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Post by mojo on Nov 8, 2004 15:01:33 GMT 1
"Ah! böwakawa poussé, poussé" What does this mean? What language is it in?
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Post by Dr Winston on Nov 9, 2004 9:08:18 GMT 1
"Ah! böwakawa poussé, poussé"
It does not mean anything. The language does not exist.
John said the song '#9 Dream' was based on a dream he'd had.
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Post by NowhereMan on Dec 21, 2005 22:26:07 GMT 1
The beatles came up with some very strange ways of making there music-they were so creative!E.g-The fantastic 'Lennon-McCartney' number one 'I feel fine',the opening strum(i am not an expert on guitars i don't have a very good guitar vocabulary you might say!)Was made by a guitar that was placed accidently too near a amplifier.............. I read that in the 'Beatles chronicles book'-A great insight on the four legends....
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Post by cowbellbill on Oct 13, 2008 18:03:43 GMT 1
I feel fine first note, is the first known recorded guitar feedback. done on purpose
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Post by Dr Winston on Oct 14, 2008 13:11:07 GMT 1
I feel fine first note, is the first known recorded guitar feedback. done on purpose Very true. John said " I Feel Fine, I wrote, and this was the first time feedback was used on a record. I defy anybody to find a record, unless it's an old blues record in 1922, that used feedback that way. I claim it for the Beatles, before Hendrix, before The Who, before anybody."
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Post by cowbellbill on Oct 14, 2008 17:32:25 GMT 1
Geoff Emerick wrote a book called Here there and everywhere. Tells how working under george martin his first project was to produce the revolver album. Thats when all the wacky techniques in recording started. A very young man with off the wall ideas and John loved it. Great book to the inside if ya get a chance
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Post by Dr Winston on Oct 15, 2008 7:06:12 GMT 1
Geoff Emerick wrote a book called Here there and everywhere. Tells how working under george martin his first project was to produce the revolver album. Thats when all the wacky techniques in recording started. A very young man with off the wall ideas and John loved it. Great book to the inside if ya get a chance Geoff Emerick - Here, There And Everywhere: My Life Recording the Music of the Beatles. It is a great book. Really interesting. Geoff Emerick had a lot of skills and gave the Beatles many ideas throughout the recording of Revolver and Sgt. Pepper.
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