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Post by mysteryboy on Feb 3, 2007 22:21:50 GMT -5
There appear to be quite a few. The opening organ chords of "Blue Jay Way" playing while John is singing "Nowhere Man" from the right channel. Going into Mr. Kite, it ends with the end of "She's so Heavy" with some Helter Skelter mixed in. It's probably the creepiest and heaviest moment on the CD. If you watch/listen to this video, it has the part I am referring to. What does it sound like Paul is shouting a few times here: youtube.com/watch?v=_IJe4xYpb-cenjoy
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Post by JoJo on Feb 3, 2007 23:14:57 GMT -5
A good video, thanks for the link MB. Also kinda cool how people are taking what we've done here at the forums and have put out these videos.. (this and Iamaphoney's are not the only examples)
I think I know what you are getting at, have a listen to the five channel, the center part..
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Post by Jai Guru Deva on Feb 3, 2007 23:33:03 GMT -5
On the "LOVE" logo, a word is possibly spelled out underneath in the red frilly pattern. It's somewhat subjective though, either you see it or you don't. It's like the KLAATU album with the bushes where some say "BEATLES" is spelled out.
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Post by fourthousandholes on Feb 3, 2007 23:55:05 GMT -5
The Youtube description for this video reads:
"Added January 09, 2007 From yeltraHnalA Im a beatles fan and this rumour has intregued me for a long time. Do i think its true??? Im an open minded sceptic."
I'd say a hardcore devotee, judging from the content.
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Post by mysteryboy on Feb 4, 2007 1:18:50 GMT -5
The late, great scientist and dolphin researcher John Lilly once told me that it is always good to question your belief systems at all times. I believe the author of the video has that approach. He is a believer but keeps an open skeptical sided mind. I think most of us here do this regarding the whole Pid/pwr matter.
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Post by mysteryboy on Feb 4, 2007 1:25:58 GMT -5
A good video, thanks for the link MB. Also kinda cool how people are taking what we've done here at the forums and have put out these videos.. (this and Iamaphoney's are not the only examples) I think I know what you are getting at, have a listen to the five channel, the center part.. I don't have 5.1 . Does the center channel reinforce what we are referring to? Also glad to see that others are "getting a clue" thanks to the forum. I don't mean to exclude anyone, but your efforts over the years have been solid as a rock, especially in the area of providing resources and ambassadorship. You and many others have done some really fantastic work here and elsewhere, and I tip my hat to you all.
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Post by JoJo on Feb 4, 2007 22:20:33 GMT -5
The late, great scientist and dolphin researcher John Lilly once told me that it is always good to question your belief systems at all times. Couldn't agree more. What an interesting person! Wiki entry on John Lilly Interesting crowd he ran with, I've always been a fan of the late madcap physicist Richard Feynman, especially when he gave the "O rings for dummies" lesson at the Challenger hearings. Also Werner Erhard, reminded me of when some friends of mine tried to get me to join EST. (a long time ago of course) Didn't work out too well, a hard sell really rubs me the wrong way.
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Post by Mellow Yellow on Feb 8, 2007 4:22:01 GMT -5
I theorize that the Love albums tells the entire PID story, but not in chronological order. For example, after Because it goes into Get Back, when I hear this I can almost see an excited bill being selected as the paul replacement and leaving his home, this then fades to Glass Onion which gives us a glimpse at what John was thinking. NOTE: As soon as you hear bills "hello, hello!" you hear John say "Nothing is Real".
So I am assuming Bill is very happy at his luck, and John is going half insane at what the band are pulling off.
Glass Onion fades and we hear JPM for the first time on the album, this to me is a flashback sequence. It is almost telling you "ok here is bill, and john is sad, but here are the events leading up to this"....... So it goes into Eleanor Rigby, JPM's "song of sadness".
I haven't finished figuring out the significance of most of the tracks but I am pretty sure the whole story is practically layed out perfectly.
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Post by fourthousandholes on Feb 8, 2007 9:32:08 GMT -5
I agree.
