Got to get you into my life was also recorded in the 60s by Cliff Bennett and the Rebel Rousers. Their version got into the UK Top Ten. It's good. You should listen to it.
if you listen with attention - this was the first "Drum & Bass " Drum Loop, combined with the first sound samples. - it was and is my favorite track on Revolver.
Its funny. When statements are made like that it almost sounds unbelievable even to me and I was there for it all. Its all true. We were blessed growing up with them.
@@Friend_Of_The_Muse Yes! It sounds weird all these years later, but it’s true. Beyond their studio experiments, no other artist had EVER sold so many records! All the British record “stamping plants” had to be retooled! They were a huge financial windfall for the Brits, and a huge part of their recovery, even 20 years after the war. At one point, the UK government took over 90% of the revenues made by the Beatles! Keep on rock’n! Peace (from another old dude) lol
Not everything. Much of Paul and John's motivation and inspiration for their "revolutionary" music was them trying to one up their contemporaries. They often seem to be the first for this or that technique, because they were bigger (and better) than the artists they were copying.
@@notabritperse The producer & engineer are the vital ingredients to any quality group's sound - they can make or break a group. Without Rick Rubin most well known 80's bands would have faded into obscurity before they ever entered a studio. The Beatles would never have achieved what they did without _G.M._
Here is the thing and take it from a guy who was 13 in 1963. All of the music from Revolver on would have never happened without I Want To Hold Your Hand and She Loves You and the rest of their early work. It gave them the freedom to do what they wanted. They were the first band that legitimized recording their own compositions. Mos music was written and given to the artists to record. They were revolutionary in so many ways. They were one of the biggest gifts this 75 year old man ever received.
Can you imagine hearing Tomorrow Never Knows in 1966??? No one had ever heard anything like it. It's a trip without the acid, even better with it. They were playing with backward tape loops, which all had to be done by hand then - cut the tape, turn it upside down, patch it into the rest of the tape, play it again, etc.
It’s true, the technology had to get this easy to trigger it. Even I, who knew almost every damn note they recorded😉 and I haven’t listened in ~40 years, am astonished how PERFECT their production always was - a big reason they sound recorded yesterday. ✊🏽
Got To Get You Into My Life was Paul's song with him singing and was his ode to pot. They'd been introduced to pot by Bob Dylan around the summer of 1964. As far as the horns go, Paul said he'd been listening to artists like Joe Tex, Wilson Pickett, Sam and Dave, etc., and wanted to get a sound like that. I absolutely *adore* Tomorrow Never Knows. It's title came from one of Ringo's whimsical sayings (such as "a hard day's night") and the lyrics/vocals came from John's taking a bit from the Tibetan Book of the Dead. It was quite an elaborate production; each went off to create a bunch of musical tapes of whatever they wanted to play; then took the tape spools and slowly wound them out in order to splice together. Some of the spools were hand-held, some held up by pencils through the center of the spool, so that they'd have space to run them together. George Martin would manipulate the sound, slowing parts down, speeding them up, etc. For example, the bits that sound (to my ear) like seagulls squawking are actually sped up bits of Paul laughing. The final product became the avant-garde mosaic you heard. True Art!
Agree. Paul said he was the one directing the tape splices arrangment, Ringo's drums were miked in an unusual fashion made them sound huge, I want to say by Geoff Emerick but can't recall offhand. And they said they wanted a one chord song, people disagree on this since there is a clear Bflat.
No matter how deep you dive, this album gets better and crazier and more to appreciate. I’ve been listening and finding out about Revolve4 for decades but just realised the backward guitar solos on Tomorrow Never Knows (the album closer) are backward tape samples of the guitar solos from Taxman (the album opener). That ALONE is enough to blow your mind … bookending the album like that with a mirror image riff, but add in the Ringo drum innovation, the sampled symphony orchestras and classical Indian music and John’s lyrics inspired by the Tibetan Book of the Dead… shiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit these guys were centuries ahead of their time. We are still catching up!
Guys...f***** great reaction .... Tomorrow Never Knows... 1966 ... Nineteen sixty f****** six !!!! Your reaction was mint in 2024, but imagine buying the album back in '66 and the stylus hits that track ...imagine the reaction back then. The ultimate timeless song. It could be released today and folk would think it was written today. I keep saying it...The Beatles GOAT and they f****** knew it !!!!!!!
