Bob Dylan singing Waiting For You @ Cordoba, Spain – July 9, 2015
I never dreamed it could be
A someone made just for me.
When I’m letting her have her way,
I’m here to see what she has to say.
Aw, the poor girl always wins the day.
I’m stayin’ ahead of the game,
And she’s a-doin’ the same,
And the whiskey flyin’ into my head.
The fiddler’s arm has gone dead,
And talk is beginning to spread
Wonderful performance.
35th Guitar Festival
Theatre Axerquia
Cordoba, Spain
July 9, 2015
Bob Dylan – vocal & piano
Tony Garnier – bass
George Recile – drums
Stu Kimball – rhythm guitar, maracas
Charlie Sexton on lead guitar
Donnie Herron – banjo, electric mandolin, pedal steel, lap steel
“Mystery Train” is one of Presley’s most haunting songs, a stark blues number that sounds ancient but was actually first cut only two years before by Memphis blues singer Junior Parker. Presley recorded it with the groove from the flip side of the same Parker single, “Love My Baby,” and Sun producer Phillips’ taut, rubbery echo effect made guitarist Scotty Moore’s every note sound doubled. Presley added a final verse — “Train . . . took my baby, but it never will again” — capped by a celebratory falsetto whoop that transformed a pastoral about death into a song about the power to overcome it.
~rollingstone.com
Train arrive, sixteen coaches long
Train arrive, sixteen coaches long
Well that long black train got my baby and gone
Train train, comin’ ’round, ’round the bend
Train train, comin’ ’round the bend
Well it took my baby, but it never will again (no, not again)
Train train, comin’ down, down the line
Train train, comin’ down the line
Well it’s bringin’ my baby, ’cause she’s mine all, all mine
(She’s mine, all, all mine)
I like ‘Across the Universe,’ too. … It’s one of the best lyrics I’ve written. In fact, it could be the best, I don’t know. It’s one of the best; it’s good poetry, or whatever you call it, without chewin’ it, it stands. See, the ones I like are the ones that stand as words without melody, that don’t have to have any melody. It’s a poem, you know; you could read ’em. „
—John Lennon, “Lennon Remembers” interview in Rolling Stone, 1971
‘Across The Universe’ is one of John’s great songs. It had special words. „
—Paul McCartney, Many Years From Now, 1997
After the aggressive sarcasm of I AM THE WALRUS, it is sad to find Lennon, some months and several hundred acid trips later, chanting this plaintively babyish incantation. His most shapeless song, ACROSS THE UNIVERSE, like IN MY LIFE and NOWHERE MAN, came out of a mentally drained state in the early hours of the morning: a trancelike succession , of trochees which presently extended to three verses. Lennon was impressed with this lyric, trying on several later occasions to write in the same metre. Sadly, its vague pretensions and listless melody are rather too obviously the products of acid grandiosity
rendered gentle by sheer exhaustion.
~Ian MacDonald (Revolution in the Head: The Beatles’ Records and the Sixties)
I strongly disagree with MacDonald on this one.
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“Across the Universe” is written by John Lennon, and credited to Lennon–McCartney. The song first appeared on the various artists’ charity compilation album No One’s Gonna Change Our World in December 1969, and later, in different form, on Let It Be, the group’s final released album.
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During the February 1968 recording sessions, Spike Milligan dropped into the studio and, on hearing the song, suggested the track would be ideal for release on a charity album he was organising for the World Wildlife Fund. At some point in 1968, the Beatles agreed to this proposal. In January 1969, the best mono mix was remixed for the charity album.In keeping with the “wildlife” theme of the album, sound effects of birds were added to the beginning and end.The original (mono) mix from February 1968 is 3:37 minutes in length. After the effects were added, the track was sped up so that even with 20 seconds of effects, it is only 3:49. Speeding up the recording also raised the key to E-flat.By October 1969, it was decided that the song needed to be remixed into stereo. This was done by Geoff Emerick immediately prior to the banding of the album. “Across the Universe” was first released in this version on the Regal Starline SRS 5013 album, No One’s Gonna Change Our World, in December 1969.
This version was issued on three Beatle compilation albums, the British version of Rarities, the different American version of Rarities and the second disc of the two-CD Past Masters album.
No One’s Gonna Change Our World/Past Masters version
We were sitting in the studio and we made it up out of thin air … we started to write words there and then … when we finished it, we recorded it at Apple Studios and made it into a song to roller-coast by.
~Paul McCartney (press release to promote the single)
That’s a better version of ‘Lady Madonna’. You know, a potboiler rewrite… I’ve always thought there was this underlying thing in Paul’s ‘Get Back.’ When we were in the studio recording it, every time he sang the line ‘Get back to where you once belonged,’ he’d look at Yoko.
~John Lennon (Playboy interviews, Sept 1980)
McCartney’s GET BACK, which in April became The Beatles’ nineteenth British single, seems to have originated as a country blues in the style of Canned Heat’s hits ‘On The Road Again’ and ‘Going Up The Country’. (The musical links are tenuous, but McCartney liked both records and busked ‘Going Up The Country’ in the studio the night before starting work on GET BACK.)
~Ian MacDonald (Revolution in the Head: The Beatles’ Records and the Sixties)
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“Get Back” was recorded by the Beatles and written by Paul McCartney (though credited to Lennon-McCartney) , originally released as a single on 11 April 1969 and credited to “The Beatles with Billy Preston.”A different mix of the song later became the closing track of Let It Be (1970), which was the Beatles’ last album released just after the group split. The single version was later issued on CD on the second disc of the Past Masters compilation.
Get Back (Single Version)
The single version of the song contains a tape echo effect throughout and a coda after a false ending, with the lyrics “Get back Loretta / Your mommy’s waiting for you / Wearing her high-heel shoes / And her low-neck sweater / Get back home, Loretta.” This does not appear on the album version; the single version’s first LP appearance would come three years later on the 1967–1970 compilation. This version also appeared in the albums 20 Greatest Hits, Past Masters and The Beatles 1. It was also included in the original line-up of the proposed Get Back album that was scheduled to be released during the fall of 1969.