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PLAYLIST JUNE 15 - Breakfast With The Beatles

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Page 1: PLAYLIST JUNE 15 - Breakfast With The Beatles

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Page 2: PLAYLIST JUNE 15 - Breakfast With The Beatles

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PLAYLIST JUNE 15th 2014 Special Guest Mike Viola & Heavy Friends

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9AM

Paul – Turning Out – NEW (Bonus)

The Beatles - I Saw Her Standing There – Please Please Me (McCartney-Lennon)

Lead vocal: Paul Recorded February 11, 1963. A Paul McCartney original, the song was written in one day

in September 1962 in the front parlor of 20 Forthlin Road, Allerton (the McCartney family from 1955 to 1964), with John Lennon helping with some of the lyrics. It was recorded under its working title, “Seventeen,” at the marathon recording session that

produced the majority of songs for the Beatles’ debut album. A fan favorite, the Beatles recorded “I Saw Her Standing There” eleven times for BBC Radio between March 1963

and May 1964. McCartney has said that his bass line was lifted almost note for note from the obscure Chuck Berry song “I’m Talking About You,” released by Berry in

February 1961. The Beatles performed “I’m Talking About You” at some of their club shows in 1962 and 1963. It is included on the “Live! At The Star Club” CD.

Specially selected by Capitol Records staff members to be the b-side of the American “I

Want to Hold Your Hand” single on Capitol in the U.S., replacing “This Boy” for the honor. The first song on the first Beatles LP.

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On U.S. albums: Introducing… The Beatles (with “1, 2, 3” inexplicably missing from Paul’s count-in) -

Vee-Jay LP Meet the Beatles! - Capitol LP

Paul McCartney – Put It There - Flowers in the Dirt ‘89 Written over two days during a skiing holiday in Zermatt, Switzerland. This was a

McCartney family saying – passed down by Paul’s father – which he was now passing down to his son, James. George Martin provides a lovely string

arrangement.

9.10 BREAK

The Beatles - Get Back - single version (Non-LP track) (Lennon-McCartney)

Lead vocal: Paul The Beatles’ nineteenth single release for EMI, and second on the Apple

Records label. The “Get Back” sessions, as the January 1969 recording sessions were now known, produced about 475 hours of film and 141 hours of audio tape that had to be sifted

through. But proper multi-track recordings weren’t made until the band was recording in the basement of the Beatles’ Apple headquarters between January 21-31, 1969.

Producer/Engineer Glyn Johns attempted to construct an album entitled “Get Back” from the tapes but his versions were rejected. The tapes were left dormant in the vault for a year, with the exception of a single (“Get Back”/“Don’t Let Me Down”). “Get Back” had been rehearsed and reworked throughout the January sessions, including over 30 takes of the song on January 27, 1969. Among those over 30 takes was the master take of

the song, but it did not include the familiar coda at the end. That would be recorded the following day and edited on to the January 27 master. Like John Lennon’s “Don’t Let Me Down,” “Get Back” features Billy Preston on keyboards. The song is also notable as one of John’s best guitar solos. Rush-released as a single with the hope of being in stores in the UK on April 11, 1969, the single showed up a week later. Although the single did not list a producer credit, it did, for the first time on a Beatles single, list an artist in addition

to the Beatles: “THE BEATLES with Billy Preston” graced both sides of the single. “A great honor,” said Preston. The single debuted at number one on the Record Retailer

singles chart, holding another Apple single out of the top spot (Mary Hopkin’s “Goodbye,” written and produced by Paul McCartney). In America, the single was issued

by Capitol on May 5, 1969, and it topped the Billboard sales chart for five weeks. It is the first Beatles single released in stereo, but the stereo mixes were for the American

market, not the UK. The UK would have to wait until the next single release (“The Ballad Of John And Yoko”) to get its first stereo Beatles 45. Prior to this all previous Beatles

singles had been issued in mono.

The Beatles - You Won’t See Me - Rubber Soul (Lennon-McCartney)

Lead vocal: Paul

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Written entirely by Paul. Recorded in two takes on November 11, 1965, at the final recording session for the “Rubber Soul” album. The song is notable for Paul’s melodic

bass line, something new to rock and roll. Paul: “It was very Motown-flavored. It's got a James Jamerson feel. He was the Motown bass player, he was fabulous, the guy who

did all those great melodic bass lines. It was him, me and Brian Wilson who were doing melodic bass lines at that time.” Beatles roadie Mal Evans is credited on the album’s

back cover with playing Hammond organ on this track, but it is inaudible in the final mix. On U.S. album:

Rubber Soul - Capitol LP

The Beatles - Eleanor Rigby - Revolver (Lennon-McCartney)

Lead vocal: Paul The Beatles’ thirteenth single release for EMI’s Parlophone label.

