much more time to write and record Revolver and it shows.

  • @thundernels

    @thundernels

    Ай бұрын

    We will get there in time. It’s so nice to finally get to the good stuff.

  • @BigSky1

    @BigSky1

    Ай бұрын

    I agree. Never thought this was that great. Rubber Soul if you like. It doesn’t cut it.

  • @makeadifference4all

    @makeadifference4all

    Ай бұрын

    "Rubber Soul" is top tier Beatles. I can't imagine describing "I'm Looking Through You" as filler.

  • @fredneecher1746

    @fredneecher1746

    Ай бұрын

    I agree. Rubber Soul is good, but still has vestiges of the 'old' Beatles, but Revolver is outstanding and original.

  • @johnbyrnes7912

    @johnbyrnes7912

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@makeadifference4allyes agree just ignore those two particularly the retort. Paul's Michelle won the Ivor Novello award in 66 . 🤡

  • @megyoo74
    @megyoo74Ай бұрын

    i dont like beatles.

  • @eduardocervantesaca
    @eduardocervantesacaАй бұрын

    i think this was just an album filler. Why waste your tieme here when you have things like Michelle or In my Life

  • @bobtaylor170

    @bobtaylor170

    Ай бұрын

    I could not disagree more. This recording is a delight, and as she explains, musically ingenious.

  • @eduardocervantesaca

    @eduardocervantesaca

    Ай бұрын

    @@bobtaylor170 If you like it thats fine, but it is an album filler

  • @bobtaylor170

    @bobtaylor170

    Ай бұрын

    @@eduardocervantesaca There is no accounting for taste.

  • @eduardocervantesaca

    @eduardocervantesaca

    Ай бұрын

    @@bobtaylor170 And Whats Goes On is even worse, the thing is that In My Life is Amazing

  • @bobtaylor170

    @bobtaylor170

    Ай бұрын

    @@eduardocervantesaca In My Life is one of the greatest songs ever written. Actually, I rather like What Goes On! It has a parodic quality to it. And it's catchy. I'm pretty sure that harmonically, it has a lot in common with I Don't Want to Spoil the Party.

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