![]() Songlist: I Feel Fine, Get Back, Ticket To Ride, Girl Voicing: TB | Performed by The Beatles | 4232b | Sheet Music Collection | $7.95 Great solo showcase, too!" - Your choir will love to explore the sounds and rhythms and textures of a cappella music with this accessible arrangement of the classic Beatles song from 1966. "Girl" Your choir will love to explore the sounds and rhythms and textures of a cappella music with this accessible arrangement of the classic Beatles song from 1966. This arrangement for guys is crafted to be successful for middle school TB choirs and offers all the appeal of the original recording. Perfect for younger choirs, it would be easy to add a student rhythm section for the complete garage band effect! " Ticket To Ride" - From the movie Help!, this was one of the incredible series of #1 hits by The Beatles. Introduce your middle school men to the classic sound of the Beatles! Authentic-sounding right down to the accompaniment, these well-crafted arrangement is irresistible! Your guys will love jamming to the #1 hit "get Back" from 1969 with its iconic guitar riffs and fun lyrics. Various Arrangers : Beatles Songs for Young Male Voices Songlist: Penny Lane, Revolution, Day Tripper, Norwegian Wood, Birthday, Lady Madona, Yesterday, Strawberry Fields Forever, Drive My Car, Blackbird / I Will, When I'm Sixty-Four, The Fool On The Hill, All My Loving, I Am The Walrus, Goodnight, Here, There And Everywhere, Ticket To Ride Voicing: Mixed 5-8 Parts | Performed by The Swingle Singers | 6017b | Songbook | $24.95 ON SALE $19.95 | A Cappella Another great addition to the Swingle publications, this book will have your group creating a new wave of Beatle mania at your next concert. These wonderful arrangements include the original scat syllables used on the recording as well as alternated endings for the songs that fade out. The book contains the seventeen songs from the CD arranged for four to eight voices and features a bonus arrangement of "Here, There and Everywhere" for AATTBB. ![]() Finally, they have published a companion songbook to the popular album. It spent three weeks at the top of the UK charts, and one in the US.Since the release of Ticket to Ride, the Swingle Singers have received many requests from choirs and a cappella groups for their Beatles' arrangements. The single topped the charts in many countries. Both editions were coupled with ‘Yes It Is’ on the b-side. ‘Ticket To Ride’ was released on 9 April 1965 in the UK, and on 19 April in the US. Lennon played a Fender Stratocaster, and it is likely that George Harrison played a Rickenbacker 360 12-string. He played the lines, which can be heard in the fade-out, on an Epiphone Casino hollow-body electric guitar. ‘Ticket To Ride’ was The Beatles’ first song to feature McCartney on lead guitar. They initially recorded drums and bass on track one of Abbey Road’s four track machines, then overdubbed rhythm and lead guitars (the latter played by Paul McCartney), John Lennon’s lead vocals, and then finally tambourine, guitars, backing vocals and handclaps onto track four. Whereas in the past they’d rehearsed and recorded what amounted to an ‘as-live’ performance of their songs, from February 1965 they adopted the practice of recording just the rhythm tracks, and then building from there.Īs such, although only two takes of ‘Ticket To Ride’ were needed, the song underwent a number of overdubs, revisions and experiments during the three hour session. Recorded in an afternoon session on 15 February 1965, at the first session for what became the Help! album, ‘Ticket To Ride’ marked a departure from The Beatles’ previous method of recording.Īlthough completed in just two takes, the first of which was a false start, ‘Ticket To Ride’ was the first Beatles song to be built from the ground up. Another recording, taped for the radio show The Beatles Invite You To Take A Ticket To Ride, was included on Live At The BBC. They played it during their final appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show, and at their Shea Stadium and Hollywood Bowl concerts.Ī version of ‘Ticket To Ride’, recorded for the British television show Blackpool Night Out, was included on Anthology 2. It also became part of The Beatles’ live repertoire in 1965, particularly on their summer tour of America. ![]() Filmed on the ski slopes of Obertauern, Austria on 20 March 1965, it was a forerunner of the music videos which would later become widespread. ‘Ticket To Ride’ was the soundtrack to a key scene in the Help! film. Don Short, journalist A Hard Day’s Write, Steve Turner ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |