Saturday, March 31, 2018

TODAY IN HISTORY ― MARCH 31

March 31 is the 90th day of the year (91st in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 275 days remaining until the end of the year. This date is slightly more likely to fall on a Tuesday, Thursday or Saturday (58 in 400 years each) than on Sunday or Monday (57), and slightly less likely to occur on a Wednesday or Friday (56).    

NATIONAL CRAYON DAY 


627 – Battle of the Trench: Muhammad undergoes a 14-day siege at Medina (Saudi Arabia) by Meccan forces under Abu Sufyan. 

1492 – Queen Isabella of Castille issues the Alhambra Decree, ordering her 150,000 Jewish and Muslim subjects to convert to Christianity or face expulsion.

1774 – American Revolutionary War: Great Britain orders the port of Boston, Massachusetts closed pursuant to the Boston Port Act.


1854 – Commodore Matthew Perry signs the Convention of Kanagawa with the Japanese government, opening the ports of Shimoda andHakodate to American trade.  

1889 – The Eiffel Tower is officially opened. At the time, it surpassed the Washington Monument to become the tallest man-made structure in the world.

1906 – The Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United States (later the National Collegiate Athletic Association) is established to set rules for college sports in the United States.


1909 – Construction of the ill fated RMS Titanic begins in Belfast, Ireland.

1917 – The United States takes possession of the Danish West Indies after paying $25 million to Denmark, and renames the territory the United States Virgin Islands.

1918 – Daylight saving time goes into effect in the United States for the first time.


1931 – TWA Flight 599 crashes near Bazaar, Kansas, killing eight, including University of Notre Dame head football coach Knute Rockne.


1933 – The Civilian Conservation Corps is established with the mission of relieving rampant unemployment in the United States.

1945 – World War II: A defecting German pilot delivers a Messerschmitt Me 262A-1, the world's first operational jet-powered fighter aircraft, to the Americans, the first to fall into Allied hands.

1951 – Remington Rand delivers the first UNIVAC I computer to the United States Census Bureau.

1966 – The Soviet Union launches Luna 10 which later becomes the first space probe to enter orbit around the Moon.


1970 – Explorer 1 re-enters the Earth's atmosphere after 12 years in orbit.


1990 – Approximately 200,000 protestors take to the streets of London to protest against the newly introduced Poll Tax.

1991 – Georgian independence referendum: Nearly 99 percent of the voters support the country's independence from the Soviet Union.

1992 – The WWII battleship USS Missouri, the last active United States Navy battleship, is decommissioned in Long Beach, California.

1994 – The journal Nature reports the finding in Ethiopia of the first complete Australopithecus afarensis skull.

2004 – Iraq War in Anbar Province: In Fallujah, Iraq, four American private military contractors working for Blackwater USA, are killed after being ambushed.


BORN TODAY

1596 – RenĂ© Descartes, French mathematician and philosopher (d. 1650)

1685 – Johann Sebastian Bach, German organist and composer (d. 1750)

1732 – Joseph Haydn, Austrian pianist and composer (d. 1809)

1809 – Nikolai Gogol, Ukrainian-Russian short story writer, novelist, and playwright (d. 1852)

1927 – Cesar Chavez, American labor union leader and activist (d. 1993)

From Wikipedia and Google (images), ex as noted.

TOP 100 SONGS OF THE BEATLES ― 10

“While My Guitar Gently Weeps" (Harrison – November 25, 1968



The BEATLES (a.k.a., The White Album) – Side 1, Track 7 (4:45)
YouTube The Concert for George: Eric Clapton (lead guitar and vocals), Dhani Harrison (acoustic guitar), Paul McCartney (piano and harmony), Ringo Starr (drums), Billy Preston (keyboards), et al – “The Concert for George”]

From WikipediaRolling Stone
, About.com, and Google –

"While My Guitar Gently Weeps" is a song written by George Harrison, first recorded by the Beatles in 1968 for their eponymous double album (also known as The White Album). The song features lead guitar by Eric Clapton, although he was not formally credited on the album.

"While My Guitar Gently Weeps" was ranked #136 on Rolling Stone's list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time", #7 on their list of the 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time, and #10 on their list of The Beatles 100 Greatest Songs. In an online poll held by Guitar World magazine in February 2012, "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" was voted the best of Harrison's Beatle-era songs.


History – 

Yet another song written during the band's spiritual journey to India in the spring of 1968, George's "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" -- arguably his signature Beatles song, and definitely the strongest he'd contributed to that point -- was only finalized after the guitarist, back at his mother's home in Warrington, England and needing lyrical inspiration, decided to literally take a page from the I Ching, the Chinese philosophical "book of changes" that was said to have mystical relevance whenever any random rune was cast. Picking up a book at random, the phrase he immediately found under his finger was "gently weeps." Thus the song was written around it. 

