Part 3–“Get Back” DVD set

The original Let It Be project was a slow, often tedious month-long project in the depths of London winter–January, 1969. Up to this point, about 3 weeks in, traction has been snail-like with numerous obstacles (the inhospitable Twickenham ‘barn’ locale, setbacks (George leaving the group in Part 1), and waiting around (the Apple studio was not fully ready for recording and the group still had not settled on a performing venue until days beforehand).

As things are picked up in Part 3, with 3 days to go for the ‘show’, they are still waiting around as Ringo and George work on the former’s “Octopus’s Garden” which, like several of the rehearsed songs (“Oh Darling”, too), ended up on the superiorly recorded album Abbey Road, under the more conservatively, reined-in, moderating auspices of their producer George Martin, in this project much marginalized and later controversially overproduced by American Phil Spector.

Linda, Paul’s new love interest, and her daughter drop in and the young girl mixes freely with the goings-on, bringing out more playful aspects of everyone in the studio. ” A wide range of non-album songs continue to be sampled including “Kansas City”, “Blue Suede Shoes, even Beatles’ oldies like “Strawberry Fields Forever”.

George confesses he has spent 6 months already developing “Something” and the band, more conscious of receding time, rehearses “I’ve Got a Feeling ” without Paul. An early hand-held synthesizer is briefly tried out, one that came back later, refined, on Paul’s successful Band on the Run LP. There is also an early version of Abbey Road‘s “I Want You” (they, incidentally, enjoy and get into playing wilder numbers throughout this movie) as they continue to fool around (e.g., John and Paul’s clenched, closed teeth version of “Two of Us”).

They talk about improving the studio sound with Martin and also their tuning, which has been rough throughout the film so far. (BTW some of that slightly skewered effect has to do with Preston’s electric keyboard, that never fully meshes seamlessly with the concert guitaring also.)

Things are moving forward in recording, but the viewer starts to realize that the amount of fooling around and goofing off when they rehearse was part of the Beatles’ usual modus operandi. They were easily distracted, getting other famous songs ‘out of their systems’  before settling down to record. (A fact I can confirm from another evidence source, the Unsurpassed Masters CD bootleg series with its numerous stops and starts and other distractions.) In other words, Beatles rehearsing often went this way and was this labored and distracted during their recordings. *The only time we hear the band go all the way through songs is on the finished LPs and in live performances.                                                                                                                                                                                                                          If the viewer is a musician, there’s definitely a familiarity with the effects of cold weather on the hands of players and instruments confirmed by John trying to keep his hands warm outside on the roof. Ironically, the concert sound remains relatively tuned and clear. The set is very limited; we hear none of the piano songs and any of George’s material for the album, unfortunately. (Important to note, too, is that the group had no monitors so could not hear each other as they played. And that the recording set-up didn’t know what the actual concert would sound like until they started playing.) Visually speaking, Lindsay-Hogg’s split-screen effects during the short show keep things interesting until it’s over.

Finally, we do hear complete versions of some of the album’s songs including “Get Back” (twice), “Don’t Let Me Down” (twice), “I’ve Got a Feeling (2x as well), “The One after 909”, and “I Dig a Pony”. To their credit, the band pushes the envelope with deliberately mangled words, screaming, and in-between-numbers comments by John.  No one watching on site seems to mind the less-than-perfect run-throughs given the remarks of most spectators. Later the band retreats to the bowels of the recording room to listen to the satisfactory playback results in a brief celebration party atmosphere.

Jackson’s ‘macrocosm’ Get Back film has been very comprehensive on the making of Let It Be over a long dreary calendar month; he seems to leave nothing out and the steady flow of jump cuts to more interesting or fun moments keep the viewer watching and along for the ride. It, of course, could have been a shorter film–maybe 3 hrs. in 2 nights? And I believe the final effects from that choice would have produced a better film overall. Instead, in his service to footage-hungry fans, Jackson serves up too many editable tidbits that peter out or lead nowhere to quick dead-ends.

Let It Be, Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s original dreary film was definitely more edited and focused and, therefore, was suited for a movie crowd with the concert footage at the fore in its ending. Jackson’s film projects the same long dreariness and waiting around for things to happen. But he also highlights many brighter moments reflected in the lighting, the constant joking around and sidetracks, and the Beatles’ more developed character portrayals. For that, he deserves a lot of credit and has ultimately rendered a truer, more realistic picture of what happened in that month-long ordeal and process. 

And it is that more positive approach/response Jackson leaves the viewers with in the end credits with amusing outtakes of songs from the film. Perhaps in the greater scheme of things, it is the humor and fun of making Let It Be that matters and mattered most and the fact that so many others got to enjoy it including The Beatles’ last live performance. His film is a respectful retrospective ode to the group and their love of music and performance. Long will they be remembered and immortalized that way.

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Ottawa : A Simple Matter Really

Individual ‘rights’ usually get superceded in a national emergency or an extremist insurrection. One does have a right to protest and that includes a right to be removed and arrested.

Individual rights vs. the greatest good for the greatest number to maintain social control and social stability. Uh, no choice here. Majority good and individual rights always supercede extremist minority ‘rights’ and ‘freedoms’. Especially in civilized democratic countries like Canada.

Incidentally, if this was happening in Washington, the guns would have been quickly drawn. Life is more civilized and peaceful in Canada.

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“History is a nightmare from which I am trying to awake.”

