That's kinda true, although you had the mono and stereo mixes which were a little different, but they were essentially the same. This is def not a Beatles release, someone did this, using the real song, only doing a lot of sampling to extend it. Sounds kinda cool but one should listen to the original first. I often thought the song should be longer though, guess now it is lol :D
I prefer the official version of 3 minutes, they made it longer but left the second verse from the vocal out. Maybe Miles Martin can make a longer version because it is my no.1 Beatles song. Only to play LOUD😅
Hi. I made this mix. I'm so glad you enjoyed it. My jaw dropped when I realised you were reacting to this version. It's a shame about some of the negative comments, but that's inevitable I guess. I made this version a long time ago just to see if it was possible, but mainly for a bit of fun. Also this was the first thing I had ever done musically before which is why it's a bit rough round the edges, and if I did it now I would change quite a lot. Ps. There is nothing in this version that was not in the original (the piano loop in the instrumental parts was taken from the piano bit at the end) :)
“What?!” 😀😁 We had that exact response 100 times listening to a new Beatles song: you NEVER knew what to expect and they were ALWAYS ahead of us. Another Reactor said recently that no matter what the genre was that they would be playing, even hardcore, they always had a touch of elegance in it that no one else had. ☺️ Their catalogue is SO deep - they mastered EVERY genre. Almost everyone who knows only a few songs thinks of their earliest recordings “I Wanna Hold Your Hand” through Rubber Soul. But thereafter: the sky was the limit. I always LOVED their weirdest tracks like this, and: Come Together I Am the Walrus A Day in the Life Within You Without You For “harder tracks” Revolution (MUST be the live version) Helter Skelter Happiness Is a Warm Gun I Want You (She’s So Heavy) But also you MUST hear their shockingly beautiful (not sappy) Dear Prudence Oh Darling Don’t Let Me Down Here Comes the Sun That’s a great start. Listen to each of the above ALWAYS on headphones and you’ll begin to understand them better 😉 Enjoy! 🥰
Yep, Dear Prudence is a song not many know, but everyone likes. John's dreamy voice and fingerpicking, George's scorching little solos here and there, and, wow, Paul's bass is on a Heavenly category. And, ah, yes, Paul can drum.
The original was really at the forefront of the *psychedelic* movement in music, if not the first, certainly _one_ of the first examples of all-out *psychedelia.*
@@kenfasano8105 I’m not Paul McCartney. And if a tree falls and no one hears it, did it make a sound? No one has ever heard of that person. Go back further and say the theremin invented it. Everyone knows what I mean. Popular music for the masses. You know what I meant too.
@@kenfasano8105 by the way, trippy doesn’t equal electronic music. You just wanted to name drop.Trippy as in psychedelic. Nine Inch Nails are electronic music but they aren’t trippy.
They have loads of trippy songs like this, this was one of their first experimental psychedelic albums, this was around the time they stopped touring and went from being a pop mainstream band (as you and many people may only know them as)to an experimental studio band, and the amazing thing is that this was back in the ‘60s and it’s still progressive today. Similar songs include I’m only sleeping, Love you to, A day in the life, Blue jay way, Strawberry fields forever, I am the walrus, Lucy in the sky with diamonds, Within you without you. And I would recommend to give a listen to the solo Paul McCartney’s album Ram. Literally greatest band of all time, and I’m in my 20s.
@@robertholbrook4582 Almost universally despised by everyone thinking only of pop music 😉 I loved it BECAUSE it was so weird and interesting, and learned later that it is “sound art”, of which I’ve seen/heard many others since. Remember Yoko introduced John to the avant garde art world and he LOVED IT - it’s a world of ideas often abstract. ✊🏽
Actually all the Beatles played their balls off on Helter Skelter, and it was Lennon who led the way on the White Album. He insisted they recorded the heavy aggressive version of Revolution playing his guitar so loud it caused headaches for engineer Geoff Emerick. You'll notice a similar stabbing electric guitar played by John commences both songs. Paul rearranged his Helter Skelter in a similar vein which was recorded several weeks after Revolution. John basically arrived at the White Album sessions with a punk "I'm back in charge" attitude, and with Yoko, causing tension which set the heavy tone for the album. Read the Emerick book.
Definitely need to check out Helter Skelter, Paul murders this song,and Ringo poundin the drums like Keith Moon of The Who,at the end he says a funny but true line
When you consider Piper at the Gates of Dawn was recorded at the Abbey Road Studio where the Beatles also recorded the Revolver album it’s no coincidence that they shared similar psychedelic flavor
1966. Revolver. Last track. No computers. Pretty good eh? 😎 I kinda like this version. Those three minutes go by quickly. So many great songs, but if you like this, I would recommend Strawberry Fields Forever.
