WOAH!| FIRST TIME HEARING The Beatles - Eleanor Rigby REACTION
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- Опубліковано 30 лип 2022
- WOAH!| FIRST TIME HEARING The Beatles - Eleanor Rigby REACTION
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The magnitude of the verse
"Eleanor Rigby, died in the church and was buried along with her name, nobody came".
Has always haunted me
The face she kept in a jar by the door
I bet that will be me
@@davidc5820You into any "nerdy shit" (like me)? I can find you some chill online friends. With modern communication technology, those are no longer exclusively "random strangers", at least for long
There is an Australian band Zoot that sang a version of this ( better ) Rick Springfield was in the band have a listen you will love it
You can argue all day if the Beatles were the GOAT. That’s opinion. What is fact is the Beatles changed EVERYTHING. Pop culture in the 20th century can be divided into what came before the Beatles and what came after. That cannot be over-emphasized.
With over forty number one hits they are definitely the GOAT.
Pop culture as we know it today really only dates back to the 1950s. Hence, there wasn't much before The Beatles in terms of that.
@gigi v Popular music goes back long before that, at least 100 yrs, but probably many hundreds.
@gigi v He did say "as we know it today". I think Elvis Presley is a gigantic stepping stone even for The Beatles.
I would have to say chuck berry...thats what they said too, but ok.
Eleanor Rigby, in my opinion, is the best song Paul ever wrote. It's profound in so many ways, never gets old.
A cautionary tale in many ways.
I never cease to be amazed how someone so young could imagine such lyrics, blows me away.
death, total and complete death. It's coming, it shows itself, It's there, then it's gone. You're gone..
@@mashokaise6881 OH, then maybe I won't finish the household chores
I prefer Paint It Black, in terms of topic.
This is a magnificent song. The tragic poetry, the choppy, baroque scaling strings cutting through Paul's soulful sound - what an absolute *masterpiece.* 🖤
When I ask people what their favorite Beatles song is and then I tell them mine is this track, they seem very surprised. Most people don't choose this as their favorite Beatles song but it's definitely my favorite. I think it's just because it was so freaking different and it also touches a cord with the lyrics
@@ON-NO-ODM It may be my favorite, but with so many great songs, so difficult to choose.
@@ON-NO-ODM Yes, I'd never heard anything like it before when I discovered it as a child (two decades after it was written).
It's unusual for 'young cool bands' to write about older people and the often grinding bleakness of their lives. It's not a cool topic, I think that's why it rarely features in song lyrics.
_Wearing the face that she keeps in a jar by the door_ is such a vivid and jolting piece of writing by McCartney. 🤍
@@ON-NO-ODM It could have been a Thomas Hardy poem.
When the Beatles first arrived on the scene, I didn't pay them much mind...until I heard this song.
Eleanor Rigby is in a class of its own.
I completely agree. As a youngster, I think this song inspired me to write poetry, which is a very gratifying thing to do, still today. By the way, you two are are a delight to follow, guys.
The Beatles were in a class of their own. Great song, great band!
She lives in a dream
True. I had the 45 when I was a kid
My contender for greatest song they ever did. Just beats Yesterday for me....
What’s striking about Eleanor Rigby is the sheer economy of the lyrics- there isn’t a syllable wasted; the whole song is tighter than a drum, and delivers a series of vignettes, complete with characterization and pathos.
The name Eleanor Rigby came from a real headstone in a Liverpool churchyard. Paul McCartney noticed the name and wrote a song around it. The orchestral music is really beautiful
Paul denied that he wrote the song after seeing a headstone in a cemetery
I’m sure you are probably correct. It’s very possible that I am wrong. Urban legends have a tendency to stick around until they are disproved. Thanks for your input
Paul has said the name Eleanor Rigby came from the actress that starred in the beatles movie help Eleanor bron and rigby came from a removal van he saw was called rigby and son. But the Eleanor rigby grave is in St Peters Church in Woolton in Liverpool the same chuch yard that John and Paul met in 1957.
@@jamesscott9456 Actually, they did get the name from a grave in Liverpool (I have been to said grave), but they denied it in interviews to avoid the grave becoming some sort of tourist hot spot. Respect!
This song is still very modern and fresh today, it did not age at all...just a masterpiece. Very moving.
5 Cellos and Paul's lead vocal & JPGR backing vocals......
Beatles songs retain their freshness. They still sound exciting and appealing today. Their music has a rimeless quality about it - which explains why they keep gaining new fans with each passing generation.
“Yesterday,” “She’s Leaving Home”, “Let It Be,” and “Something” are deeply emotional Beatles songs as well.
Great choices!
And of course: Penny Lane.
She’s Leaving Home would be great
@@MyOliver64 Penny Lane is a wonderful song but I wouldn't exactly call it deeply emotional. More like affectionately observational. Although, of course we long time Beatles fans can get deeply emotional when we hear anything by them, so there's that...