The crazy thing is there's less than 3 years between The Beatles writing songs like I Want To Hold Your Hand and Tomorrow Never Knows. It's the evolution that's the wild to me. Usually when bands hit it big they stick with a winning formula, or they maybe deviate slightly. Beatles 1963 and 1966 were like completely different bands.
Extremely ground breaking song - backwards guitar, tape loops, unique beat, manipulated vocals, and on and on. I was waiting for you to get to this song. There wasn't anything like this before. No, we all never made it home after Tomorrow Never Knows.
06:52..."hold on, I'm in a trance!" 🤣😎 This has been my favorite Beatles song for a very very long time and it's so cool to see you all getting off on it too.
“Tomorrow Never Knows” was a quantum leap forward and a glimpse of what was to come. There’s a little of everything on this album, including one of the most beautiful vocal performances ever, for my money, with Paul’s “Here There and Everywhere” This album was truly the bridge to the future!
I was all of 21 yrs old when the EWF version came out. As a Black girl who listened to all genres of music, I had to argue many times with those who looked like me that this was a remake of a Beatles song...
Tomorrow Never Knows freaked out everyone when they first heard it in 1966. Kudos to George Martin for all that went into making it, that was not normal music, neither to make, produce or listen to. They were beyond genius and opened up everyone's eyes and ears to future possibilities. Great album! 🎵🎸🎤🎹🎷🎶
I so, so love you guys! You get it. You both recognise genius when you hear it. Two hip hop dudes vibing on tomorrow never knows gives me so much hope for music. Great reaction. Totally dope.
Tomorrow Never Knows was so far ahead of its time. It just blew us away. Little did we know that it was a harbinger to come. No one had any idea that Sgt. Pepper held in store.
"No one mentioned this!" Love it!! Definitely puts one in a trance. Imagine listening to this album when it first came out. It blew my mind. One of my favorite Beatle albums.
With 'Tomorrow Never Knows' the Beatles really embrace experimental and eastern/Indian music. No synthesizers. Sitar. Recorded on only 4 tracks. Essentially playing tape loops, reversing them, slowing them down, speeding them up. All by the most popular 'Pop' group in the world then. It's a real watershed moment in popular music. True masterwork. Thanks for the reactions. Was waiting to see what you had to say about this. Glad you liked it.
At the end of last year I went to Paul's show on the "Got Back" tour here in Brazil. Seeing him sing "Got To Get You Into My Life" live was a unique experience, the magic of a Beatle is still there ❤
I still think Revolver is my favourite Beatles album, it's the one I always come back to. Tight, great tunes, flows from beginning to end...and topped off with Tomorrow Never Knows at the end. Marvellous. The white album is for losing yourself in, Abbey Road is the warm goodbye, Rubber Soul and Sg. Pepper have some bangers. Ach, they're all genius. But this is the one for me.
This album (and Rubber Soul right before it) is where you see The Beatles actually CHANGING young peoples taste in music. You don’t know it now but back then, (I was in college when this was released) we would rush to get a new Beatles album and have a “listening party” with several others. When they started their “big change”, we would look at one another and go “what the hell was THAT?”. After more listens and lots of radio play, within weeks everyone loved it. You had to, it was The Beatles. They were the gurus of popular music. They literally changed our taste in music and made us much more sophisticated consumers of it.
This is why bands like Pink Floyd regarded the Beatles as Music GODS! When a band has gone past "really good" to reach "great" those future Music Gods who follow do so by building on the foundations u built.
None of the noise of today could not even begin to be compared to this. Done with a speck of the technology we have today, . . . . . and there are actually about 100, ONE HUNDRED MORE songs just as innovative and beautiful.
Tomorrow Never Knows was the first time looping had been used. When I was researching this song during my Masters Degree, I discovered that many hip-hop producers credit this song with the birth of hip-hop. Funnily enough, the drums aren't looped, that's pure Ringo playing live.
For eight years they led the way. Tomorrow Never Knows could be released today and considered way ahead of its time. One more unrelated fact that will always astound me- when they broke up in 1970, none of them were 30 yet.