"Tomorrow Never Knows," (single), that’s easily the unofficial publicised rendition, I haven't experienced, other than the record single, "Tomorrow Never Knows,", the official original publicised release on side-B, (1966), remastered version (2009), (2022 Mix), also featured on a compilation record self-titled "Tomorrow Never Knows". (2012). The most famous/notorious Beatles bootleg records in my collection: A Collection of Beatles Oldies (1966) was the first attempt at an official Beatles Greatest Hits record and featured a mix of record cuts like "Michelle", singles, "I Want To Hold Your Hand", and a cover of Larry Williams' "Bad Boy". 1962-1966 (the "Red Album") and 1967-1970 (the "Blue Album"), probably the best known Greatest Hits compilations prior to 1. This release was partly of grey market bootleg hit collections as there was no Greatest Hits compilation available. Rarities. (1978/80) two separate records with different track listings and backgrounds, was released in '78 as an addendum for the 13-LP collection to also provide the singles tracks that were not on the Red and Blue records (as those didn't include many B-sides nor the Long Tall Sally EP). 20 Greatest Hits (1982) a compilation of, well, twenty of their greatest hits, released to mark the 20th anniversary of the release of their debut single ("Love Me Do"). Notable for being the last Beatles record to be released with variant versions. Past Masters (1988). A collection of all official 1962-70 Beatles releases not included on the studio records. This includes most hit singles, "She Loves You" and "Hey Jude", the B-sides to those singles, and a few other rarities. It was meant to augment the record catalogue, this time being newly released to the CD format, but also functioned as the de facto Greatest Hits compilation for that format until the CD reissues of "Red" and "Blue" in 1993 and the release of 1 in 2000. Anthology 1, 2, and 3. (1995-96) - After decades of various 'hidden' Beatle material circulating as bootlegs, an official collection of (almost all) unreleased material. Notable mainly for 1 and 2 including the last proper Beatles singles ever recorded, consisting of leftover John Lennon tracks backed by the remaining Beatles. Other than those two tracks, the albums feature mostly studio out-takes, demos, and live performances ☘ xx
Had A Collection of Beatles Oldies from shortly after release. Not a bootleg. It's truly dreadful. Whatever happened in the pressing ruined the songs. Put me off Beatles till about 1999 when my then 12-year old daughter heard my barely heard cd of Pepper and loved it. So, age 69, I only got into Beatles age 49. I was more into The Who, Mott, punk
Ringo.. The human metronome 😂 The illustrious virtuosic prodigious "The Beatles" revolutionized music antiquity. The Beatles was inducted into The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1988! Tomorrow Never Knows: A cult classic British anthem from 66 :) Grow up on (North West England), basically a home-grown artist within my area of region. The Beatles received none or any formal training in music composition, and even their performance skills were mostly self-taught (with the exception of George's training on the sitar). Some of the innovation they displayed in their sound and style was because they hadn't been taught the "right way" to write music, and instead just did what sounded interesting to them. This also goes for Ringo, who played with a standard drum kit, despite being left-handed, allowing him to do riffs, fills, and other little tricks that were very difficult for other drummers using "proper technique" to replicate. The name The Beatles is a pun on the genre Beat, which is what The Beatles started off playing, but they changed their sound so much over the years that it wasn't really accurate by the time of Revolver. The casual music crowd of today doesn't listen to any other early 60s artists apart from The Beatles, so they are unaware of the context of the band's name. Luckily, it can also refer to the Beat of a song rather than just the genre. Their B-Sides quite often became big hits in their own right, but "We Can Work it Out"/"Day Tripper", "Yellow Submarine"/"Eleanor Rigby", "Penny Lane"/"Strawberry Fields Forever" and "Come Together"/"Something" were all officially considered double A-sides. The Beatles were among the first to make music videos. The video for "Strawberry Fields Forever" is a Concept Video. Throughout their first seven studio albums (up to and including Revolver), there are six songs which exceed three minutes. Lennon-McCartney tended to write a lot of songs on the same subject or with very similar musical techniques which showed the personality of both songwriters as well as the similarities and differences between them. The Beatles are notorious among bands of their generation for preferring less expensive and less prestigious instruments than most later bands used-or at least, those instruments didn't become prestigious until The Beatles made them famous. They used them to begin with because those instruments were all that they could afford, and later because they came to prefer them. Among these are McCartney's Höfner 500/1 bass, which he still uses today (although not his original model, which got stolen); Harrison's preference for Gretsch guitars; and most famously, Lennon, Harrison and McCartney all favouring the then rather unloved Epiphone Casino over the guitar it was designed to be a budget version of, the Gibson ES-330. Lennon's Casino was his main guitar from 1965 to the end of the band's career. 🇬🇧
The first time my daughter heard this she was eight, she was halfway between the two speakers of my seperates system she stopped in tracks. Took one step backwards then one forwards turned round looked me square in the eyes put a finger to either side of her head and did that dog thing when they tilt their head first one way then the other. When the track was finished she shouted again! I had to play it twice morre before she was satisfied. Thats when I had it confirmed I had another music lover in the family.
You are listening to excerpts from The Tibetan Book of the Dead in this John song. Look it up. This one is different from the other psychedelic songs because of the words. John was very into Transcendental Meditation at the time.
Of course this isn't the original version, but close enough. Realize that it came out in 1966. Think about that. It could come out literally today and it would seem contemporary, this or the original. How many nearly 60 year old songs could you say that about? Back then it helped launch what came to be called Psychedelic Rock. These days I don't know what you'd call it. Trance music?
If the original 3 min song would seem contemporary today, why bother with this stupid remix? Historically it is misleading and dishonest to new ears/ reactors.
This Lennon/McCartney collaboration was originally titled 'The Void' (cf. stuff in the 'Tibetan Book of The Dead' & NDEs*), some thought the title was too bleak so Lennon opted for one of Starkey's in-band comic sayings "tomorrow never knows" (a backdoor rendition on: 'live in the moment'). Here is the 1st [experimental] recording of it (from April 1966): ua-cam.com/video/YtmukKLZQUw/v-deo.html . The song was in no way unrelated to Lennon (and wife Cynthia) and Harrison (and wife Patty) unintentionally tripping on [pharmaceutical] LSD with Harrison's dentist Riley (the 'Dr. Robert' on the LP) in April 1965 (Dr. Riley was the host of a small coffee-party at his apartment, who dissolved LSD in the coffee of all 4 guests without their foreknowledge or consent, Lennon at first went into a screaming rage and Harrison, Patty and Cynthia were at first angry and shocked, however the experience really cathartically changed both Lennon's and Harrison's personalities and 'transformed' their 'egos', making 'aggressive' Lennon far more relaxed and less obnoxious and 'less of an acerbic clown' and more serious, and giving Harrison and Lennon a 'hugely deepened sense of universal awareness and interconnectedness'). Counter-intuitively, 'Tomorrow Never Knows' was the first song from the April 1966 'Revolver' album sessions to be conceived, written and recorded. McCartney tried LSD briefly in January 1966. 'Tomorrow Never Knows' was the last track of side 2 on the 'Revolver' album released on August 5th 1966. * NDEs = Near Death Experiences (and also experientially and parallel similar related to pre-Asclepieion and Asclepieion era Hellenist-religious cave 'darkness-water-immersion sensory-deprivation' therapy/enlightenment/ divination of antiquity that dates back in one form or another to proto-neolithic shamanistic cultures globally generally). Note: 'Tomorrow Never Knows' had the same mind-blowing way-ahead of it's time influence on UK concurrent and future pop musicians as did this groundbreaking experimental 'electronic music' theme tune to the UK children's sci-fi TV series Dr. Who in 1963: ua-cam.com/video/75V4ClJZME4/v-deo.html
According to Wikipedia and its references, it is a John song. Ditto, Paul's recollections on Anthology series where John brought in this song done on one Chord.
If you don't know the Beatles music much, you will find only a few other songs in their catalog in a similar vein. Some of the most trippiest sounding would be It's All Too Much, Blue Jay Way, and Only A Northern Song. They had so many styles, and psychedelic was just one of many they experimented with.