However, when the song joined its White Album brethren in being demo'ed at George's home in Esher, John and Paul seemed less than thrilled with the song, an attitude which did not improve when proper attempts to record the song were first made on July 25, August 16, and September 3. Hard to believe, but then again, the song had undergone several lyrical changes, with seemingly endless permutations like "The problems you serve are the troubles you're reaping" and "I look at the trouble and see that it's raging."

Harrison himself was not pleased with the way the song was going, and midway through the session on September 3, began all over again. On September 5, this second version was also found wanting, and George started with a whole new arrangement: George on acoustic, Ringo on drums, Paul on piano, and John on electric rhythm guitar.  

The next day, Harrison's friend Eric Clapton, also his neighbor in the county of Esher, gave George a lift to Abbey Road studios. Unhappy with the band infighting and his own attempts at a guitar solo for "Weeps," George insisted on the way in that Eric come into the studio and lay down a track. Clapton originally refused, correctly noting that "nobody (famous) ever plays on the Beatle's records!" but George insisted. The invitation had its intended effects: the band were completely professional and Eric's solo sounded great. But listening to the playback, the ex-Yardbird decided the result "wasn't Beatle-y enough," so the solo was run through the Leslie rotating speaker of the Hammond B-3 organ cabinet, an effect the lads had been using at least as far back as "Tomorrow Never Knows." That same day, the remaining vocal and instrumental tracks were laid down. 

Musical structure –

The song is in Am, with a shift to a ♭7 (Am/G) on "all" (bass note G) and a 6 (D9 (major 3rd F#)) after "love" (bass note F#) to a ♭6 (Fmaj7) on "sleeping" (bass note F). This 8-♭7-6-♭6 progression has been described as an Aeolian/Dorian hybrid. Everett notes that the change from the minor mode verse (A-B) to the parallel major for the bridge might express hope that "unrealized potential" described in the lyrics is to be "fulfilled," but that the continued minor triads (III, VI and II) "seem to express a strong dismay that love is not to be unfolded." Clapton's guitar contribution has been described as making this a "monumental" track; particularly notable features include the increasing lengths of thrice-heard first scale degrees (0.17-0.19), the restraint showed by rests in many bars then unexpected appearances (as at 0.28-0.29), commanding turnaround phrases (0.31-0.33), expressive string bends marking modal changes from C to C# (0.47-0.53), power re-transition (1.21-1.24), emotive vibrato (2.01-2.07), and a solo (1.55-2.31) with a "measured rise in intensity, rhythmic activity, tonal drive and registral climb."

Composition and recording –

Inspiration for the song came to Harrison when reading the I Ching, which, as Harrison put it, "seemed to me to be based on the Eastern concept that everything is relative to everything else... opposed to the Western view that things are merely coincidental. "Taking this idea of relativism to his parents’ home in northern England, Harrison committed to write a song based on the first words he saw upon opening a random book. Those words were “gently weeps”, and he immediately began the song. As he said:

"I wrote "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" at my mother's house in Warrington. I was thinking about the Chinese I Ching, the Book of Changes... The Eastern concept is that whatever happens is all meant to be, and that there's no such thing as coincidence - every little item that's going down has a purpose. "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" was a simple study based on that theory. I decided to write a song based on the first thing I saw upon opening any book - as it would be relative to that moment, at that time. I picked up a book at random, opened it, saw 'gently weeps', then laid the book down again and started the song."


The initial incarnation was not final, as Harrison said: "Some of the words to the song were changed before I finally recorded it.” A demo recorded at George's home in Esher includes an unused verse: “I look at the trouble and see that it's raging, While my guitar gently weeps. As I'm sitting here, doing nothing but ageing, Still my guitar gently weeps.”

As well as an unused line in the very beginning: “The problems you sow, are the troubles you're reaping, Still, my guitar gently weeps.”

This line was eventually omitted in favor of the one appearing on The Beatles.

An early acoustic guitar and organ demo of the song featured a slightly different third verse:

“I look from the wings at the play you are staging, While my guitar gently weeps. As I'm sitting here, doing nothing but ageing, Still my guitar gently weeps.”

This version was released on the 1996 compilation Anthology 3 and was used as the basis of the 2006 Love remix, with a string arrangement by George Martin.


The band recorded the song several times. Take I on 25 July 1968 involved Harrison on his J-200 guitar and an overdubbed harmonium. Sessions on 16 August and 3 and 5 September included a version with a backward guitar solo (as Harrison had done for "I'm Only Sleeping" on Revolver), but Harrison was not satisfied. On 6 September 1968, during a ride from Surrey into London, Harrison asked his friend Eric Clapton to add a lead guitar solo to the song. Clapton was reluctant; he said, "Nobody ever plays on the Beatles' records"; but Harrison convinced him and Clapton's solo, using a Gibson Les Paul guitar, was recorded that evening. Harrison later said that in addition to his solo, Clapton's presence had another effect on the band: "It made them all try a bit harder; they were all on their best behavior."

