@tlamb1379 to be fair, only having experienced some of the songs, the plan was to check out a visual representation of their music. I just didn't know they weren't the ones who made the videos. I do now though
@@mjames4709 i always like to see an artist's visual work to see how they would tell the story of their song. Turns out it wasn't the artist who did the video
The song actually ends with the piano chord. That last part was an easter egg they put on the inner groove of the album for the people listening on cheaper players that don't automatically lift the needle before it hits that inner ring.
Yeah I knew about the note being the ending of the song. I was definitely thrown off by the last part of this video. And what's weird is this is from The Beatles' UA-cam channel, so you would think they wouldn't have the skipped version like that
Very did a very good job and did decent research that I did not know before! Thank you! I did not know there is a video with this song. I am 38 years old and grew up to this album when I was 12. I haven’t heard it in a good long while and I like how you let the song play out for as long as you did. I usually don’t like song reacts to songs I love because they interrupt the song but you did a nice job. I appreciate that. I do think that the last part is a song that is skipping on a turn table but I could be wrong but I always assumed that the record is playing backwards and skipping at the same time. I love this song because it’s heavy and dark but also cathartically peaceful and real about the trivial frustrations in a day in the life. I love this album so much. This song reminds me of the songs in the same album that come before it called She’s leaving home, Getting Better, and Fixing a hole. One of my other top favorite albums from the Beatles is Revolver and Rubber Soul. Its hard to believe those weren’t also influenced by psychedelics so perhaps they were as well, or not, I don’t know. Thanks for your react. I literally only found your video because I UA-cam searched 'rectify'. lol Take care!
Haha love it. I will say there are so many songs from The Beatles I have not heard. I don't think I ever listened to any album all the way through before either. Definitely check out the video for the song. It's... interesting to say the least. You can also check the reaction out for it in the playlist at the end of this video that has all the reactions for The Beatles I have done so far
@@AceofBadeReacts Awesome! I will! When it comes to full album reacts I would recommend Sgt Peppers, Revolver, and Pink Floyd's Dark Side of The Moon.. and if your into rock I recommend the concept albums of Mars Volta's De-Loused in the Comatorium and System of the Down's Toxicity. And for Electro I recommend Air's Moon Safari. Cheers!
@@AceofBadeReacts The last part was on the runout groove of the original vinyl record. I don't think it is a part of the song. The Guinness Book of Records was started by the brewery in 1954.
@billspencer9430 it did seem kind of disjointed, but bands have put experimental things on their records for decades so I didn't think anything of it. Oh so they are done by the same entity
British Beatle albums usually had 14 tracks on but American ones only had 12 because the American record company saved up the spare tracks to make extra albums. The British record company were not happy about this but there was nothing they could do about it. When the first CD copies of the albums come out the British version was released in America and Britain.
The american albums are often quite different with non-album singles like I Want To Hold Your Hand appearing on a US album. That whole thing with different releases between the US and the UK ended with Sgt. Pepper's.
@AceofBadeReacts both A Hard Day's Night and Help! are quite different albums. Side 1 of the UK versions are all songs from the respective movies and appear on their US counterparts. Side 2 of those albums have songs that appeared on other US albums (that very often didn't have a similarly titled UK counterpart) whereas the US versions of A Hard Day's Night and Help! are true soundtrack albums with the US version of Help! being the Beatles release with a sitar on there (and ANY indian influenced music in their discography), predating Norwegian Wood by several months.
I mean some of it was warranted if you go back and read the comments. But some of it got out of control. At least now that I did the research on The Beatles, I can now react to more without fear of being attacked (only slightly kidding)
It's not completely your fault about the previous reaction (which I didn't watch). Most Beatles "music videos" really suck and ruin the listening experience of some very special and classic music.
It's definitely worth a watch to see some of the stuff I didn't cover during this one. But yeah I learned that a lot of their music videos aren't actually theirs
There really wasn't music videos back then. Most of what you see were just random film clips put together for promotional purposes. Music videos and MTV were a decade away. If the video didn't make any sense it probably wasn't supposed to.
It can be said, that the Beatles started producing real music videos (Paperback writer, Rain, Strawberry fields forever, Penny Lane), which were sent to TV channels all over the world (since the Beatles eventually lost interest in regularly appearing in person on TV shows).
You don't know (no fault of yours) how the landscape for popular culture changed when the public responded to this breakthrough record with massive sales - the Beatles' influence jumped even higher. The record isn't sacred but its importance has been forgotten.
@@Sirala6 That's fine. That's, what a well-functioning brain should do. 😃 But it doesn't explain, why a world-famous record and its importance should've been forgotten. It's true, that Revolver and Abbey Road are now rated more highly, but I can't see, that Pepper has been forgotten, which isn't to be expected with Beatles stuff anyway.
What are your thoughts on audio only reactions? Did I make up for the previous reaction?
I wish everyone listening to music would skip the video. Thank you!
@tlamb1379 to be fair, only having experienced some of the songs, the plan was to check out a visual representation of their music. I just didn't know they weren't the ones who made the videos. I do now though
Well done you. Listening rather than watching is always the way to go. 👍🏻🇦🇺
I often find the videos distracting, making it had to focus on the music. "Strawberry Fields" is a good example of this - or at least it is to me.
@@mjames4709 i always like to see an artist's visual work to see how they would tell the story of their song. Turns out it wasn't the artist who did the video
Probably the best song on the best album ever.
The song actually ends with the piano chord. That last part was an easter egg they put on the inner groove of the album for the people listening on cheaper players that don't automatically lift the needle before it hits that inner ring.