No. They soon realised that being high did not help with playing or writing and was a hindrance. But for getting an initial idea... being high did trigger some moods and ideas they could work out in detail when sober. There was a lot of avant garde art and music and poetry at the time and Paul, especially, tapped into it very soon after moving to London
I've never liked it, when fans create dubious versions of Beatles songs. In Mixer's defense, many have done much worse. But the original is impressive enough, is considered to be a style-defining piece and, with loops and samples, already contains here in 1966 elements of later hip hop production methods.
I don't mind if the person is VERY clear that it's their edit I hate when people's first intro to the music is this stuff, Athology alt mixes or a Paul live cut.
It's the Beatles. They invented everything. This was 1966 by the way. I am the Walrus, Strawberry Fields Forever, It's All Too Much, A Day in the Life and the list goes on and on.
Perhaps you didn't plugin the second channel. I don't hear the vocals on my side. It's a real great song, and one of the most psychadelic there is. I see, the vocals come in later. This is some altered version.
I can understand that. But this extended version was interesting. Listen to 801's live version of 'Tomorrow Never Knows' with Brian Eno doing the vocals, and the electronic music version by the ever so popular (world wide) German band Tangerine Dream. Both versions are just fantastic! And Los Lobos do an excellent live version as well. All on UA-cam.
This song became a trip for The Grateful Dead who played it at many concerts, bending the minds of their audiences. They were heavily into later (post 64) Beatles tunes and played several in different variations.
@@PeterOConnell-pq6io Keep at it. I am pretty sure you will do better and better (obviously I get it, 'cause I am aware playing the game existence to the end, is great advice! have a good day and or existence Peter!)
It's difficult to call it a "song" but I consider it a masterpiece of sonic collage depicting a revolution. I never understood why John never made anything like it during the 1970s.
Yea, I agree with below. The Beatles never made an extended version like this. Someone stretched this one out like a rubber band. It is the Beatles, but the actual version is just 3 minutes.
one of the early reverse delay pedals used in rock. Kenny Rogers & The !st Edition was also an early example of reverse delay in the intro to "What Condition my Condition was In" before his solo career ! This was early 60's ! 😉
Loved this reaction! Yeah, the Beatles were experimenting with lots of different tape loops running forward, backward, sideways, fast, slow. They were influenced by avant garde composers like Karlheinz Stockhausen, John Cage, Terry O'Reilly, etc. They were also experimenting with LSD. This song was the group trying to expand pop music from the typical 3-minute verse-chorus-verse structure and blending in the new, emerging psychedelic sounds. And, lyrically, John Lennon was influenced by the writings of Timothy Leary who had been literally publishing instructions on how to properly trip on acid. Put all that together with the imagination of The Beatles and the inventive practicality of their producer, George Martin, this is what you get! One of their greatest, game changing songs ever! Love you! You're beautiful! Love your reactions!
The Beatles help elevate psychedelic rock. This occurred after their extended stay in India studying with a guru. These lyrics reflect this trip. As someone noted below this is not truly The Beatles but someone's idea of 'improving' this song. The feel shorter original is better. Maybe listen to Phil Collins' cover of this tune......very true to the original, except he personally created the whole soundscape for his first album (1981) 'Face Value' (it is the album with 'In the Air Tonight'). Some don't like his version but I think it is a wonderful tribute to John Lennon who passed just months before. It ends with "Somewhere Over the Rainbow". Hauntingly beautiful.
Since I know this song very well I can comment early lol however I will watch your reaction. Phil Collins does a great cover of this by the way and you should check it out lol. ❤
Many who criticize the Beatles as having no influence on music listen to 'I Want to Hold Your Hand' and say, huh, boy band. They were always innovators.
This was the first song recorded for this album. 1966 - when they did their last tour, they could never play this live. Yes, and the loops of sound, and the live drum beats, and philosophy were original -this is extended. John Lennon had the lyrics, and ideas, Ringo did serious drumming. Their Producer, who was not taking LSD, had to realtionaize what he was asked like "Make it sound like an Orange" or "the chant of 100 Guru's on a mountain chanting".....George Martin produced the most bizarre music of 1966 with this track. And this was only like 3.5 years from early Beatles "I want to hold your hand" -these men were not standing still, they changed.
Maybe checkout I am the Walrus or Lucy In the Sky with Diamonds or Strawberry Fields... All written by John Lennon with his vocals... Very trippy stuff!
My favorite song from my favorite band. This song changed popular music forever. Just a fact. It’s a musical butterfly effect. Radiohead doesn’t sound exactly as they perfectly do without this song.
Beatles are unmatched. Love it when young people discover them.......did they influence, you judge......"Hymn from a village" by James....." Let forever be" by Chemical brothers
Great reaction. And yes, they were among the very first pioneers of psych rock (among other firsts for popular music). Check out "Blue Jay Way", "I Am the Walrus", "Strawberry Fields Forever", "The Inner Light", "Love You To", "Within You, Without You", It's All Too Much", "Only a Northern Song", "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds", and "You Know My Name" (just generally wacko fun).
Now if you like trippy or psychedelic, you must listen to their "Strawberry Fields Forever". The Beatles knew how to compose in sophisticated ways with interesting chord progressions, counter-melodies, and key changes to evoke emotion. Hugely influential.
Other trippy songs by them include “A Day In The Life”, “Blue Jay Way”, “I Am The Walrus”, “Strawberry Fields Forever”, “Revolution #9” (more a sound collage than a song), and “You Know My Name (Look Up The Number)” which displays their wacked out sense of humor. There are some others, but I’ll leave them to other commenters.
An unfortunately underappreciated song. Being stuck on "Yellow Submarine" was a handicap. "Hey Bulldog" suffered the same fate for decades, but seems to have been rediscovered of late. "It's All to Much" deserves to be rediscovered as well.
@@Brunoburningbright I also don't understand why the movie Yellow Submarine wasn't and isn't recognized as a masterpiece. Because the Beatles hardly had any creative involvement in it themselves? Except through their music. This proves the richness and influence of their music and the ideas and themes within it. Strangely, the first time I heard "Hey Bulldog" was on the LP with the soundtrack. But in the German version of Yellow Submarin, which I knew from TV as a child and later from VHS tape, this slapstick scene was cut out. It was included in the DVD edition, newly dubbed into German.