Essentially a Paul McCartney solo composition, he had some help with the song’s storyline from John, George, Ringo and John’s childhood friend Pete Shotton at

Kenwood, John’s estate in Weybridge. This marks the first time a finished Beatles recording had no Beatle playing an instrument. The backing track, a haunting George Martin score, featured a double string quartet (four violins, two violas and two cellos) and was finished in 14 takes on April 28, 1966 with John and

Paul sitting in the control room. The title character had initially been called Daisy Hawkins, but later evolved into Eleanor Rigby. Paul says the name was based on

“Help!” actress Eleanor Bron and the name of a local business, Rigby & Evans Ltd., Wine & Spirit Shippers.

Paul McCartney – Somedays – Flaming Pie ‘97 Composed on March 18, 1994 while Linda was on a photo shoot in Kent (for one

of her cookbooks). Paul gave himself a “self-imposed mission” to complete a song in one-session. George Martin later provided the orchestral arrangement for

this emotional stunner.

The Beatles - You Never Give Me Your Money - Abbey Road (Lennon-McCartney)

Lead vocal: Paul The famous “Abbey Road” medley begins with Paul’s “You Never Give Me Your Money,” a song which itself consists of three segments. In Barry Miles’ “Many Years From Now,”

McCartney states that the first part of the song was him “directly lambasting Allen Klein’s attitude to us: no money, just funny paper, all promises and it never works out. It’s basically a song about no faith in the person.” The reference to “funny paper” was the numerous bank statements and other official looking documents that claimed they had stocks and bonds or money in various bank accounts, but to the band members it always seemed imaginary; they were rich on paper. The second part is a nostalgic bit about being out of college with money spent, leading to the third section, about an

optimistic escape (“Soon we’ll be away from here. Step on the gas and wipe that tear away”) inspired by Paul and Linda hitting the road to get away from it all. Recording

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began on May 6, 1969, at Trident Studios, with Paul on piano and offering a guide vocal marching the group through 36 takes.

The Beatles - Things We Said Today - A Hard Day’s Night

(Lennon-McCartney) Lead vocal: Paul

Written in May 1964 on board a yacht called Happy Days during Paul McCartney's holiday in the Virgin Islands with his girlfriend Jane Asher, plus Ringo Starr and his

future wife Maureen. Recorded in three takes on June 2, 1964. In his 1980 interview with Playboy magazine John Lennon remembered this being one of Paul’s better songs. McCartney double tracked his vocals. John Lennon's piano part was meant to be omitted

from the final mix, but lack of separation between instruments meant that its sound leaked into other microphones during recording. As a result it can be heard on the

released version. The b-side of the UK “A Hard Day’s Night” single. On U.S. album:

Something New - Capitol LP

Believe it or not all those songs written by the same individual….

QUIZ Name the song from Paul’s Ram album that John claimed

was about him but was in fact directed at Linda’s ex husband…not John…

9.43 BREAK

PAUL McCARTNEY: Dear Boy wasn’t getting at John, Dear Boy was actually a song to Linda’s ex-husband: “I guess you never knew what

you had missed

Paul & Linda McCartney – Dear Boy – Ram ‘71 Although like, Too Many People and 3 Legs, Paul never intended this song to be about John Lennon. But nonetheless, John took it as another insult. According to Paul this was really an autobiographical tune about how thankful he was to have

had Linda in his life.

The Beatles - Back In The U.S.S.R. - The Beatles (Lennon-McCartney)

Lead vocal: Paul

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Written while in India, Paul’s “Back In The U.S.S.R.” is based on Chuck Berry’s 1959 hit “Back In The U.S.A.,” but was written to mimic the classic sound of the Beach Boys. Beach Boys lead singer Mike Love was on the Transcendental Meditation sojourn in

India with the Beatles in the spring of 1968 and as McCartney was working on his new song, Love suggested the lyrics about Ukraine and Moscow girls, similar to his lyrics in “California Girls.” Recording began on August 22, 1968, and it was during this session that Ringo Starr officially quit the band. His departure was blamed on a disagreement with Paul over his drumming. Ringo flew to the Mediterranean to spend time on actor Peter Sellers’ yacht. It was there that he wrote “Octopus’s Garden.” On September 3, Ringo returned to the studio to find his drum kit smothered in flowers. Ringo: “I felt

tired and discouraged … took a week’s holiday, and when I came back to work everything was all right again.” But Ringo added, “Paul is the greatest bass guitar player in the world. But he is also very determined; he goes on and on to see if he can get his own way. While that may be a virtue, it did mean that musical disagreements inevitably

arose from time to time.”

