brammy wrote:I thought George's opening chord was the famous
kindalikeac7butmovethetwofingersonestringlower chord
3
3
5
3
5
3
.... this sounds more like it than the one you describe, dont you think?
I thought so at first, and I played it that way for a while, and when played alone, I find it does a good job of covering all the bases, but when you have many musicians, It's too... Heavy I guess.
Video proof shows that John played the
3
1
2
3
x
x
live, which lends me to assume that he plays it on the record that way as well. On many live version, you can clearly hear the 12 strings with the same voicing. George Martin in the Studio played the piano, I think it was determined he played a G triad. very simple. Paul I think someone had figured out he played a D at the 12 fret.
anyways, the reason I have it the way it is above, is to cover MOST bases. the Fadd9 I find is essential, as it has the high G, and more importantly, a very "light airy" sound to it. Then you've got to cover the G. which means you can have the 2nd guitar play either a unison with the first one, or have it play the G5 (easier than a G triad I find).
Then the bass can play the G (which I think sounds nicer) or play the note Paul supposedly played (D) but I find that without an actual piano added to the mix, the D sounds a touch dissonnant with all the F add9.
All that work to sound like the Gsus you posted above!