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Beatles songs love me do

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If you do that we will not be able to send you any of this unless you re-subscribe. Thus, for many years the only extant recorded copies were the red label Parlophone 45 rpm vinyl records pressed in 1962.

It was just Lennon and McCartney sitting down without either of us having a particularly original idea. The Ultimate Beatles Encyclopedia.



The song was an early Lennon-McCartney composition from 1958, although it wasn't recorded by the group for another four years. Love Me Do was completely co-written. It might have been my original idea but some of them really were 50-50s, and I think that one was. It was just Lennon and McCartney sitting down without either of us having a particularly original idea. We loved doing it, it was a very interesting thing to try and learn to do, to become songwriters. I think why we eventually got so strong was we wrote so much through our formative period. Love Me Do was our first hit, which ironically is one of the two songs that we control, because when we first signed to EMI they had a publishing company called Ardmore and Beechwood which took the two songs, Love Me Do and , and in doing a deal somewhere along the way we were able to get them back. Introducing our own numbers started round Liverpool and Hamburg. Love Me Do, one of the first ones we wrote, Paul started when he must have been about 15. It was the first one we dared to do of our own. It was quite hard to come in singing Love Me Do. We thought our numbers were a bit wet. But we gradually broke that down and decided to try them. John Lennon Anthology As well as being their debut single, the band also recorded Love Me Do eight times for the BBC. A version from 10 July 1963, recorded for the Pop Go The Beatles programme, is available on Live At The BBC. The first release single of Love Me Do featured Andy White, but the second release featured Ringo. The Andy White version is the version with the tambourine and the version without the tambourine is with Ringo. Andy White actually played in two songs naming Love Me Do and P. You can clearly hear the difference in the drum beating style if you compare these two songs from the Please Please Me album to other songs where Ringo played in. Regarding Love Me DO: Which of the three do you prefer? But the best version of the song, for me, is Past Masters. But then, that was way before the Past Masters. BTW, there is a great youtube with segments of all 3 versions, comparing them, with some commentary by some drummer. That is a daft thing to say. Isaw him in a interview talk about singing the long do in love me do. This was because he was use to John singing it so great and was nervous to take over. He was nervous I read that originally John sang the lead but when they decided to use the harmonica at the same time as the vocal solo, George Martin told Paul to sing it. Paul was so nervous he pointed to George Harrison and said let him sing it. I guess Harrison proved him wrong later on. Good song but not one of their best. For purists like me its great that there was no stereo version of Love Me Do. So George Martin would have been most keen to closely supervise the final mixes of the mono versions of the songs because these would be listened to by the vast majority of the record buying public. He may have even farmed out the stereo mixing to an assistant or if he did do it himself it would not have been a meticulous process. All that changed with Sgt Pepper although even here to my ears the mono mix is the superior sound. However it was totally different in the US. Also worth noting, the mono mixes available in North America were not necessarily the same as the UK mono mixes. It would be great if someone drew together all of these alternate mixes onto one album. I find it interesting that they even exist. If you listen to each pressing they ALL have the Ringo version. Could you and Mark Lewisohn both be correct? He said that EMI destroyed the four-track master tape of the Ringo version, which implies that in 1963 they no longer thought it was good enough to use. BTW, you must have heard this fact around 73,000,000,000 times. I feel sorry for you! Everything before was done on 2-Track. The Please Please Me album was recorded in a day and there are no know re-take of the songs of the album with the exception of Love Me Do. As I remember, they recorded twist and shout in one go for the last time because John can only sing one last song on that session before his vocal chords rip apart. When Parlophone set about compiling the Please Please Me album, the Ringo version was unavailable. It was in Canada. I find it interesting how simple this song is, but how much different it could be in arrangement. I wonder was it different in studio. Same title, different song, released ironically on Capitol here in the US Capitol 3603 to be precise. It re-opened my eyes in the simplest purest way. John is the star of this song with his lead vocals throughout the verses and instantly recognizable harmonica riff. This is the trend now….. I loved records, 8-tracks, cassettes and then CDs. But I will never be foolish enough to say 8-tracks were better than CDs. Besides, they are all just blank canvases, and only as good as the material put on them. But as technology improves, so does the potential for cleaner, more pristine sound reproduction. To say otherwise is to be a slave to the current fad of denouncing everything new and glorying everything old. On the version on the PLEASE PLEASE ME album youtube link below , if you listen very carefully to the following you will hear a slight flaw in the pitch on the word DO sung by Paul in one place. Just after the harmonica solo, Paul and Jon sing the words LOVE ME DO. On the word DO, Paul slightly over pitches the intended G note. It may have been beacuse of the first experience adjusting to singing on pitch while listeneing to yourself on headphones and a combination of coming back in after a break in singing while John blew his solo. Love Me Do: 3 recordings released 1. Andy White on drums Ringo on tambourine released on Please Please Me LP 2. It seems unlikely that John would have sung the line if it was all Paul, as John essentially stated, first in 1972 and again in 1980.

I gusto it's because of that that George Martin used Andy White, the 'professional', when we went down a week later to record Love Me Do. He was nervous I read that originally John sang the lead but when they decided to use the harmonica at the same time as the glad solo, George Martin told Paul to sing it. Retrieved 5 October 2012. Especially considering how powerful their 'Meet the Beatles' is. The Beatles were keen to record their own material, something which was almost unheard of at that time, and it is generally accepted that it is to Lucifer Martin's credit that they were allowed to float their own ideas. Love Me Do was completely co-written. The exception was Magical Mystery Tour. That was not the case in other countries, where extra singles and albums with different track listings were released.

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released December 15, 2018

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