This is one of three songs on the White Album where Paul McCartney experiments with the Fender Jazz Bass (the others being "Glass Onion" and "Yer Blues") instead of his Hofner and Rickenbacker basses.

Towards the end of the song, Harrison's voice is heard crying: "Oh, Oh", which some of the Beatles fans thought that he was crying: "Paul, Paul", indicating that theory about Paul McCartney being dead, and that George was weeping for Paul.


Takes: 25

Personnel

John Lennon: Rhythm guitars (1965 Epiphone E230TD(V) Casino)
Paul McCartney: Harmony vocals, bass guitar (1961 Fender Bass VI), piano (1905 Steinway Vertegrand "Mrs. Mills")
George Harrison: Lead vocals (double-tracked), rhythm guitar (1968 Gibson J-200), organ (Hammond B-3)
Ringo Starr: Drums (Ludwig), tambourine, castanets
Eric Clapton: Lead guitar (1957 Gibson Les Paul Standard)


Trivia –

The original EMI demo of "Weeps," which can be heard on Anthology 3, shows the song to be essentially complete. In fact, some think it holds even more emotional power than the original. There's also a third verse left out of the final recording: "I look from the wings at the play you are staging / While my guitar gently weeps / As I'm sitting here doing nothing but aging / Still my guitar gently weeps." 

The first two attempts at recording the song feature a harmonium, the aforementioned third verse, and a backwards guitar solo by George. The mono mix of "Weeps" differs from the stereo in that the solo is louder in the mix and also "wobblier," while George's vocal track does not include the ending "yeah yeah yeah" from the more famous stereo version. 

"While My Guitar Gently Weeps" was played live by George on at least two occasions: once with Clapton in Japan in 1992, and once in 1987 at the Prince's Trust Rock Concert in London.
George would later write a solo song puckishly titled "This Guitar (Can't Keep From Crying).


Today in Beatles History (From The Internet Beatles Album) March 31 

1963 – Performance in the Poll Winner's Concert. at the Wembley Empire Pool, organized by New Musical Express.
– Number 1 Studio, Piccadilly Theatre, London. 2.30-6.30pm. Recording for BBC's Side By Side: 'Side By Side": "I Saw Her Standing There"; "Do You Want To Know A Secret"; "Baby It's You"; "Please Please Me"; "From Me To You"; "Misery". First Side By Side performance.
– Number 1 Studio, Piccadilly Theatre, London. 6.30-10.30pm. Recording for BBC's Side By Side: "Side By Side"; "From Me To You"; "Long Tall Sally"; "A Taste Of Honey"; "Chains"; "Thank You Girl"; "Boys". 

1964 – Please Please Me LP, 54th week in the Top 10 (UK New Musical Express chart). With The Beatles number 1, 19th week (UK New Musical Express chart).
"Can't Buy Me Love" number 1, 2nd week (UK New Musical Express chart). 


1965 – Brian becomes a controlling director of Japspic Productions Limited, the lessees of the Saville Theatre, and of Stramsact Limited. Brian thus becomes leaseholder of the Saville Theatre. 1967Studio 1. 7.00pm-6.00am. Recording: "Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)" (takes 1-9). Mono mixing: "Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)" (remixes 1-9, from take 9). Producer: George Martin; Engineer: Geoff Emerick; 2nd Engineer: Richard Lush.
– Sixth and last performance of Fats Domino and his orchestra at the Saville Theatre
– Support acts: Gerry and the Pacemakers, and the Bee Gees. 

1969 – John speaks about his idea of sending acorns of peace to the world leaders.
– John reveals that his fortune is about 50,000 pounds.– John and Yoko return to London.
– Television House, London. John and Yoko appear live on Associated-Rediffusion's
– "Today", with Eamonn Andrews. Reconstitution of their bed-in.
– Theatre Royal, London. Shooting for The Magic Christian.



1970 – Studio 1 and control room Studio 3. 7.00pm-? Recording:"Across The Universe" (tape reduction take 8 into take 9, overdub onto take 9); "The Long And Winding Road" (tape reduction of 31 January 1969 recording into takes 17-19, overdub onto take 18); "I Me Mine" (tape reduction extended edit of take 16 into takes 17, 18, overdub onto take 18). Producer: Phil Spector; Engineer: Peter Bown; 2nd Engineer: Richard Lush.
– Orchestra and choir overdub. Last session of Ringo. Last recording session for a Beatles album.
– The London Art Gallery appeals for the closing of John's exhibition.

10 MOST DEVOTED FANS BASES: 4

Harry Potter ― 4




POPULARITY: Seven Harry Potter books are best-selling book series in history, with 450 million books in print; final installment Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows holds Guinness World Record for fastest-selling work of fiction in 24 hours (11 million copies in the U.S. and U.K.). Books are published in 73 languages, making J.K. Rowling one of most translated authors in history; eight films have grossed 7.7 billion dollars, making it highest-grossing film series of all time. Potter brand in its entirety is worth more than $15 billion.