Ian Paice developed the drum pattern on Deep Purple's song The Mule after listening to Ringo's pattern on Tomorrow Never Knows. What an incredible song to be released in 1966!!! In my view this is one of the first (if not the very first) progressive rock songs. It set the stage for everything coming after it. Astounding achievement!
Frank I love this song Tomorrow Never Knows. ( who wouldn't ❓) Just for kicks I scrolled on UA-cam to see if anyone COVERED it .. YES ❗ Check out LOS LOBOS performing this song Live. Bravo❗
Tomorrow Never Knows is the first psychedelic pop song and was recorded several months before before both Hendrix and Cream debut albums and a year before Pink Floyd's debut. The production they used was a huge technological leap forward.
Rubber Soul (which came out in 1965, one year before Revolver), would be an excellent choice to do next. The two albums are often mentioned in the same breath.
The Beatles were Motown fans. James Jameson of the funk brothers was one of Paul's influences. Tomorrow Never Knows was the first song recorded and John told the producer and engineer that he wanted to sound like the Dali lama chanting from a mountain top. This is my favorite Beatles album. I would go to Sargent Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band next because that was their next record.
Psychedelia at it's best. So far ahead of it's time. George played the guitar solos and they were recorded backwards to give you that weird eerie sound. Sooooo cool.
Paul McCartney wrote "Got To Get You Into My Life" in 1966 and he sings the song too. Paul wrote it, influenced by marijuana. John wrote "Tomorrow Never Knows" after reading "The Tibetan Book Of The Dead". The title of "TNK" is one of Ringo's sayings.
They say "Tomorrow never knows" one of the greatest musical achievements of all time! It's only ONE chord I believe, all the way through! They think it inspired "House" music too...Revolver & Rubber Soul right before it are their TWO BEST albums...hands down. Absolute genius..HAA...Che looks blown away!!
It's gorgeous and hypnotic.Now that I watched La & Che go into a Beatles trance 😊 I scrolled UA-cam to see if anyone COVERED it. Wow...check out LOS LOBOS performing this song Live 🔥🔥🔥
Ha ha, I saw the titles and I could not wait to see your reaction to "Tomorrow Never Knows". Ages beyond their era as always. The 1-chord song written by John, full of tracks played backwards!
Well, that was fun - watching you two young fellers getting your minds blown. Hah! We baby boomers lived through a magic time. Tomorrow Never Knows was the first psychedelic song of the 60's, brought to you by the GOAT.
Beetles with horns..yes.. Wow, man..this is about as McCartneyesque as a song could possibly be...and yeah..Sgt. Pepper is next..Tomorrow Never Knows is a psychedelic preview of it...
The EW&F version is from the Movie Sgt Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band. Also had Aerosmith doing COme Together and Peter Frampton on Long and Winding Road.
Everyone hated that movie, except for me who was a teenager at the time and 😍😍😍 Peter Frampton. In the days before MTV & music videos, I loved being able to see everyone perform w/o begging one of my older cousins to take me to a concert (which is how I saw Peter for the first time).
Great stuff gentlemen, it explains the despair of people when they heard the Beatles were breaking up. The "White" album or "Sgt Pepper" can't go wrong with either.
Fun fact... when the Beatles were in Hamburg, their former bass player, Stu Sutcliffe, hung out with a bass player and artist, Klaus Voormann, and his girlfriend Ingrid. Eventually she became Stu's girlfriend, but remained friends with Klaus. After Stu died of a brain tumor, Klaus remained a friend of the band, and invented the Beatles hairstyle that was a huge part of their public persona in their early days. This was when guys were still wearing crew cuts, and the Beatles started the long hair phenomenon. He is also the artist that drew the cover of Revolver, for which he received a Grammy, and many other covers. He later played in The Plastic Ono Band, and Manfred Mann's Earth Band, as well as a ton of session work. He has led a very interesting life.
More Revolver Reactions below:
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rumble.com/v4lovgc-the-beatles-and-your-bird-can-singfor-no-one.html
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rumble.com/v4pzq9f-the-beatles-i-want-to-tell-you.html
Revolver is the album where the Beatles became a serious band.
Have really enjoyed your explorations through this album!
Love your reactions to all the songs here!
Got to get you into my life was also recorded in the 60s by Cliff Bennett and the Rebel Rousers. Their version got into the UK Top Ten. It's good. You should listen to it.
