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Re: [ForAllThings] Beatles Article Long Article

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

My sisters got me hooked on The Beatles when I was a little kid ¡ª somehow they got they got the money to buy their albums ¡­ I¡¯ve seen Paul McCartney five times in concert and Ringo Starr once ...

On May 1, 2025, at 5:36?PM, Chuck via groups.io <antarisky@...> wrote:

I thought you might enjoy it.. I love the Beatles a great deal too. I listened to them a lot growing up along with Elvis.. Mom always had the radio on to stations that played this kind of music.?
It is on musicradar site: ?
Chuck
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-------Original Message-------
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Date:?5/1/2025 3:25:06 PM
Subject:?Re: [BAFsMusic] [ForAllThings] Beatles Article Long Article
?
Great article Chuck ¡ª thank you ¡ª my favorite group ...

On May 1, 2025, at 1:42?PM, Chuck via??<antarisky@...> wrote:

?

Came across this article and wanted to share
Chuck

?

¡°We could see John begin smiling. At the end of the first verse, he gave an exuberant thumbs-up and McCartney and Harrison began slapping each other on the back¡±: How one Beatles track spawned a recording technique revolution

Originally called ¡¯The Void¡¯, the groundbreaking song found the Fab Four exploring higher planes of consciousness - and leaning on the studio more than ever before

The Beatles in 1966

(Image credit: Santi Visalli Inc./Getty Images)

?The 1960s were a decade of quite astonishing change. The conservatism and austerity of the postwar period was besieged by the blooming of pop culture - and a new era of self-expression began to flower in the heads of a generation.

By 1966, culture, fashion, art and comedy were undergoing a giddy renaissance, yet it was pop music that was the prime mover. Its influence over the youth now solidified, pop could push beyond its hormone-fuelled bedrock. It was increasingly wandering into new frontiers of possibility.

Nothing exemplified this as clearly as the sonic evolution of?.

Since their explosion into the public consciousness a scant three years earlier, the Fab Four had demonstrated an aptitude for pop songwriting.

Now, curiosity - and competition - had spurred them to deviate away from the thematic norms of pop songwriting (I.e. Love, relationships and relentless positivity).

On their sixth studio album, Rubber Soul in 1965,?,?,??and??had widened their musical scope significantly. Edging away from the dictates of pop commerce, Rubber Soul rippled with more mature themes - and a more varied instrumental palette.?

But it was 1966¡¯s Revolver that really instigated the Beatles¡¯ pioneering second stage.

One track in particular is undoubtedly a firm contender for being the most groundbreaking in the history of recorded music.?

Tomorrow Never Knows was the very first track to be cut for the album, and contained multitudes of technical innovations. It sounded unlike anything anyone had ever heard before. And yet, it resonated with the era perfectly.

The Beatles - Tomorrow Never Knows - YouTubeThe Beatles - Tomorrow Never Knows - YouTube

Surrendering to the void

Accompanying their desire to be more creatively ambitious, the heavy demands of touring internationally had also started to take their toll on the four young men, then still in their mid-twenties.

While by 1965, the Beatles were regularly filling out football and baseball stadiums in the US, the increased stress of the security implications, a gruelling schedule and sheer volume of their often-hysterical audiences led to increased dissatisfaction.

Behind the closed doors of their studio, Abbey Road (then known as EMI Recording Studios), the Beatles found a safe haven. It was calm, secure ground on which they could focus on their core passion with freedom and support.

Inspired by the politically-charged and self-reflective writing of Bob Dylan, the neo-philosophy of the fomenting acid culture and the unbridled sonic adventurousness of the Beach Boys, the Beatles were driven to challenge themselves as songwriters.?

Partly excited by the potential of the studio, the group were also wary of being left behind as pop¡¯s inexorable pace quickened. They wanted to be taken more seriously as artists, as opposed to the conveyors of pop confectionary that some more 'cerebral' commentators regarded them as.

Revolver¡¯s final track was recorded first, and was borne out of a particularly strange starting point.John Lennon in 1966

(Image credit: Keystone/Getty Images)

Originally dubbed ¡®Mark 1¡¯ and later ¡®The Void¡¯ - Tomorrow Never Knows was inspired by Lennon¡¯s mind-expanding perusal of psychedelic drug advocate Timothy Leary¡¯s ¡®The Psychedelic Experience: A Manual Based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead¡¯.

An attempt to transcend the physical world and unlock the potential of the mind, Lennon was in thrall to Leary¡¯s trendy, acid-centered teachings.

¡°[Timothy] Leary was the one who was going round saying, 'Take it, take it, take it,' and we followed his instructions in The Book of the Dead, his how-to-take-a-trip book,¡± Lennon told Hunter Davies in his 1968 authorised biography.

¡°I did it just like he said in the book, and then I wrote 'Tomorrow Never Knows,' which is almost the first acid song, 'Lay down all thought, surrender to the void¡¯.¡±

While the obvious acid-infused subtext was a pretty provocative theme, it was the attempt to musically mould Lennon¡¯s psychedelically inspired concept into a listenable form that would prove a head-scratcher.

But realising his vision would usher in several innovations that are now studio production norms.

Convening at Abbey Road to begin making Tomorrow Never Knows at 8pm on April 6th 1966, the foundations of the track were - as Paul recalled in the Beatles Anthology - Lennon strumming ¡®rather earnestly¡¯ on the chord of C while he reeled off his mantra-like lyric.

This modal nucleus underlined the Eastern-influenced form he wanted the track to reflect.?

Coupled with the Beatles¡¯ desire to expand, there was also a serendipitous changing of personnel at Abbey Road itself.?

Replacing outgoing head engineer Norman Smith came Geoff Emerick. The 20 year-old junior engineer had been in their producer George Martin¡¯s team since 1964, so knew the boys well.?

Suddenly promoted to chief engineer at a time when the Beatles¡¯ demands were becoming increasingly more unconventional, Emerick - then younger than the Beatles - was thrilled by the challenges coming his way, and was just as buoyed by the potential of the recording studio.

"We didn't have loops in those days. Your dad had a great time!"

Critical to Tomorrow Never Knows¡¯ sound was its underlying rhythmic throb, supplied by Ringo Starr¡¯s relentless, drum loop-like pattern. The sound of which was carefully wrangled by Emerick and Starr.

Many now-norms of drum recording were first put to use during the making of this track.

A key one was the damping (and close-mic¡¯ing and compression) of the 22-inch bass drum of Starr¡¯s Ludwig Black Oyster Pearl kit.

¡°There was this woollen sweater with four necks that they had received from a fan,¡± Emerick told Andy Babuik in The Beatles Gear.

¡°It was around the studio, so I stuffed it into the bass drum to deaden the sound. I moved the bass drum microphone very close to the drum itself, which really wasn¡¯t considered the thing to do at the time. We then ran the kit sound through a Fairchild 660 valve compressor.¡±

The resulting brilliance, definition and oomph of the sound resulted in the close-mic¡¯ing of a dampened bass drum to become a standard practice from this moment on.Ringo

(Image credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Using AKG D19C mics for the drum overheads and an AKG D20 for that ingenious bass drum capture, Emerick and Starr¡¯s kit-recording fastidiousness (which also found Starr balancing a cigarette packet atop his snare to reign in its resonances) resulted in the perfect central pulse for the track.

The sound - and style of Starr¡¯s repeating drum pattern - would prove influential for decades to come. It foreshadowed the structural centrality of drum loops in dance music years later, while its tight repetitiveness prefigured the era of sample-based production.

Although of course, Ringo wasn¡¯t actually playing a loop - he had to lock into that groove for duration of the track¡¯s runtime.

Years later,??Starr recalled that his son - upon first hearing the track - believed it to be a drum loop; ¡°Zak, years and years ago said ¡®Oh, and that loop you had.¡¯ And I said ¡®Loop?¡¯ Loops?!,¡± remembered Ringo.

¡°I said ¡®Phone this number,¡¯ and he phoned the number, and George Martin said ¡®Yes?¡¯ Zak went ¡®Well, is that a loop?¡¯ and George Martin had to tell my boy, ¡¯Look Zak, we didn¡¯t have loops in those days. Your dad had a great time!¡¯¡±

Ringo¡¯s contribution to the track went beyond that iconic drum part.

As with A Hard Day¡¯s Night and Eight Days a Week, the title - Tomorrow Never Knows - stemmed from another of his wry malapropisms.?

The original uttering of the phrase happened during an interview in 1964 in response to a journalist asking him about his hair being surreptitiously cut at the British Embassy during their first US visit.

Lennon thought it struck the right balance of profound and playful to mask the track¡¯s heavier subtext.

?

Locking in with Starr¡¯s beat, McCartney¡¯s bass part was (unusually for him) static and grounded.

Fastening his Rickenbacker 4001S bass to the note of C in ostinato form, McCartney supplied a steady palpitation that tightly latched to Starr¡¯s drum part, providing a neat bedrock for the more extraordinary additions that were to follow

"They probably thought we were daft"

With the rhythm section in-place, the real magic of Tomorrow Never Knows had a springboard from which to launch.

Bolstering the track¡¯s C-note drone was a Hammond organ. Its sustained chord sound was output through a Leslie speaker cabinet, cradling the musical information in pad-like form.

But it was the decision to incorporate tape loops into the mix - a suggestion of Paul McCartney - that elevated the track into a new domain.

McCartney had, on the quiet, been an avid tape-loop experimentalist.

He remembered years later that his interest in the field had tended to be overshadowed by Lennon¡¯s prominence on the band¡¯s more outr¨¦ tracks; "What's often said of me is that I'm the guy who wrote 'Yesterday¡¯,¡±?. ¡°But I'm also a guy who was really interested in tape loops, electronics and avant-garde music. That just doesn't get out there on a wide level.¡±

For Tomorrow Never Knows, there were five main loops, all of which had been stretched or manipulated in some way.

Firstly there was a seagull-like sound that appears near the track¡¯s beginning and conclusion. This chirpy effect was actually a recording of McCartney¡¯s own laughter, sped up to emulate a joyous bird in flight.

Then there were some reversed and looped strings in B flat major (which, when played over the C, gave an impression of polytonality).?

There was the sound of a mellotron on its ¡®Flute¡¯ setting and another on its ¡®Strings¡¯ setting, as well as a recording a the sitar-type sound - actually a tamboura - that opens the track, which played an ascending phrase.

Output via five BTR 3 tape machines, these carefully selected loops were each hand-operated by an individual technician.

Taking their cues from the musique concr¨¨te approaches of visionaries like Karlheinz Stockhausen, the Beatles had the idea to live-mix and essentially ¡®perform¡¯ these samples during the final mix of the track

The ever-enthused Emerick gleefully took to the task of setting this up.

As he remembered in his extraordinary memoir, Here, There and Everywhere, ¡°What followed next was a scene that could have come out of a science fiction movie - or a Monty Python sketch.

"Every tape machine in every studio was commandeered and every available EMI employee was given the task of holding a pencil or drinking glass to give the loops the proper tensioning. In many instances, this meant they had to be standing out in the hallway, looking quite sheepish.

"Most of those people didn¡¯t have a clue what we were doing; they probably thought we were daft.¡±Geoff Emerick

Geoff Emerick and Ringo a few years later?(Image credit: Monti Spry/Central Press/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Emerick and Martin rode the faders in the studio, with the Beatles barking instructions as to which tape loops should be raised and lowered.?

"With each fader carrying a different loop, the mixing desk acted like a synthesizer,¡± Emerick recalled in Here, There and Everywhere. ¡°We played it like a musical instrument, too, carefully overdubbing textures to the prerecorded backing track.¡±

This out-there approach to manipulating disparate sound sources was way ahead of its time, and - being that it was tracked and manipulated live - was impossible to reproduce afterwards. But the resulting tape-mix was burnt into the final version of Tomorrow Never Knows forever.