FACEBOOK FOLLOWERS: 50.7 million
TWITTER FOLLOWERS: 728,000

FAN NICKNAME: Potterheads, Potterites, Muggles (though some believe "Muggles" is a term for nonfans). The very vocal subset of fans who believe Harry and Hermione should have ended up together call themselves Harmonians.

MAIN HANGOUTS: Rowling's own Pottermore for interactive reading; Mugglenet and the Leaky Cauldron for news and forums; Fiction Alley for fan fiction; the Harry Potter Companion for fan art; Mugglecast, Pottercast, and Potter Pensieve for podcasts.

AVERAGE DEMOGRAPHIC: Although nominally children's fiction, the books have attracted a much broader readership — a fact the publishers have acknowledged by releasing separate covers for child and adult readers. Both the books and the films "age" with Harry, growing progressively darker as the series continues (thus the PG-13 ratings for the later films). But unlike most fantasy series (except those that focus on romance), the convention scene skews more female.

DEVOTIONAL PROFILE: Outsiders predicted there would be a post-Potterdepression following the release of the last book and the last film, and yes, there might have been a slight slump at first, but the fandom quickly bounded back before you could say, "Accio wand!" Potter love has transcended the story's completion, especially with a new generation of converts discovering the books for the first time (which is why J.K. Rowling is still careful to avoid spoilers when she speaks). And while HP fans are happy to read (and reread) the books, part of the magic is feeling like they're part of Harry's world. They go to Pottermore to get assigned their house and wear their colors with pride, even if they've been put in Slytherin. They might have a wand at the ready, just in case. And robes. For the more elaborate props not available for purchase, fans make pilgrimages to museum exhibits, places featured in the films, and the HP amusement park in Orlando, where you can drink Butterbeer in Hogsmeade. But that's all if you're just kinda casual about it.

Serious fans aren't content to play tourist; creating something new, or placing Rowling's work in a new context, is what keeps the fandom's blood pumping. Fanfic for HP surpasses that of Star Trek, and it can get pretty pornographic — a lot of the slashfic involves pairings such as Harry/Draco, Hermione/Snape, even Dumbledore/Fawkes (and need we remind you Fawkes is a bird?). Parodies thrive, and there's much wrocking out to wizard rock — an indie underground innovated by the HP fandom that boasts some 500 bands. Rowling and Warner Bros. allow the bands to perform and sell CDs so long as they remain not-for-profit, which limits the growth of the genre, but that hasn't stopped other fandoms (Twilight, Hunger Games) from adopting the practice. Fans also play a real-world version of Quidditch — a bruising mash-up of rugby, basketball, and dodge ball, with brooms, of course, but no flying — and it's become an international sport, with 798 teams in the U.S. alone. That not dedicated enough for you? How about fans who have lightning bolts tattooed on their foreheads? Or who have legally changed their name to Draco? Fans may grumble that Pottermore isn't satisfying enough (too many technical hiccups!), and they debate whether Rowling shouldn't write another book after all — because loving Harry Potter is not something you grow out of.

From Vulture

TODAY IN HISTORY ― MARCH 30

March 30 is the 89th day of the year (90th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 276 days remaining until the end of the year. This date is slightly more likely to fall on a Monday, Wednesday or Friday (58 in 400 years each) than on Saturday or Sunday (57), and slightly less likely to occur on a Tuesday or Thursday (56).

NATIONAL I AM IN CONTROL DAY 

1822 – The Florida Territory is created in the United States.  


1842 – Ether anesthesia is used for the first time, in an operation by the American surgeon Dr. Crawford Long.


1856 – The Treaty of Paris is signed, ending the Crimean War


1867 – Alaska is purchased from Russia for $7.2 million, about 2-cent/acre ($4.19/km²), by United States Secretary of State William H. Seward. The purchase was priginally know by its opponents as "Seward's Folly."

1870 – Texas is readmitted to the Union following Reconstruction.



1939 – The German Heinkel He 100 fighter sets a world airspeed record of 463 mph (745km/h).  

1939 – Detective Comics Vol. 1 #27 is released, introducing Batman.

1940 – Second Sino-Japanese War: Japan declares Nanking capital of a new Chinese puppet government, nominally controlled by Wang Jingwei.

1944 – World War II: Allied bombers conduct their most severe bombing run on Sofia, Bulgaria.

1949 – A riot breaks out in Austurvöllur square in ReykjavĂ­k, when Iceland joins NATO.

1964 – Jeopardy!, hosted by Art Fleming, debuts and runs until January 3, 1975. The third re-incarnation has been running since September 10, 1984. Over 7000 episodes have been aired. 


1972 – Vietnam War: The Easter Offensive begins after North Vietnamese forces cross into the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) of South Vietnam.

1979 – Airey Neave, a British Member of Parliament, is killed by a car bomb as he exits the Palace of Westminster. The Irish National Liberation Army claims responsibility.

1981 – President Ronald Reagan is shot in the chest outside a Washington, D.C., hotel by John Hinckley, Jr. Another two people are wounded at the same time.