I think you should do “The White Album” next. It has some of my favorite songs on it.
To me, Tomorrow Never Knows is the biggest leap forward in the history of music.
You’re not wrong. Purple Haze is up there too.
I agree! Even in 2024 it sounds soooooo different and progressive as a song.
Easily, 60 years ahead of its time!!!
if you listen with attention - this was the first "Drum & Bass " Drum Loop, combined with the first sound samples. - it was and is my favorite track on Revolver.
YES!!!! well said.
There is NO modern music industry without the Beatles. They did EVERYTHING first!
Exactly.
Its funny. When statements are made like that it almost sounds unbelievable even to me and I was there for it all. Its all true. We were blessed growing up with them.
@@Friend_Of_The_Muse Yes! It sounds weird all these years later, but it’s true. Beyond their studio experiments, no other artist had EVER sold so many records! All the British record “stamping plants” had to be retooled! They were a huge financial windfall for the Brits, and a huge part of their recovery, even 20 years after the war. At one point, the UK government took over 90% of the revenues made by the Beatles!
Keep on rock’n!
Peace (from another old dude) lol
@@cherrypickerguitars ✌
Not everything. Much of Paul and John's motivation and inspiration for their "revolutionary" music was them trying to one up their contemporaries. They often seem to be the first for this or that technique, because they were bigger (and better) than the artists they were copying.
The earth is over a billion years old. I was luck enough to be born at the same time as these lads. I got to experience it all, from beginning to end.
And you've got a big dong? Lucky bastard!
I agree, same for me!
Here here! 👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽
Yessir..me too
I think of this ALL THE TIME! How lucky are we?!
Even in 2024, "Tomorrow Never Knows" STILL sounds like it's from the future -- more than half a century after its release!!
I was born in 66, you know it lol 😂 😂
Gentlemen, Tomorrow Never Knows was decades ahead of its time! This is an apex tune!
Great comment - apex tune!
We still haven’t caught to it! Beatles were a gift from God! The Mozart of our time.
"Tomorrow Never Knows " is the beginning of Psychedelic Beatles.
I'd say "Rain" - which came out a couple of months earlier, though it was recorded during the same sessions in 1966,
I'd go with Rain
Rubber soul had psychedelia. Tomorrow never knows is the beginning of experimental/avant-garde music.
She Said She Said.
Rain was definitely the beginning
It's hard to believe that they went from I Want to Hold Your Hand to Tomorrow Never Knows in 2 years! Who does that?!
The Beatles and only the Beatles!
Their producer! Total studio band.
@@dancarter482 George Martin didn't have the ideas. He helped execute them.
LSD, that who.
@@notabritperse The producer & engineer are the vital ingredients to any quality group's sound - they can make or break a group. Without Rick Rubin most well known 80's bands would have faded into obscurity before they ever entered a studio. The Beatles would never have achieved what they did without _G.M._
So imagine in '66 as a 15 year-old hearing this for the first time! One truly WTF moment!
I remember.
@@freddylubin What was it like? Like entering another dimension perhaps?
Rubber Soul, which preceded this album, was the real beginning of the change.
This is a great album too
Rubber Soul, Revolver, Sgt Pepper, White Album....the greatest 4 album run ever!
I had them on 2 sides of an audio cassette, you can' t do one without the other. They turned a corner with those albums.
@@urbangardener66You have to have Abby Road in there! To leave that out WOW!!
Hard agree for this.
Tomorrow Never Knows....is the song that CHANGED everything!!!!!!
Boom
It's simply a masterpiece, which is why their albums are still being bought 50 years later.
She Loves You to this in basically 2 years, mind boggling.
It's mind blowing that Revolver is 1966. What a great record.
I was12 in 1966 when this came out, no one who listened to Revolver back then was quite the same after. Talk about ahead of their time...
Revolver is amazing.
Almost as good as The Best of The Beatles.
@@daverowntree5737 I prefer Wings, they're the band The Beatles could have been.
@@jabbawonger6572 LOL!
“Hold on, I’m in a trance” my dude feelin it and I’m here for it
Tomorrow Never Knows is so far ahead of its time its crazy to think it almost 60 years old.
Only the Beatles can drop that song with backwards guitars and shit! Crazy band!