Complementing these loops, a zig-zagging guitar line from Harrison was injected into the mix, but to match the track¡¯s vortex-like arrangement, it was reversed.

The idea of backwards guitar solos had first arisen during the recording of another Revolver standout,?, when - accidentally - the tape had been loaded incorrectly into a tape machine and produced a suitably yawning-esque sound.

Backwards guitar was suddenly a creative texture that the Beatles could draw on.

Within Tomorrow Never Knows, George¡¯s guitar part (which was played on an Epiphone Casino routed through a Leslie cabinet) gave the impression of a winding shimmering entity, coiling into itself.

It was the aural equivalent of bending time and space.

"It's the Dalai Lennon!"

While its sonics were certainly unlike anything heard before, at the heart of Tomorrow Never Knows was Lennon¡¯s prophet-like vocal, instructing listeners to surrender to the void and open their minds to a new universe beyond our perception.

Lennon conceived of a vocal that sounded as profound as its lyric, wanting the characteristics of a monk chanting atop a mountain. He proposed quite an outlandish idea for capturing the right kind of vocal quality he was imagining.

¡°He suggested we suspend him from a rope in the middle of the studio ceiling, put a mike in the middle of the floor, give him a push and he¡¯d sing as he went around and around,¡± Geoff recalled in The Beatles Recording Sessions.

Instead of this potentially dangerous idea, Emerick pondered a more down-to-earth solution.

As he recalled in his autobiography; ¡°The studio¡¯s Hammond organ was hooked up to a system called a Leslie - a large wooden box that contained an amp and two sets of revolving speakers, one that carried low bass frequencies and the other that carried high treble frequencies; it was the effect of those spinning speakers that was largely responsible for the characteristic Hammond organ sound.¡±

Geoff had the - then-radical - idea to route the vocal signal through the Leslie.

¡°In my mind, I could almost hear what John¡¯s voice might sound like if it were coming from a Leslie. It would take a little time to set up, but I thought it might just give him what he was after.¡±

Patching in the signal, Emerick then committed the audio of the mic¡¯d-up Leslie cabinet to tape, and created an effected version of Lennon¡¯s vocal that sounded suitably supernatural.

¡°Lennon¡¯s voice sounded like it never had before, eerily disconnected, distant yet compelling,¡± recalled Emerick. ¡°The effect seemed to perfectly complement the esoteric lyrics he was chanting. Everyone in the control room - including George Harrison - looked stunned."

Geoff continues, ¡°Through the glass we could see John begin smiling. At the end of the first verse, he gave an exuberant thumbs-up and McCartney and Harrison began slapping each other on the back.

"¡¯It¡¯s the Dalai Lennon!¡¯ Paul shouted.¡±The Beatles 1966

(Image credit: Chris Walter/Getty Images)

Tomorrow Never Knows¡¯ successful Leslie experiment prefigured the solidification of ADT (Automatic Double Tracking) later in the Revolver sessions, though the track itself didn¡¯t feature it.

The end of the beginning

So, let¡¯s run those innovations back shall we?

Tomorrow Never Knows was the first significant pop track to feature a tightly compressed, dampened bass drum, it was the first to incorporate a hand-manipulated tape loop collage, triggered at random and in a performative-manner in the studio.

It was among the first Beatle tracks to sport backwards guitar, the first to feature an unheard-of vocal-doubling and effecting process (laying the groundwork for the advent of Automatic Double Tracking later in the album sessions - another future fixture) and the first British pop track to orient itself around a non-Western musical form.

That's quite the forward-thinking production process. It'd be one that¡¯d be worth talking about, even if the results were less than spellbinding.

Thankfully, the song was - and remains - one of the Beatles' most cherished accomplishments.

Tomorrow Never Knows was a veritable atom bomb of possibility.?

It exploded a twin revolution in the minds of listeners. It showed that pop music could be a bigger, bolder and more bountiful thing than previously imagined.

In the hands of the Beatles, pop could be existential.

Now with a thematically and musically boundless playing field, the potential for pop¡¯s vibrant future was revealed.Beatles

(Image credit: Mark and Colleen Hayward/Redferns/Getty Images)

Critically (particularly for us at MusicRadar) the track was arguably the first major example of an artist approaching the the studio as an instrument.?

Aiming to reflect a whirlwind, transcendent experience through sound, the Beatles, Geoff Emerick and George Martin, unlocked techniques and approaches that are now foundational to how we approach music production.

Ironically, considering it triggered many of the album¡¯s most colourful ideas, Tomorrow Never Knows was sequenced as Revolver¡¯s concluding number.

The highest summit of the record also proved a compelling teaser for one of the most extraordinary creative outpourings in pop history.?

It was right around the corner¡­

Categories
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Music-Making Editor

I'm the Music-Making Editor of MusicRadar, and I am keen to explore the stories that affect all music-makers - whether they're just starting or are at an advanced level. I write, commission and edit content around the wider world of music creation, as well as penning deep-dives into the essentials of production, genre and theory. As the former editor of Computer Music, I aim to bring the same knowledge and experience that underpinned that magazine to the editorial I write, but I'm very eager to engage with new and emerging writers to cover the topics that resonate with them. My career has included editing MusicTech magazine and website, consulting on SEO/editorial practice and writing about music-making and listening for titles such as NME, Classic Pop, Audio Media International,??and Uncut. When I'm not writing about music, I'm making it. I release tracks under the name?.?


?


Re: Fw: Celebrity Birthdays for May 1

 

Happy birthday to all and may all be celebrating a birthday next year?Emoji
Especially Julie Benz. Our beloved vampire, Darla.
Mary
Live long and?prosper

On Thursday, May 1, 2025 at 07:49:54 PM CDT, Mary Landers via groups.io <maryeland@...> wrote:


From: Jackie Schmitt






?
Here's today's celebrity birthdays. Jackie
?
May 1: Singer Judy Collins is 86.
?
Actor Stephen Macht (¡°Suits,¡± ¡åGeneral Hospital¡±) is 83.
?
Singer Rita Coolidge is 80.
?
Singer-bassist Nick Fortuna of The Buckinghams is 79.
?
Actor Dann Florek (¡°Law & Order: SVU¡±) is 74.
?
Singer-songwriter Ray Parker Jr. is 71. Actor Byron Stewart is 69.
?
Actor Maia Morgenstern (¡°The Passion of the Christ¡±) is 63.
?
Actor Scott Coffey (¡°Mulholland Drive,¡± ¡åThe Outsiders¡±) is 61.
?
Country singer Wayne Hancock is 60.
?
Actor Charlie Schlatter (¡°Diagnosis Murder¡±) is 59.
?
Country singer Tim McGraw is 58.
?
Bassist D¡¯Arcy Wretzky (Smashing Pumpkins) is 57.
?
Director Wes Anderson is 56.
?
Actor Julie Benz ("Buffy the Vampire Slayer," "Angel," ¡°No Ordinary Family,¡± ¡°Dexter¡±) is 53.
?
Singer Tina Campbell of Mary Mary is 51.
?
Actor Darius McCrary (¡°Family Matters¡±) is 49.
?
Actor Jamie Dornan (¡°Fifty Shades of Grey¡±) is 43.
?
Actor Kerry Bishe¡¯ (¡°Argo¡±) is 41.
?
TV personality Abby Huntsman (¡°The View¡±) is 39.
?
Actor Lizzy Greene (¡°A Million Little Things¡±) is 21.


Mary
Live long and?prosper


Fw: Celebrity Birthdays for May 1

 

From: Jackie Schmitt






?
Here's today's celebrity birthdays. Jackie
?
May 1: Singer Judy Collins is 86.
?
Actor Stephen Macht (¡°Suits,¡± ¡åGeneral Hospital¡±) is 83.
?
Singer Rita Coolidge is 80.
?
Singer-bassist Nick Fortuna of The Buckinghams is 79.
?
Actor Dann Florek (¡°Law & Order: SVU¡±) is 74.
?
Singer-songwriter Ray Parker Jr. is 71. Actor Byron Stewart is 69.
?
Actor Maia Morgenstern (¡°The Passion of the Christ¡±) is 63.
?
Actor Scott Coffey (¡°Mulholland Drive,¡± ¡åThe Outsiders¡±) is 61.
?
Country singer Wayne Hancock is 60.
?
Actor Charlie Schlatter (¡°Diagnosis Murder¡±) is 59.
?
Country singer Tim McGraw is 58.
?
Bassist D¡¯Arcy Wretzky (Smashing Pumpkins) is 57.
?
Director Wes Anderson is 56.
?
Actor Julie Benz ("Buffy the Vampire Slayer," "Angel," ¡°No Ordinary Family,¡± ¡°Dexter¡±) is 53.
?
Singer Tina Campbell of Mary Mary is 51.
?
Actor Darius McCrary (¡°Family Matters¡±) is 49.
?
Actor Jamie Dornan (¡°Fifty Shades of Grey¡±) is 43.
?
Actor Kerry Bishe¡¯ (¡°Argo¡±) is 41.
?
TV personality Abby Huntsman (¡°The View¡±) is 39.
?
Actor Lizzy Greene (¡°A Million Little Things¡±) is 21.


Mary
Live long and?prosper


Fw: Music History for May 1

 

From: Jackie Schmitt






Music History for
May 1


1931 - Kate Smith began her radio career on CBS.?

1939 - "Lonesome Road" was recorded by the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra.?

1965 - The Supremes' "Back in My Arms Again" was released.?

1967 - Elvis Presley and Priscilla Beaulieu were married. They were together until 1973.?

1969 - Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash taped a TV special at the Grand Ol' Opry in Nashville, TN.?

1969 - Jimi Hendrix was arrested at Toronto International Airport for possession of narcotics and was released on $10,000 bail.?

1970 - Elton John and lyricist Bernie Taupin combined for the first time on Elton¡¯s first American album "Elton John".?

1972 - The Eagles' "Take It Easy" was released. It was their first single.?

1972 - Paul Simon released his self-titled solo debut album.?

1973 - Bachman-Turner Overdrive released its first LP (self-titled) with former Guess Who guitarist Randy Bachman.?

1973 - "Marvin Gaye Day" was declared in Washington, DC.?

1974 - The Carpenters performed at U.S. President Nixon's request at a White House dinner for West German Chancellor Willy Brandt.?

1979 - Elton John became the first pop music star to perform in Israel.?

1982 - KISS released the album "Killers."?

1984 - Mick Fleetwood filed for bankruptcy in the U.S.?

1989 - Police in California were called to a jewelry store after employees reported a suspicious person. The person turned out to be Michael Jackson shopping in disguise.?

1998 - Garth Brooks announced that the 4 millionth ticket had been purchased to his current world tour.?

1998 - Snoop Doggy Dog and MC Delmar Arnaud were each found with less than an ounce of marijuana and were arrested and booked on one count of misdemeanor marijuana possession each.?


Mary
Live long and?prosper


Fw: ¡®The Masked Singer¡¯ recap: APRIL 30

 

From: Sharon Pohlman



¡®The Masked Singer¡¯ recap: An Oscar winner unmasks in shocking ¡®Semi-Finals Night¡¯ twist

  • ?
  • ?April 30, 2025

It's?the?semi-finals on?The?Masked?Singer?and?the?final four?are ready to battle it out ahead of next week's blockbuster season finale. Tonight,?the?finalists will go head-to-head to get one step closer to?the?prestigious Golden Mask trophy.?The?winner of each battle will advance to?the?finale while?the?bottom two will fight it out in a brutal smackdown for?the?ages.

Get ready for thrilling performances as panelists?,?,?, and??play detective on ¡°Semi-Finals Night¡± of?The?Masked?Singer?airing Wednesday, April 30 (8 p.m. ET/PT) on?.?Nick Cannon?hosts the wild and wacky fun.