In my life
Yesterday. You don't know The Beatles until you hear Yesterday. It's the most covered song in history.
They were the second-best selling artists of the 2000-2009 decade. And they last recorded together in 1970. Yes, they are the GOATs unquestionably.
Paul wrote this at the age of 21 !! it takes a life time to come up with that insight , unbelievable song and lyric genius true genius .
@@phillipbachelor3884 oh 23 that old hey that makes all the difference then, the point remains the same you pedantic sod ! he wasn't in his 60's or 70 was he .
Agreed, Kate Bush was similar. One her first hits, 'The Man with Child in their Eyes' she wrote when she was 13 and most of her big hits by the time she was in her early 20s.
Kate is also a GOAT in a much smaller niche, mostly alone. I love that song too 🎉
@martinogle4509
IT IS SUCH joy to see young people appreciating OUR music
Amen
absolutely ... Its just wonderful.
Your music? .... Eh nope
"Our" music means "our era's" music. Our = Baby Boomers. I love that this music is still alive and being listened to 60+ years after it was recorded.
"Our" music means "our era's" music. Our = Baby Boomers. I love that this music is still alive and being listened to 60+ years after it was recorded.
Paul was 24 when he wrote this song. This is why the Beatles were to best. They went from writing I Want to Hold Your Hand to Eleanor Rigby in two years. Their growth as musicians is what makes them different.
3*
@@link19942013 closer to two
@@bramsteenhoek2674 2,5. I win!
There growth as musicians ...? how about there growth as people. For such relatively young men showing such compassion for the kind of people the world takes little note of...a heartbreaking song for sure...
All four of them were still under 30 years old when they broke up. The amount of recording they did and the number of top 10 hits they had in such a short amount of time has never been duplicated, and probably never will be. They were more popular in the states than they were in their native country. They had 28 top 10 hits on the UK charts and 34 top 10s on the Billboard Hot 100. Not to mention they're the only band in the history of the Billboard Hot 100 to have five singles simultaneously in the top 10.
You can’t discount that cello! Best sound in the world!
The strings are what made me fall in love with this song! One of the anthology albums had just the strings so I was able to really pick out what all was happening.
When I was in high school and in the orchestra, we played this in one concert.
This song is a like a genre on its' own, McCartney captured the essence of loneliness in a song like nobody else has got near, nothing egotistical or emotional in this song, it's almost brutal and gothic in conveying that human tragedy in such a droll detached way. The fact it was one of the most famous, current and celebrated people in the world at the time singing about such a subject seemed to add a kind of mystique and power to the recording.
The closest to this I was Simon and Garfunkel's A Most Pecular Man which was nowhere near Eleanor Rigby
George Martin was the Beatles producer, arranger, composer, conductor and a musician. He was the one in the studio who said "that doesn't work, lets try it this way". Martin was classically trained and I am sure that he added much polish to their work. Any time that I hear a symphony backing a Beatles song I am sure that he was the man controlling that part of the song. I always thought that there should have been five Beatles credited on their albums.
He was...
Listen to George Martin's Theme One.
The man was a genius!
@@DavidPlayfair Do I have to listen to it twice
@@DavidPlayfair Do I have to listen to it twice
Sorry, finger trouble!
Edited.
Definitely worth listening to more than twice though. IMO! :) @@edeledeledel5490
Hey guys, I gotta repeat this, I'm a Beatles fanatic and I've said one time before, you really need to do a deep dive on the Beatles and listen to their entire catalog in chronological order so you can see the growth and change in just 8 years (1962-1970).
YES!!!
I agree 100% , the only way to see their genius
Would that include the Quarry Men
Dude. Get off of your beatle worship. They have LIVES!
@@special420player Could add that, I love everything they did including all the bootleg stuff I have.
"Wearing a face that she keeps in a jar by the door." Such incredible lyrics!
Ajar...one word
It's an old saying that means someone's pretending to be happy in public but actually miserable in private.
Cold cream.
@@dravenblackthorn4765 A jar. A door can be ajar...but this line refers to a jar of makeup, cold cream or rouge.
@@yakbutterfly1 that's what I read it means. Cold cream to make her look younger than she really is.Adds to the sadness of Elenor Rigby's lonely life.
Rubber Soul is my all time favorite album by the Beatles. 70 years old and still loving it !
this song was on REVOLVER....
Thanks. And both those albums are filled with great songs.
@@joebersik9846
@@joebersik9846 Which is kind of weird, right? This number sounds like it would have been on Srgt. Pepper, or The White Album. 1966 just seams a little too early for a sound that's so progressive. Paul McCartney was something else in his day!