Tomorrow never knows is so genius it’s amazing how modern their songs sound despite being recorded in 1966 on a 4 track. Amazing
Tomorrow never knows still sounds like the future, 66 is mind blowing 👌
There was absolutely nothing like this out then and it blew everybody away.
Beatles were not just a pop band . The pushed, were innovative, experimental and transformational!
Ringo killing it
Here is the thing and take it from a guy who was 13 in 1963. All of the music from Revolver on would have never happened without I Want To Hold Your Hand and She Loves You and the rest of their early work. It gave them the freedom to do what they wanted. They were the first band that legitimized recording their own compositions. Mos music was written and given to the artists to record. They were revolutionary in so many ways. They were one of the biggest gifts this 75 year old man ever received.
Airplay Beats is the best reaction channel on YT. Knowledgable, open to new things, and so much fun! Another terrific reaction!
100% !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Yeah I look forward to their updates. He said they have more Beatles coming. I told them they have to do a reaction on the Walrus. LOL
Oh yeah! Walrus, FOR SURE! Goo goo ga joob!
Yup
Agree!!!
Can you imagine hearing Tomorrow Never Knows in 1966??? No one had ever heard anything like it. It's a trip without the acid, even better with it. They were playing with backward tape loops, which all had to be done by hand then - cut the tape, turn it upside down, patch it into the rest of the tape, play it again, etc.
Even with all the super computerised electronic gimmicks in use today...they still could not create anything as revolutionary as TNK!...🤔
Tomorrow Never Knows is just one chord and signifies The Beatle’s beginning interest in psychedelia and Indian music.
A whole new world of Beatle fans is emerging, listening to the Greatest band ever, bar none. Enjoy.
It’s true, the technology had to get this easy to trigger it.
Even I, who knew almost every damn note they recorded😉 and I haven’t listened in ~40 years, am astonished how PERFECT their production always was - a big reason they sound recorded yesterday. ✊🏽
Got To Get You Into My Life was Paul's song with him singing and was his ode to pot. They'd been introduced to pot by Bob Dylan around the summer of 1964. As far as the horns go, Paul said he'd been listening to artists like Joe Tex, Wilson Pickett, Sam and Dave, etc., and wanted to get a sound like that. I absolutely *adore* Tomorrow Never Knows. It's title came from one of Ringo's whimsical sayings (such as "a hard day's night") and the lyrics/vocals came from John's taking a bit from the Tibetan Book of the Dead. It was quite an elaborate production; each went off to create a bunch of musical tapes of whatever they wanted to play; then took the tape spools and slowly wound them out in order to splice together. Some of the spools were hand-held, some held up by pencils through the center of the spool, so that they'd have space to run them together. George Martin would manipulate the sound, slowing parts down, speeding them up, etc. For example, the bits that sound (to my ear) like seagulls squawking are actually sped up bits of Paul laughing. The final product became the avant-garde mosaic you heard. True Art!
Great trivia, which I can verify.
@@CuriousGeorge1111 Thank you! I adore The Beatles.
Agree. Paul said he was the one directing the tape splices arrangment, Ringo's drums were miked in an unusual fashion made them sound huge, I want to say by Geoff Emerick but can't recall offhand. And they said they wanted a one chord song, people disagree on this since there is a clear Bflat.
No matter how deep you dive, this album gets better and crazier and more to appreciate. I’ve been listening and finding out about Revolve4 for decades but just realised the backward guitar solos on Tomorrow Never Knows (the album closer) are backward tape samples of the guitar solos from Taxman (the album opener). That ALONE is enough to blow your mind … bookending the album like that with a mirror image riff, but add in the Ringo drum innovation, the sampled symphony orchestras and classical Indian music and John’s lyrics inspired by the Tibetan Book of the Dead… shiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit these guys were centuries ahead of their time. We are still catching up!
Ode to pot.? Mmmmm...
The Beatles were unbelievable
Tomorrow Never Knows is when the Beatles lift off and get wonderfully weird❤❤❤❤
Goats… Paul’s voice was butter in this era… smooth and clean
Earth, Wind and Fire's cover of this ranks in the all time stratosphere of covers. This song is pure McCartney
They made a lame cover out of a great tune. I love Earth wind and fire but their version is boring and useless all in all. Totally forgettable.