Some Beach Boys sneakin` through…

The Beatles - Paperback Writer - A Collection Of Beatles Oldies (Lennon-McCartney)

Lead vocal: Paul The Beatles’ twelfth single release for EMI’s Parlophone label.

Recorded on April 13 and 14, 1966. The track is notable for Paul McCartney’s furious bass line. The bass is so prominent in the mix that sound engineers at EMI worried it

could cause the stylus of a record player tone arm (the needle thing on record players) to jump when fans played the 45 RPM single at home. Thankfully, no such calamity

occurred. For this heavy bass sound Paul’s chose to replace his usual Hofner bass with a Rickenbacker 4001S bass. Aside from the dominant bass part, McCartney also provides the lead guitar, with George Harrison working the tambourine. The second and third

verse backing vocal is the French nursery rhyme “Frere Jacques.” Released in America on May 23 and in the UK on June 10. “Paperback Writer” made the second largest ever jump to No. 1 on Billboard's chart. It debuted at number 28 on June 11, 1966, moved to

15 and then to number 1 on June 25. The only single to make a bigger jump was another Beatles song, “Can't Buy Me Love.”

On U.S. album: Hey Jude - Capitol LP (1970)

We just heard Paul McCartney’s groovy Paperback Writer… Paul did not use his usual Hofner brand bass on the song for

a pair of tickets what brand of bass did Paul use on Paperback Writer?

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While yer thinking of the answer to that question here is a medley of shorts songs found on The Red Rose Speedway

album by the pop group WINGS….

Paul McCartney & Wings – Medley: Hold Me Tight/Lazy Dynamite/Hands of Love/Power Cut – Red Rose

Speedway ‘73 Reminiscent of the end of Abbey Road, Paul had taken four unfinished songs and

strung them together to create this medley.

Winner HERE – Rickenbacker 1964 Rickenbacker 4001S bass

NEWS HERE

10.13 BREAK

The Beatles - We Can Work It Out – Past Masters

Recorded: 20/29 October 1965 RELEASED AS A CHRISTMAS SINGLE ON DEC. 3RD 1965 AND IT KICKED OFF THE RUBBER SOUL

SESSIONS IN OCT. 1965 Yesterday & Today in US / Collection of Oldies in UK

Written by Paul as a pleading song to Jane Asher, who had just moved away from London to join the theatre. It was the first such instance in their

relationship, and one that contributed to their eventual breakup

The Beatles - I’m Down - Single (Lennon-McCartney)

Lead vocal: Paul Recorded in one take on June 14, 1965. Written entirely by Paul McCartney, who

showed off his skills at the June 14 recording session by recording “I’ve Just Seen A Face” in six takes, then the scorcher “I’m Down” in one take, and following a dinner

break, nailing “Yesterday” in two takes. “I’m Down” was patterned after Little Richard’s “Long Tall Sally,” or as George Harrison described it at the time, “It’s pretty wild…

because it has Paul’s wild voice.” Paul: “I could do Little Richard's voice, which is a wild, hoarse, screaming thing. It's like an out-of-body experience. You have to leave your

current sensibilities and go about a foot above your head to sing it. A lot of people were fans of Little Richard so I used to sing his stuff but there came a point when I wanted

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one of my own, so I wrote ‘I'm Down.’ I ended up doing it at Shea Stadium. It worked very well for those kind of places, it was a good stage song. And in as much as they are hard to write, I'm proud of it. Those kind of songs with hardly any melody, rock 'n' roll songs, are much harder to write than ballads, because there's nothing to them.” John Lennon plays the Hammond organ. The B-side of the “Help!” single, issued July 23,

1965 in the UK and July 19, 1965 in the U.S. On U.S. album:

Non-album single (B-side) UK:

Non-album single (B-side)

MIC ON HERE 95.5 KLOS BWTB 3 hrs of SIR PAUL with and w out the Beatles…here

bluegrass version of a song I know you know…

Paul - Can't Buy Me Love - Soundcheck

The Beatles - Penny Lane - Non-LP track (Lennon-McCartney)

Lead vocal: Paul The Beatles’ fourteenth single release for EMI’s Parlophone label.