This song is the second track on the album Revolver. But yes, Rubber Soul is great in its own right. However, if you've really been listening to Rubber Soul for years, and you're now 70, you should've known that Eleanor Rigby isn't on it; decades ago.😂
@@thelegendinhisownmind7038 I was simply commenting that Rubber Soul is my favorite album. Nothing to do with this reaction, just simply stating my opinion. :)
Great heartfelt song about loneliness. The strings were arranged by the Beatles producer George Martin. The harmonies and backing vocals included some by John and George, but also multi tracked Paul singing with himself.
This was the only Beatles song where none of them played any instruments during the taping.
I've always found this to be a very sad song, even though Rob likes the violin work.
"Eleanor Rigby died in the church and was buried along with her name, nobody came" says it all.
@@alexanderwalter4595 I agree. It's beautiful but sad. Lonely people whose lives may not actually make a difference, but people like Father McKenzie continue to do their under appreciated jobs. Not the typical story for a pop song.
I'd always heard this was all Paul on vocals. I'll have to listen to it a bit closer to detect John and George.
In seventh grade, my English teacher made us each pick a poem to memorize and recite. She said it could be a song, so I picked "Eleanor Rigby." Even at age12, this song had really hit me as very poignant. It's an extremely memorable song, one I've always kept in mind as I interact with people. You never know who might be lonely, so I try to be friendly and show an interest in them.
"Father McKenzie, wiping the dirt from his hands as he walks from the grave.........no one was saved" is one of the greatest lines in any Pop song, so simple, so direct, gets the point over perfectly.
... it's "no one will save".
@@steve55sogood16 Nope, GBPaddling was right, its "saved" - you can clearly hear Paul articulate the "ed" at the end of the word if you listen carefully.
Y guy Ives me chills
@@steve55sogood16 No it isn't. Your line also makes no sense.
Father McKenzie didn't save any souls that day in church because there was no congregation to hear his sermon. He no longer has a function or purpose as a priest - his life is now meaningless, as well as cripplingly lonely. 😔
It's a magnificent and powerful song. My favourite line is *_Wearing the face that she keeps in a jar by the door._*
It's such a vivid and jolting piece of writing by McCartney. 🤍
For young people it's hard to express how revolutionary this was in its day. The Beatlrs were really on a different planet musically from their contemporaries.
This is one of the greatest songs of the 20th Century. I have listened to it for over 50 years, and I still love it.
And yes, that was John Lennon on harmony.
All three were on the harmony. George, John, Paul.
Whether someone loves the Beatles or hates them, they are still always going to be the greatest band ever.
NO BAND EVER innovated or influenced more than they did.
Those are simply facts.
You’re right and it’s the breadth and depth of their innovation and influence that makes them so impressive (and I don’t enjoy all their stuff, but really respect them). Nowadays, it’s really difficult to convey how radically different the pre-Beatles era is from what happened post-Beatles.
dave seguin
there are people that hate the beatles ?
the only person I ever heard say that was lou reed,
which to me is tantamount to an admission that you dont like music.
transformer is a magnificent album, but is effectively Bowie.
love lou`s stance generally and some of the other stuff, but his grand opus was produced by another real genius and was the high point of lou`s career.
so I end up saying what did lou reed know about music ?
he was an arrogant twat too.
we really, really need you to tell us the all time greatest meal, which all of us must agree upon.
This song is so haunting & so sad for all the lonely people. You'll love this one.✌🌻🌻
One of the truly great songs of the Beatles. The lyrics define poignancy.
Sheer poetry...meaningful..
Melancholic...magnificent ...a complete two minute mini masterpiece
This song has basically just catapulted the Beatles into a whole new level of music. This is another Beatles' classic that will continue to stand the test of time. Thanks for the upload.
The White album is my favorite. My favorite Beatles song is “Across the Universe” John Lennons brilliance shines through on this one
♥ white album too!
Same for me!
Ditto the White Album. One of my fondest childhood memories. 8)
Paul has a sweet voice and there are other songs with The Beatles that showcase it like Here There and Everywhere or She's Leaving Home. He is one of a kind and yes a pure genius.
Two great songs‼️
Paul has/had about 6 different voices. Incredibly wide-ranging.
One of my favorite Beatles songs ever. Hauntingly beautiful.
The genius behind The Beatles sound was George Martin. John and Paul would have these amazing ideas of different sounds and quirky instrumentation, and George was smart enough to say YES…
Credit their producer, Sir George Martin (fifth Beatle) for the orchestration. His input and classical training was a major part of the Beatles growth.
This song still brings a sense of sadness and loss........God Bless the Beatles and their talent.
The more you listen to The Beatles, the more you will appreciate them and how it changed the world! Honestly, I can never pick a favorite song, but one of my favorites are "In My Life"! I want it to be played at my funeral...
Lets hope that a long way off!
