She Said She Said Questions
She Said She Said Questions
A friend mentioned to me yestrerday that Paul McCartney did not play on She Said She Said and that this is well documented.
Has anyone here heard this before? BTW, it seems that it took John, George and Ringo 9 hours to put this together. Did Paul dub the bass part after the session? Does he play on it at all?
I would appreciate hearing your thoughts and interpretation of this great song.
Has anyone here heard this before? BTW, it seems that it took John, George and Ringo 9 hours to put this together. Did Paul dub the bass part after the session? Does he play on it at all?
I would appreciate hearing your thoughts and interpretation of this great song.
Life, as with music, often requires one to let go of the melody and listen to the rhythm
Please join the Official RickResource Forum Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/groups/379271585440277
Please join the Official RickResource Forum Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/groups/379271585440277
-
beefandbones
- Intermediate Member
- Posts: 893
- Joined: Thu Feb 19, 2004 7:27 am
I've read that as well - I think in 'Revolution in the Head.' Ian MacDonald (if that is indeed where I read it) makes the point that this song has the least amount of Paul's 'fingerprints' of all the Revolver songs. Also, I seem to remember reading elsewhere that Paul stormed out of the session after an argument. Wish I could remember for sure where I read this stuff!
The meter is odd, like many of John's songs, but the recording itself is pretty straightforward. As in, no flowery arrangements or complex studio trickery. It might have taken a lengthy session to work out the meter, then for George to add the bass. (I've read a theory that George plays bass on She Said She Said.) That would make a certain amount of sense, since the bassline on SS,SS contains very few McCartney style flourishes.
That's just what I've heard. I'm not sure how much faith I have in it, though.
The meter is odd, like many of John's songs, but the recording itself is pretty straightforward. As in, no flowery arrangements or complex studio trickery. It might have taken a lengthy session to work out the meter, then for George to add the bass. (I've read a theory that George plays bass on She Said She Said.) That would make a certain amount of sense, since the bassline on SS,SS contains very few McCartney style flourishes.
That's just what I've heard. I'm not sure how much faith I have in it, though.
to me , it is Paul playing the bass part. Listen to the end of the song, that's not George?
If there was an argument it could have been possible that John wanted an reserved bass, no click sounds and no funky playing.
And , as I mentioned elsewere in the forum, it could have been George on rhythm guitar and John
playing the distorted lead guitar part on his Epiphone Casino. But that's another topic...
If there was an argument it could have been possible that John wanted an reserved bass, no click sounds and no funky playing.
And , as I mentioned elsewere in the forum, it could have been George on rhythm guitar and John
playing the distorted lead guitar part on his Epiphone Casino. But that's another topic...
-
dr_evil
Walter Everet (The Beatles as musicians ) quotes Barry Milles’ book about an argument between McCartney and Harrison that led to George to play bass in this track. Everet also adds the following. “ George had photographed with a Burns bass during these sessions; this recording would then mark his first bass playing on a Beatles track since his chromatic overdub onto “I want to hold your hand”
I think Everet says this photo:

I think Everet says this photo:

-
beefandbones
- Intermediate Member
- Posts: 893
- Joined: Thu Feb 19, 2004 7:27 am
If Paul left the session after an argument with George about Paul's bassline, you'd think Paul might have been a tad more empathetic as he instructed George on how to play the guitar line on I've Got A Feeling, captured in the Let it Be film. Or maybe it was just a little payback! Interesting that George walked out of the Let it Be sessions...
-
roadrunners
- Member
- Posts: 492
- Joined: Wed Aug 25, 2004 1:15 pm
- Contact:
yeah, there is no way that paul is on that track, one can easily hear in the end that it is john and george singing all of the harmonies. The track really could have benifited with the addition of pauls harmony. Also, in the let it be sessions bootlegs that I have, one can hear them jamming to she said....and paul is playing some very complex little bass fills on the hofner. while john sings the missing licks and plays his guitar
"This is my personal quote"