Boogie Woogie vs. Pearl

Ahead of the night's first epic battle, Boogie Woogie and Pearl shared a few thoughts before fighting entering the ring: "It's a showdown you want? Well, I am no stranger to fighting for survival," said Pearl. "Here, I've shown I can do any and all genres ¡ª and I've kept the panel spinning in circles. You know, one thing about me is I'm not afraid to blaze a trail. When I first broke onto the scene there weren't many women doing what I was doing. I thought, 'Why not?' So I started my own movement and ended up opening doors for so many others. But tonight, it's about showing Boogie Woogie the door. And believe me, it won't be easy, but I can stand up for myself so ... bye bye Boogie Woogie!"

Boogie Woogie responded, "I'm not going anywhere, honey! Okay, you've got me fired up now. I'm usually a happy-go-lucky guy, but the farther I get here, the more serious I'm becoming. I'm tapping into emotions that have been asleep for way too long. So tonight I'm coming at you with an upbeat, uptempo song to bring the power of Boogie Woogie. That's what it's gonna take to beat a wildcard like Pearl!"
Boogie Woogie went first, singing "Maps" by?Maroon 5?before revealing he has a connection to Ken. He told the panelist, "You're clearly a fan of mine, as you're one of my millions of followers. I promise when this is over I will finally follow you back." The panelists guessed Boogie Woogie was?Ed Sheeran?(Ken),?Kevin Jonas?(Rita), or?Justin Guarini?(Jenny).

Pearl fought back by singing "You Don't Own Me" by?Lesley Gore?before telling Jenny, "Not only did we walk the same carpet, but you watched me win one of my biggest awards at the AMAs." The panelists guessed Pearl was?Kacey Musgraves?(Jenny),?Martina McBride?(Ken),?Ann Wilson?(Robin), or?Natalie Maines?(Rita).

The Winner

The winner of this battle was Pearl! She will advance straight into the finale while Boogie Woogie heads into the final smackdown later tonight.

Mad Scientist Monster vs. Coral

In the night's second battle, Mad Scientist Monster took on Coral. Before the big competition, they shared a few more clues while engaging in some smack talk: "I am so pumped for a battle," Coral said. "I mean, I'm the youngest left in the competition ¡ª and ¡ª I'm actually one of the youngest ever to get this far. There's only one thing left to do ¡ª and that's wipe the floor with this crazy old scientist."

Mad Scientist Monster fired back, "Hey! I'm not that old. Plus, with age comes experience ¡ª and believe me ¡ª I've been training for this my whole life. As an athlete-turned-singer, I apply a sports mentality to all my performances. I'm not just cruisin' here, I'm working hard. I'm doing cardio, keeping my strength up, carbo-loading ¡ª so I'm more than ready to take down this little tadpole."

Coral took the stage first singing "What Was I Made For?" by?Billie Eilish?before telling Rita, "Your franchise and my franchise are going to make beautiful sweet music later this year." The panelists guessed Coral was?Meg Donnelly?(Rita),?Kylee Russell?(Rita),?Sofia Carson?(Rita),?Peyton List?(Ken), or?Hailee Steinfeld?(Jenny).

Mad Scientist Monster stepped up to the challenge by singing "A Bar Song (Tipsy)" by?Shaboozey?before asking Robin, "Remember that Lucky Duck clue about someone stealing something from you? Well, that was me back in 2013." The panelists guessed Mad Scientist Monster was?Trace Adkins?(Robin),?Billy Ray Cyrus?(Ken), or?Sam Hunt?(Rita).

The Winner

The winner of this battle was Mad Scientist Monster! He will advance straight into the finale while Coral takes on Boogie Woogie in the smackdown.

The Smackdown

In tonight's smackdown for a spot in the finale, Coral sang "Suddenly I See" by?KT Tunstall?before Boogie Woogie took on "Are You Gonna Be My Girl" by?Jet. Ken called it "the best smackdown I've ever seen" before the audience was forced to pick a winner.

The Elimination

Before the vote took place, the mysterious Lucky Duck ambushed the stage ringing a big golden bell. He quacked, "I've been breaking into this competition all season long. I've decided to dust off this old lucky bell, because tonight, both of you are safe!" Coral and Boogie Woogie will both advance to the Season 13 finale!

Lucky Duck then confessed, "The big surprise is that they aren't unmasking, I am!" He then pulled off his bill and revealed himself as Oscar winner and Rita's husband,?Taika Waititi!


Mary
Live long and?prosper


Re: [ForAllThings] Beatles Article Long Article

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

I thought you might enjoy it.. I love the Beatles a great deal too. I listened to them a lot growing up along with Elvis.. Mom always had the radio on to stations that played this kind of music.
It is on musicradar site: ?
Chuck
?
?
?
?

-------Original Message-------
?
Date: 5/1/2025 3:25:06 PM
Subject: Re: [BAFsMusic] [ForAllThings] Beatles Article Long Article
?
Great article Chuck ¡ª thank you ¡ª my favorite group ...

On May 1, 2025, at 1:42?PM, Chuck via groups.io <antarisky@...> wrote:

?

Came across this article and wanted to share
Chuck

?

¡°We could see John begin smiling. At the end of the first verse, he gave an exuberant thumbs-up and McCartney and Harrison began slapping each other on the back¡±: How one Beatles track spawned a recording technique revolution

Originally called ¡¯The Void¡¯, the groundbreaking song found the Fab Four exploring higher planes of consciousness - and leaning on the studio more than ever before

The Beatles in 1966

(Image credit: Santi Visalli Inc./Getty Images)

?The 1960s were a decade of quite astonishing change. The conservatism and austerity of the postwar period was besieged by the blooming of pop culture - and a new era of self-expression began to flower in the heads of a generation.

By 1966, culture, fashion, art and comedy were undergoing a giddy renaissance, yet it was pop music that was the prime mover. Its influence over the youth now solidified, pop could push beyond its hormone-fuelled bedrock. It was increasingly wandering into new frontiers of possibility.

Nothing exemplified this as clearly as the sonic evolution of?.

Since their explosion into the public consciousness a scant three years earlier, the Fab Four had demonstrated an aptitude for pop songwriting.

Now, curiosity - and competition - had spurred them to deviate away from the thematic norms of pop songwriting (I.e. Love, relationships and relentless positivity).

On their sixth studio album, Rubber Soul in 1965,?,?,??and??had widened their musical scope significantly. Edging away from the dictates of pop commerce, Rubber Soul rippled with more mature themes - and a more varied instrumental palette.?

But it was 1966¡¯s Revolver that really instigated the Beatles¡¯ pioneering second stage.

One track in particular is undoubtedly a firm contender for being the most groundbreaking in the history of recorded music.?

Tomorrow Never Knows was the very first track to be cut for the album, and contained multitudes of technical innovations. It sounded unlike anything anyone had ever heard before. And yet, it resonated with the era perfectly.

The Beatles - Tomorrow Never Knows - YouTubeThe Beatles - Tomorrow Never Knows - YouTube

Surrendering to the void

Accompanying their desire to be more creatively ambitious, the heavy demands of touring internationally had also started to take their toll on the four young men, then still in their mid-twenties.

While by 1965, the Beatles were regularly filling out football and baseball stadiums in the US, the increased stress of the security implications, a gruelling schedule and sheer volume of their often-hysterical audiences led to increased dissatisfaction.

Behind the closed doors of their studio, Abbey Road (then known as EMI Recording Studios), the Beatles found a safe haven. It was calm, secure ground on which they could focus on their core passion with freedom and support.

Inspired by the politically-charged and self-reflective writing of Bob Dylan, the neo-philosophy of the fomenting acid culture and the unbridled sonic adventurousness of the Beach Boys, the Beatles were driven to challenge themselves as songwriters.?

Partly excited by the potential of the studio, the group were also wary of being left behind as pop¡¯s inexorable pace quickened. They wanted to be taken more seriously as artists, as opposed to the conveyors of pop confectionary that some more 'cerebral' commentators regarded them as.

Revolver¡¯s final track was recorded first, and was borne out of a particularly strange starting point.John Lennon in 1966

(Image credit: Keystone/Getty Images)

Originally dubbed ¡®Mark 1¡¯ and later ¡®The Void¡¯ - Tomorrow Never Knows was inspired by Lennon¡¯s mind-expanding perusal of psychedelic drug advocate Timothy Leary¡¯s ¡®The Psychedelic Experience: A Manual Based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead¡¯.

An attempt to transcend the physical world and unlock the potential of the mind, Lennon was in thrall to Leary¡¯s trendy, acid-centered teachings.

¡°[Timothy] Leary was the one who was going round saying, 'Take it, take it, take it,' and we followed his instructions in The Book of the Dead, his how-to-take-a-trip book,¡± Lennon told Hunter Davies in his 1968 authorised biography.

¡°I did it just like he said in the book, and then I wrote 'Tomorrow Never Knows,' which is almost the first acid song, 'Lay down all thought, surrender to the void¡¯.¡±

While the obvious acid-infused subtext was a pretty provocative theme, it was the attempt to musically mould Lennon¡¯s psychedelically inspired concept into a listenable form that would prove a head-scratcher.

But realising his vision would usher in several innovations that are now studio production norms.

Convening at Abbey Road to begin making Tomorrow Never Knows at 8pm on April 6th 1966, the foundations of the track were - as Paul recalled in the Beatles Anthology - Lennon strumming ¡®rather earnestly¡¯ on the chord of C while he reeled off his mantra-like lyric.

This modal nucleus underlined the Eastern-influenced form he wanted the track to reflect.?

Coupled with the Beatles¡¯ desire to expand, there was also a serendipitous changing of personnel at Abbey Road itself.?

Replacing outgoing head engineer Norman Smith came Geoff Emerick. The 20 year-old junior engineer had been in their producer George Martin¡¯s team since 1964, so knew the boys well.?

Suddenly promoted to chief engineer at a time when the Beatles¡¯ demands were becoming increasingly more unconventional, Emerick - then younger than the Beatles - was thrilled by the challenges coming his way, and was just as buoyed by the potential of the recording studio.

"We didn't have loops in those days. Your dad had a great time!"

Critical to Tomorrow Never Knows¡¯ sound was its underlying rhythmic throb, supplied by Ringo Starr¡¯s relentless, drum loop-like pattern. The sound of which was carefully wrangled by Emerick and Starr.

Many now-norms of drum recording were first put to use during the making of this track.

A key one was the damping (and close-mic¡¯ing and compression) of the 22-inch bass drum of Starr¡¯s Ludwig Black Oyster Pearl kit.

¡°There was this woollen sweater with four necks that they had received from a fan,¡± Emerick told Andy Babuik in The Beatles Gear.

¡°It was around the studio, so I stuffed it into the bass drum to deaden the sound. I moved the bass drum microphone very close to the drum itself, which really wasn¡¯t considered the thing to do at the time. We then ran the kit sound through a Fairchild 660 valve compressor.¡±

The resulting brilliance, definition and oomph of the sound resulted in the close-mic¡¯ing of a dampened bass drum to become a standard practice from this moment on.Ringo

(Image credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Using AKG D19C mics for the drum overheads and an AKG D20 for that ingenious bass drum capture, Emerick and Starr¡¯s kit-recording fastidiousness (which also found Starr balancing a cigarette packet atop his snare to reign in its resonances) resulted in the perfect central pulse for the track.

The sound - and style of Starr¡¯s repeating drum pattern - would prove influential for decades to come. It foreshadowed the structural centrality of drum loops in dance music years later, while its tight repetitiveness prefigured the era of sample-based production.

Although of course, Ringo wasn¡¯t actually playing a loop - he had to lock into that groove for duration of the track¡¯s runtime.

Years later,??Starr recalled that his son - upon first hearing the track - believed it to be a drum loop; ¡°Zak, years and years ago said ¡®Oh, and that loop you had.¡¯ And I said ¡®Loop?¡¯ Loops?!,¡± remembered Ringo.