"In My Life" is my absolute favorite Beatle song. It's always hard to pick favorite of theirs, but I did it♡
💯✨ 👏👏👏 Paul McCartney recounted this song's origin story in a 2018 interview with GQ. He said: "When I was really little I lived on what was called a housing estate, which is like the projects - there were a lot of old ladies and I enjoyed sitting around with these older ladies because they had these great stories, in this case about World War II. One in particular I used to visit and I'd go shopping for her - you know, she couldn't get out. So I had that figure in my mind of a sort of lonely old lady. Over the years, I've met a couple of others, and maybe their loneliness made me empathize with them. But I thought it was a great character, so I started this song about the lonely old lady who picks up the rice in the church, who never really gets the dreams in her life. Then I added in the priest, the vicar, Father McKenzie. And so, there was just the two characters. It was like writing a short story, and it was basically on these old ladies that I had known as a kid."
In Observer Music Monthly, November 2008, McCartney said: "These lonely old ladies were something I knew about growing up, and that was what 'Eleanor Rigby' was about - the fact that she died and nobody really noticed. I knew this went on." The lyrics "wearing the face that she keeps in a jar by the door" are a reference to the cold-cream she wears in an effort to look younger.
I had not heard the story behind this song so thank you for sharing.
Ahh. That was absolutely lovely and poignant to read. I never knew why Paul wrote Eleanor Rigby. Thank you for posting your comment with this helpful and insightful information.🙏☺💞😺🍀
I have his book "Lyrics". He met the ladies doing chores for them. He'd get paid a schilling for mowing yards, shopping, etc. He was originally going to call her Daisy Hawkins after Jim Hawkins in Treasure Island, but it didn't fit. The "face that she keeps in a jar by the door" is a reference to Nivea Cold Cream. It was his mom's favorite and it scared him as a kid every time she would put it on.
I love watching Paul describe how he wrote songs like this. Because his talent is on another planet, he sounds like me describing how make a peanut butter sandwich. Just so matter of a fact. Just like John. I can't imagine having just 1% of their talent.
When the Beatles played at the local memorial hall father McKenzie was inspired by a Mr McKenzie who used to look after the lads when they played there I believe
Now you're talking! One of my favorites in the category of "She's leaving Home", "Nowhere Man" and "A day in the life"
It's so Great that many young people are loving the Beatles songs.😊☮️🇬🇧
Eleanor Rigby is in a class of its own.. Paul Maccartney vocals are really my fav and his lyrics always brilliant.
As a 65-year-old man who first heard the Beatles as a five year old in 1962, and never stop since then, you both remind me of myself when I first heard every one of their songs on the radio!
Me too. I was 7 in 1962. It was fab growing up with this amazing music xxx
I highly suggest doing a deep dive into The Beatles catalog. There’s a ton of great stuff from “Please Please Me”, “With The Beatles”, “A Hard Days Night”…etc that you haven’t listened to yet.
Exactly!! You've barely scratched the surface as far as the early Beatles. Besides playing Twist and Shout for your daughters, this is the earliest song you've done. This means you're missing out on a lot of great music, like I Feel Fine, A Hard Day's Night, Help!, No Reply, Can't Buy Me Love, You Can't Do That, We Can Work It Out, and Daytripper...just to name a few!!
"A Day in the Life"
"Tomorrow Never Knows" and "She Said, She Said" off of Revolver. All of Sgt. Peppers, Strawberry Fields, Yesterday... lots of great stuff.
I love Michelle.
Yes haven't heard them do any old school early Beetles from early 60s- they were so much fun, Please, Please Me, Hard Days Night, Ticket to Ride loads of others can't think of the titles!!
Paul McCartney was in his early 20s when he wrote this song. I think it shows a deep empathy for people that struggle through life. Even at that age he had great emotional intelligence.
They had probably broken up or were about to before I was really aware of who they were, even though I must have heard them all my life. (I was born in ‘62.) So my perspective may not be entirely accurate but it seems to me that they maintained an appreciation for regular people, in particular the older generations, at a time when rock and roll was getting disillusioned, angry, and critical of anyone who represented traditional values. I suspect it’s because they grew up in Liverpool, which was a working class city. The deep empathy that you mentioned shows up from time to time in their songs which is why we never outgrew them and why more than fifty years later a new generation can flip out over how great they were.
And I just remembered that Paul was 14 when his mom died and John was 17 when he lost his mom. Losing their own mothers but also seeing each other’s pain must have opened their eyes to the fact that this is a hurting world, and you don’t always know what someone else is going through.
His mother was a nurse, and she died when McCartney was 14. Can't imagine what that is like.
hey wrote hey jude for John's son when he left his mam
That's the only way to describe it is masterpiece. Pure poetry set to beautiful violins and cello. One of two Beatles songs that had no drums. At least I believe that is correct. Beatlemania continues to grow to new generations. Beatles forever. Peace out.
I also feel like it forms a "Trance". It captures you and leads you through the story and makes you ponder your own life.
You will never know the impact the Beatles had unless you lived through Beatlemania. I was 6 in 1963, and it was pretty wild. They pretty much turned the world upside down.
Your exactly right.