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Post by mysteryboy on Feb 15, 2007 12:32:54 GMT -5
The late, great scientist and dolphin researcher John Lilly once told me that it is always good to question your belief systems at all times. Couldn't agree more. What an interesting person! Wiki entry on John Lilly Interesting crowd he ran with, I've always been a fan of the late madcap physicist Richard Feynman, especially when he gave the "O rings for dummies" lesson at the Challenger hearings. Also Werner Erhard, reminded me of when some friends of mine tried to get me to join EST. (a long time ago of course) Didn't work out too well, a hard sell really rubs me the wrong way. JoJo, if you are interested, here is a much more detailed description of Lilly's many discoveries and inventions. He really should have received the Nobel for the peak-flow meter alone! Also, keeping this Beatle related, John was a fan of Lilly's work. Cheers A clip: "...An unparalleled scientific visionary and explorer, Dr. Lilly has made significant contributions to psychology, brain research, computer theory, medicine, ethics, and interspecies communication. His concepts, inventions, publications, and articulated explorations have dramatically enhanced the quality of contemporary global culture. His work with dolphins and whales created a global awareness that lead to the enactment of the Marine Mammal Protection Act in 1972. Today, Dr. Lilly is considered the father of dolphin researchers. In the 1940s, Dr. Lilly invented new types of capacitance manometers to aid in researches of human metabolism, and invented gas concentration and flow meters to study respiration, gas mixing, and pressure and altitude. In the '40s and '50s, Dr. Lilly was on the cutting edge of Neuroscience. He was the first to map the brain of chimpanzees, in the process inventing the "Lilly Wave": an electrical pulse that could be used to stimulate the chimp's brain without any damage. He also developed the twenty-five channel EEG moving relief maps of the electrical activity in the brain and dynamic iconic displays for researching pulse shapes and electrodes. His brain mapping with acoustic, motor, and travelling waves predated today's state of the art by fifty years. His research in electronic brain stimulation, dreams, schizophrenia, and the neurophysiology of motivation - involving the identification of punishment and reward systems -- were published in a number of psychiatric journals. In conducting his brain research, Dr. Lilly developed an interest in large brain systems. This led him to work with dolphin communication. In the process he invented various spectral analyzers and hydro-phones, and pioneered the use of minicomputers with real time programming and original software. While working at the National Institutes of Health on isolation, solitude and confinement, he invented the floatation tank, a tool to maximally isolate sensory stimulation to "better understand what the mind does without exterior influence. NASA and other important organization have used his research into sensory isolation. After ten years of tank research, and while still in the employ of NIMH, he was given the responsibility to experiment with LSD in the tank. The results of that study were reported and published by that institute in his classic treatise, Programming and Metaprogramming in the Human Biocomputer. Like all his research, this was eventually made available to the public. Dr. Lilly considered this documentation his most original work. This is where he first published his famous statement, "In the province of the mind, what one believes to be true is true or becomes true, within certain limits to be found experientially and experimentally. These limits are further beliefs to be transcended. In the mind, there are no limits" Dr. Lilly's last physician remarked with awe that John Lilly is the only person he knows of whose least accomplishment was becoming a Medical Doctor." Site: www.ace.to/tribute.html
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Post by JoJo on Feb 15, 2007 19:10:53 GMT -5
Thanks Mysteryboy. I was reminded that for a while there was a health club in town that had an isolation tank or two as part of their set of attractions. I guess back in the 80's it was pretty common, I'm not sure. Never gave it a try, although I always meant to. Nice thing about this is that you have way of doing a little mind expansion in an all natural way. Couldn't agree more.
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Post by CoconutFudge on Mar 16, 2007 2:10:08 GMT -5
There's an ambulance-like siren on there somewhere. It's late and what song it's during escapes me at this time, but I remember hearing it and thinking, "Whaaa?"
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Post by That Latvian Guy on Mar 16, 2007 12:42:57 GMT -5
There's an ambulance-like siren on there somewhere. It's late and what song it's during escapes me at this time, but I remember hearing it and thinking, "Whaaa?" That was Julia. The siren was probably due to the song being dedicated to John's mum, who died in a hit-and-run accident.
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Post by CoconutFudge on Mar 17, 2007 2:26:37 GMT -5
There's an ambulance-like siren on there somewhere. It's late and what song it's during escapes me at this time, but I remember hearing it and thinking, "Whaaa?" That was Julia. The siren was probably due to the song being dedicated to John's mum, who died in a hit-and-run accident. I like how I'm so ridiculously suspicious of everything ever that I didn't even connect that with the obvious. Thank you for bringing me back to reality.
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Post by plastic paul on Mar 17, 2007 3:18:11 GMT -5
There's an ambulance-like siren on there somewhere. It's late and what song it's during escapes me at this time, but I remember hearing it and thinking, "Whaaa?" That was Julia. The siren was probably due to the song being dedicated to John's mum, who died in a hit-and-run accident. Well she was knocked down by an off duty Policeman as well. Of all people!
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Post by That Latvian Guy on Mar 17, 2007 3:42:29 GMT -5
That was Julia. The siren was probably due to the song being dedicated to John's mum, who died in a hit-and-run accident. Well she was knocked down by an off duty Policeman as well. Of all people! That was the thing I was thinking of. The policeman didn't stop, he just drove away.
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Post by foxokles on Apr 1, 2007 20:00:09 GMT -5
I noticed that the "PAUL IS DEAD, REALLY REALLY DEAD"-bit was left on the LOVE-version of Sgt. Peppers Reprise. It's very faint and only to be heard on the left channel.
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