2009 – Twelve gunmen attack the Manawan Police Academy in Lahore, Pakistan.


BORN TODAY

1853 – Vincent van Gogh, Dutch-French painter and illustrator (d. 1890)

1863 – Mary Calkins, American philosopher and psychologist (d. 1930)

1914 – Sonny Boy Williamson I, American singer-songwriter and harmonica player (d. 1948)

1950 – Janet Browne, English-American historian and academic

From Wikipedia and Google (images), ex as noted. 

TOP 100 SONGS OF THE BEATLES ― 11

“A Hard Day’s Night" (Lennon – June 26, 1964)



A Hard Day’s Night – Side 1, track 1 (2:34)
YouTube (Re-mastered 1964 movie trailer)
From WikipediaRolling Stone, About.com, and Google 

"A Hard Day's Night" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles. Written by John Lennon, and credited to Lennon–McCartney, it was released on the movie soundtrack of the same name in 1964. It was later released as a single, with "Things We Said Today" as its B-side.

The song featured prominently on the soundtrack to the Beatles' first feature film, A Hard Day's Night, and was on their album of the same name. The song topped the charts in both the United Kingdom and United States when it was released as a single. Featuring a prominent and unique opening chord, the song's success demonstrated that the Beatles were not a one-hit wonder in the US.

The American and British singles of "A Hard Day's Night" as well as both the American and British albums of the same title all held the top position in their respective charts for a couple of weeks in August 1964, the first time any artist had accomplished this feat.


History –

Written by John on April 15, 1964, on the back of an old greeting card, in direct response to the need for a title track for the Beatles' first film. Ringo had inspired the title after one particularly busy day; not realizing the sun had gone down, he claimed it had been "A hard day's... night!" The malapropism became the name of the film, then called Beatlemania!, although whether the idea to use the phrase came from the group, the movie's director, Dick Lester, or the film's producer, Walter Shenson, is a matter of debate.

Although John and Paul frequently sang their own contributions to a song, Paul took lead vocals on the bridges here simply because John felt his own vocal register wasn't high enough.

The solo has been rumored to be George Martin playing a harpsichord, as two different octaves are heard, but the actual effect was caused by Harrison playing his solo on guitar and Martin doubling him on piano.

Title – 

The song's title originated from something said by Ringo Starr, the Beatles' drummer. Starr described it this way in an interview with disc jockey Dave Hull in 1964: "We went to do a job, and we'd worked all day and we happened to work all night. I came up still thinking it was day I suppose, and I said, 'It's been a hard day... and I looked around and saw it was dark so I said, '...night!' So we came to 'A Hard Day's Night." 


Starr's statement was the inspiration for the title of the movie, which in turn inspired the composition of the song. According to Lennon in a 1980 interview with Playboy magazine: "I was going home in the car and Dick Lester [director of the movie] suggested the title, 'Hard Day's Night' from something Ringo had said. I had used it in In His Own Write [a book Lennon was writing then], but it was an off-the-cuff remark by Ringo. You know, one of those malapropisms. A Ringo-ism, where he said it not to be funny... just said it. So Dick Lester said, 'We are going to use that title.'"

In a 1994 interview for The Beatles Anthology, however, McCartney disagreed with Lennon's recollections, basically stating that it was the Beatles, and not Lester, who had come up with the idea of using Starr's verbal misstep: "The title was Ringo's. We'd almost finished making the film, and this fun bit arrived that we'd not known about before, which was naming the film. So we were sitting around at Twickenham studios having a little brain-storming session... and we said, 'Well, there was something Ringo said the other day.' Ringo would do these little malapropisms, he would say things slightly wrong, like people do, but his were always wonderful, very lyrical... they were sort of magic even though he was just getting it wrong. And he said after a concert, 'Phew, it's been a hard day's night.'"

In 1996, yet another version of events cropped up; in an Associated Press report, the producer of the film A Hard Day's Night, Walter Shenson, stated that Lennon described to Shenson some of Starr's funnier gaffes, including "a hard day's night", whereupon Shenson immediately decided that that was going to be the title of the movie (replacing other alternatives, including Beatlemania). Shenson then told Lennon that he needed a theme song for the film.


Production –

Regardless of who decided on the title, Lennon immediately made up his mind that he would compose the movie's title track. He dashed off the song in one night, and brought it in for comments the following morning (the original manuscript lyrics may be seen in the British Library, scribbled in ballpoint on the back of an old birthday card). As he described in his 1980 Playboy interview, "...the next morning I brought in the song... 'cuz there was a little competition between Paul and I as to who got the A-side — who got the hits. If you notice, in the early days the majority of singles, in the movies and everything, were mine... in the early period I'm dominating the group.... The reason Paul sang on 'A Hard Day's Night' (in the bridge) is because I couldn't reach the notes."