I was 4 in '64 when my half brother who was 18 arrived in Canada, in June, from Liverpool.
Their music was all over the radio stations in Canada 6 months before the Ed Sullivan Show in the U.S.
The anticipation was intense while waiting for him to arrive.
The first time I saw him; he had a Beatle hair cut, wore a Beatle suit, Beatle boots, and sounded just like them when he talked.
Unfortunately he turned out to be a bad seed, and was deported from Canada a year later. I never saw him again.
I know he got married and had 3 kids, in the late '80's, but he went to work one day and disappeared.
Weird what happens in life.
We’re so lucky to have experienced their magic.
I grew up in England in the 60s and early 70s, and while they were together it was as if the air itself was carrying them, their music was a constant and everyone knew each of them as if they were personally acquainted. When they split, it was the biggest news story. There was so much good, ground-breaking music then, but nothing was so pervasive, so part of that ever-changing spirit we call the 60s, as the Beatles' stuff. I don't think that's ever been repeated by any artiste(s) no matter how successful. As you say, you really had to be there.
To me there is another category of Beatles, the ones that make you cry. Eleanor Rigby, She's Leaving Home, A Day in the Life. All this time later and I still come away with tears.
@FreedomsRealm
Each one of those affects me the same way. And I would add "In My Life" as the one that made me cry even as a 12 year old kid.
I can't imagine growing up without The Beatles.💙☮
@@deborahcornell171 Oh yes that's a great one too. And in some ways it feels good to acknowledge these experiences. That in seeing them it allows them to belong.
It’s like reading a book by jumping into chapters out of order The Beatles work is an evolutionary collection of masterpieces. Truly cannot be appreciated fully when out of order Luckily I was 10 when they appeared on The Ed Sullivan show and I grew up /along with them ❤❤❤❤
Eleanor Rigby, though also released as a single, was one of the tracks on "Revolver", to my mind the most groundbreaking Beatles album *ever.* It was followed by "Sgt Pepper" but "Revolver" birthed the innovations which "Sgt Pepper" later developed.
Back to back Beatles?!? This put a smile on my face!
I suggest listening to “Let it Be” next.
Let it Be one of my Favorites!
Two in a row...maybe 3??? Almost as good as laying on my belly watching them on the Ed Sullivan show in 1964 at age 8!
Lucy in the sky with DIMONDS 💎💎💎
@@marietheresahughes2911 Yes,a thousand times!
ooh I hope so! ♥
Eleanor Rigby is from their "Revolver" album. Arguably, their greatest record for the music and its revolutionary sound techniques. It's very hard to pick a favorite on that record. Recommend "Taxman", "Tomorrow Never Knows" and "Here there and Everywhere".
Taxman is underrated, IMO.
Here, There and Everywhere is a beautiful love song
And don't forget "Got To Get You Into My Life". Amber will love those horns!
Revolver is the greatest record of all time
She Said She Said, I'm Only Sleeping, and And Your Bird Can Sing are all top notch as well
The Beatles changed the game forever!! They brought music to a new level, they were the pioneers, from the albums they put out from 1963 to 1970 they evolved musically so much within that short time period!!
The Beatles are amazing. I can't think of many people who have covered a Beatles song. Aretha Franklin did an amazing version of this song. Stellar. For some reason Eleanor Rigby touches me. It is my favourite Beatles song.
Zoot (Aust) do a fine job at it too
One of Paul's masterpieces. Those are cellos and violins.
Four violins, two cellos, and two violas to be precise.
Thanks to George Martin for the classical vibe.
"In My Life" is one of the most beautiful songs I have ever heard. Bette Midler did a remake of this song in 1991 for the film "For The Boys". Both versions are pretty but the Beatles' version knocks it out of the park. Please review this song. Definitely a tearjerker.
Sean Connery did it on the George Martin album!
Totally agree!!!! In My Life is a definitely a must-hear!
YESYESYES!
@@ajivins1 I love that version ...
My favorite Beatles song.
Paul can sing a sad story so amazingly! The arrangement where the vocals are mimicked by the cello She’s Leaving Home is a great example of the vocal prowess the group always had. In this song, there are some Lennon harmonies, but much of it is something that the Beatles were famous for developing, dubbing, and multi-tracking. Towards the end of this song, Paul is actually doing the harmonizing with himself courtesy of double tracking, masters of their domain!
She's Leaving Home 🏡 makes me cry 😪 no matter how many times I hear it.
She's Leaving Home doesn't get the credit it deserves
@@arizonadaz530 I agree
The cello resonates so well with the human voice
Probably in my top 5 favorite Beatles songs. Please consider For No One, Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds, Across the Universe, & Yellow Submarine! Highly suggest watching the animated movie, it's a fever dream but great Beatles music and trippy visuals. All You Need Is Love!! ❤️🧡💛💚💙💜 keep smiling!! 🥰
I'll second "For Noone"!
