
DonF
Call Me "Grandpa"
Nah. Couldn't find one. Had to make my own.Scouse said:are you sure you didn't just sing over a bootleg?

Thanks for the listen!
Don
Nah. Couldn't find one. Had to make my own.Scouse said:are you sure you didn't just sing over a bootleg?
Scouse said:I've been doing Beatles covers in the comfort of my own garage. I play and sing all the sounds and get a lot of enjoyment out of it - and I thought it was only me!![]()
I use a Fender Stratocaster, Morgan Bass, Ibanez Acoustic, Marshall MG30 watt amplifier, Line 6 POD 2.0, a Fostex DMT 8 track digital recorder, tambourine, Casio keyboard, sennheiser microphone, hand claps and shoved into Goldwave software mainly for fading out tracks.![]()
Here's my version of Rain - Enjoy!
DonF said:Since this thread has been revived (OK, it was never really dead!), I'll throw this one to the wolves. It's hot off the computer:
For No One
Happy listening,
Don
Very nice. I like the way you sing "eyes" in "...and in her eyes you see nothing...", and the way the bass sounds when it comes in on the 2nd verse (I think that would be its strongest entrance and if it were me I'd leave it out of the chorus preceding it, but just my own taste, the arrangement's very good).DonF said:Since this thread has been revived (OK, it was never really dead!), I'll throw this one to the wolves. It's hot off the computer:
For No One
Happy listening,
Don
I can see the swirling paisley/tie-dyed light show on the wall behind the band.variaxman said:Thought I would get in on the fun...although this one is nowhere near the talent of the other Beatle tunes I have heard in this thread.I play in a 3piece classic rock cover band, and the other night we decided to jam on "Tomorrow Never Knows", kinda in our own way.One of my Favorite bands, Govt Mule , often jams to this tune in concert and that is were we got our inspiration. It's nothing like the original...but its kinda psychedelic if your into that sorta thing.
Tomorrow Never Knows
Nice... the vocal is kind of Lennon-ish.Scouse said:I've been doing Beatles covers in the comfort of my own garage. I play and sing all the sounds and get a lot of enjoyment out of it - and I thought it was only me!![]()
I use a Fender Stratocaster, Morgan Bass, Ibanez Acoustic, Marshall MG30 watt amplifier, Line 6 POD 2.0, a Fostex DMT 8 track digital recorder, tambourine, Casio keyboard, sennheiser microphone, hand claps and shoved into Goldwave software mainly for fading out tracks.![]()
Here's my version of Rain - Enjoy!
The arrangement pretty much a note-for-note transcription of the original, so the credit for that must go to Sirs McCartney and Martin.Timothy Lawler said:... and the way the bass sounds when it comes in on the 2nd verse (I think that would be its strongest entrance and if it were me I'd leave it out of the chorus preceding it, but just my own taste, the arrangement's very good).
That fact did occur to me.Hey this has the same descending bass line at the opening as Kafer's Beatle-like "The Ledge" if anybody remembers that tune.
I agree with you. However, I believe that there is value in this sort of mimicry if one approaches it like an art student copying one of the Old Masters' paintings. I learned an awful lot about this recording in the process of remaking it. In particular, avoiding a mechanical feel, and preserving the looseness and spontaneity of the original, was quite a challenge.Scouse said:There are two camps either we strive to get as close to the original (a sort of musical nirvana) complete with mimicing mistakes on the original or we attack it with a different arrangement. Whilst there is some merit in the former from a musicianship point of view I prefer to do the latter. At least there is some creativity on the musicans part.
DonF said:My 16-year-old daughter sat... afterward, she said, "I wish I could write songs like that!"
Don