Following the disastrous 1966 world tour the individual Beatles took control of their hectic schedule. They were no longer in a rush to do anything. In September 1966,

Brian Epstein informed EMI and Capitol that there would be no new Beatles album, and quite possibly no single, ready in time for the 1966 Christmas season. EMI quickly

assembled a 16-track greatest hits album (“A Collection Of Beatles Oldies”). In the U.S., Capitol did not release a hits compilation and instead waited impatiently for a new

single. The band reconvened in late November to begin work on their next LP. With no deadlines, they simply brought in new songs as they dreamt them up.

Like John’s “Strawberry Fields Forever,” Paul’s “Penny Lane” was named after a real

place; it was a bus stop (roundabout) in Liverpool. Written almost entirely by Paul (he says Lennon helped him with the third verse), work began on December 29, 1966, and the song took nearly three weeks to complete. Paul described the song as “childhood reminiscences.” Paul: “There was a barber shop called Bioletti’s with head shots of the haircuts you could have in the window and I just took it all and arted it up a little bit to make it sound like he was having a picture exhibition in his window. It was all based on

real things.” On U.S. album:

Magical Mystery Tour - Capitol LP

Paul McCartney – Flaming Pie – Flaming Pie ‘97 The title track, it evolved out of jam between Paul and Jeff Lynne (during recording of the track, “Souvenir”). It was recorded in a single session on

February 27th, 1996.

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The Beatles - Love Me Do – Please Please Me (McCartney-Lennon)

Lead vocal: John and Paul The Beatles’ first single release for EMI’s Parlophone label.

Released October 5, 1962, it reached #17 on the British charts. Principally written by Paul McCartney in 1958 and 1959. Recorded with three different drummers: Pete Best

(June 6, 1962, EMI), Ringo Starr (September 4, 1962), and Andy White (September 11, 1962 with Ringo playing tambourine). The 45 rpm single lists the songwriters as

Lennon-McCartney. One of several Beatles songs Paul McCartney owns with Yoko Ono. Starting with the songs recorded for their debut album on February 11, 1963, Lennon and McCartney’s output was attached to their Northern Songs publishing company.

Because their first single was released before John and Paul had contracted with a music publisher, EMI assigned it to their own, a company called Ardmore and Beechwood,

which took the two songs “Love Me Do” and “P.S. I Love You.” Decades later McCartney and Ono were able to purchase the songs for their respective companies, MPL

Communications and Lenono Music. Fun fact: John Lennon shoplifted the harmonica he played on the song from a shop in Holland.

On U.S. albums: Introducing… The Beatles (Version 1) - Vee-Jay LP

The Early Beatles - Capitol LP

10.43 BREAK

The Beatles - Hey Jude – Live David Frost Show (Lennon-McCartney)

Lead vocal: Paul The Beatles’ eighteenth single release for EMI, the first on the Apple Records

label. Paul McCartney’s masterpiece. The 7 minute, 11 second track was the longest released by the Beatles up until that time, and the song broke wide open the usual two to three minute mold that had long been the standard for pop singles. Paul got the idea for the song while driving to visit Cynthia and Julian Lennon. He wrote the lyrics as a message of encouragement to young Julian while his parents were in the throes of a very public separation. Paul wanted to stay friends, so he planned a visit. Cynthia was still living in

John’s Kenwood estate, and since Paul usually wrote songs on the way there to collaborate with his writing partner, he fell into the same routine. Paul: “I started with the idea ‘Hey Jules,’ which was Julian, don’t make it bad, take a sad song and make it better. Hey, try and deal with this terrible thing. I knew it was not going to be easy for him. I always feel sorry for kids in divorce. The adults may be fine but the kids … I had the idea by the time I got there. I changed it to ‘Jude’ because I thought that sounded a

bit better.”

Mike Viola

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Mike Viola – Oh! Darling – Live

Take a request HERE

11.13 BREAK

Take a request HERE

Take a request HERE

Take a request HERE

Mike Viola –That Thing You Do– Live

Take a request HERE

11.43 BREAK

The Beatles - The Night Before - Help! (Lennon-McCartney)

Lead vocal: Paul

The Beatles - I’ve Just Seen A Face - Help! (Lennon-McCartney)

Lead vocal: Paul

The Beatles – Yesterday - Help! Lead vocal: Paul