Good Morning/Good Afternoon/Good Evening. Song of The Day. I - TopicsExpress



          

Good Morning/Good Afternoon/Good Evening. Song of The Day. I Call Your Name is a song written primarily by John Lennon and credited to Lennon–McCartney. Lennon wrote the song prior to the formation of the Beatles. In 1963, he gave the song to Billy J. Kramer of The Dakotas, another Liverpool band who was signed to Parlophone by George Martin. Kramer released it as the B-side of the single Bad to Me, another Lennon–McCartney composition. Lennon was reportedly dissatisfied with the Dakotas arrangement of his song as well as its position as the singles B-side,[citation needed] so the Beatles recorded their own version. The song features George Harrison playing the Rickenbacker 360/12 guitar, offering the distinctive sound of the famous guitar to the world for the first time. The opening guitar riff differs slightly between the mono and stereo mixes. The cowbell also starts earlier in the mono mix. It first appeared in the United States on the Capitol Records release The Beatles Second Album, appearing later in the United Kingdom on the EP Long Tall Sally. The songs instrumental bridge is the Beatles first attempt at ska. The song was never added to the film A Hard Days Night because director Richard Lester rejected it for sounding too similar to You Cant Do That, which was recorded five days prior and featured on the non-soundtrack side of the album release. I Call Your Name was re-released in 1988 on the compilation album Past Masters. youtube/watch?v=pkAaky91zBU
Posted on: Sat, 10 Jan 2015 23:25:25 +0000

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