On 16 April 1964, the Beatles gathered at Studio 2 of the Abbey Road Studios and recorded "A Hard Day's Night." It took them less than three hours to polish the song for its final release, eventually selecting the ninth take as the one to be released. Evening Standard journalist Maureen Cleave described a memorable taxi ride the morning the song was recorded:

"One day I picked John up in a taxi and took him to Abbey Road for a recording session. The tune to the song 'A Hard Day's Night' was in his head, the words scrawled on a birthday card from a fan to his little son Julian: 'When I get home to you,' it said, 'I find my tiredness is through...' Rather a feeble line about tiredness, I said. 'OK,' he said cheerfully and, borrowing my pen, instantly changed it to the slightly suggestive: 'When I get home to you/I find the things that you do/Will make me feel all right.' The other Beatles were there in the studio and, of course, the wonderful George Martin. John sort of hummed the tune to the others – they had no copies of the words or anything else. Three hours later I was none the wiser about how they’d done it but the record was made – and you can see the birthday card in the British Library."

In the Associated Press report, Shenson described his recollection of what happened. At 8:30 in the morning, "There were John and Paul with guitars at the ready and all the lyrics scribbled on matchbook covers. They played it and the next night recorded it." Shenson declared, "It had the right beat and the arrangement was brilliant. These guys were geniuses."


Opening chord –

"A Hard Day's Night" is immediately identifiable before the vocals even begin, thanks to George Harrison's unmistakable Rickenbacker 360/12 12-string guitar's "mighty opening chord". According to George Martin, "We knew it would open both the film and the soundtrack LP, so we wanted a particularly strong and effective beginning. The strident guitar chord was the perfect launch," having what Ian MacDonald calls, "a significance in Beatles lore matched only by the concluding Emajor of "A Day in the Life", the two opening and closing the group's middle period of peak creativity". "That sound you just associate with those early 1960s Beatles records".

Analysis of the chord has been debated, it having been described as G7add9sus4, G7sus4, or G11sus4 and others below.

The exact chord is an Fadd9 confirmed by Harrison during an online chat on 15 February 2001: 

Q: Mr Harrison, what is the opening chord you used for "A Hard Day's Night"?
A: It is F with a G on top, but you'll have to ask Paul about the bass note to get the proper story.

According to Walter Everett the opening chord has an introductory dominant function because McCartney plays D in the bass: Harrison and Martin play F A C G, over the bass D, on twelve-string guitar and piano, giving the chord a mixture-colored neighbor, F; two diatonic neighbours, A and C; plus an anticipation of the tonic, G — the major subtonic as played on guitar being a borrowed chord commonly used by the Beatles, first in "P.S. I Love You" (see mode mixture), and later in "Every Little Thing", "Tomorrow Never Knows" and "Got to Get You into My Life" (in the latter two against a tonic pedal).

Alan W. Pollack also interprets the chord as a surrogate dominant, the G being an anticipation that resolves on the G major chord that opens the verse. He suggests it is a mixture of D minor, F major, and G major (missing the B). Tony Bacon calls it a Dm7sus4 (D F G A C), which is the minor seventh chord plus the fourth, G.(For more information regarding chord functions see diatonic function.)

Everett points out that the chord relates to the Beatles' interest in pandiatonicharmony.

Dominic Pedler has also provided an interpretation of the famous chord, with The Beatles and George Martin playing the following:

George Harrison – Fadd9 in 1st position on Rickenbacker 360/12 12-string electric guitar
John Lennon – Fadd9 in 1st position on a Gibson J-160E 6-string acoustic guitar
Paul McCartney – high D played on the D-string, 12th fret on Hofner 500/1 electric bass
George Martin – D2-G2-D3 played on a Steinway Grand Piano
Ringo Starr – Subtle snare drum and ride cymbal

This gives the notes: G-B-D-F-A-C (the B is a harmonic). One of the interesting things about this chord (as described by Pedler) is how McCartney's high bass note reverberates inside the sound box of Lennon's acoustic guitar and begins to be picked up on Lennon's microphone or pick-up during the sounding of the chord. This gives the chord its special "wavy" and unstable quality. Pedler describes the effect as a "virtual pull-off".

Jason Brown, Professor for the Faculty of Computer Science at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, whose research interests include graph theory, combinatorics, and combinatorial algorithms, announced in October 2004 that after six months of research he succeeded in analyzing the opening chord by de-composing the sound into original frequencies using a mathematical technique known as the Fourier transform.  According to Brown, the Rickenbacker guitar wasn't the only instrument used. "It wasn't just George Harrison playing it and it wasn't just the Beatles playing on it... There was a piano in the mix." He states that Harrison was playing the following notes on his 12 string guitar: a2, a3, d3, d4, g3, g4, c4, and another c4; McCartney played a d3 on his bass; producer George Martin was playing d3, f3, d5, g5, and e6 on the piano, while Lennon played a loud c5 on his six-string guitar.

In November 2009, Wired published an article where Celemony's Melodyne Editor with Direct Note Access technology was used to analyze the opening chord.