¡°I said ¡®Phone this number,¡¯ and he phoned the number, and George Martin said ¡®Yes?¡¯ Zak went ¡®Well, is that a loop?¡¯ and George Martin had to tell my boy, ¡¯Look Zak, we didn¡¯t have loops in those days. Your dad had a great time!¡¯¡±

Ringo¡¯s contribution to the track went beyond that iconic drum part.

As with A Hard Day¡¯s Night and Eight Days a Week, the title - Tomorrow Never Knows - stemmed from another of his wry malapropisms.?

The original uttering of the phrase happened during an interview in 1964 in response to a journalist asking him about his hair being surreptitiously cut at the British Embassy during their first US visit.

Lennon thought it struck the right balance of profound and playful to mask the track¡¯s heavier subtext.

?

Locking in with Starr¡¯s beat, McCartney¡¯s bass part was (unusually for him) static and grounded.

Fastening his Rickenbacker 4001S bass to the note of C in ostinato form, McCartney supplied a steady palpitation that tightly latched to Starr¡¯s drum part, providing a neat bedrock for the more extraordinary additions that were to follow

"They probably thought we were daft"

With the rhythm section in-place, the real magic of Tomorrow Never Knows had a springboard from which to launch.

Bolstering the track¡¯s C-note drone was a Hammond organ. Its sustained chord sound was output through a Leslie speaker cabinet, cradling the musical information in pad-like form.

But it was the decision to incorporate tape loops into the mix - a suggestion of Paul McCartney - that elevated the track into a new domain.

McCartney had, on the quiet, been an avid tape-loop experimentalist.

He remembered years later that his interest in the field had tended to be overshadowed by Lennon¡¯s prominence on the band¡¯s more outr¨¦ tracks; "What's often said of me is that I'm the guy who wrote 'Yesterday¡¯,¡±?. ¡°But I'm also a guy who was really interested in tape loops, electronics and avant-garde music. That just doesn't get out there on a wide level.¡±

For Tomorrow Never Knows, there were five main loops, all of which had been stretched or manipulated in some way.

Firstly there was a seagull-like sound that appears near the track¡¯s beginning and conclusion. This chirpy effect was actually a recording of McCartney¡¯s own laughter, sped up to emulate a joyous bird in flight.

Then there were some reversed and looped strings in B flat major (which, when played over the C, gave an impression of polytonality).?

There was the sound of a mellotron on its ¡®Flute¡¯ setting and another on its ¡®Strings¡¯ setting, as well as a recording a the sitar-type sound - actually a tamboura - that opens the track, which played an ascending phrase.

Output via five BTR 3 tape machines, these carefully selected loops were each hand-operated by an individual technician.

Taking their cues from the musique concr¨¨te approaches of visionaries like Karlheinz Stockhausen, the Beatles had the idea to live-mix and essentially ¡®perform¡¯ these samples during the final mix of the track

The ever-enthused Emerick gleefully took to the task of setting this up.

As he remembered in his extraordinary memoir, Here, There and Everywhere, ¡°What followed next was a scene that could have come out of a science fiction movie - or a Monty Python sketch.

"Every tape machine in every studio was commandeered and every available EMI employee was given the task of holding a pencil or drinking glass to give the loops the proper tensioning. In many instances, this meant they had to be standing out in the hallway, looking quite sheepish.

"Most of those people didn¡¯t have a clue what we were doing; they probably thought we were daft.¡±Geoff Emerick

Geoff Emerick and Ringo a few years later?(Image credit: Monti Spry/Central Press/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Emerick and Martin rode the faders in the studio, with the Beatles barking instructions as to which tape loops should be raised and lowered.?

"With each fader carrying a different loop, the mixing desk acted like a synthesizer,¡± Emerick recalled in Here, There and Everywhere. ¡°We played it like a musical instrument, too, carefully overdubbing textures to the prerecorded backing track.¡±

This out-there approach to manipulating disparate sound sources was way ahead of its time, and - being that it was tracked and manipulated live - was impossible to reproduce afterwards. But the resulting tape-mix was burnt into the final version of Tomorrow Never Knows forever.

Complementing these loops, a zig-zagging guitar line from Harrison was injected into the mix, but to match the track¡¯s vortex-like arrangement, it was reversed.

The idea of backwards guitar solos had first arisen during the recording of another Revolver standout,?, when - accidentally - the tape had been loaded incorrectly into a tape machine and produced a suitably yawning-esque sound.

Backwards guitar was suddenly a creative texture that the Beatles could draw on.

Within Tomorrow Never Knows, George¡¯s guitar part (which was played on an Epiphone Casino routed through a Leslie cabinet) gave the impression of a winding shimmering entity, coiling into itself.

It was the aural equivalent of bending time and space.

"It's the Dalai Lennon!"

While its sonics were certainly unlike anything heard before, at the heart of Tomorrow Never Knows was Lennon¡¯s prophet-like vocal, instructing listeners to surrender to the void and open their minds to a new universe beyond our perception.

Lennon conceived of a vocal that sounded as profound as its lyric, wanting the characteristics of a monk chanting atop a mountain. He proposed quite an outlandish idea for capturing the right kind of vocal quality he was imagining.

¡°He suggested we suspend him from a rope in the middle of the studio ceiling, put a mike in the middle of the floor, give him a push and he¡¯d sing as he went around and around,¡± Geoff recalled in The Beatles Recording Sessions.

Instead of this potentially dangerous idea, Emerick pondered a more down-to-earth solution.

As he recalled in his autobiography; ¡°The studio¡¯s Hammond organ was hooked up to a system called a Leslie - a large wooden box that contained an amp and two sets of revolving speakers, one that carried low bass frequencies and the other that carried high treble frequencies; it was the effect of those spinning speakers that was largely responsible for the characteristic Hammond organ sound.¡±

Geoff had the - then-radical - idea to route the vocal signal through the Leslie.

¡°In my mind, I could almost hear what John¡¯s voice might sound like if it were coming from a Leslie. It would take a little time to set up, but I thought it might just give him what he was after.¡±

Patching in the signal, Emerick then committed the audio of the mic¡¯d-up Leslie cabinet to tape, and created an effected version of Lennon¡¯s vocal that sounded suitably supernatural.

¡°Lennon¡¯s voice sounded like it never had before, eerily disconnected, distant yet compelling,¡± recalled Emerick. ¡°The effect seemed to perfectly complement the esoteric lyrics he was chanting. Everyone in the control room - including George Harrison - looked stunned."

Geoff continues, ¡°Through the glass we could see John begin smiling. At the end of the first verse, he gave an exuberant thumbs-up and McCartney and Harrison began slapping each other on the back.

"¡¯It¡¯s the Dalai Lennon!¡¯ Paul shouted.¡±The Beatles 1966

(Image credit: Chris Walter/Getty Images)

Tomorrow Never Knows¡¯ successful Leslie experiment prefigured the solidification of ADT (Automatic Double Tracking) later in the Revolver sessions, though the track itself didn¡¯t feature it.

The end of the beginning

So, let¡¯s run those innovations back shall we?

Tomorrow Never Knows was the first significant pop track to feature a tightly compressed, dampened bass drum, it was the first to incorporate a hand-manipulated tape loop collage, triggered at random and in a performative-manner in the studio.

It was among the first Beatle tracks to sport backwards guitar, the first to feature an unheard-of vocal-doubling and effecting process (laying the groundwork for the advent of Automatic Double Tracking later in the album sessions - another future fixture) and the first British pop track to orient itself around a non-Western musical form.

That's quite the forward-thinking production process. It'd be one that¡¯d be worth talking about, even if the results were less than spellbinding.

Thankfully, the song was - and remains - one of the Beatles' most cherished accomplishments.

Tomorrow Never Knows was a veritable atom bomb of possibility.?

It exploded a twin revolution in the minds of listeners. It showed that pop music could be a bigger, bolder and more bountiful thing than previously imagined.

In the hands of the Beatles, pop could be existential.

Now with a thematically and musically boundless playing field, the potential for pop¡¯s vibrant future was revealed.Beatles

(Image credit: Mark and Colleen Hayward/Redferns/Getty Images)

Critically (particularly for us at MusicRadar) the track was arguably the first major example of an artist approaching the the studio as an instrument.?

Aiming to reflect a whirlwind, transcendent experience through sound, the Beatles, Geoff Emerick and George Martin, unlocked techniques and approaches that are now foundational to how we approach music production.

Ironically, considering it triggered many of the album¡¯s most colourful ideas, Tomorrow Never Knows was sequenced as Revolver¡¯s concluding number.

The highest summit of the record also proved a compelling teaser for one of the most extraordinary creative outpourings in pop history.?

It was right around the corner¡­

Categories
?
Music-Making Editor

I'm the Music-Making Editor of MusicRadar, and I am keen to explore the stories that affect all music-makers - whether they're just starting or are at an advanced level. I write, commission and edit content around the wider world of music creation, as well as penning deep-dives into the essentials of production, genre and theory. As the former editor of Computer Music, I aim to bring the same knowledge and experience that underpinned that magazine to the editorial I write, but I'm very eager to engage with new and emerging writers to cover the topics that resonate with them. My career has included editing MusicTech magazine and website, consulting on SEO/editorial practice and writing about music-making and listening for titles such as NME, Classic Pop, Audio Media International,??and Uncut. When I'm not writing about music, I'm making it. I release tracks under the name?.?


?


Re: [ForAllThings] Beatles Article Long Article

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Great article Chuck ¡ª thank you ¡ª my favorite group ...

On May 1, 2025, at 1:42?PM, Chuck via groups.io <antarisky@...> wrote:

?

Came across this article and wanted to share
Chuck

?

¡°We could see John begin smiling. At the end of the first verse, he gave an exuberant thumbs-up and McCartney and Harrison began slapping each other on the back¡±: How one Beatles track spawned a recording technique revolution

Originally called ¡¯The Void¡¯, the groundbreaking song found the Fab Four exploring higher planes of consciousness - and leaning on the studio more than ever before

The Beatles in 1966

(Image credit: Santi Visalli Inc./Getty Images)

?The 1960s were a decade of quite astonishing change. The conservatism and austerity of the postwar period was besieged by the blooming of pop culture - and a new era of self-expression began to flower in the heads of a generation.

By 1966, culture, fashion, art and comedy were undergoing a giddy renaissance, yet it was pop music that was the prime mover. Its influence over the youth now solidified, pop could push beyond its hormone-fuelled bedrock. It was increasingly wandering into new frontiers of possibility.

Nothing exemplified this as clearly as the sonic evolution of?.

Since their explosion into the public consciousness a scant three years earlier, the Fab Four had demonstrated an aptitude for pop songwriting.

Now, curiosity - and competition - had spurred them to deviate away from the thematic norms of pop songwriting (I.e. Love, relationships and relentless positivity).

On their sixth studio album, Rubber Soul in 1965,?,?,??and??had widened their musical scope significantly. Edging away from the dictates of pop commerce, Rubber Soul rippled with more mature themes - and a more varied instrumental palette.?

But it was 1966¡¯s Revolver that really instigated the Beatles¡¯ pioneering second stage.

One track in particular is undoubtedly a firm contender for being the most groundbreaking in the history of recorded music.?

Tomorrow Never Knows was the very first track to be cut for the album, and contained multitudes of technical innovations. It sounded unlike anything anyone had ever heard before. And yet, it resonated with the era perfectly.

The Beatles - Tomorrow Never Knows - YouTubeThe Beatles - Tomorrow Never Knows - YouTube

Surrendering to the void

Accompanying their desire to be more creatively ambitious, the heavy demands of touring internationally had also started to take their toll on the four young men, then still in their mid-twenties.

While by 1965, the Beatles were regularly filling out football and baseball stadiums in the US, the increased stress of the security implications, a gruelling schedule and sheer volume of their often-hysterical audiences led to increased dissatisfaction.

Behind the closed doors of their studio, Abbey Road (then known as EMI Recording Studios), the Beatles found a safe haven. It was calm, secure ground on which they could focus on their core passion with freedom and support.