Yes excellent choices I love Lucy in the sky with diamonds 💎💎💎❤
I was just going to recommend several of those! I'll also add: You've Got to Hide Your Love Away, Fool on the Hill, and Here There and Everywhere.
For No One is one of the best songs McCartney ever wrote.
There are so many more Nowhere Man etc
One time I got out of the subway in NYC and there was a group of street performers playing Eleanor Rigby all with violins and I burst into tears I was so moved.
"She's leaving home" did that to me, still does!
@@margaretflounders8510 tell me about it! My daughter’s starting college in 3 weeks and that song is STUCK IN MY HEAD 🥲
@@KTRS
i have a beautiful daughter too,
she`s left home. but I am thankful that her partner, with whom she now lives, is a fabulous young man, and he adores her and she him. he was part of her crew when they were kids.
So I know she is safe and happy.
and yet this song makes me cry every single time,
"standing alone at the top of the stair...she breaks down"
this is purely and simply... art.
you know macartney met the girl who left home before and after she left home coincidentally.
Not along ago, Paul said: "I listen to Elonor Rigby, and I wonder who was able to write a song like this." He himself was not thinking, to be good enough to do so.
But luckily for us, he was.
Seems that Paul has some contact in VERY HIGH places
This was a poetry lesson in English class back in my middle school days. Not long after this song came out!
YES! My absolute favorite Beatles song, largely because of the gorgeous strings, especially the cello! It's a song about loneliness and people feeling completely alone in the world. At the end, Eleanor dies. Father McKenzie walks away from her gravesite, wiping the dirt from his hands. No one came to her funeral. It's an incredibly beautiful and incredibly sad song.
Yet, earlier in the song it was her wedding and happier times. I cried just reading your comment.
@@paulkane7771 It wasn’t her wedding. It was some stranger’s wedding.
The Beatles can always take me to deep, emotional places. Never fails. I personally love She’s Leaving Home for that reason.
THAT song is a masterpiece!
The most beautiful song that always makes me cry.
Also, the late Syreeta Wright, Stevie Wonder's first wife did a beautiful cover of She's Leaving Home. That was my first time hearing her. You a right...it's an awesomely beautiful song.
Also here, there and everywhere!
Bye bye 😢
The fact that hundreds of reactors are listening to their music and wanting more 50+ years after they broke up, speaks volumes. Absolutely no other band can say that. 800 million units sold. At their "Tribute" shows, everyone knows every word to every song regardless of their age (8 -80).
My favourite Beatles song. And that is saying a lot. Absolutely brilliant lyrics!
As a lonely child, who grew to be a lonely adult, I always felt this song. Something between melancholy and sad.
Great song.
A relatable story for many. Remembering the difference between loneliness and being alone then embracing the full spectrum of our emotions is actually quite healthy. Sadness is a healer as long as you don't let it drive the bus.
@@staggerlee9362 Together, loneliness and being alone are the pits but it's also part of life. I don't spend much time on that kind of stuff. I know my shortcomings and so what? Music has always been there for me and it's been a lifeline. It's meant more to me than it does the average person, it seems, for as long as I can remember. I'm 56 and can remember hearing stuff from almost fifty years ago, when it came out.
I love music because I feel it. For me, Eleanor Rigby is about being alone and lonely and getting on with your life. Crying about it doesn't do anything. Life goes on, you either go with it or you waste it.
Nobody will know or care when I die but my life hasn't been wasted. I've lived every bit of it to my fullest. I've had bad times but the good times got me through. I've had a ton of fun!
PS, I still do when I can.
She was buried and no one was there. 🥺🥺🥺🥺
I can relate to your situation 100%, dear.
The Beatles were kind of the only friend that was always there when I grew up. And this song...It's a very special one and very dear to me.
@@Realbillball I know, music is the best friend a person can have. It doesn't judge you. It doesn't hurt you, insult or make you cry unless you want it to. And the good it does is, for me, better than any person can offer.
If anyone were to ask me "What is the saddest Beatles song," my answer would be "The last verse of Eleanor Rigby."
You really should check out the movie Yellow Submarine." Very trippy, very clever, and tons of fun.
I once heard a version of Eleanor Rigby with the vocals removed and I found myself openly weeping in the middle of an HMV.
I would say that the most "traditional" Beatles songs are songs like "She Loves You", "Thank You Girl", "From Me To You", "I Saw Her Standing There", "Please Please Me" and "A Hard Day's Night".
Those songs definitely emphasise their original classic rock/pop vibe, although their later more experimental style with songs like "Eleanor Rigby", "Love You To", "Tomorrow Never Knows", "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds" etc is excellent as well.
Eleanor Rigby, This is one of my soul songs. It gets deep in there. The one lyric “ keeping her face in a jar by the door, who is it for?”
All the lyrics and orchestral background maintains a chilling experience of pondering the story of the characters and the questions asked during the song.