@@fitless Each of us has our own humble opinion.
This is a John Lennon song. Inspired by reading the Tibetan Book Of The Dead. McCartney brought in the tape loops for the mixing session though.
@@dggydddy59 long proven to be a fable
@@fitlessNah, the original sounds incomplete. EW&F pulled a Jimi on that one
Applause also to Klaus Voorman, old friend from their Hamburg days, who designed the album artwork, AMAZING!!!
and also the Anthology covers
and won the Emmy for best album cover art
Don't forget, this is all analog. I think this was their first experiment with tape loops.
When this song came out, it was considered the first psychedelic song for the hippy era.
This was 12 years before Earth,Wind and Fire.
Most diverse band ever... that's why they still reach people today.
Guys...f***** great reaction .... Tomorrow Never Knows... 1966 ... Nineteen sixty f****** six !!!! Your reaction was mint in 2024, but imagine buying the album back in '66 and the stylus hits that track ...imagine the reaction back then. The ultimate timeless song. It could be released today and folk would think it was written today. I keep saying it...The Beatles GOAT and they f****** knew it !!!!!!!
Actually, I don’t think they did know it. When they broke up, people were heartbroken. John’s comment was, “We were just a rock and roll band.”
@vorkosigrrl6047 they knew it alright.
"Bucket full of soul"...classic
I love these 2 dudes. Such fun reactions
The crazy thing is there's less than 3 years between The Beatles writing songs like I Want To Hold Your Hand and Tomorrow Never Knows. It's the evolution that's the wild to me. Usually when bands hit it big they stick with a winning formula, or they maybe deviate slightly. Beatles 1963 and 1966 were like completely different bands.
Extremely ground breaking song - backwards guitar, tape loops, unique beat, manipulated vocals, and on and on. I was waiting for you to get to this song. There wasn't anything like this before. No, we all never made it home after Tomorrow Never Knows.
06:52..."hold on, I'm in a trance!" 🤣😎 This has been my favorite Beatles song for a very very long time and it's so cool to see you all getting off on it too.
Beatle records are like other band’s greatest hits albums. No filler.
Perfect post
“Tomorrow Never Knows” was a quantum leap forward and a glimpse of what was to come. There’s a little of everything on this album, including one of the most beautiful vocal performances ever, for my money, with Paul’s “Here There and Everywhere” This album was truly the bridge to the future!
To me, this is a transition album for the Beatles. The previous album (Rubber Soul) started it and this album cemented it.😊
There is an argument to be made that Tomorrow Never Knows is the most important musical composition of the twentieth century.
Tomorrow Never Knows was released 57 years ago, along with the album obviously, and it still sounds like the future
The Beatles were first to do almost everything in modern music.🎉
Tomorrow Never Knows is my favorite Beatles song of all time.
Beatles psychedelia mixed with Indian raga sitar music and backwards tape loops!!! PURE GENIUS FROM THE LADS!!!!!
I was all of 21 yrs old when the EWF version came out. As a Black girl who listened to all genres of music, I had to argue many times with those who looked like me that this was a remake of a Beatles song...
"Hold on, I'm in a trance!" What a perfect reaction😂😂😂 you two are the best, peace ✌🏻
Such an honest reaction… you guys are the standard!
Sgt. Pepper is the pinnacle of the Beatles
Tomorrow Never Knows freaked out everyone when they first heard it in 1966. Kudos to George Martin for all that went into making it, that was not normal music, neither to make, produce or listen to. They were beyond genius and opened up everyone's eyes and ears to future possibilities. Great album! 🎵🎸🎤🎹🎷🎶
The Beatles didn't just do it first, they wrote the song.😅
I was going to point this out, too!
the more I think about the more I think that Revolver is the Beatles best album
👍👍
They don’t have a best album they’re all hitting. They’re all an adventure!
The Beatles had MANY best albums, not just one!
I so, so love you guys! You get it. You both recognise genius when you hear it. Two hip hop dudes vibing on tomorrow never knows gives me so much hope for music. Great reaction. Totally dope.
Tomorrow Never Knows was so far ahead of its time. It just blew us away. Little did we know that it was a harbinger to come. No one had any idea that Sgt. Pepper held in store.
