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The first Beatles Christmas fan-club disc to be recorded by the individual Beatles separately, the 1968 offering is a collage of odd noises, musical snippets and individual messages. McCartney's song "Happy Christmas, Happy New Year" is featured, along with Lennon's poems "Jock and Yono" and "Once Upon a Pool Table".
"Happiness Is a Warm Gun" was sequenced as the final track on side one, following "While My Guitar Gently Weeps". [29] "Happiness Is a Warm Gun" reportedly was Harrison and McCartney's favourite track on the White Album. [30] All four of the Beatles later identified it as their favourite song on the album. [9]
"Chains" is a rhythm and blues song written by husband-and-wife songwriting team Gerry Goffin and Carole King. It was a hit for the American girl group the Cookies in 1962 and for the English rock band the Beatles, who recorded the song for their debut album in 1963.
"Things We Said Today" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles, written by Paul McCartney and credited to Lennon–McCartney. It was released in July 1964 as the B-side to the single "A Hard Day's Night" and on their album of the same name, except in North America, where it appeared on the album Something New.
"Christmas Time (Is Here Again)" is a Christmas song by the English rock band the Beatles, originally recorded for their fifth fan club Christmas record, Christmas Time Is Here Again! (1967). One of the few Beatles songs credited to all four members of the band, it consists of a blues based backing track as well as double-tracked vocals sung by ...
You tell two particularly poignant anecdotes about John and Paul from around this time. One is that their meeting in L.A. in 1974 may have been a factor in John going back to Yoko.
The frequent use of added sixth chords in the song accentuate its dreamlike feel. [7] The song also has an example of major 9th harmony in the Cmaj 9 chord on "Here comes the Sun King"; here, above the tonic C major triad , both B (seventh) and D (ninth) combine in the vocals "to form a suitably lush fanfare for the monarch himself."
Incomplete when first brought into EMI Studios on Tuesday 2 June 1964, [6] Paul McCartney suggested an idea for the middle eight section based solely on chords, which was recorded with the intention of adding lyrics later. But by the time it was needed to be mixed, the middle eight was still without words and that is how it appears on the LP. [5]