Yeah I knew about the note being the ending of the song. I was definitely thrown off by the last part of this video. And what's weird is this is from The Beatles' UA-cam channel, so you would think they wouldn't have the skipped version like that
@@AceofBadeReacts Then they wouldn't get all these comments about it...
I used to play that single groove at the end to try and work out what they were saying
Very did a very good job and did decent research that I did not know before! Thank you! I did not know there is a video with this song. I am 38 years old and grew up to this album when I was 12. I haven’t heard it in a good long while and I like how you let the song play out for as long as you did. I usually don’t like song reacts to songs I love because they interrupt the song but you did a nice job. I appreciate that. I do think that the last part is a song that is skipping on a turn table but I could be wrong but I always assumed that the record is playing backwards and skipping at the same time. I love this song because it’s heavy and dark but also cathartically peaceful and real about the trivial frustrations in a day in the life. I love this album so much. This song reminds me of the songs in the same album that come before it called She’s leaving home, Getting Better, and Fixing a hole. One of my other top favorite albums from the Beatles is Revolver and Rubber Soul. Its hard to believe those weren’t also influenced by psychedelics so perhaps they were as well, or not, I don’t know. Thanks for your react. I literally only found your video because I UA-cam searched 'rectify'. lol Take care!
Haha love it. I will say there are so many songs from The Beatles I have not heard. I don't think I ever listened to any album all the way through before either. Definitely check out the video for the song. It's... interesting to say the least. You can also check the reaction out for it in the playlist at the end of this video that has all the reactions for The Beatles I have done so far
@@AceofBadeReacts Awesome! I will! When it comes to full album reacts I would recommend Sgt Peppers, Revolver, and Pink Floyd's Dark Side of The Moon.. and if your into rock I recommend the concept albums of Mars Volta's De-Loused in the Comatorium and System of the Down's Toxicity. And for Electro I recommend Air's Moon Safari. Cheers!
Toxicity is top notch. I have been checking out Pink Floyd performances as well. I don't think I've heard of the rest of those though
@@AceofBadeReacts The last part was on the runout groove of the original vinyl record. I don't think it is a part of the song.
The Guinness Book of Records was started by the brewery in 1954.
@billspencer9430 it did seem kind of disjointed, but bands have put experimental things on their records for decades so I didn't think anything of it. Oh so they are done by the same entity
This song is best listened to as the last 'chapter' of one 'story' -- as the last song of the album complete.
Valid. I still have yet to listen to the album all the way through. Perhaps one day
British Beatle albums usually had 14 tracks on but American ones only had 12 because the American record company saved up the spare tracks to make extra albums. The British record company were not happy about this but there was nothing they could do about it. When the first CD copies of the albums come out the British version was released in America and Britain.
The american albums are often quite different with non-album singles like I Want To Hold Your Hand appearing on a US album.
That whole thing with different releases between the US and the UK ended with Sgt. Pepper's.
Oh I see. I didn't even think to look at the track listings for releases like that
@AceofBadeReacts both A Hard Day's Night and Help! are quite different albums.
Side 1 of the UK versions are all songs from the respective movies and appear on their US counterparts.
Side 2 of those albums have songs that appeared on other US albums (that very often didn't have a similarly titled UK counterpart) whereas the US versions of A Hard Day's Night and Help! are true soundtrack albums with the US version of Help! being the Beatles release with a sitar on there (and ANY indian influenced music in their discography), predating Norwegian Wood by several months.
Yeah, Beatles fans can get... passionate... about their favorite band. I'd say most of us are pleasant people, though :)
I mean some of it was warranted if you go back and read the comments. But some of it got out of control. At least now that I did the research on The Beatles, I can now react to more without fear of being attacked (only slightly kidding)
Bummer cause, we already have!!!
@@joeblow-tp6gz what do you mean?
@@AceofBadeReacts You're screwed commies😀😀😀...That's the Trump Supreme court!!
@@AceofBadeReacts 3 Judges last time....how many this time....one...two???....oh not 3 again😜😜
@joeblow-tp6gz I'm still not understanding. Like people judging my reaction?
@@AceofBadeReacts Who cares about you??? Talking supreme court moron
It's not completely your fault about the previous reaction (which I didn't watch). Most Beatles "music videos" really suck and ruin the listening experience of some very special and classic music.
It's definitely worth a watch to see some of the stuff I didn't cover during this one. But yeah I learned that a lot of their music videos aren't actually theirs
There really wasn't music videos back then. Most of what you see were just random film clips put together for promotional purposes. Music videos and MTV were a decade away. If the video didn't make any sense it probably wasn't supposed to.
It can be said, that the Beatles started producing real music videos (Paperback writer, Rain, Strawberry fields forever, Penny Lane), which were sent to TV channels all over the world (since the Beatles eventually lost interest in regularly appearing in person on TV shows).
Yeah that's what we were told from that reaction. I have since learned about that
You don't know (no fault of yours) how the landscape for popular culture changed when the public responded to this breakthrough record with massive sales - the Beatles' influence jumped even higher. The record isn't sacred but its importance has been forgotten.
What makes you think, that the importance of this record has been forgotten?
@@braudabo My brain makes me think.
@@Sirala6 That's fine. That's, what a well-functioning brain should do. 😃
But it doesn't explain, why a world-famous record and its importance should've been forgotten. It's true, that Revolver and Abbey Road are now rated more highly, but I can't see, that Pepper has been forgotten, which isn't to be expected with Beatles stuff anyway.
@@braudabo Best expressed in an article: "One-third of Gen Z doesn't know who The Beatles are, new survey reveals" you will find it through Google : )
Forgotten? No. I think the younger generations just aren't aware of music from before the... I don't know.. the 80s? That's probably far enough back