Crazy songs by the Beatles (all mandatory): 1 - A Day in the Life 2 - Within you Without you 3 - Norweegian Wood 4 - Strawberry Fields Forever 5 - I am the Warlus 6 - Oh Darling 7 - Helter Skelter 8 - I want you 9 - The whole medley (without stopping between songs please) from Because until the end, I mean, literally, the song The End Honorary mentions: 1 - Hey Bulldog 2 - Dear Prudence 3 - Ticket to Ride 4 - I feel fine 5 - Day Tripper 6 - The inner light 7 - Across the Universe 8 - Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite 9 - Love you to 10 - I got a feeling And to close up the top ten: While my guitar gently weeps Out of the list because they're just too much of classic songs and if you haven't listened to them before, then I don't know what you're doing: 1 - Hey Jude 2 - All you need is love 3 - Let it be 4 - Here comes the Sun 5 - Something 6 - Come together 7 - Nowhere Man 8 - In my life 9 - Girl 10 - Sgt Pepper's lonely hearts club band + With a little help from my friends + Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds And that's just for starters. Like I said, all mandatory.
It came out in 1966. Yes, they didn't have anything more than tape recorders and put this together with tape loops played backwards. They didn't have synths or multitrack editing. Before the album "Revolver" the Beatles were entertainers doing pop songs. But anything they released went to #1 and, from Revolver on, they used that popularity and their innovative musical talent to send out serious messages. Still, they retained their polish, though a lot of their work (Sgt.Pepper and Magical Mystery Tour....) is full of satire. Some lyrics in this song are taken from the Tibetan Book of the Dead----and was called "The Void." But Ringo suggested "Tomorrow Never Knows" which sounded like the title to a James Bond movie (very popular at the time). Saying the Beatles wrote songs is like saying Shakespeare wrote stories....it's sort of correct.....
Sadly, this was not done by the Beatles- someone else added extra at the beginning. It kind of upsets the balance which they and their excellent producer George Martin arranged.
Yes Pet you'll find Strawberry Fields Forever , I Am The Walrus , I'm Only Sleeping , Being For The Benefit Of Mr Kite , Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds , Come Together , Glass Onion , A Day In The Life , Blue Jay Way , Long Long Long , She Said She Said , Flying and also The Inner Light if you fancy the Psychedelic hits ! 🔥🌈👁️🤡👽🎱
It’s always been called psychedelia but it can also be considered pop music Surrealism which already existed in all the arts, even movies. It was a cool transfer into pop.
@@johnbyrnes7912 Maybe she’s into sound collage and sound art - especially a 1968 example 😉 But you’re right it’s not a song - it fair to call it trippy 🫨
This is some extended mix I've never heard. The Stones song "2,000 Light Years From Home" is probably the most psychedelic song of the Summer Of Love. ('67) It was the "B" side of "She's A Rainbow".
this song is a reflection of their time spent in India looking for "enlightenment" as all human beings do {cognizant human beings}, a musical reflection to the questions we all ask , who are we , why are we and where are we , they also "discovered the sit-tar played by a guy named robbie , but that's a story for another day , also featured in some of their music . the beatles reflected the mind of their generation in some pretty damn good music.
This is a fan remix. There is no extended mix, the only version of this song is the 3 minute official release.
I confirm. True.
That's kinda true, although you had the mono and stereo mixes which were a little different, but they were essentially the same. This is def not a Beatles release, someone did this, using the real song, only doing a lot of sampling to extend it. Sounds kinda cool but one should listen to the original first.
I often thought the song should be longer though, guess now it is lol :D
But it is very good. Age 69, I love this version
@@cuebj Yes me too. I'm 66 and always loved this song a lot. This is even better. Thanks for sharing
I prefer the official version of 3 minutes, they made it longer but left the second verse from the vocal out. Maybe Miles Martin can make a longer version because it is my no.1 Beatles song. Only to play LOUD😅
Hi. I made this mix. I'm so glad you enjoyed it. My jaw dropped when I realised you were reacting to this version. It's a shame about some of the negative comments, but that's inevitable I guess. I made this version a long time ago just to see if it was possible, but mainly for a bit of fun. Also this was the first thing I had ever done musically before which is why it's a bit rough round the edges, and if I did it now I would change quite a lot. Ps. There is nothing in this version that was not in the original (the piano loop in the instrumental parts was taken from the piano bit at the end) :)
“What?!” 😀😁
We had that exact response 100 times listening to a new Beatles song: you NEVER knew what to expect and they were ALWAYS ahead of us.
Another Reactor said recently that no matter what the genre was that they would be playing, even hardcore, they always had a touch of elegance in it that no one else had. ☺️
Their catalogue is SO deep - they mastered EVERY genre. Almost everyone who knows only a few songs thinks of their earliest recordings “I Wanna Hold Your Hand” through Rubber Soul.
But thereafter: the sky was the limit. I always LOVED their weirdest tracks like this, and:
Come Together
I Am the Walrus
A Day in the Life
Within You Without You
For “harder tracks”
Revolution (MUST be the live version)
Helter Skelter
Happiness Is a Warm Gun
I Want You (She’s So Heavy)
But also you MUST hear their shockingly beautiful (not sappy)
Dear Prudence
Oh Darling
Don’t Let Me Down
Here Comes the Sun
That’s a great start.
Listen to each of the above ALWAYS on headphones and you’ll begin to understand them better 😉
Enjoy! 🥰
Harder tracks: and both Rain and Hey Bulldog raised their hands and eyebrows.
Highly recommend "A Day In The Life" if you like trippy songs; Also -" Dear Prudence" for absolute song writing and instrumentation perfection.
Yep, Dear Prudence is a song not many know, but everyone likes. John's dreamy voice and fingerpicking, George's scorching little solos here and there, and, wow, Paul's bass is on a Heavenly category. And, ah, yes, Paul can drum.
The original was really at the forefront of the *psychedelic* movement in music, if not the first, certainly _one_ of the first examples of all-out *psychedelia.*
Do you realize you’ve listened to the greatest band of all time
Priceless ❤🎉
In fairness, she listened to a fan edit of the greatest band of all time
Most definitely so
@@MrKeychangetrue but is it not the Beatles?
@@MrKeychangeand are they not the greatest band of all time? You dbag
In my opinion, The Beatles invented trippy
As of a fan of more than 50 years, I agree w/ you.
There was a forum on Reddit, and I argued that this started the whole prog rock movement.
No, Karlheinz Stockhausen did. Paul McCartney would probably agree.
@@kenfasano8105 I’m not Paul McCartney. And if a tree falls and no one hears it, did it make a sound? No one has ever heard of that person. Go back further and say the theremin invented it. Everyone knows what I mean. Popular music for the masses. You know what I meant too.
