[
Date Prev][
Date Next] [
Thread Prev][
Thread Next]
[
Date Index][
Thread Index][
Author Index]
Re: THE TOP 5!
In a message dated 98-04-24 15:23:50 EDT, you write:
<< I've been participating for over 6 months and this is the first time
that
I've
heard anyone mention " Tomorrow never knows". It's one of the few beatles
songs
that I can remember hearing for the first time and thinking "wow, this is
totally
different". There was some talk about what got people into looping a
while
back
and I'd have to say that on a sort of subconscious level hearing that song
moved
me in this direction. >>
Yeah, I've never heard anyone mention it either. Unlike yourself, most of
what I heard by the Beatles for the first time rocked my world and
continues
to knock me out to this day, but this track is a special one to be sure.
As I understand it, there were five tape loops employed on five separate
reel-
to-reel machines being recorded directly onto the master. The loops were
manually manipulated by John, Paul, George, Ringo and George Martin
simultaneously. I heard recently that this posed some problems when
George
Martin went back to remix and remaster for the CD reissue, since he could
only
re-e.q. the master tape, whereas everything else on Revolver he could break
down track by track. Since the performance was totally random and there
wasn't
a single track of just tape loops, it was impossible on TNK. I have to
say,
this is probably one of my favorite rock & roll tracks of all time - I know
it's fashionable to put down Ringo's playing these days but his drum
groove on
this fuckin' rules, plus a characteristically great vocal by Lennon, what
more
do you want...
Of course, the Beatles got more heavily into tape loops by way of George
Martin's interest in musique concrete, such as the 1" tape pieces spliced
into
loops and used as the background for "Being For The Benefit Of Mr. Kite",
and
John & Yoko's tape collage "Revolution 9", etc. I think a thread on
looping
and the Beatles is long overdue here, surely they did a lot to bring tape
manipulation and loops into pop music before anyone else (unless you count
Les
Paul's double-speed guitar overdubs on those old hits with Mary Ford - hey,
why not) and used a variety of pretty interesting techniques in their
applications.
Ken R