The Tibetan Book of the Dead - Tomorrow Never knows! Enough said. Couldn't stop playing this album when it first came out, especially this track.
'They strictly made this for those who do drugs' That is a great quote, thanks for coming out with that. Love it 👍
"No one mentioned this!" Love it!! Definitely puts one in a trance. Imagine listening to this album when it first came out. It blew my mind. One of my favorite Beatle albums.
Remember- these guys had to do all these sounds WIHTOUT digital technology! All this had to BE INVENTED
And they could spell WITHOUT auto correct!
I'm still not sure the world is ready for Tomorrow Never Knows
With 'Tomorrow Never Knows' the Beatles really embrace experimental and eastern/Indian music. No synthesizers. Sitar. Recorded on only 4 tracks. Essentially playing tape loops, reversing them, slowing them down, speeding them up. All by the most popular 'Pop' group in the world then. It's a real watershed moment in popular music. True masterwork. Thanks for the reactions. Was waiting to see what you had to say about this. Glad you liked it.
Tomorrow Never Knows reminds me that we are not living in a golden age of music right now
That gum you like is going to come back in style.
I feel so sorry for today’s kids.
Yeah...but what about Beyonce!...😂😂😂
@leethrelfalllt I stand corrected 😁
At the end of last year I went to Paul's show on the "Got Back" tour here in Brazil. Seeing him sing "Got To Get You Into My Life" live was a unique experience, the magic of a Beatle is still there ❤
The beatles were so high during the 60s , They even let ringo sing a couple of songs.
I still think Revolver is my favourite Beatles album, it's the one I always come back to. Tight, great tunes, flows from beginning to end...and topped off with Tomorrow Never Knows at the end. Marvellous. The white album is for losing yourself in, Abbey Road is the warm goodbye, Rubber Soul and Sg. Pepper have some bangers. Ach, they're all genius. But this is the one for me.
This album (and Rubber Soul right before it) is where you see The Beatles actually CHANGING young peoples taste in music. You don’t know it now but back then, (I was in college when this was released) we would rush to get a new Beatles album and have a “listening party” with several others. When they started their “big change”, we would look at one another and go “what the hell was THAT?”. After more listens and lots of radio play, within weeks everyone loved it. You had to, it was The Beatles. They were the gurus of popular music. They literally changed our taste in music and made us much more sophisticated consumers of it.
Tomorrow Never Knows is the song I start my workouts with, I swear. Its sooo uplifting and opening.
This is why bands like Pink Floyd regarded the Beatles as Music GODS!
When a band has gone past "really good" to reach "great" those future Music Gods who follow do so by building on the foundations u built.
None of the noise of today could not even begin to be compared to this. Done with a speck of the technology we have today, . . . . . and there are actually about 100, ONE HUNDRED MORE songs just as innovative and beautiful.
Wonder if the Beatles ever dropped acid? Listens to "Tomorrow Never Knows" That's an affirmative!
You don't need to wonder - all of them confirmed it. George's comments on it are worth searching out.
And now we're doing psychedelic therapy.
Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds, anyone?
Tomorrow Never Knows was the first time looping had been used. When I was researching this song during my Masters Degree, I discovered that many hip-hop producers credit this song with the birth of hip-hop. Funnily enough, the drums aren't looped, that's pure Ringo playing live.
That's a hook, for sure. Mind blowing, even 50+ years later. These guys are musical gods, like Jimi. Thank you for your great reactions. 🙏🙏
For eight years they led the way. Tomorrow Never Knows could be released today and considered way ahead of its time. One more unrelated fact that will always astound me- when they broke up in 1970, none of them were 30 yet.
Ian Paice developed the drum pattern on Deep Purple's song The Mule after listening to Ringo's pattern on Tomorrow Never Knows. What an incredible song to be released in 1966!!! In my view this is one of the first (if not the very first) progressive rock songs. It set the stage for everything coming after it. Astounding achievement!
Frank I love this song Tomorrow Never Knows. ( who wouldn't ❓) Just for kicks I scrolled on UA-cam to see if anyone COVERED it .. YES ❗ Check out LOS LOBOS performing this song Live. Bravo❗
Tomorrow Never Knows is the first psychedelic pop song and was recorded several months before before both Hendrix and Cream debut albums and a year before Pink Floyd's debut. The production they used was a huge technological leap forward.