@@kenfasano8105 by the way, trippy doesn’t equal electronic music. You just wanted to name drop.Trippy as in psychedelic. Nine Inch Nails are electronic music but they aren’t trippy.
There are always surprises when you listen to the greatest musical quartet of all time.
They INVENTED trippy.
Strawberry Fields Forever
They have loads of trippy songs like this, this was one of their first experimental psychedelic albums, this was around the time they stopped touring and went from being a pop mainstream band (as you and many people may only know them as)to an experimental studio band, and the amazing thing is that this was back in the ‘60s and it’s still progressive today. Similar songs include I’m only sleeping, Love you to, A day in the life, Blue jay way, Strawberry fields forever, I am the walrus, Lucy in the sky with diamonds, Within you without you. And I would recommend to give a listen to the solo Paul McCartney’s album Ram. Literally greatest band of all time, and I’m in my 20s.
You’re listening to the greatest band of all time
this song is from 1966
Not this unnecessary stupid remix.
The Beatles took the world for a ride in the sixties
Another great Beatles song that is kind crazy is A Day in the Life
Don't forget Within You Without You on the same album.
Revolution number 9😊
@@jamesbobo One of George's greatest works.
@@robertholbrook4582
Almost universally despised by everyone thinking only of pop music 😉
I loved it BECAUSE it was so weird and interesting, and learned later that it is “sound art”, of which I’ve seen/heard many others since.
Remember Yoko introduced John to the avant garde art world and he LOVED IT - it’s a world of ideas often abstract.
✊🏽
You should watch a short documentary on how they recorded this song on a four track recorder... it is increedible
The Beatles did everything. Paul McCartney is even accredited with inventing metal on 'Helter Skelter'
Actually all the Beatles played their balls off on Helter Skelter, and it was Lennon who led the way on the White Album. He insisted they recorded the heavy aggressive version of Revolution playing his guitar so loud it caused headaches for engineer Geoff Emerick. You'll notice a similar stabbing electric guitar played by John commences both songs. Paul rearranged his Helter Skelter in a similar vein which was recorded several weeks after Revolution. John basically arrived at the White Album sessions with a punk "I'm back in charge" attitude, and with Yoko, causing tension which set the heavy tone for the album. Read the Emerick book.
Definitely need to check out Helter Skelter, Paul murders this song,and Ringo poundin the drums like Keith Moon of The Who,at the end he says a funny but true line
I think this is among the best psychedelic albums ever made, along with Pink Floyd's first album Piper at the Gates of Dawn.
When you consider Piper at the Gates of Dawn was recorded at the Abbey Road Studio where the Beatles also recorded the Revolver album it’s no coincidence that they shared similar psychedelic flavor
1966. Revolver. Last track.
No computers.
Pretty good eh? 😎
I kinda like this version. Those three minutes go by quickly.
So many great songs, but if you like this, I would recommend Strawberry Fields Forever.
EVERYTIME I hear this song I close my eyes and imagine Ringo playing the drums.
"Tomorrow Never Knows," (single), that’s easily the unofficial publicised rendition, I haven't experienced, other than the record single, "Tomorrow Never Knows,", the official original publicised release on side-B, (1966), remastered version (2009), (2022 Mix), also featured on a compilation record self-titled "Tomorrow Never Knows". (2012). The most famous/notorious Beatles bootleg records in my collection: A Collection of Beatles Oldies (1966) was the first attempt at an official Beatles Greatest Hits record and featured a mix of record cuts like "Michelle", singles, "I Want To Hold Your Hand", and a cover of Larry Williams' "Bad Boy". 1962-1966 (the "Red Album") and 1967-1970 (the "Blue Album"), probably the best known Greatest Hits compilations prior to 1. This release was partly of grey market bootleg hit collections as there was no Greatest Hits compilation available. Rarities. (1978/80) two separate records with different track listings and backgrounds, was released in '78 as an addendum for the 13-LP collection to also provide the singles tracks that were not on the Red and Blue records (as those didn't include many B-sides nor the Long Tall Sally EP). 20 Greatest Hits (1982) a compilation of, well, twenty of their greatest hits, released to mark the 20th anniversary of the release of their debut single ("Love Me Do"). Notable for being the last Beatles record to be released with variant versions. Past Masters (1988). A collection of all official 1962-70 Beatles releases not included on the studio records. This includes most hit singles, "She Loves You" and "Hey Jude", the B-sides to those singles, and a few other rarities. It was meant to augment the record catalogue, this time being newly released to the CD format, but also functioned as the de facto Greatest Hits compilation for that format until the CD reissues of "Red" and "Blue" in 1993 and the release of 1 in 2000. Anthology 1, 2, and 3. (1995-96) - After decades of various 'hidden' Beatle material circulating as bootlegs, an official collection of (almost all) unreleased material. Notable mainly for 1 and 2 including the last proper Beatles singles ever recorded, consisting of leftover John Lennon tracks backed by the remaining Beatles. Other than those two tracks, the albums feature mostly studio out-takes, demos, and live performances ☘ xx
Had A Collection of Beatles Oldies from shortly after release. Not a bootleg. It's truly dreadful. Whatever happened in the pressing ruined the songs. Put me off Beatles till about 1999 when my then 12-year old daughter heard my barely heard cd of Pepper and loved it. So, age 69, I only got into Beatles age 49. I was more into The Who, Mott, punk
Ringo.. The human metronome 😂
The illustrious virtuosic prodigious "The Beatles" revolutionized music antiquity.
The Beatles was inducted into The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1988!
