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"Think for Yourself" has a 4/4 time signature and is set to a moderate rock beat. [21] After a two-bar introduction, the structure comprises three combinations of verse and chorus, with the final chorus being repeated in full, followed by what musicologist Alan Pollack terms a "petit-reprise of the last phrase" to close the song. [22]
The claim's supported in the main text by the statement that there was no precedence before "Think for Yourself" for having a standard bass part and a fuzz bass part on the one song. I imagine Spector might've had two bassists playing the same lines on a track, perhaps upright and electric to create a fatter sound.
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Flying Teapot is the third studio album by the progressive rock band Gong, originally released by Virgin Records in May 1973. It was the second entry in the Virgin catalogue (V2002) and was released on the same day as the first, Mike Oldfield's Tubular Bells (V2001).
You is the third of the "Radio Gnome Invisible" trilogy of albums, following Flying Teapot and Angel's Egg. The trilogy forms a central part of the Gong mythology. The structure of the album mixes short narrative pieces with long, jazzy instrumentals (such as "Master Builder", "A Sprinkling of Clouds" and "Isle of Everywhere"), building to a ...
"Think" is a Mick Jagger and Keith Richards composition. It first appeared as a Chris Farlowe single which reached No 37 on the UK Singles Chart in January 1966. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The Rolling Stones ' own version appeared, three months later, on their Aftermath album, [ 3 ] [ 4 ] with a rewritten third verse.
"The Gnome" is a song by the English rock band Pink Floyd. Written by Syd Barrett , it is the eighth song on their 1967 debut album, The Piper at the Gates of Dawn . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The song takes place in a fictional gnome world from the perspective of a gnome.
James Brown & the Famous Flames recorded an extremely fast live rendition of "Think" for their 1963 album Live at the Apollo. Brown also performs the song on Live at the Apollo, Volume II in a duet with Marva Whitney. In 1967, Brown recorded "Think" in the studio as a duet with Vicki Anderson. The version grazed the bottom of the Pop chart ...