Inspired by the politically-charged and self-reflective writing of Bob Dylan, the neo-philosophy of the fomenting acid culture and the unbridled sonic adventurousness of the Beach Boys, the Beatles were driven to challenge themselves as songwriters.?

Partly excited by the potential of the studio, the group were also wary of being left behind as pop¡¯s inexorable pace quickened. They wanted to be taken more seriously as artists, as opposed to the conveyors of pop confectionary that some more 'cerebral' commentators regarded them as.

Revolver¡¯s final track was recorded first, and was borne out of a particularly strange starting point.John Lennon in 1966

(Image credit: Keystone/Getty Images)

Originally dubbed ¡®Mark 1¡¯ and later ¡®The Void¡¯ - Tomorrow Never Knows was inspired by Lennon¡¯s mind-expanding perusal of psychedelic drug advocate Timothy Leary¡¯s ¡®The Psychedelic Experience: A Manual Based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead¡¯.

An attempt to transcend the physical world and unlock the potential of the mind, Lennon was in thrall to Leary¡¯s trendy, acid-centered teachings.

¡°[Timothy] Leary was the one who was going round saying, 'Take it, take it, take it,' and we followed his instructions in The Book of the Dead, his how-to-take-a-trip book,¡± Lennon told Hunter Davies in his 1968 authorised biography.

¡°I did it just like he said in the book, and then I wrote 'Tomorrow Never Knows,' which is almost the first acid song, 'Lay down all thought, surrender to the void¡¯.¡±

While the obvious acid-infused subtext was a pretty provocative theme, it was the attempt to musically mould Lennon¡¯s psychedelically inspired concept into a listenable form that would prove a head-scratcher.

But realising his vision would usher in several innovations that are now studio production norms.

Convening at Abbey Road to begin making Tomorrow Never Knows at 8pm on April 6th 1966, the foundations of the track were - as Paul recalled in the Beatles Anthology - Lennon strumming ¡®rather earnestly¡¯ on the chord of C while he reeled off his mantra-like lyric.

This modal nucleus underlined the Eastern-influenced form he wanted the track to reflect.?

Coupled with the Beatles¡¯ desire to expand, there was also a serendipitous changing of personnel at Abbey Road itself.?

Replacing outgoing head engineer Norman Smith came Geoff Emerick. The 20 year-old junior engineer had been in their producer George Martin¡¯s team since 1964, so knew the boys well.?

Suddenly promoted to chief engineer at a time when the Beatles¡¯ demands were becoming increasingly more unconventional, Emerick - then younger than the Beatles - was thrilled by the challenges coming his way, and was just as buoyed by the potential of the recording studio.

"We didn't have loops in those days. Your dad had a great time!"

Critical to Tomorrow Never Knows¡¯ sound was its underlying rhythmic throb, supplied by Ringo Starr¡¯s relentless, drum loop-like pattern. The sound of which was carefully wrangled by Emerick and Starr.

Many now-norms of drum recording were first put to use during the making of this track.

A key one was the damping (and close-mic¡¯ing and compression) of the 22-inch bass drum of Starr¡¯s Ludwig Black Oyster Pearl kit.

¡°There was this woollen sweater with four necks that they had received from a fan,¡± Emerick told Andy Babuik in The Beatles Gear.

¡°It was around the studio, so I stuffed it into the bass drum to deaden the sound. I moved the bass drum microphone very close to the drum itself, which really wasn¡¯t considered the thing to do at the time. We then ran the kit sound through a Fairchild 660 valve compressor.¡±

The resulting brilliance, definition and oomph of the sound resulted in the close-mic¡¯ing of a dampened bass drum to become a standard practice from this moment on.Ringo

(Image credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Using AKG D19C mics for the drum overheads and an AKG D20 for that ingenious bass drum capture, Emerick and Starr¡¯s kit-recording fastidiousness (which also found Starr balancing a cigarette packet atop his snare to reign in its resonances) resulted in the perfect central pulse for the track.

The sound - and style of Starr¡¯s repeating drum pattern - would prove influential for decades to come. It foreshadowed the structural centrality of drum loops in dance music years later, while its tight repetitiveness prefigured the era of sample-based production.

Although of course, Ringo wasn¡¯t actually playing a loop - he had to lock into that groove for duration of the track¡¯s runtime.

Years later,??Starr recalled that his son - upon first hearing the track - believed it to be a drum loop; ¡°Zak, years and years ago said ¡®Oh, and that loop you had.¡¯ And I said ¡®Loop?¡¯ Loops?!,¡± remembered Ringo.

¡°I said ¡®Phone this number,¡¯ and he phoned the number, and George Martin said ¡®Yes?¡¯ Zak went ¡®Well, is that a loop?¡¯ and George Martin had to tell my boy, ¡¯Look Zak, we didn¡¯t have loops in those days. Your dad had a great time!¡¯¡±

Ringo¡¯s contribution to the track went beyond that iconic drum part.

As with A Hard Day¡¯s Night and Eight Days a Week, the title - Tomorrow Never Knows - stemmed from another of his wry malapropisms.?

The original uttering of the phrase happened during an interview in 1964 in response to a journalist asking him about his hair being surreptitiously cut at the British Embassy during their first US visit.

Lennon thought it struck the right balance of profound and playful to mask the track¡¯s heavier subtext.

?

Locking in with Starr¡¯s beat, McCartney¡¯s bass part was (unusually for him) static and grounded.

Fastening his Rickenbacker 4001S bass to the note of C in ostinato form, McCartney supplied a steady palpitation that tightly latched to Starr¡¯s drum part, providing a neat bedrock for the more extraordinary additions that were to follow

"They probably thought we were daft"

With the rhythm section in-place, the real magic of Tomorrow Never Knows had a springboard from which to launch.

Bolstering the track¡¯s C-note drone was a Hammond organ. Its sustained chord sound was output through a Leslie speaker cabinet, cradling the musical information in pad-like form.

But it was the decision to incorporate tape loops into the mix - a suggestion of Paul McCartney - that elevated the track into a new domain.

McCartney had, on the quiet, been an avid tape-loop experimentalist.

He remembered years later that his interest in the field had tended to be overshadowed by Lennon¡¯s prominence on the band¡¯s more outr¨¦ tracks; "What's often said of me is that I'm the guy who wrote 'Yesterday¡¯,¡±?. ¡°But I'm also a guy who was really interested in tape loops, electronics and avant-garde music. That just doesn't get out there on a wide level.¡±

For Tomorrow Never Knows, there were five main loops, all of which had been stretched or manipulated in some way.

Firstly there was a seagull-like sound that appears near the track¡¯s beginning and conclusion. This chirpy effect was actually a recording of McCartney¡¯s own laughter, sped up to emulate a joyous bird in flight.

Then there were some reversed and looped strings in B flat major (which, when played over the C, gave an impression of polytonality).?

There was the sound of a mellotron on its ¡®Flute¡¯ setting and another on its ¡®Strings¡¯ setting, as well as a recording a the sitar-type sound - actually a tamboura - that opens the track, which played an ascending phrase.

Output via five BTR 3 tape machines, these carefully selected loops were each hand-operated by an individual technician.

Taking their cues from the musique concr¨¨te approaches of visionaries like Karlheinz Stockhausen, the Beatles had the idea to live-mix and essentially ¡®perform¡¯ these samples during the final mix of the track

The ever-enthused Emerick gleefully took to the task of setting this up.

As he remembered in his extraordinary memoir, Here, There and Everywhere, ¡°What followed next was a scene that could have come out of a science fiction movie - or a Monty Python sketch.

"Every tape machine in every studio was commandeered and every available EMI employee was given the task of holding a pencil or drinking glass to give the loops the proper tensioning. In many instances, this meant they had to be standing out in the hallway, looking quite sheepish.

"Most of those people didn¡¯t have a clue what we were doing; they probably thought we were daft.¡±Geoff Emerick

Geoff Emerick and Ringo a few years later?(Image credit: Monti Spry/Central Press/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Emerick and Martin rode the faders in the studio, with the Beatles barking instructions as to which tape loops should be raised and lowered.?

"With each fader carrying a different loop, the mixing desk acted like a synthesizer,¡± Emerick recalled in Here, There and Everywhere. ¡°We played it like a musical instrument, too, carefully overdubbing textures to the prerecorded backing track.¡±

This out-there approach to manipulating disparate sound sources was way ahead of its time, and - being that it was tracked and manipulated live - was impossible to reproduce afterwards. But the resulting tape-mix was burnt into the final version of Tomorrow Never Knows forever.

Complementing these loops, a zig-zagging guitar line from Harrison was injected into the mix, but to match the track¡¯s vortex-like arrangement, it was reversed.

The idea of backwards guitar solos had first arisen during the recording of another Revolver standout,?, when - accidentally - the tape had been loaded incorrectly into a tape machine and produced a suitably yawning-esque sound.

Backwards guitar was suddenly a creative texture that the Beatles could draw on.

Within Tomorrow Never Knows, George¡¯s guitar part (which was played on an Epiphone Casino routed through a Leslie cabinet) gave the impression of a winding shimmering entity, coiling into itself.

It was the aural equivalent of bending time and space.

"It's the Dalai Lennon!"

While its sonics were certainly unlike anything heard before, at the heart of Tomorrow Never Knows was Lennon¡¯s prophet-like vocal, instructing listeners to surrender to the void and open their minds to a new universe beyond our perception.

Lennon conceived of a vocal that sounded as profound as its lyric, wanting the characteristics of a monk chanting atop a mountain. He proposed quite an outlandish idea for capturing the right kind of vocal quality he was imagining.

¡°He suggested we suspend him from a rope in the middle of the studio ceiling, put a mike in the middle of the floor, give him a push and he¡¯d sing as he went around and around,¡± Geoff recalled in The Beatles Recording Sessions.

Instead of this potentially dangerous idea, Emerick pondered a more down-to-earth solution.

As he recalled in his autobiography; ¡°The studio¡¯s Hammond organ was hooked up to a system called a Leslie - a large wooden box that contained an amp and two sets of revolving speakers, one that carried low bass frequencies and the other that carried high treble frequencies; it was the effect of those spinning speakers that was largely responsible for the characteristic Hammond organ sound.¡±

Geoff had the - then-radical - idea to route the vocal signal through the Leslie.

¡°In my mind, I could almost hear what John¡¯s voice might sound like if it were coming from a Leslie. It would take a little time to set up, but I thought it might just give him what he was after.¡±

Patching in the signal, Emerick then committed the audio of the mic¡¯d-up Leslie cabinet to tape, and created an effected version of Lennon¡¯s vocal that sounded suitably supernatural.

¡°Lennon¡¯s voice sounded like it never had before, eerily disconnected, distant yet compelling,¡± recalled Emerick. ¡°The effect seemed to perfectly complement the esoteric lyrics he was chanting. Everyone in the control room - including George Harrison - looked stunned."

Geoff continues, ¡°Through the glass we could see John begin smiling. At the end of the first verse, he gave an exuberant thumbs-up and McCartney and Harrison began slapping each other on the back.

"¡¯It¡¯s the Dalai Lennon!¡¯ Paul shouted.¡±The Beatles 1966

(Image credit: Chris Walter/Getty Images)

Tomorrow Never Knows¡¯ successful Leslie experiment prefigured the solidification of ADT (Automatic Double Tracking) later in the Revolver sessions, though the track itself didn¡¯t feature it.

The end of the beginning

So, let¡¯s run those innovations back shall we?

Tomorrow Never Knows was the first significant pop track to feature a tightly compressed, dampened bass drum, it was the first to incorporate a hand-manipulated tape loop collage, triggered at random and in a performative-manner in the studio.

It was among the first Beatle tracks to sport backwards guitar, the first to feature an unheard-of vocal-doubling and effecting process (laying the groundwork for the advent of Automatic Double Tracking later in the album sessions - another future fixture) and the first British pop track to orient itself around a non-Western musical form.