I like the fact that the guitar "solo" riffs are mixed in reverse. Sounds great.
Rubber Soul (which came out in 1965, one year before Revolver), would be an excellent choice to do next. The two albums are often mentioned in the same breath.
The Beatles absolutely wrote this
A fantastic amount of growth from rubber soul to revolver to Sgt pepper. Just unreal.
The Beatles were Motown fans. James Jameson of the funk brothers was one of Paul's influences. Tomorrow Never Knows was the first song recorded and John told the producer and engineer that he wanted to sound like the Dali lama chanting from a mountain top. This is my favorite Beatles album. I would go to Sargent Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band next because that was their next record.
Though this song is more Stax inspired than Motown inspired.
Psychedelia at it's best. So far ahead of it's time. George played the guitar solos and they were recorded backwards to give you that weird eerie sound. Sooooo cool.
Magical Mystery Tour ❤
This band is on a level all by themselves. The great bands are on the next level down.
Paul McCartney wrote "Got To Get You Into My Life" in 1966 and he sings the song too. Paul wrote it, influenced by marijuana. John wrote "Tomorrow Never Knows" after reading "The Tibetan Book Of The Dead". The title of "TNK" is one of Ringo's sayings.
Proof that the pen is mightier than the sword, this album, changed, an entire generation. Thanks for giving the music, it's just props. Good job.
They say "Tomorrow never knows" one of the greatest musical achievements of all time!
It's only ONE chord I believe, all the way through! They think it inspired "House" music too...Revolver & Rubber Soul right before it are their TWO BEST albums...hands down. Absolute genius..HAA...Che looks blown away!!
True. It’s just C. They were inspired by Indian raga’s for this track
Tomorrow Never Knows is my favorite Beatles song!!! Waaaaaay ahead of its time despite being so psychedelic.
It's gorgeous and hypnotic.Now that I watched La & Che go into a Beatles trance 😊 I scrolled UA-cam to see if anyone COVERED it. Wow...check out LOS LOBOS performing this song Live 🔥🔥🔥
Ha ha, I saw the titles and I could not wait to see your reaction to "Tomorrow Never Knows". Ages beyond their era as always. The 1-chord song written by John, full of tracks played backwards!
Well, that was fun - watching you two young fellers getting your minds blown. Hah! We baby boomers lived through a magic time. Tomorrow Never Knows was the first psychedelic song of the 60's, brought to you by the GOAT.
Just another reason they are the greatest ever!!!!
They actually recorded Tomorrow Never Knows first before the other songs on this album.
Beetles with horns..yes..
Wow, man..this is about as McCartneyesque as a song could possibly be...and yeah..Sgt. Pepper is next..Tomorrow Never Knows is a psychedelic preview of it...
revolutionary sounds.
The EW&F version is from the Movie Sgt Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band. Also had Aerosmith doing COme Together and Peter Frampton on Long and Winding Road.
Everyone hated that movie, except for me who was a teenager at the time and 😍😍😍 Peter Frampton. In the days before MTV & music videos, I loved being able to see everyone perform w/o begging one of my older cousins to take me to a concert (which is how I saw Peter for the first time).
4:25 "That was a bucketful of soul" - perfect
Great stuff gentlemen, it explains the despair of people when they heard the Beatles were breaking up. The "White" album or "Sgt Pepper" can't go wrong with either.
Love the sketch of John on the cover, looking to the side. It’s a clue as to what’s on the album. Especially Tomorrow Never Knows.
Fun fact... when the Beatles were in Hamburg, their former bass player, Stu Sutcliffe, hung out with a bass player and artist, Klaus Voormann, and his girlfriend Ingrid. Eventually she became Stu's girlfriend, but remained friends with Klaus. After Stu died of a brain tumor, Klaus remained a friend of the band, and invented the Beatles hairstyle that was a huge part of their public persona in their early days. This was when guys were still wearing crew cuts, and the Beatles started the long hair phenomenon. He is also the artist that drew the cover of Revolver, for which he received a Grammy, and many other covers. He later played in The Plastic Ono Band, and Manfred Mann's Earth Band, as well as a ton of session work. He has led a very interesting life.