–James Joyce, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

Certainly applies to the Ottawa situation today, the States of late, and the impending Russian-Ukraine war.

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The Missing Element Today

“A thing of Beauty is a joy forever.” –Keats

(Keats has the last word on the quote)

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Part 2 of “Get Back”

(the DVD and Blu-Ray went quickly out of print)

Lots of sitting around waiting for George to return, for their Apple recording studio to take shape after they abandon the Twickenham barn, for their machinery to arrive, for John and Paul to stop goofing around between recording takes, and for their recording engineer to be ready to record. The secret recording of John and Paul’s private conversation about getting George to return is bizarre with nothing resembling common sense or productive thoughtful statements!

There are more scenes giving insights into their creative process with George Martin stuffing newspapers into a piano to make it sound more quaint and dated, with John on Hawaiian guitar on George’s “For You Blue” skiffle tune, with John on guitar playing the bass parts for “Let It Be”, and with John and Paul in rehearsal trying different accents including Dylan and Scottish on “Two of Us” run-throughs. The part where John and Paul go through the harmony syllable by syllable on the ending of the bridge is a minor study in painstaking detail.

Many songs that made it to the Abbey Road LP instead are heard here in process including “Oh, Darling”, “Mean Mr. Mustard”, and “Golden Slumbers”. A number of other song starts end up on Paul’s solo albums: including “Teddy Boy” and “Back Seat of My Car”.
Excerpts from many old rock songs including their own material continue to pop up, reflecting their early and other musical influences, the highlight of which is when John and Paul sing a chunk of The Everly Brothers’ “Bye Bye Love”.

As previously in this film, George and Ringo remain more obviously on the outside of conversations and decisions. Paul often looks to John for direction and tends to follow him for goofy outtakes; John is usually the mischief-maker keeping things light, breaking up Paul although Paul likes to ham it up whenever it’s his song.

People continue to drop in for a look-see including Peter Sellers who had worked with Ringo on The Magic Christian movie, Yoko’s art dealer, and notably pianist Billy Preston whom they immediately get on board for some rehearsals and eventual concert. A fair bit of work gradually begins to be put in on album songs such as “I’ve Got a Feeling”, “Don’t Let Me Down”, “For You Blue”, “Get Back”, and “Let It Be”.

George Martin keeps offering opinions, but has been largely sidelined throughout the film so far. In fact, EMI later gave the tapes to Phil Spector to finish up, going against John’s original intention of a bare-bones live album (those original tapes were not heard till the Naked Let It Be CD years later). Phil Spector got most of the credit for the Let It Be LP; George Martin only got a minimal, humiliating “Thanks” on the cover.

Thus, it’s understandable when at one point when Peter Jackson shows the bored and disillusioned Martin curled up on the studio floor in a vaguely ‘fetal’ position trying to pass the time reading a newspaper. (Elsewhere Martin has spoken of songs with 53 takes which frustrated him to no end when he gave advice at the time; he was often ignored though he was asked later to produce and record the group for Abbey Road ‘the old way’ afterward.)

Near the end of part 2, the original director and recording engineer confer with Paul, suggesting an Apple rooftop concert and Ringo and others go up on the roof to check things out. (There is some concern that the roof might not hold all the equipment and people on it.) So they have found a stage and only have to finish rehearsing days away from the planned show.

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8 GOP Senators support violent unruliness in the air

over offenders being placed on No-Fly lists being recommended against dangerous anti-masking kooks trying to down planes. These are, after all, Their People.

Typical GOP madness: sick, dangerous, crazy, and always in plain sight (like Trump’s dopey stands).

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Ottawa truckers are completely bonkers,

willing to endanger their own kids’ safety by keeping them as pawns and now hostages within the terrorist camp in front of Parliament. “Live free or die” is their terribly unoriginal slogan copped from the New Hampshire state motto.

They seem to want a shootout at the Alamo and, like the Jim Jones massacre stupids, have drunk the kool-aid, and are prepared to die like lemmings following the 1/6ers and Trump, dangerously placing their own children directly in harm’s way.

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A vote for federal PCs and BQs

is a vote for the trucker convoys significantly financed by US crazies like the Pillow Guy (who was, fortunately, denied entry into Canada) and extremists who desire the overthrow of their parties and the rest of the government and who want to take over Canada. It’s a vote for lawlessness, unlimited toxicity, rednecks, and illegal gun-toters bent on mayhem and murder.

These nutcases pee on the war memorial, crap on the streets of Ottawa, and desecrate Terry Fox’s statue, while using their kids as pawns against law and order. That tells you everything you need to know about these two parties and the barbarians at our gates.

I think we can now dismiss these loser parties as pro-Canada, pro-peace, and pro-social order. Instead, they choose anarchy, terrorism, violence, and insurrection. They choose a takeover of Canada by terrorists and American/GOP hooligans. They are hardly the ‘good guys.’

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Never fully trust your GPS.

You could end up like the lost woman and her kids rescued from Elk Island Park who was following hers and ended up 4 km. off course!

There have been many other more disastrous stories of drivers ending up on dead end roads and even in remote uninhabited places having put their full blind trust in technology.

Using a modicum of common sense and built-in human smarts is a wise practice rather than turning one’s own safety and that of other loved ones completely over to technology, which has a track record of failure and tragedy.

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Pets provide a lot of

amusement and entertainment.

My daughter’s rabbit yawning

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