That's quite the forward-thinking production process. It'd be one that¡¯d be worth talking about, even if the results were less than spellbinding.

Thankfully, the song was - and remains - one of the Beatles' most cherished accomplishments.

Tomorrow Never Knows was a veritable atom bomb of possibility.?

It exploded a twin revolution in the minds of listeners. It showed that pop music could be a bigger, bolder and more bountiful thing than previously imagined.

In the hands of the Beatles, pop could be existential.

Now with a thematically and musically boundless playing field, the potential for pop¡¯s vibrant future was revealed.Beatles

(Image credit: Mark and Colleen Hayward/Redferns/Getty Images)

Critically (particularly for us at MusicRadar) the track was arguably the first major example of an artist approaching the the studio as an instrument.?

Aiming to reflect a whirlwind, transcendent experience through sound, the Beatles, Geoff Emerick and George Martin, unlocked techniques and approaches that are now foundational to how we approach music production.

Ironically, considering it triggered many of the album¡¯s most colourful ideas, Tomorrow Never Knows was sequenced as Revolver¡¯s concluding number.

The highest summit of the record also proved a compelling teaser for one of the most extraordinary creative outpourings in pop history.?

It was right around the corner¡­

Categories
?
Music-Making Editor

I'm the Music-Making Editor of MusicRadar, and I am keen to explore the stories that affect all music-makers - whether they're just starting or are at an advanced level. I write, commission and edit content around the wider world of music creation, as well as penning deep-dives into the essentials of production, genre and theory. As the former editor of Computer Music, I aim to bring the same knowledge and experience that underpinned that magazine to the editorial I write, but I'm very eager to engage with new and emerging writers to cover the topics that resonate with them. My career has included editing MusicTech magazine and website, consulting on SEO/editorial practice and writing about music-making and listening for titles such as NME, Classic Pop, Audio Media International,??and Uncut. When I'm not writing about music, I'm making it. I release tracks under the name?.?



Beatles Article Long Article

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

?

Came across this article and wanted to share
Chuck

?

¡°We could see John begin smiling. At the end of the first verse, he gave an exuberant thumbs-up and McCartney and Harrison began slapping each other on the back¡±: How one Beatles track spawned a recording technique revolution

Originally called ¡¯The Void¡¯, the groundbreaking song found the Fab Four exploring higher planes of consciousness - and leaning on the studio more than ever before

The Beatles in 1966

(Image credit: Santi Visalli Inc./Getty Images)

The 1960s were a decade of quite astonishing change. The conservatism and austerity of the postwar period was besieged by the blooming of pop culture - and a new era of self-expression began to flower in the heads of a generation.

By 1966, culture, fashion, art and comedy were undergoing a giddy renaissance, yet it was pop music that was the prime mover. Its influence over the youth now solidified, pop could push beyond its hormone-fuelled bedrock. It was increasingly wandering into new frontiers of possibility.

Nothing exemplified this as clearly as the sonic evolution of .

Since their explosion into the public consciousness a scant three years earlier, the Fab Four had demonstrated an aptitude for pop songwriting.

Now, curiosity - and competition - had spurred them to deviate away from the thematic norms of pop songwriting (I.e. Love, relationships and relentless positivity).

On their sixth studio album, Rubber Soul in 1965, , , and had widened their musical scope significantly. Edging away from the dictates of pop commerce, Rubber Soul rippled with more mature themes - and a more varied instrumental palette.

But it was 1966¡¯s Revolver that really instigated the Beatles¡¯ pioneering second stage.

One track in particular is undoubtedly a firm contender for being the most groundbreaking in the history of recorded music.

Tomorrow Never Knows was the very first track to be cut for the album, and contained multitudes of technical innovations. It sounded unlike anything anyone had ever heard before. And yet, it resonated with the era perfectly.

The Beatles - Tomorrow Never Knows - YouTube The Beatles - Tomorrow Never Knows - YouTube

Surrendering to the void

Accompanying their desire to be more creatively ambitious, the heavy demands of touring internationally had also started to take their toll on the four young men, then still in their mid-twenties.

While by 1965, the Beatles were regularly filling out football and baseball stadiums in the US, the increased stress of the security implications, a gruelling schedule and sheer volume of their often-hysterical audiences led to increased dissatisfaction.

Behind the closed doors of their studio, Abbey Road (then known as EMI Recording Studios), the Beatles found a safe haven. It was calm, secure ground on which they could focus on their core passion with freedom and support.

Inspired by the politically-charged and self-reflective writing of Bob Dylan, the neo-philosophy of the fomenting acid culture and the unbridled sonic adventurousness of the Beach Boys, the Beatles were driven to challenge themselves as songwriters.

Partly excited by the potential of the studio, the group were also wary of being left behind as pop¡¯s inexorable pace quickened. They wanted to be taken more seriously as artists, as opposed to the conveyors of pop confectionary that some more 'cerebral' commentators regarded them as.

Revolver¡¯s final track was recorded first, and was borne out of a particularly strange starting point.John Lennon in 1966

(Image credit: Keystone/Getty Images)

Originally dubbed ¡®Mark 1¡¯ and later ¡®The Void¡¯ - Tomorrow Never Knows was inspired by Lennon¡¯s mind-expanding perusal of psychedelic drug advocate Timothy Leary¡¯s ¡®The Psychedelic Experience: A Manual Based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead¡¯.

An attempt to transcend the physical world and unlock the potential of the mind, Lennon was in thrall to Leary¡¯s trendy, acid-centered teachings.

¡°[Timothy] Leary was the one who was going round saying, 'Take it, take it, take it,' and we followed his instructions in The Book of the Dead, his how-to-take-a-trip book,¡± Lennon told Hunter Davies in his 1968 authorised biography.

¡°I did it just like he said in the book, and then I wrote 'Tomorrow Never Knows,' which is almost the first acid song, 'Lay down all thought, surrender to the void¡¯.¡±

While the obvious acid-infused subtext was a pretty provocative theme, it was the attempt to musically mould Lennon¡¯s psychedelically inspired concept into a listenable form that would prove a head-scratcher.

But realising his vision would usher in several innovations that are now studio production norms.

Convening at Abbey Road to begin making Tomorrow Never Knows at 8pm on April 6th 1966, the foundations of the track were - as Paul recalled in the Beatles Anthology - Lennon strumming ¡®rather earnestly¡¯ on the chord of C while he reeled off his mantra-like lyric.

This modal nucleus underlined the Eastern-influenced form he wanted the track to reflect.

Coupled with the Beatles¡¯ desire to expand, there was also a serendipitous changing of personnel at Abbey Road itself.

Replacing outgoing head engineer Norman Smith came Geoff Emerick. The 20 year-old junior engineer had been in their producer George Martin¡¯s team since 1964, so knew the boys well.

Suddenly promoted to chief engineer at a time when the Beatles¡¯ demands were becoming increasingly more unconventional, Emerick - then younger than the Beatles - was thrilled by the challenges coming his way, and was just as buoyed by the potential of the recording studio.

"We didn't have loops in those days. Your dad had a great time!"

Critical to Tomorrow Never Knows¡¯ sound was its underlying rhythmic throb, supplied by Ringo Starr¡¯s relentless, drum loop-like pattern. The sound of which was carefully wrangled by Emerick and Starr.

Many now-norms of drum recording were first put to use during the making of this track.

A key one was the damping (and close-mic¡¯ing and compression) of the 22-inch bass drum of Starr¡¯s Ludwig Black Oyster Pearl kit.

¡°There was this woollen sweater with four necks that they had received from a fan,¡± Emerick told Andy Babuik in The Beatles Gear.

¡°It was around the studio, so I stuffed it into the bass drum to deaden the sound. I moved the bass drum microphone very close to the drum itself, which really wasn¡¯t considered the thing to do at the time. We then ran the kit sound through a Fairchild 660 valve compressor.¡±

The resulting brilliance, definition and oomph of the sound resulted in the close-mic¡¯ing of a dampened bass drum to become a standard practice from this moment on.Ringo

(Image credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Using AKG D19C mics for the drum overheads and an AKG D20 for that ingenious bass drum capture, Emerick and Starr¡¯s kit-recording fastidiousness (which also found Starr balancing a cigarette packet atop his snare to reign in its resonances) resulted in the perfect central pulse for the track.

The sound - and style of Starr¡¯s repeating drum pattern - would prove influential for decades to come. It foreshadowed the structural centrality of drum loops in dance music years later, while its tight repetitiveness prefigured the era of sample-based production.

Although of course, Ringo wasn¡¯t actually playing a loop - he had to lock into that groove for duration of the track¡¯s runtime.

Years later, Starr recalled that his son - upon first hearing the track - believed it to be a drum loop; ¡°Zak, years and years ago said ¡®Oh, and that loop you had.¡¯ And I said ¡®Loop?¡¯ Loops?!,¡± remembered Ringo.

¡°I said ¡®Phone this number,¡¯ and he phoned the number, and George Martin said ¡®Yes?¡¯ Zak went ¡®Well, is that a loop?¡¯ and George Martin had to tell my boy, ¡¯Look Zak, we didn¡¯t have loops in those days. Your dad had a great time!¡¯¡±

Ringo¡¯s contribution to the track went beyond that iconic drum part.

As with A Hard Day¡¯s Night and Eight Days a Week, the title - Tomorrow Never Knows - stemmed from another of his wry malapropisms.

The original uttering of the phrase happened during an interview in 1964 in response to a journalist asking him about his hair being surreptitiously cut at the British Embassy during their first US visit.

Lennon thought it struck the right balance of profound and playful to mask the track¡¯s heavier subtext.

?

Locking in with Starr¡¯s beat, McCartney¡¯s bass part was (unusually for him) static and grounded.

Fastening his Rickenbacker 4001S bass to the note of C in ostinato form, McCartney supplied a steady palpitation that tightly latched to Starr¡¯s drum part, providing a neat bedrock for the more extraordinary additions that were to follow

"They probably thought we were daft"

With the rhythm section in-place, the real magic of Tomorrow Never Knows had a springboard from which to launch.

Bolstering the track¡¯s C-note drone was a Hammond organ. Its sustained chord sound was output through a Leslie speaker cabinet, cradling the musical information in pad-like form.

But it was the decision to incorporate tape loops into the mix - a suggestion of Paul McCartney - that elevated the track into a new domain.

McCartney had, on the quiet, been an avid tape-loop experimentalist.

He remembered years later that his interest in the field had tended to be overshadowed by Lennon¡¯s prominence on the band¡¯s more outr¨¦ tracks; "What's often said of me is that I'm the guy who wrote 'Yesterday¡¯,¡± . ¡°But I'm also a guy who was really interested in tape loops, electronics and avant-garde music. That just doesn't get out there on a wide level.¡±

For Tomorrow Never Knows, there were five main loops, all of which had been stretched or manipulated in some way.

Firstly there was a seagull-like sound that appears near the track¡¯s beginning and conclusion. This chirpy effect was actually a recording of McCartney¡¯s own laughter, sped up to emulate a joyous bird in flight.

Then there were some reversed and looped strings in B flat major (which, when played over the C, gave an impression of polytonality).

There was the sound of a mellotron on its ¡®Flute¡¯ setting and another on its ¡®Strings¡¯ setting, as well as a recording a the sitar-type sound - actually a tamboura - that opens the track, which played an ascending phrase.

Output via five BTR 3 tape machines, these carefully selected loops were each hand-operated by an individual technician.

Taking their cues from the musique concr¨¨te approaches of visionaries like Karlheinz Stockhausen, the Beatles had the idea to live-mix and essentially ¡®perform¡¯ these samples during the final mix of the track

The ever-enthused Emerick gleefully took to the task of setting this up.

As he remembered in his extraordinary memoir, Here, There and Everywhere, ¡°What followed next was a scene that could have come out of a science fiction movie - or a Monty Python sketch.