Randy Bachman has stated that he heard the original masters of the recordings and could hear the 12-string guitar playing "an F chord, but you put a G on top, and you put a G on the bottom, and you put a C next to that G", "a D on the bass", and "rhythm guitar was a D chord with a sus 4".

A repeated arpeggio outlining the notes of the opening chord ends the song in a circular fashion, fading out with the sound of helicopter blades. This provides, "a sonic confirmation that the thirty-six hours we have just seen [in the movie] will go on and on and on". This was an inspiration of George Martin, who said: "Again, that's film writing. I was stressing to them the importance of making the song fit, not actually finishing it but dangling on so that you're into the next mood." The song contains 12 other chords.


Music and lyrics –

The song is composed in the key of G major and in a 4/4 time signature. The verse features the ♭VII or major subtonic chord that was a part of the opening chord as an ornament or embellishment below the tonic. Transposed down a perfect fifth, the modal frame of the song though pentatonic features a ladder of thirds axially centered on G with a ceiling note of B♭ and floor note of E♭ (the low C being a passing tone)

According to Middleton, the song, "at first glance major-key-with-modal-touches", reveals through its "Line of Latent Mode" "a deep kinship with typical blues melodic structures: it is centered on three of the notes of the minor-pentatonic mode (E♭-G-B♭), with the contradictory major seventh (B♮) set against that. Moreover, the shape assumed by these notes - the modal frame - as well as the abstract scale they represent, is revealed, too; and this - an initial, repeated circling round the dominant (G), with an excursion to its minor third (B♭), 'answered' by a fall to the 'symmetrical' minor third of the tonic (E♭) - is a common pattern in blues."

Lennon opens the twelve measure-long verse and carries it along, suddenly joined at the end by McCartney, who then sings the bridge.


Recording –

During the recording of "A Hard Day’s Night", Lennon and McCartney double track their vocals throughout including the chorus. Lennon sings the lead vocal on the verses and Paul sings lead on the middle eight. During the chorus McCartney handles the high harmony and Lennon the low harmony. Take 7 reveals that the lyrics were still not set with Lennon singing "you make me feel all right" and McCartney and Harrison still unsteady with their respective lines, ending with Lennon chiding them with the line "I heard a funny chord".

The instrumental break, sometimes credited solely to George Harrison on a Rickenbacker 12-string guitar, is probably played by Harrison on 6-string guitar with George Martin doubling on a piano recorded to tape at half-speed and then sped up to normal. Recording this solo was the most challenging aspect of the session; a take that surfaced on a bootleg in the 1980s reveals Harrison fumbling over his strings, losing his timing and missing notes. But by the time the session wrapped at 10 p.m. that night, he had sculpted one of his most memorable solos — an upward run played twice and capped with a circular flourish - in illustration of an observation made by engineer Geoff Emerick: "George would spend a lot of time working out solos. Everything was a little bit harder for him, nothing quite came easily."

The song closes with Harrison playing an arpeggio of the opening chord (Fadd9) during the fade-out, the first time the Beatles had used such a technique — most, if not all, of their earlier work had closed with a final chord (and cadence), such as "She Loves You" and "I Want to Hold Your Hand".


Lyrics –

The lyrics speak about the singer's undying devotion to his lover, and how he toils so she can purchase the items she fancies. The singer sings about his tiredness when he comes home from work, but how the things that his lover does perk him up. Critics have pointed out that the first verse, repeated as the last verse, exploits three worn-out-sounding cliches, "a hard day's work," "working like a dog," and "sleeping like a log," only to quicken up the pace with a patter-couplet reassuring the singer's girlfriend that his energy and pleasure level have been renewed by her ministrations.

In 1965, for the television show ‘The Music of Lennon and McCartney‘, Peter Sellers recited the lyrics to ‘A Hard Day’s Night‘ in the manner of Laurence Olivier's famous performance of Shakespeare's Richard III.


Takes: 9

Personnel –

John Lennon – Lead vocal, rhythm guitars (1964 Rickenbacker 325, Gibson J160E)
Paul McCartney – Lead vocal (bridge), backing vocal, bass guitar (1961 Hofner 500/1)
George Harrison – Lead guitar (Rickenbacker "Fire-glo" 360-12)
Ringo Starr – Drums (Ludwig)
George Martin – Piano


Release and reception –

"A Hard Day's Night" was first released to the United States, coming out on 26 June 1964 on the album A Hard Day's Night, the soundtrack to the film, and released by United Artists. It was the first song to be released before single release (see below).

"A Hard Day's Night" was the first Beatles single released in the UK not to use a pronoun in its title, following "Love Me Do", "Please Please Me", "From Me to You." "She Loves You", "I Want to Hold Your Hand", and "Can't Buy Me Love".