Tomorrow Never Knows: A cult classic British anthem from 66 :)
Grow up on (North West England), basically a home-grown artist within my area of region. The Beatles received none or any formal training in music composition, and even their performance skills were mostly self-taught (with the exception of George's training on the sitar). Some of the innovation they displayed in their sound and style was because they hadn't been taught the "right way" to write music, and instead just did what sounded interesting to them. This also goes for Ringo, who played with a standard drum kit, despite being left-handed, allowing him to do riffs, fills, and other little tricks that were very difficult for other drummers using "proper technique" to replicate. The name The Beatles is a pun on the genre Beat, which is what The Beatles started off playing, but they changed their sound so much over the years that it wasn't really accurate by the time of Revolver. The casual music crowd of today doesn't listen to any other early 60s artists apart from The Beatles, so they are unaware of the context of the band's name. Luckily, it can also refer to the Beat of a song rather than just the genre. Their B-Sides quite often became big hits in their own right, but "We Can Work it Out"/"Day Tripper", "Yellow Submarine"/"Eleanor Rigby", "Penny Lane"/"Strawberry Fields Forever" and "Come Together"/"Something" were all officially considered double A-sides. The Beatles were among the first to make music videos. The video for "Strawberry Fields Forever" is a Concept Video. Throughout their first seven studio albums (up to and including Revolver), there are six songs which exceed three minutes. Lennon-McCartney tended to write a lot of songs on the same subject or with very similar musical techniques which showed the personality of both songwriters as well as the similarities and differences between them. The Beatles are notorious among bands of their generation for preferring less expensive and less prestigious instruments than most later bands used-or at least, those instruments didn't become prestigious until The Beatles made them famous. They used them to begin with because those instruments were all that they could afford, and later because they came to prefer them. Among these are McCartney's Höfner 500/1 bass, which he still uses today (although not his original model, which got stolen); Harrison's preference for Gretsch guitars; and most famously, Lennon, Harrison and McCartney all favouring the then rather unloved Epiphone Casino over the guitar it was designed to be a budget version of, the Gibson ES-330. Lennon's Casino was his main guitar from 1965 to the end of the band's career. 🇬🇧
Revolver is the Beatles getting serious and growing up, extraordinary album.
The first time my daughter heard this she was eight, she was halfway between the two speakers of my seperates system she stopped in tracks. Took one step backwards then one forwards turned round looked me square in the eyes put a finger to either side of her head and did that dog thing when they tilt their head first one way then the other. When the track was finished she shouted again! I had to play it twice morre before she was satisfied. Thats when I had it confirmed I had another music lover in the family.
You are listening to excerpts from The Tibetan Book of the Dead in this John song. Look it up. This one is different from the other psychedelic songs because of the words. John was very into Transcendental Meditation at the time.
LSDeeeeeeeee, baby🤪!! (Those drums🤗! And the bass - or as they would probably say it: "droom n' behss")
They were the definition of innovation.
The Beatles weren’t afraid to tackle any genre. Rock, country, baroque, even kids songs. They made them all great.
Of course this isn't the original version, but close enough. Realize that it came out in 1966. Think about that. It could come out literally today and it would seem contemporary, this or the original. How many nearly 60 year old songs could you say that about? Back then it helped launch what came to be called Psychedelic Rock. These days I don't know what you'd call it. Trance music?
If 'Tomorrow Never Knows' came out between 1970 - 1975 it would have been considered progressive rock.
If the original 3 min song would seem contemporary today, why bother with this stupid remix? Historically it is misleading and dishonest to new ears/ reactors.
It would fit right in at an EDM festival 😉♥️
The Beatles changed music forever.
Yep - there is plenty being played backwards on this track
"Do they have more songs like this?" haha!
😂 that was my exact reaction on my first listen many many moons ago….
This Lennon/McCartney collaboration was originally titled 'The Void' (cf. stuff in the 'Tibetan Book of The Dead' & NDEs*), some thought the title was too bleak so Lennon opted for one of Starkey's in-band comic sayings "tomorrow never knows" (a backdoor rendition on: 'live in the moment'). Here is the 1st [experimental] recording of it (from April 1966): ua-cam.com/video/YtmukKLZQUw/v-deo.html . The song was in no way unrelated to Lennon (and wife Cynthia) and Harrison (and wife Patty) unintentionally tripping on [pharmaceutical] LSD with Harrison's dentist Riley (the 'Dr. Robert' on the LP) in April 1965 (Dr. Riley was the host of a small coffee-party at his apartment, who dissolved LSD in the coffee of all 4 guests without their foreknowledge or consent, Lennon at first went into a screaming rage and Harrison, Patty and Cynthia were at first angry and shocked, however the experience really cathartically changed both Lennon's and Harrison's personalities and 'transformed' their 'egos', making 'aggressive' Lennon far more relaxed and less obnoxious and 'less of an acerbic clown' and more serious, and giving Harrison and Lennon a 'hugely deepened sense of universal awareness and interconnectedness'). Counter-intuitively, 'Tomorrow Never Knows' was the first song from the April 1966 'Revolver' album sessions to be conceived, written and recorded. McCartney tried LSD briefly in January 1966. 'Tomorrow Never Knows' was the last track of side 2 on the 'Revolver' album released on August 5th 1966.
* NDEs = Near Death Experiences (and also experientially and parallel similar related to pre-Asclepieion and Asclepieion era Hellenist-religious cave 'darkness-water-immersion sensory-deprivation' therapy/enlightenment/ divination of antiquity that dates back in one form or another to proto-neolithic shamanistic cultures globally generally).
Note: 'Tomorrow Never Knows' had the same mind-blowing way-ahead of it's time influence on UK concurrent and future pop musicians as did this groundbreaking experimental 'electronic music' theme tune to the UK children's sci-fi TV series Dr. Who in 1963: ua-cam.com/video/75V4ClJZME4/v-deo.html
According to Wikipedia and its references, it is a John song. Ditto, Paul's recollections on Anthology series where John brought in this song done on one Chord.
I think you might enjoy "I am the walrus" by The Beatles from the same year, I think.
🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸LSD was legal until 1968, Beatles first tripped in 65, we all knew which songs to listen to when tripping...🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸
If you don't know the Beatles music much, you will find only a few other songs in their catalog in a similar vein. Some of the most trippiest sounding would be It's All Too Much, Blue Jay Way, and Only A Northern Song. They had so many styles, and psychedelic was just one of many they experimented with.
Well we were high when we wrote it....
No. They soon realised that being high did not help with playing or writing and was a hindrance. But for getting an initial idea... being high did trigger some moods and ideas they could work out in detail when sober. There was a lot of avant garde art and music and poetry at the time and Paul, especially, tapped into it very soon after moving to London
This song was created thanks to Timothy Leary's book: "The Tibetian Book of The Dead" & a touch of L.S.D.,
I've never liked it, when fans create dubious versions of Beatles songs. In Mixer's defense, many have done much worse. But the original is impressive enough, is considered to be a style-defining piece and, with loops and samples, already contains here in 1966 elements of later hip hop production methods.
Age 69, I like this a lot
I don't mind if the person is VERY clear that it's their edit I hate when people's first intro to the music is this stuff, Athology alt mixes or a Paul live cut.
The Beatles.
Very insightful
It's the Beatles. They invented everything. This was 1966 by the way. I am the Walrus, Strawberry Fields Forever, It's All Too Much, A Day in the Life and the list goes on and on.