"Every tape machine in every studio was commandeered and every available EMI employee was given the task of holding a pencil or drinking glass to give the loops the proper tensioning. In many instances, this meant they had to be standing out in the hallway, looking quite sheepish.

"Most of those people didn¡¯t have a clue what we were doing; they probably thought we were daft.¡±Geoff Emerick

Geoff Emerick and Ringo a few years later (Image credit: Monti Spry/Central Press/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Emerick and Martin rode the faders in the studio, with the Beatles barking instructions as to which tape loops should be raised and lowered.

"With each fader carrying a different loop, the mixing desk acted like a synthesizer,¡± Emerick recalled in Here, There and Everywhere. ¡°We played it like a musical instrument, too, carefully overdubbing textures to the prerecorded backing track.¡±

This out-there approach to manipulating disparate sound sources was way ahead of its time, and - being that it was tracked and manipulated live - was impossible to reproduce afterwards. But the resulting tape-mix was burnt into the final version of Tomorrow Never Knows forever.

Complementing these loops, a zig-zagging guitar line from Harrison was injected into the mix, but to match the track¡¯s vortex-like arrangement, it was reversed.

The idea of backwards guitar solos had first arisen during the recording of another Revolver standout, , when - accidentally - the tape had been loaded incorrectly into a tape machine and produced a suitably yawning-esque sound.

Backwards guitar was suddenly a creative texture that the Beatles could draw on.

Within Tomorrow Never Knows, George¡¯s guitar part (which was played on an Epiphone Casino routed through a Leslie cabinet) gave the impression of a winding shimmering entity, coiling into itself.

It was the aural equivalent of bending time and space.

"It's the Dalai Lennon!"

While its sonics were certainly unlike anything heard before, at the heart of Tomorrow Never Knows was Lennon¡¯s prophet-like vocal, instructing listeners to surrender to the void and open their minds to a new universe beyond our perception.

Lennon conceived of a vocal that sounded as profound as its lyric, wanting the characteristics of a monk chanting atop a mountain. He proposed quite an outlandish idea for capturing the right kind of vocal quality he was imagining.

¡°He suggested we suspend him from a rope in the middle of the studio ceiling, put a mike in the middle of the floor, give him a push and he¡¯d sing as he went around and around,¡± Geoff recalled in The Beatles Recording Sessions.

Instead of this potentially dangerous idea, Emerick pondered a more down-to-earth solution.

As he recalled in his autobiography; ¡°The studio¡¯s Hammond organ was hooked up to a system called a Leslie - a large wooden box that contained an amp and two sets of revolving speakers, one that carried low bass frequencies and the other that carried high treble frequencies; it was the effect of those spinning speakers that was largely responsible for the characteristic Hammond organ sound.¡±

Geoff had the - then-radical - idea to route the vocal signal through the Leslie.

¡°In my mind, I could almost hear what John¡¯s voice might sound like if it were coming from a Leslie. It would take a little time to set up, but I thought it might just give him what he was after.¡±

Patching in the signal, Emerick then committed the audio of the mic¡¯d-up Leslie cabinet to tape, and created an effected version of Lennon¡¯s vocal that sounded suitably supernatural.

¡°Lennon¡¯s voice sounded like it never had before, eerily disconnected, distant yet compelling,¡± recalled Emerick. ¡°The effect seemed to perfectly complement the esoteric lyrics he was chanting. Everyone in the control room - including George Harrison - looked stunned."

Geoff continues, ¡°Through the glass we could see John begin smiling. At the end of the first verse, he gave an exuberant thumbs-up and McCartney and Harrison began slapping each other on the back.

"¡¯It¡¯s the Dalai Lennon!¡¯ Paul shouted.¡±The Beatles 1966

(Image credit: Chris Walter/Getty Images)

Tomorrow Never Knows¡¯ successful Leslie experiment prefigured the solidification of ADT (Automatic Double Tracking) later in the Revolver sessions, though the track itself didn¡¯t feature it.

The end of the beginning

So, let¡¯s run those innovations back shall we?

Tomorrow Never Knows was the first significant pop track to feature a tightly compressed, dampened bass drum, it was the first to incorporate a hand-manipulated tape loop collage, triggered at random and in a performative-manner in the studio.

It was among the first Beatle tracks to sport backwards guitar, the first to feature an unheard-of vocal-doubling and effecting process (laying the groundwork for the advent of Automatic Double Tracking later in the album sessions - another future fixture) and the first British pop track to orient itself around a non-Western musical form.

That's quite the forward-thinking production process. It'd be one that¡¯d be worth talking about, even if the results were less than spellbinding.

Thankfully, the song was - and remains - one of the Beatles' most cherished accomplishments.

Tomorrow Never Knows was a veritable atom bomb of possibility.

It exploded a twin revolution in the minds of listeners. It showed that pop music could be a bigger, bolder and more bountiful thing than previously imagined.

In the hands of the Beatles, pop could be existential.

Now with a thematically and musically boundless playing field, the potential for pop¡¯s vibrant future was revealed.Beatles

(Image credit: Mark and Colleen Hayward/Redferns/Getty Images)

Critically (particularly for us at MusicRadar) the track was arguably the first major example of an artist approaching the the studio as an instrument.

Aiming to reflect a whirlwind, transcendent experience through sound, the Beatles, Geoff Emerick and George Martin, unlocked techniques and approaches that are now foundational to how we approach music production.

Ironically, considering it triggered many of the album¡¯s most colourful ideas, Tomorrow Never Knows was sequenced as Revolver¡¯s concluding number.

The highest summit of the record also proved a compelling teaser for one of the most extraordinary creative outpourings in pop history.

It was right around the corner¡­

Categories
Music-Making Editor

I'm the Music-Making Editor of MusicRadar, and I am keen to explore the stories that affect all music-makers - whether they're just starting or are at an advanced level. I write, commission and edit content around the wider world of music creation, as well as penning deep-dives into the essentials of production, genre and theory. As the former editor of Computer Music, I aim to bring the same knowledge and experience that underpinned that magazine to the editorial I write, but I'm very eager to engage with new and emerging writers to cover the topics that resonate with them. My career has included editing MusicTech magazine and website, consulting on SEO/editorial practice and writing about music-making and listening for titles such as NME, Classic Pop, Audio Media International, Guitar.com and Uncut. When I'm not writing about music, I'm making it. I release tracks under the name .


Fw: Rolling Stone: Music (4/30/2025): A Year Later, No One Can Get Over the Kendrick and Drake Beef

 


April 30, 2025

Last May, the two rap titans went on an unprecedented spree of disses, and the hip-hop world is still buzzing

By Andre Gee

?

Grammy winner dropped anthemic lead single ¡°What Was That¡± last week

?

An afternoon at the record store with the indie-rock star, who's following up her acclaimed 2023 debut

?

Matt Andersen, who combines soul and blues sounds with the folk vibes of his native country, is making inroads in the U.S. with new album The Hammer & The Rose

?

Jillian Lauren was shot by police outside her home April 8 and was later booked on suspicion of attempted murder for allegedly firing first



?

The pop punkers share the song along with the news they¡¯ve signed to Pure Noise Records

?

Never Enough drops June 6th

?

Out June 13, band unleashes ¡°the whole kitchen sink¡± for 15-CD/six-LP/four-DVD box set celebrating 1996 album: concerts, demos, outtakes, rarities, and more, totaling 245 unreleased tracks

?

"Black artists continue to be criminalized for their creativity. Rap is art," rapper's family says in video statement



Visit the to update your profile and customize what email alerts and newsletters you receive.

Rolling Stone is a part of Penske Media Corporation. ? 2025 Rolling Stone, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

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? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
Mary
Live long and prosper


WDRV's Ten @ 10 - Guess the Year - With Bob Stroud

 

Inline image



Ten @ 10


Each weekday at 10am, The Drive¡¯s Bob Stroud picks?ten great
songs from one great year or sometimes a great theme to feature.
See the old lists here and vote on the current list.

We'd like to know what song you heard on today's Ten @ 10 that made you turn up your radio or?just plain made you go "wow!"
Check out the available songs from today¡¯s Ten @ 10 in?The Drive¡¯s Playlist Center. Check back tomorrow for a brand new Ten @ 10 on 97.1 FM The Drive!
Comments or suggestions for Ten @ 10? Email us at:??Ten@...


  1. Lindsey Buckingham?--?Holiday Road
  2. Heart?-- How Can I Refuse
  3. Def Leppard?--?Rock Rock (till you drop)
  4. Billy Joel?-- Uptown Girl
  5. The Fixx?--?Saved by Zero
  6. Journey?-- Send Her My Love
  7. Krokus?--?Screaming in the Night
  8. U2?--?Sunday Bloody Sunday
  9. Robert Plant?-- In the Mood
  10. Yes?--?Leave It

Comments or Suggestions for Ten @ 10

E-mail us at:?Ten@...

? The Year for April 29 was?1977.

Number One Song as Voted by the Listeners:

Jackson Browne?--?Loadout/Stay


Mary
Live long and prosper


Inspiring Quotes for Wednesday, April 30, 2025

 


Inline image


He who has peace of mind disturbs neither himself nor another.

Separator icon
Epicurus

The ancient Greek philosopher Epicurus posited happiness as life¡¯s ultimate goal. But he also believed that our human fears often stop us from reaching that goal, and that only in freeing the mind from anxiety and worry can we experience freedom and peace. In fact, the lifestyle we now call ¡°Epicurean¡± refers to one that focuses on the most basic joys of life: things like friendship, knowledge, virtue, and sense-based comforts such as food and good health. When we simplify life in that way, we can be at peace not only with ourselves but also with the people around us. Across millennia, Epicurus reminds us that the simplest pleasures, enjoyed in good company, are often the best.

Mary
Live long and prosper


Re: Fw: Celebrity Birthdays for April 30

 

Happy birthday to all and may all be celebrating a birthday next year?Emoji
Mary
Live long and?prosper

On Wednesday, April 30, 2025 at 08:33:20 PM CDT, Mary Landers via groups.io <maryeland@...> wrote:


From: Jackie Schmitt






Here's today's celebrity birthdays. Jackie
?
April 30: Singer Willie Nelson is 92.
?
Actor Perry King (¡°Riptide¡±) is 77.
?
Singer Merrill Osmond of The Osmonds is 72.
?
Director Jane Campion is 71.?
?
Actor-director Paul Gross (¡°Due South¡±) is 66.
?
Bassist Robert Reynolds of The Mavericks is 63.
?
Actor Adrian Pasdar (¡°Heroes¡±) is 60.
?
Singer J.R. Richards (Dishwalla) is 58.
Rapper Turbo B of Snap is 58.?
?
Guitarist Clark Vogeler of The Toadies is 56.
?
Singer Chris ¡°Choc¡± Dalyrimple of Soul for Real is 54.
Guitarist Chris Henderson of 3 Doors Down is 54.
Country singer Carolyn Dawn Johnson is 54.
?
Actor Lisa Dean Ryan (¡°Doogie Howser, M.D.¡±) is 53.
?
Singer Akon is 52.?
Singer Jeff Timmons of 98 Degrees is 52.
?
Actor Johnny Galecki (¡°The Big Bang Theory,¡± ¡åRoseanne¡±) is 50.
?
Actor Sam Heughan (¡°Outlander¡±) is 45.
?
Actor Kunal Nayyar (¡°The Big Bang Theory¡±) is 44.
?
Rapper Lloyd Banks is 43.?
Actor Kirsten Dunst is 43.
?
Country singer Tyler Wilkinson of The Wilkinsons is 41.
?
Actor Dianna Agron (¡°Glee¡±) is 39.
?
Singer Brandon Lancaster of LANCO is 36.
?
Rapper Travis Scott is 34.


