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Post by BeatlePaul on Jul 22, 2006 16:26:38 GMT
Hey Tara ...... why are you pointing on Samarkhand?
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Post by Sun King™ on Jul 29, 2006 13:01:15 GMT
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paperback_Writer"Aside from deviating from the subject of love, McCartney had it in mind to write a song with a melody backed by a single, static chord. "John and I would like to do songs with just one note like 'Long Tall Sally.' We got near it in 'The Word.'" He also claimed to have barely failed to achieve this goal with "Paperback Writer," as the verse remains on G until the end, at which point it pauses on C. The backing vocals during this section are from the French children's song "Frère Jacques".The start of "Samarkhand" aka "Mistery Tour" is people singing "Frere Jaques" as well. This would seem to pinpoint the time of Paul's RCA demo rather precisely. Excellent, Byrds!
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Post by The Duke of Spiders on Jul 29, 2006 21:55:20 GMT
That mp3 sounds like Deep Purple to me. Were they with RCA?
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Post by vegetableman on Jul 31, 2006 5:38:17 GMT
The guitar on that track is not Hendrix.
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Post by TotalInformation on Jul 31, 2006 17:11:39 GMT
That mp3 sounds like Deep Purple to me. Were they with RCA?
Deep Purple was not extant at the time.
The guitar on that track is not Hendrix.
Please provide reasoning process, if any, that led to this conclusion.
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Post by vegetableman on Jul 31, 2006 18:51:03 GMT
Have you heard Jimi play guitar? That ain't him. I have ears to hear. Also there is no way that was recorded in '66. That is a slice of 1970+ music. I see no evidence given to convince me that that recording happened in '66. If there is some proof let us know.
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Post by Perplexed on Aug 1, 2006 8:05:49 GMT
Have you heard Jimi play guitar? That ain't him. I have ears to hear. Also there is no way that was recorded in '66. That is a slice of 1970+ music. I see no evidence given to convince me that that recording happened in '66. If there is some proof let us know. Agreed, that is not Hendrix singing. Agredd, that could not have been recorded in 1966. IMO, it could easily have been recorded in 1969 or 1970. I have not been a listener of Hendrix. I think I shall begin. It will take awhile for that automatic "sense" of perception about his style, patterns, phrasing, etc, to come to me. No doubt I'll need to audit his 5? 6? albums 25 times apiece, focusing while relaxed. Whoever it is on guitar, though if I am to believe that Hendrix was first with his sound, was totally influenced by Hendrix or that first stream of Hendrix inspired players. Before Hendrix, the guitar track there would probably have never hapenned. Players like that may never have come along. Jimi made every known contemporary guitarist of his sound like a polite blues artist........the aggression, the hyper-driven, passionate techniques were Jimi's to invent and leave to the world for further development. Jimi was first, as far as I know, and rock and roll would be forever augmented by what it learned from him. This was surely not recorded after 1975, from the sound of it. IMO. I know Jimi left us in '70.
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Post by The Duke of Spiders on Aug 1, 2006 17:41:40 GMT
Like I said, it sounds like Deep Purple.
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Post by mistermoonlight on Aug 8, 2006 14:40:49 GMT
Doesn't sound like Deep Purple to me... I'd rather say Cream, voice sounds a bit like Jack Bruce. Furthermore I think this could very well be recorded before 1970, if you consider that Hendrix' 'Are You Experienced' with its reversed cymbals was recorded in 1967.
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Post by plastic paul on Aug 8, 2006 23:12:37 GMT
Too much backmasking in "LSD inspired" musicians around that time, there has got to be something in that.
Has it been proven that our brains can subconciously interpret backwards stuff that we wouldn't normally notice?
Are we being subliminally brainwashed?
I feel like TI
;D
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Post by Paulythene Paul on Aug 13, 2006 22:57:46 GMT
I believe it is Eric Clapton, Ginger Baker, Rick Grech & Steve Winwood. I think that's Stevie Winwood singing "Can you hear me...(uncertain word)?" Eric's on lead vocals for most of the "song". Ginger and Rick do backup vocals. Stevie and Eric are on guitars. Rick on bass. Ginger on drums. To believe this production has something to do with PID, you would need to have Blind Faith.
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