Ahhhhh Interviewer: Tell me, what's so great about The Beatles? You: They invented everything. Paul McCartney gives you a call: Great thought!
Drop a dot and you'll get it
Lol
😂
I smiled !
I really enjoyed this fan remix. Its the Beatles of course its amazing. Love n Peace.
Perhaps you didn't plugin the second channel. I don't hear the vocals on my side. It's a real great song, and one of the most psychadelic there is.
I see, the vocals come in later. This is some altered version.
And a historically incorrect, meddled with remix that is dishonest to the artist's intent and musical history.
If you enjoy weird, you might like Revolution 9! 😀
The seagull sounds is actually a repeating accelerated loop of McCartney laughing
As soon as I heard "extended mix" I noped out.
I can understand that. But this extended version was interesting. Listen to 801's live version of 'Tomorrow Never Knows' with Brian Eno doing the vocals, and the electronic music version by the ever so popular (world wide) German band Tangerine Dream. Both versions are just fantastic! And Los Lobos do an excellent live version as well. All on UA-cam.
This song became a trip for The Grateful Dead who played it at many concerts, bending the minds of their audiences. They were heavily into later (post 64) Beatles tunes and played several in different variations.
Did they ever record it I’d LOVE to hear their version.
You must listen to “Lucy in the sky with diamonds”😊
I love watching younger people reacting to this track. Minds blown.
Despite a setback or two, playing the game "existence" until the end still works for me
I inmediately checked out your profile pic and it says: Go ahead, do as I do... and I will.
@mauriciovargas3913 It's not the worst advice I've given.
@@PeterOConnell-pq6io Keep at it. I am pretty sure you will do better and better (obviously I get it, 'cause I am aware playing the game existence to the end, is great advice! have a good day and or existence Peter!)
@mauriciovargas3913 You too. Don't go quietly.
@@PeterOConnell-pq6ionot quietly, I will not. 😊
❤
the beatles...the best
"Love You To" is another indian/psychedelic song from the same album
Revolution #9 is their most far out disembodied song
By John Lennon. Producer George Martin did not want that on The Beatles (White Album).
It’s more an experiment in sound.
@@undergroundwarrior70 NEITHER did the other three band members. But Lennon bullied them into it .On heroin...
It's difficult to call it a "song" but I consider it a masterpiece of sonic collage depicting a revolution. I never understood why John never made anything like it during the 1970s.
Yeah, what key's it in anyway?
The Beatles invented “Trippy”. Glad you’ve joined the party 🎈
Yea, I agree with below. The Beatles never made an extended version like this. Someone stretched this one out like a rubber band. It is the Beatles, but the actual version is just 3 minutes.
Why would you not play the original version? This is a crappy mix someone made
one of the early reverse delay pedals used in rock. Kenny Rogers & The !st Edition was also an early example of reverse delay in the intro to "What Condition my Condition was In" before his solo career ! This was early 60's ! 😉
That First Edition record was released in early '68. It was even featured on one of the first Laugh In TV shows. Great record, but post Sgt. Pepper's.
Another song from Revolver (the same album that this song is from) called Love You To is trippy like this....perhaps the first World Music.
Loved this reaction! Yeah, the Beatles were experimenting with lots of different tape loops running forward, backward, sideways, fast, slow. They were influenced by avant garde composers like Karlheinz Stockhausen, John Cage, Terry O'Reilly, etc. They were also experimenting with LSD. This song was the group trying to expand pop music from the typical 3-minute verse-chorus-verse structure and blending in the new, emerging psychedelic sounds. And, lyrically, John Lennon was influenced by the writings of Timothy Leary who had been literally publishing instructions on how to properly trip on acid. Put all that together with the imagination of The Beatles and the inventive practicality of their producer, George Martin, this is what you get! One of their greatest, game changing songs ever! Love you! You're beautiful! Love your reactions!
The Beatles help elevate psychedelic rock. This occurred after their extended stay in India studying with a guru. These lyrics reflect this trip. As someone noted below this is not truly The Beatles but someone's idea of 'improving' this song. The feel shorter original is better.
Maybe listen to Phil Collins' cover of this tune......very true to the original, except he personally created the whole soundscape for his first album (1981) 'Face Value' (it is the album with 'In the Air Tonight'). Some don't like his version but I think it is a wonderful tribute to John Lennon who passed just months before. It ends with "Somewhere Over the Rainbow". Hauntingly beautiful.
This was the beginning.
The Beatles INVENTED trippy!
Since I know this song very well I can comment early lol however I will watch your reaction. Phil Collins does a great cover of this by the way and you should check it out lol. ❤
King Crimson also covered it on tour in 2000.
Ok thanks for the recommendation, I'll check it out 👍
There’s also a great rendition of this, and Within You Without You, by Indian musicians on traditional Indian instruments including the tabla ♥️
The lyrics are based from a book by Timothy Leary, a pioneer in LSD.
💊
Many who criticize the Beatles as having no influence on music listen to 'I Want to Hold Your Hand' and say, huh, boy band. They were always innovators.
There are no other songs like Tomorrow Never Knows. The closest you might get to it may be *The Inner Light*
"I Am the Walrus" and "Strawberry Fields Forever" next!
THIS JUST IN: THE BEATLES HAD SOME SMALL INFLUENCE ON 60's PSYCHEDELIA. (Jeez!)
If you want more "weird," check out "I Am the Walrus" and "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds."
This was the first song recorded for this album. 1966 - when they did their last tour, they could never play this live. Yes, and the loops of sound, and the live drum beats, and philosophy were original -this is extended. John Lennon had the lyrics, and ideas, Ringo did serious drumming. Their Producer, who was not taking LSD, had to realtionaize what he was asked like "Make it sound like an Orange" or "the chant of 100 Guru's on a mountain chanting".....George Martin produced the most bizarre music of 1966 with this track. And this was only like 3.5 years from early Beatles "I want to hold your hand" -these men were not standing still, they changed.
You might enjoy, Helter Skelter, I Am The Walrus or Strawberry Fields by the Beatles based on some of the other videos you've done
I think I heard you say something like "hypno-mazing". Brilliant!
This was actually the FIRST SONG RECORDED FOR REVOLVER..ONCE YOU KNOW THAT YOU CANNOT UNKNOW IT
Check out the album Revolver and then Rubber Soul.
