Heres a small list of songs Ministry - Over The Shoulder John O'Brien Docker - Freak Out (Extended) Indo Tribe - Owl (Can You See Me Mix) The Rolling Stones - Miss You
I was always disappointed by the album version, I knew there was guitar in it but for reasons unknown it’s just gone 😐 Love the new remastered album with the other takes of this
At 8:30, George says something like "Elmore James ain't got nothing on this ferrick (?)" What is he saying? When I was 11 in 1969, I listened with my brother to the 45 rpm version of this, and I remember at the time George saying it on the record. It was the first time I heard the name Elmore James. I remember it since my older brother sneered, saying, "Elmore James is much better than this"--and I thought, "Who is Elmore James?" But I don't understand the last word. "Record"? "Ferrick"? Is he saying John is a "fairy"? It was the 45 rpm. Not said on any LP version as far as I know. Some score says "Elmore James got nothin' on this baby" but "baby" is not what I hear. George gives two more asides: "Go, Johnny, go" and "There go the twelve-bar blues." But I don't recall if these are on the 45 rpm version that I heard in late 1969. George may be mocking John's simplistic slide playing when George mentions Elmore James (king of slide guitar in the 1950s). But Elmore was a master of only a few slide guitar licks--a limited guitar player. George might mock John's playing (I'm not sure--not mocking?), but on the whole I view John as a more versatile and accomplished guitarist than Elmore James.
Hear the paper rattling on the piano strings!
0:00 - Drums
2:20 - Piano
4:40 - Acoustic guitar (intro) & lap steel guitar
7:09 - Vocals
Wheres the bass?
@@marcobianchi1605 No bass part was recorded for the song.
@@marcobianchi1605 read the beatles wiki pages rather than wikipedia itself, because its much more accurate than wikipedia is
Love Lennon’s lap steel work on this! Pretty cool how he catches that little bass lick leading into each verse :)
Georges Voice is Beautiful Man!
What a WONDERFUL THINK!
Love the piano dampened by maybe paper or something ?
good video bro what program do you use
I extract the channels of the 5.1 mix and further isolate it using phase cancellation and AI
how do you achieve this? do you take song requests? i have a lot of songs that ive always wanted to isolate like this
It depends on the song. What songs are you looking to hear the isolated things?
Heres a small list of songs
Ministry - Over The Shoulder
John O'Brien Docker - Freak Out (Extended)
Indo Tribe - Owl (Can You See Me Mix)
The Rolling Stones - Miss You
after listening to this for a long time, i just realized that there’s no bass in this track.. interesting
I was always disappointed by the album version, I knew there was guitar in it but for reasons unknown it’s just gone 😐
Love the new remastered album with the other takes of this
Listen to the naked version
At 8:30, George says something like "Elmore James ain't got nothing on this ferrick (?)"
What is he saying? When I was 11 in 1969, I listened with my brother to the 45 rpm version of this, and I remember at the time George saying it on the record. It was the first time I heard the name Elmore James. I remember it since my older brother sneered, saying, "Elmore James is much better than this"--and I thought, "Who is Elmore James?"
But I don't understand the last word.
"Record"?
"Ferrick"?
Is he saying John is a "fairy"?
It was the 45 rpm. Not said on any LP version as far as I know.
Some score says "Elmore James got nothin' on this baby" but "baby" is not what I hear.
George gives two more asides: "Go, Johnny, go" and "There go the twelve-bar blues." But I don't recall if these are on the 45 rpm version that I heard in late 1969.
George may be mocking John's simplistic slide playing when George mentions Elmore James (king of slide guitar in the 1950s). But Elmore was a master of only a few slide guitar licks--a limited guitar player. George might mock John's playing (I'm not sure--not mocking?), but on the whole I view John as a more versatile and accomplished guitarist than Elmore James.
It definitely is “Elmore James got nothing on this, baby!”
Is that a piano only or there's also a banjo?
It's a piano with paper placed on top of the strings, giving it that sound.
@@alexandrabeewow interesing