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Good Morning/Good Afternoon/Good Evening. Song of The Day. Besame Mucho is the first song recorded at The Beatles EMI audition in June 1962, Besame Mucho was a part of the groups live set during their Hamburg days. The romantic ballad was written in 1940 by Mexican songwriter Consuelo Velázquez, and first recorded by Emilio Tuero. The title translates as kiss me a lot. The words were translated by American composer and singer Sunny Skylar. It reached audiences worldwide from 1944, and became an international hit following its appearance in the film Follow The Boys. The cost of records was high for budding musicians in the 1950s and early 60s, and The Beatles plundered the music collections of friends, relatives and associates wherever they could. The Coasters 1960 version of Besame Mucho fell into the hands of Paul McCartney, and quickly became a favourite. I had this very diverse little record collection from which I was culling material. I remember I had the Coasters Zing Went The Strings Of My Heart, which was on the b-side of Yakety Yak. I can look back on these records and see what it was I liked. With Besame Mucho by the Coasters, its a minor song and it changes to a major, and where it changes to a major is such a big moment musically. That major change attracted me so much. Paul McCartney Many Years From Now, Barry Miles The song entered The Beatles repertoire in 1961, remaining in it for around a year. It was often hammed up by McCartney, who adopted a suitable Latino vocal style in a light-hearted display of his singing versatility. The group first recorded Besame Mucho at their ill-fated Decca audition on 1 January 1962; a live version was taped 12 months later on New Years Eve at Hamburgs Star-Club. It left their set shortly afterwards. The Beatles recorded an unknown number of takes of Besame Mucho at their first EMI session on 6 June 1962, with Pete Best on drums. The recording was rediscovered in the 1980s, having previously been thought destroyed, and was released in 1995 on Anthology 1. I think George Martin felt we were raw and rough but that we had some quality that was interesting. We did Love Me Do, PS I Love You, Ask Me Why, Besame Mucho and Your Feets Too Big, among others. George Harrison Anthology The group recorded Besame Mucho once more in their career. On 29 January 1969 they swiftly ran through the song during the Get Back sessions, along with two Buddy Holly songs: Not Fade Away and Mailman, Bring Me No More Blues. Besame Mucho was included in the Let It Be film. youtube/watch?v=dg48JepkiRo
Posted on: Mon, 10 Nov 2014 11:00:01 +0000

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