Maybe checkout I am the Walrus or Lucy In the Sky with Diamonds or Strawberry Fields... All written by John Lennon with his vocals... Very trippy stuff!
My favorite song from my favorite band.
This song changed popular music forever. Just a fact.
It’s a musical butterfly effect.
Radiohead doesn’t sound exactly as they perfectly do without this song.
Beatles are unmatched. Love it when young people discover them.......did they influence, you judge......"Hymn from a village" by James....." Let forever be" by Chemical brothers
Great reaction. And yes, they were among the very first pioneers of psych rock (among other firsts for popular music). Check out "Blue Jay Way", "I Am the Walrus", "Strawberry Fields Forever", "The Inner Light", "Love You To", "Within You, Without You", It's All Too Much", "Only a Northern Song", "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds", and "You Know My Name" (just generally wacko fun).
Within You Without You is another trippy hit from them.
um it wasn't a hit.
@@matthewashman1406 True. But it was a
trip."
The original was alot shorter,& to the point.But,I like both...It's after 65 Beatles!!!
back to the classics !!! Revolver is my favorite Beatles album , every track is pure gem !!! - "eleonor Rigby" ; "taxman" next please !!!
Now if you like trippy or psychedelic, you must listen to their "Strawberry Fields Forever". The Beatles knew how to compose in sophisticated ways with interesting chord progressions, counter-melodies, and key changes to evoke emotion. Hugely influential.
Other trippy songs by them include “A Day In The Life”, “Blue Jay Way”, “I Am The Walrus”, “Strawberry Fields Forever”, “Revolution #9” (more a sound collage than a song), and “You Know My Name (Look Up The Number)” which displays their wacked out sense of humor. There are some others, but I’ll leave them to other commenters.
I recommend: "It's All Too Much", released in 1969 on the album “Yellow Submarine”. It is similarly hypnotic and bombastic as "Tomorrow Never Knows".
An unfortunately underappreciated song. Being stuck on "Yellow Submarine" was a handicap. "Hey Bulldog" suffered the same fate for decades, but seems to have been rediscovered of late. "It's All to Much" deserves to be rediscovered as well.
@@Brunoburningbright I also don't understand why the movie Yellow Submarine wasn't and isn't recognized as a masterpiece. Because the Beatles hardly had any creative involvement in it themselves? Except through their music. This proves the richness and influence of their music and the ideas and themes within it. Strangely, the first time I heard "Hey Bulldog" was on the LP with the soundtrack. But in the German version of Yellow Submarin, which I knew from TV as a child and later from VHS tape, this slapstick scene was cut out. It was included in the DVD edition, newly dubbed into German.
Crazy songs by the Beatles (all mandatory):
1 - A Day in the Life
2 - Within you Without you
3 - Norweegian Wood
4 - Strawberry Fields Forever
5 - I am the Warlus
6 - Oh Darling
7 - Helter Skelter
8 - I want you
9 - The whole medley (without stopping between songs please) from Because until the end, I mean, literally, the song The End
Honorary mentions:
1 - Hey Bulldog
2 - Dear Prudence
3 - Ticket to Ride
4 - I feel fine
5 - Day Tripper
6 - The inner light
7 - Across the Universe
8 - Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite
9 - Love you to
10 - I got a feeling
And to close up the top ten: While my guitar gently weeps
Out of the list because they're just too much of classic songs and if you haven't listened to them before, then I don't know what you're doing:
1 - Hey Jude
2 - All you need is love
3 - Let it be
4 - Here comes the Sun
5 - Something
6 - Come together
7 - Nowhere Man
8 - In my life
9 - Girl
10 - Sgt Pepper's lonely hearts club band + With a little help from my friends + Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds
And that's just for starters. Like I said, all mandatory.
Ringo rocks.
It came out in 1966. Yes, they didn't have anything more than tape recorders and put this together with tape loops played backwards. They didn't have synths or multitrack editing. Before the album "Revolver" the Beatles were entertainers doing pop songs. But anything they released went to #1 and, from Revolver on, they used that popularity and their innovative musical talent to send out serious messages. Still, they retained their polish, though a lot of their work (Sgt.Pepper and Magical Mystery Tour....) is full of satire. Some lyrics in this song are taken from the Tibetan Book of the Dead----and was called "The Void." But Ringo suggested "Tomorrow Never Knows" which sounded like the title to a James Bond movie (very popular at the time). Saying the Beatles wrote songs is like saying Shakespeare wrote stories....it's sort of correct.....
Didn't know about this extended mix. It's great! Wish it was longer
Sadly, this was not done by the Beatles- someone else added extra at the beginning. It kind of upsets the balance which they and their excellent producer George Martin arranged.
If you love this, you need to try the White Album.
this is not the Beatles...this is some bullshit someone did
It's a remix of the Beatles original and done very well. Age 69, I like it a lot
@@cuebj I hate it...
iS bull...
@@nasserhafes3021 .... Never, never, never remix Classic Rock.. EVER!! I hate it too.
There are many more songs that will amaze you.
Yes Pet you'll find Strawberry Fields Forever , I Am The Walrus , I'm Only Sleeping , Being For The Benefit Of Mr Kite , Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds , Come Together , Glass Onion , A Day In The Life , Blue Jay Way , Long Long Long , She Said She Said , Flying and also The Inner Light if you fancy the Psychedelic hits ! 🔥🌈👁️🤡👽🎱
Oh don't listen to Revolution 9 whatever you do ! Helter Skelter maybe but definately not Revolution 9 !!! 👁️🎱
It’s always been called psychedelia but it can also be considered pop music Surrealism which already existed in all the arts, even movies.
It was a cool transfer into pop.
@@johnbyrnes7912
Maybe she’s into sound collage and sound art - especially a 1968 example 😉
But you’re right it’s not a song - it fair to call it trippy 🫨
beautiful, beautiful, beautiful :)
This is some extended mix I've never heard. The Stones song "2,000 Light Years From Home" is probably the most psychedelic song of the Summer Of Love. ('67) It was the "B" side of "She's A Rainbow".
the Stones were always copying the Beatles' ideas for a while.
Great Beatles!
"Blue Jay Way" is nice and trippy too..!
Next reaction: It's All Too Much
this song is a reflection of their time spent in India looking for "enlightenment" as all human beings do {cognizant human beings}, a musical reflection to the questions we all ask , who are we , why are we and where are we , they also "discovered the sit-tar played by a guy named robbie , but that's a story for another day , also featured in some of their music . the beatles reflected the mind of their generation in some pretty damn good music.