Mary
Live long and?prosper


Fw: Celebrity Birthdays for April 30

 

From: Jackie Schmitt






Here's today's celebrity birthdays. Jackie
?
April 30: Singer Willie Nelson is 92.
?
Actor Perry King (¡°Riptide¡±) is 77.
?
Singer Merrill Osmond of The Osmonds is 72.
?
Director Jane Campion is 71.?
?
Actor-director Paul Gross (¡°Due South¡±) is 66.
?
Bassist Robert Reynolds of The Mavericks is 63.
?
Actor Adrian Pasdar (¡°Heroes¡±) is 60.
?
Singer J.R. Richards (Dishwalla) is 58.
Rapper Turbo B of Snap is 58.?
?
Guitarist Clark Vogeler of The Toadies is 56.
?
Singer Chris ¡°Choc¡± Dalyrimple of Soul for Real is 54.
Guitarist Chris Henderson of 3 Doors Down is 54.
Country singer Carolyn Dawn Johnson is 54.
?
Actor Lisa Dean Ryan (¡°Doogie Howser, M.D.¡±) is 53.
?
Singer Akon is 52.?
Singer Jeff Timmons of 98 Degrees is 52.
?
Actor Johnny Galecki (¡°The Big Bang Theory,¡± ¡åRoseanne¡±) is 50.
?
Actor Sam Heughan (¡°Outlander¡±) is 45.
?
Actor Kunal Nayyar (¡°The Big Bang Theory¡±) is 44.
?
Rapper Lloyd Banks is 43.?
Actor Kirsten Dunst is 43.
?
Country singer Tyler Wilkinson of The Wilkinsons is 41.
?
Actor Dianna Agron (¡°Glee¡±) is 39.
?
Singer Brandon Lancaster of LANCO is 36.
?
Rapper Travis Scott is 34.


Mary
Live long and?prosper


Fw: Music History for April 30

 

From: Jackie Schmitt

Music History for
April 30


1940 - Jimmy Dorsey and his band recorded the song "Contrasts."?

1941 - At Decca Studios, Charlie Parker made his first commercial recording with the Jay McShann group. The songs were "Hootie Blues" and "Swingmatism."?

1953 - Frank Sinatra and arranger Nelson Riddle teamed up for the first time.?

1957 - Elvis recorded "Jailhouse Rock."?

1960 - Fats Domino recorded "Walking to New Orleans."?

1965 - The Kinks began their first British tour.?

1965 - Herman's Hermits and the Zombies began their first U.S. tour.?

1976 - In Memphis, TN, Bruce Springsteen jumped a fence at Graceland in an attempt to see his idol,?Elvis Presley.?

1970 - Twiggs Lyndon was arrested on murder charges after stabbing a club manager over an alleged breach of contract. Lyndon was the road manager for the Allman Brothers.?

1977 - In Pontiac, Michigan, Led Zeppelin played a show to an audience of 77,229. The event set a new record for attendance at a single-act concert.?

1987 - Madonna's "La Isla Bonita" became her 11th consecutive top five single.?

1987 - The Beatles'?Help!,?Rubber Soul?and?Revolver?were released on compact disc.?

1988 - Pink Floyd's?Dark Side of the Moon?fell out of the Billboard 200 chart for the first time in 725 weeks.

1992 - Madonna's bustier was stolen from Fredrick's of Hollywood. A $1,000 reward was offered for its return.?

1998 - The Oak Ridge Boys performed in Washington, DC, at the 50th anniversary ceremony of the American Red Cross' blood services.?

1999 - Darrell Sweet (Nazareth) died of a heart attack as the band arrived for a show in New Albany, IN.?

2002 - Vanessa Carlton's debut album?Be Not Nobody?was released.?

2004 - In Los Angeles, CA, Courtney Love (Hole) entered a plea of "not guilty" for two charges of felony drug possession.?

2016 - In Kirriemuir, Angus, Scotland, a life-sized bronze statue of Bon Scott (AC/DC) was unveiled in Bellies Brae Car Park during the 10th anniversary of the Bonfest music festival.?


Mary
Live long and?prosper


Fw: TV History for April 30

 

From: Jackie Schmitt




?

TV History for? April 30


1964?- The FCC ruled that all TV receivers should be equipped to receive both VHF and UHF channels.?

1975?- ABC aired the pilot episode of "Starsky and Hutch."?

1992?- The final episode of "The Cosby Show" aired on NBC.??

1997?- The television series "Ellen" made TV history when its lead character "came out" as a lesbian.?


Mary
Live long and?prosper


Fw: Rolling Stone: Music (4/29/2025): The 50 Best Willie Nelson Songs

 


April 29, 2025

The country icon is always there to get us through, and here are his essential moments

By Rolling Stone

?

Beyonc¨¦ packed the SoFi Stadium show with an impactful Jimi Hendrix reference, multiple cameos from Blue Ivy, and visual commentary about America

?

The singer opens up about his latest album, his viral single ¡°Sally, When the Wine Runs Out,¡± and living life on and off the internet

?

Brian Ennals and Infinity Knives take on American genocide, Buffalo's Ch¨¦ Noir does it her way, and Lord Sko comes out of Washington Heights with a smooth debut

?

The former Van Halen frontman explains why he won¡¯t do a farewell tour, breaks down his upcoming Vegas residency, and says a documentary about the band may never happen



?

¡°I was there along with Taylor Swift, how did that work out? How did that one work out?¡± he said recalling his appearance at the Super Bowl in February

?

Over the past few weeks, the singer-songwriter quietly shared pictures and screengrabs from a phone he stopped using in 2015

?

¡°Koffee¡± is the Grammy winner¡¯s first release in two years

?

The Welsh New Wave band scored big hits in the Eighties with ¡°Sixty Eight Guns,¡± ¡°Strength,¡± and ¡°Rain in the Summertime¡±



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? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
Mary
Live long and prosper


WDRV's Ten @ 10 - Guess the Year - With Bob Stroud

 

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Ten @ 10


Each weekday at 10am, The Drive¡¯s Bob Stroud picks?ten great
songs from one great year or sometimes a great theme to feature.
See the old lists here and vote on the current list.

We'd like to know what song you heard on today's Ten @ 10 that made you turn up your radio or?just plain made you go "wow!"
Check out the available songs from today¡¯s Ten @ 10 in?The Drive¡¯s Playlist Center. Check back tomorrow for a brand new Ten @ 10 on 97.1 FM The Drive!
Comments or suggestions for Ten @ 10? Email us at:??Ten@...


  1. The Babys?--?Isn't It Time
  2. Crosby, Stills & Nash?-- Dark Star
  3. Steely Dan?--?Peg
  4. Lynyrd Skynyrd?--?That Smell
  5. The Alan Parsons Project?--?Breakdown
  6. Blue ?yster Cult?-- Godzilla
  7. Bob Welch?--?Sentimental Lady
  8. UFO?--?Lights Out
  9. Electric Light Orchestra?-- Sweet Talkin' Woman
  10. Jackson Browne?--?Loadout/Stay

Comments or Suggestions for Ten @ 10

E-mail us at:?Ten@...

? The Year for April 28 was?1989.

Number One Song as Voted by the Listeners:

Roy Orbison?--?You Got It


Mary
Live long and prosper


Inspiring Quotes for Tuesday, April 29, 2025

 

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People living deeply have no fear of death.

Separator icon
Ana?s Nin

Ana?s Nin¡¯s writing was largely ignored by the public until the 1960s, when feminism and surrealism (themes abundant in Nin¡¯s work) gained traction in the popular culture of the time. The French-born American author is most widely known for the publication of her?, which filled eight volumes in total. This quote comes from the second book in the series, and illustrates Nin¡¯s desire to live a full life. In the same book, she wrote, ¡°I have so strong a sense of creation, of tomorrow.¡±

Mary
Live long and prosper


Re: Fw: Celebrity Birthdays for April 29

 

Happy birthday to all and may all be celebrating a birthday next year?Emoji
Mary
Live long and?prosper

On Tuesday, April 29, 2025 at 10:14:56 PM CDT, Mary Landers via groups.io <maryeland@...> wrote:


From: Jackie Schmitt







Here's today's celebrity birthdays. Jackie
?
?
April 29: Singer Country singer Duane Allen of The Oak Ridge Boys is 82.
?
Singer Tommy James is 78.
?
Director Phillip Noyce (¡°Patriot Games,¡± ¡°Clear and Present Danger¡±) is 75.
?
Comedian Jerry Seinfeld is 71.
?
Actor Kate Mulgrew (¡°Orange Is the New Black,¡± ¡åStar Trek: Voyager¡±) is 70.
?
Actor Daniel Day-Lewis is 68.
?
Actor Michelle Pfeiffer is 67.
Actor Eve Plumb (¡°The Brady Bunch¡±) is 67.
?
Country singer Stephanie Bentley is 62.
?
Actor Vincent Ventresca (TV¡¯s ¡°The Invisible Man,¡± ¡°Boston Common¡±) is 59.
?
Singer Carnie Wilson of Wilson Phillips is 57.
?
Actor Paul Adelstein (¡°Private Practice¡±) is 56.
?
Rapper Master P is 55.?
Actor Uma Thurman is 55.
?
Actor Darby Stanchfield (¡°Scandal¡±) is 54.
?
Country singer James Bonamy is 53.
?
Singer Erica Campbell of Mary Mary is 53.
?
Bassist Mike Hogan of The Cranberries is 52.
?
Actor Tyler Labine (¡°New Amsterdam¡±) is 47.
?
Actor Megan Boone (¡°The Blacklist¡±) is 42.
?
Actor Zane Carney (¡°Dave¡¯s World¡±) is 40.
?
Singer Amy Heidemann of Karmin is 39.
?
Singer Foxes is 36.
?
Actor Grace Kaufman (¡°Man with a Plan¡±) is 23.


Groups.io Links:

You receive all messages sent to this group.

View/Reply Online (#231495) | Reply to Group | Reply to Sender | Mute This Topic | New Topic
Your Subscription | Contact Group Owner | Unsubscribe [maryeland@...]


Fw: Celebrity Birthdays for April 29

 

From: Jackie Schmitt







Here's today's celebrity birthdays. Jackie
?
?
April 29: Singer Country singer Duane Allen of The Oak Ridge Boys is 82.
?
Singer Tommy James is 78.
?
Director Phillip Noyce (¡°Patriot Games,¡± ¡°Clear and Present Danger¡±) is 75.
?
Comedian Jerry Seinfeld is 71.
?
Actor Kate Mulgrew (¡°Orange Is the New Black,¡± ¡åStar Trek: Voyager¡±) is 70.
?
Actor Daniel Day-Lewis is 68.
?
Actor Michelle Pfeiffer is 67.
Actor Eve Plumb (¡°The Brady Bunch¡±) is 67.
?
Country singer Stephanie Bentley is 62.
?
Actor Vincent Ventresca (TV¡¯s ¡°The Invisible Man,¡± ¡°Boston Common¡±) is 59.
?
Singer Carnie Wilson of Wilson Phillips is 57.
?
Actor Paul Adelstein (¡°Private Practice¡±) is 56.
?
Rapper Master P is 55.?
Actor Uma Thurman is 55.
?
Actor Darby Stanchfield (¡°Scandal¡±) is 54.
?
Country singer James Bonamy is 53.
?
Singer Erica Campbell of Mary Mary is 53.
?
Bassist Mike Hogan of The Cranberries is 52.
?
Actor Tyler Labine (¡°New Amsterdam¡±) is 47.
?
Actor Megan Boone (¡°The Blacklist¡±) is 42.
?
Actor Zane Carney (¡°Dave¡¯s World¡±) is 40.
?
Singer Amy Heidemann of Karmin is 39.
?
Singer Foxes is 36.
?
Actor Grace Kaufman (¡°Man with a Plan¡±) is 23.


Groups.io Links:

You receive all messages sent to this group.

View/Reply Online (#231495) | Reply to Group | Reply to Sender | Mute This Topic | New Topic
Your Subscription | Contact Group Owner | Unsubscribe [maryeland@...]

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