Very nice lesson. It's so good to see what both guitar parts are playing. It all makes so much more sense and allows me to pick and choose which part to play. Thanks for the fine effort!
My Beatles Compleat transcripts say Bm rather than B7. I know the original by Smokey Robinson goes major. I find it hard to tell on the Beatles version. Any thoughts?
Hi, thanks for the query. I've gone back and had another listen and I'm fairly certain that it is a B7 that comes after the D. Published sheet music is often inaccurate for the Beatles' guitar parts (though it does give a good starting point for learning a song).
@@jonathanchacon1248 it's the two chord. It usually points back at the 5 as in jazz. You could make it a minor, major or seventh chord. What ever gets you off for the occasion.
Love it. Much appreciated you breaking it down.
Beatles did a marvelous cover of this. Solid tutorial thank you. Been wanting to play this for some time now.
Great, I’m glad it was helpful, thanks!
Very nice lesson. It's so good to see what both guitar parts are playing. It all makes so much more sense and allows me to pick and choose which part to play. Thanks for the fine effort!
Thank you for the comment, I really appreciate it!
Good lesson , you have a great talent . Thx Bernie
Thank you, that is very kind of you!
good stuff! thanks
great video my friend, this is very useful to me
Thank you, I’m pleased it was useful!
SUPERB!!
My Beatles Compleat transcripts say Bm rather than B7. I know the original by Smokey Robinson goes major. I find it hard to tell on the Beatles version. Any thoughts?
Hi, thanks for the query. I've gone back and had another listen and I'm fairly certain that it is a B7 that comes after the D. Published sheet music is often inaccurate for the Beatles' guitar parts (though it does give a good starting point for learning a song).
Cantona
My question is what key is this song in?
Hi, this song is in the key of A Major, thanks.
@@cmsfanclub If it’s in A major, what does the presence of the B7 imply?
@@jonathanchacon1248 it's the two chord. It usually points back at the 5 as in jazz. You could make it a minor, major or seventh chord. What ever gets you off for the occasion.
@@michaelgiordano3757 I always thought that if the two was a major then it implies we are in a minor key
@@jonathanchacon1248 careful using the term always when talking about music. It doesn't have to follow rules like that.
Can you zoom in for a better understanding thanks
Thanks for the feedback, I will try and make future videos clearer.
Zoom in wouldbe nice 😁