People who are not one of the lonely people cannot fathom such people exist or where they may belong.
I often wonder how the Beatles nail the types of feelings of what things are like, in terms of experiencing extreme loneliness and insignificance in different types of people, as it doesn’t seem they could possibly relate and express the absolute genuineness of what a life may look like to be lonely and unloved.
A great song to react to next from the Beatles would be - “Happiness is a Warm Gun”
A powerful song with a powerful message. The ending is brutal in it's bleakness. You just don't expect that.
Yes. That's the word: bleak. I've heard nothing thing like it in popular music. For someone who had virtually no formal training in music ( unlike, say, Billy Joel,) McCartney verges on genius again and again and again.
Probably because they were under pressure to get it done for recording....1963..1970..how many recordings..phew
" She's Leaving Home " - is a real work of art, also on the ground breaking Sgt. Pepper album.
Eleanor Rigby is on Revolver.
Yes
paul wrote She's leaving home when he was a teenager, but it was left on the shelf until pepper, hard to believe than a teenager could write such a classic song.
The whole album is a work of art. That is what makes it a game changer. Before this no one would have even imagined it possible
@@macca1146 Wow. Roger Hogdson of Supertamp-whom loved & strived to emulate The Beatles, in his own way of course, also wrote many of his songs as a teenager.
This has always been my favourite Beatles song. As a child it upset me, but I couldn’t help but love it.( J&A your amazing I love watching you )Love from a old woman in England UK xxx
My English teacher broke down the lyrics when I was at school in Scotland in 1970. Shame I didn’t appreciate at the time what an amazing song it is - I was only 12 at the time. It’s been one of my favourite Beatles songs for a long time.
Our teacher had us doing an essay on why the Beatles songs were so popular ...( try explaining)
The album this is on, “Revolver” is typically the one critics call the greatest album of all time. All the songs on it are just KILLER.
My favorite Beatles Album
Paul McCartney said the best album ever recorded was “Pet Sounds” by The Beach Boys. I think they’re both high on the list.
"Rain," "She Said She Said," "Taxman," "Tomorrow Never Knows." So many great songs on that album.
"All you Need is Love" is one of my favorites. Love Beatles, cant get enough and I lived thru it... Any song on any album is a hit!
One thing wrong with "All You Need" is the guitar solo. It sucked so bad. I'd never heard Lennon play so amaturishly.
So glad you guys appreciate the Beatles. One of their most beautiful songs is Here, There, and Everywhere. Please try that one if you haven’t done it yet.
This is my favorite.
My favorite Beatles song
This song has so many layers, it's tonally upbeat, but the story is very heavy. The music is incredibly simple, Paul carries this with his voice and story telling.
The Beatles have a huge range of music and styles. To get a better idea of what they were capable of, you really need to start from their earliest albums and work your way through them sequentially. You don't have to do it all on your reaction channel. They were doing everything from ballads to screaming rockers from their earliest days (way before they recorded anything). And every one of their albums was a change up to a new level - the progression from Rubber Soul through Revolver and Sergeant Pepper's and on to the White Album is amazing.
Yes, I was going to suggest that myself. It would be *awesome* for the channel to do an album by album reaction to the astounding progression of Beatles music, start to finish.
Paul McCartney once said that “If anyone earned the title of the fifth Beatle, it was George Martin." There is no doubt that The Beatles created, wrote and made great music. At the same time, The Beatles may not have had their diversity of sound and some of their creativity without George Martin, the man who signed The Beatles and also produced the vast majority of their work. Martin was such a vital force in helping The Fab Four sound different than other bands of the era. He also helped the band's musical visions come to life. Martin was a classically trained and gifted musician and through his musical knowledge and experience, he helped the band incorporate various ideas- uncommon for Pop acts- from strings to horns and other instrumentation into the band's sound.
Martin wrote and performed the majority of the orchestral arrangements for many of The Beatles songs. He even played keyboard on their early recordings.
I found the other day that George Martin worked with Spike Milligan in the years before the Beatles, and there is the belief that without his mind being opened by Spike's craziness his work with the Beatles wouldn't have happened
@@simoncutts8570 That's interesting.
Totally. Great comment.
If wasn't for George Martin, the Beatles wouldn't be as great, that's my opinion.
Martins production made the albums avant garde wirks of art
Simply the greatest and most influential band of all time.
The amazing thing about this song, is you don't miss the drums, and guitars at all. George Martin should get huge credit for assembling the arrangement on this one. Paul was the only vocalist on this track, including doing the harmonies.
The Beatles were at the forefront of almost everything new in music during this time, they invented the modern concept of what rock and pop music would be.
However, I believe this song, about sadness and loneliness, is a direct spin off of the Rolling Stones "Paint it Black", about loss and depression, that came out several months prior. Before these songs came out everyone in pop/rock music would only sing about happiness and love and joy, but after these songs the doors were opened for anyone to sing about real life, real pain, real emotions.