The United Kingdom first heard "A Hard Day's Night" when it was released there on 10 July 1964, both on the album A Hard Day's Night, and as a single, backed with "Things We Said Today" on the B-side. Both the album and single were released by Parlophone Records. The single began charting on 18 July 1964, a week later ousting the Rolling Stones' "It's All Over Now" from the top spot on the British charts on 25 July 1964, coincidentally the day when both the American and British albums too hit the peak of their respective charts. The single stayed on top for three weeks, and lasted another nine weeks in the charts afterwards.

America first saw the single of "A Hard Day's Night" on 13 July 1964, featuring "I Should Have Known Better" on the B-side, and released by Capitol Records. Capitol had been in a quandary about cashing in on the success of the movie A Hard Day's Night, as United Artists held the publishing rights for the soundtrack (thus owning the rights to release the album of the same title). However, there was nothing preventing Capitol from releasing the songs in other forms, leading to six out of the seven songs from the movie's soundtrack coming out on singles.

The American single began its 13-week chart run on five days after release, and on 1 August started a two-week long run at the top, setting a new record—nobody before had ever held the number one position on both the album and singles charts in the United Kingdom and the United States at the same time. The Beatles were the first to do so, and continued to be the only ones who had done this until 1970 when Simon and Garfunkel achieved the same feat with their album Bridge over Troubled Water and its title track. "A Hard Day's Night" went on to sell one million copies in America within just over five weeks.

In 1965, "A Hard Day's Night" won The Beatles the Grammy Award for Best Performance by a Vocal Group. In 2004, this song was ranked number 153 on Rolling Stone's list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time".

Trivia –

The song's famous opening chord has been a subject of much debate and even sound analysis, a debate made more intriguing by the fact that the chord, which sounds like a single guitar, actually represents the whole band, in this case John and George playing Fadd9 (notes: FACG), Paul playing a D note on the bass, and George Martin striking an open D chord on the piano. In order to reconstruct the chord alone, the closest approximation is a Dm7sus4 (DFGAC).

London's Evening Standard reporter, Maureen Cleave, a friend of Lennon's, has claimed that she urged John to change the original lines "I find my tiredness is through/And I feel all right," which later became "I find the things that you do/They make me feel all right." This has never been verified, however. (Cleave would later conduct the interview in which John would make his infamous "bigger than Jesus" comment.

This is the first of eight songs taken from the Hard Day's Night soundtrack and issued on singles -- under their licensing agreement, only United Artists, producer of the film, could legally sell a soundtrack album in the US, so Capitol resigned themselves to pulling as many singles as possible from it.

This was the first Beatles song to win a Grammy, in 1964 (the first of their Grammys came earlier that same night, for Best New Artist).



Today in Beatles History (From The Internet Beatles Album) March 30 

1962 – 1st professional performance in the South of England (Stroud), organized by Jack Fallon.

1963 – Concert at the De Montfort Hall, Leicester (end of Chris Montez and Tommy Roe tour).

1964 – Beatles records are in 9 of the 10 1st positions of the Canadian charts.
– Meet The Beatles has sold 3,650,000 copies.
– The Playhouse Theatre, Manchester. 7.00-10.30pm. Recording for BBC's Saturday Club; 'Everybody's Trying To Be My Baby'; 'I Call Your Name'; 'I Got A Woman'; "You Can't Do That"; "Can't Buy Me Love'; "Sure To Fall (In Love With You)"; "Long Tall Sally".
Only BBC take of "I Call Your Name".
– Epstein flies with Gerry and the Pacemakers to Australia, to oversee their arrival for a concert tour.
– Shooting of the Beatles performing live at the Scala Theatre, for A Hard Day's Night.

1965 – Cilla Black flies to New York with Brian.

1966 – New York. Epstein and Tatsuji Nagashima arrange the Tokyo concerts, and Brian secures the UK representation of the Japanese company Nagashima directs, Kyodo Kikaku Inc.

1967 – Studio 2. 7.00pm-3.00am. Mono mixing: "With A Little Help From My Friends" (remixes 1-15, from take 11). Recording: 'Being For The Benefit Of Mr Kite!' (overdub onto take 9). Mono mixing: "Being For The Benefit Of Mr Kite!" (remixes 1-7, from take 9). Producer: George Martin; Engineer: Geoff Emerick; 2nd Engineer: Richard Lush.



– Fifth performance of Fats Domino and his orchestra at the Saville Theatre. Support acts: Gerry and the Pacemakers and the Bee Gees.

1969 – George and Pattie appear on Esher and Walton Magistrates' Court, walton-On-Thames, Surrey. Trial for possession of cannabis resin. They plead guilty and are fined 250 pounds each, plus 10 guineas costs.
– End of John and Yoko's bed-in at the Amsterdam Hilton. John and Yoko leave the Amsterdam Hilton.
– Premiere of a TV documentary produced by John and Yoko, with their attendance, in – Vienna: "Rape". They comment the film in a press conference at the Hotel Sacher, Vienna. The film is broadcast by the Austrian National Network Television.

1978 – End of 3rd period of LP London Town sessions at Abbey Road Studios.