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Heads up for you Beatles fans: 60 Minutes features Paul McCartney tonight (Original Post) ailsagirl Dec 2018 OP
Thanks! Will definitely watch it! skylucy Dec 2018 #1
He revealed something that really surprised me. Croney Dec 2018 #2
He finally offered the world a formal apology... Dave Starsky Dec 2018 #3
Lol! No that wasn't it. Croney Dec 2018 #4
Oh, yes. That is actually well known. Dave Starsky Dec 2018 #5
Ireland's Chris De Burgh also can't read music. Aristus Dec 2018 #6
For some people, it's purely instinctive ailsagirl Dec 2018 #8
I learned of that only recently-- absolutely staggering, isn't it? ailsagirl Dec 2018 #7
Here are the links for anyone who missed it TexasBushwhacker Dec 2018 #9
Like to ask him if they'll release the Let It Be film. edbermac Dec 2018 #10

Croney

(4,657 posts)
2. He revealed something that really surprised me.
Sun Dec 30, 2018, 10:23 PM
Dec 2018

I won't say what it was until you've watched it. Maybe you knew it, but I was floored by it.

Dave Starsky

(5,914 posts)
3. He finally offered the world a formal apology...
Mon Dec 31, 2018, 12:53 AM
Dec 2018

For making "Simply Having a Wonderful Christmastime".

I've waited for this moment for decades.

Dave Starsky

(5,914 posts)
5. Oh, yes. That is actually well known.
Mon Dec 31, 2018, 09:26 AM
Dec 2018

The dude is a prodigy, for sure.

A surprising number of truly talented popular artists are that way. Jeff Lynne of ELO is another example. Like McCartney, he's a self-taught multi-instrumentalist who was even able to give instructions to a 30-piece orchestra back in ELO's heyday.

Aristus

(66,320 posts)
6. Ireland's Chris De Burgh also can't read music.
Mon Dec 31, 2018, 11:17 AM
Dec 2018

He grew up in the medieval castle his parents bought and converted into a BnB. He says he learned piano and guitar in order to entertain their guests, especially the girls...

ailsagirl

(22,896 posts)
7. I learned of that only recently-- absolutely staggering, isn't it?
Mon Dec 31, 2018, 08:49 PM
Dec 2018

They were not schooled in music theory nor did they ever even take music lessons, yet they instinctively knew everything they needed to create the songs they wanted. They didn't know the technical words or concepts yet they utilized them constantly. How is this possible? Pure instinct? Really, I think they actually were "geniuses"-- I hate to use that over-used word but how else to explain it?

Here's an excerpt from Jonathan Gould's book, in which he writes about the song, A Hard Day's Night:

It begins with a musical wake-up call: the harsh clang of a solitary guitar chord that hangs in the air for an elongated moment, its densely-packed notes swimming into focus like eyes adjusting to the light. (Though the song is in the key of G, this opening chord is a D minor 11th, as if a C-major triad were being played over a D-minor triad.) Two bars later, reality rushes in, as John's vocal pickup ("It's been a..." ) is swept up and carried along by a swift current of guitars, bass, drums...The momentum builds through another verse until, with a shout, the singers seem to leap out of the path of Harrison's twelve-string electric guitar and George Martin's piano as they combine on a deep, bluesy run that resolves in a delighted little jig-step of sixteen notes.The singing returns, the middle repeats, and finally, a full three minutes after it began, the song heads wearily for home, the band slowing imperceptibly, until the rhythm falls out and George's twelve-string explodes into the chord that opened the song--arpeggiated this time, its notes distinct and shimmering like stars against the sky.

Wow

edbermac

(15,938 posts)
10. Like to ask him if they'll release the Let It Be film.
Mon Dec 31, 2018, 10:12 PM
Dec 2018

Warts and all, as John said. But I doubt it will be.

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