I love the strings in this song. YES, the Beatles are/were the greatest musical act ever! They are in a class of their own.
Some of my faves: "Something," "I Want You (She's So Heavy)," "I Should Have Known Better," "A Hard Day's Night," "The Long And Winding Road," "Can't Buy Me Love" and "If I Fell."
Best album??? *ABBEY ROAD*
On our first date, my husband and I went to karaoke. He sang "I Should Have Known Better", and that was pretty much all it took. We're celebrating our 27th anniversay this month.
As a long-time Beatles fan and musician of 61+ years, I can say that "Rigby" is genius work! McCartney and Martin at their best. And one of their greatest influencers was BUDDY HOLLY! Yes. Paul. ALL PAUL. And the cellos drive this song ...
Bealtes changed stuff tremendously. They started to have bands that writr their songs and also bands that spend long time in studio.
This song has always touched me. As someone who has clinical & bipolar depression, I am very familiar with that "face in a jar by the door" that we put on whenever we step outside so people won't know how lonely and depressed we are. Thank you for listening to this one.
100%
OMG! All these years I have loved this song and I never thought of it that way, being someone who is also depressed and bi-polar. You have put into words something I never thought.
Great analogy. The jar is fard creme, make up foundation.
I suffer with Bi polar and my go to is Behind Blue eyes.
@@OLDSKOOLRAVER1 mine is "How To Fight Loneliness" by Wilco
Oh Darling is a great song by the Beatles. Paul's gritty voice just takes the song over the top. You two would love it!
Can’t pick a “Beatles best song”, but that one is up there!
Love Oh Darling too, Paul's voice!
Definitely!!!
Oh, Darling is a great song. And John Lennon wished he wrote it because he felt his voice would have been better for the song than Paul's. I wish they did a version with John singing it just to hear what John would have done with it. That said, I think I would prefer Paul's voice on Oh, Darling over John's but I will never know for sure because we will never hear John sing it. Paul does great on the vocals and the bassline. Both just incredible.
I concur.
This is transitional Beatles going from Pop to off the charts musical genius.
ONLY strings in this one. ABSOLUTELY the greatest rock (multi-genre) band of all time! Thanks for your reaction.
That's right; not a drum (or any percussion instrument) to be heard anywhere yet still wonderfully solid and rhythmic.
Eleonor Rigby is one of the most heart-wrenching songs ever written. The strings are of course the genius of the 5th Beatle Producer George Martin. This was from Revolver 1966 before the Seargent pepper's album. There is a graveyard in Liverpool with a grave of Eleonor Rigby. This is definitely a Paul McCartney song and he must have subliminally remembered her name from childhood.
too bad they miss the lyrics so often which breaks my heart especially with Beatles and Simon and Garfunkel.
@@kelly9876 In their defence, it's easy to get lost in the sound.
@@Embur12 Exactly. Right from the very outset - with no introduction or warning - the overall sound of Paul's voice and the string quartet takes the listener somewhere bleak.
I think the backup harmonies were also Paul. It doesn't sound like John's voice!
If you're familiar with the Beatles anthology series you can find a strings only version of this song.
This is one of the first songs where they start to flex their musical prowess. It's Paul signing. These guys were doing things that flew in the face of popular music - And they made it popular. Because they were the Bealtes !!!
The Beatles were chock full of quality and variety. Listen to all their songs and you will be convinced that they are the GOAT. They were constantly changing. They were always unafraid. Even our rock and roll hating parents had to step back and wonder when they heard songs like this one.
This level of genius will never be equalled.
Another amazing Beatles song. Also from Revolver, try either She Said, She Said or Tomorrow Never Knows, the Beatles entering the peak of their power and experimentation. Enjoy! 🎵🎤🎸🎹🎶
I love this song. My other favorite Beatles songs are “Blackbird” The Long and Winding Road” “Something” “Come Together”.
It isn't about "intensity". It's about DEPTH of MEANING -- EMOTIONAL reach that no one in "pop" music dared even admit as reality behind the superficial.
The Beatles were incredibly innovative, and they played a huge range of styles.
I am an old guy, and the Beatles were very important to me in my late teens, and in university.
This was really just Paul with some strings (and the rest of the Beatles only on some harmonies). Pretty like his earlier "Yesterday."
When the Beatles started, there was just the bare bones of “genre’s” blues, classical, country, jazz and rock and roll. They pushed musical boundaries and evolved into probably one of the most influential bands in history
Probably?
Swing, Big Band, Soul, Opera ...
When I heard this song as a kid, it was probably the first time I heard validation for having compassion for lonely, outcast people. As huge a cultural phenomenon as they were, they never forgot where they came from and the joys and sorrows of the people they knew growing. up.
Loneliness is a terrible thing,and we all could find ourselves there depending which turns life's long and winding road takes.
I love y’all’s reactions to Beatle tunes. Proof that their music is for all generations.