joey
Hard Day's Night
Posts: 16
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Post by joey on Dec 5, 2006 13:16:47 GMT -5
Do YOU know any clues from hey jude, please tell me if you know it:)
Joey O´flarragan
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Post by beatlies on Dec 6, 2006 9:50:48 GMT -5
Billionaire Corporate Banking Monopoly Hitler-Allied War Criminal Samurai Aristocrat Yasuda family Yoko Ono's 1965 movie "Satan's Bed" was alternately titled "Judas City." The title and some lines in Hey Jude come from a comedy routine of the Greenwich Village 1950s hipster comedian Lord Buckley, who would have been very familiar to Lennon double/imposter Charlie Brill. Watching the Hey Jude videos, it's clear that Faul repeatedly sings "Jew" instead of "Jude" in some places. Those are some recent observations I've made with the song.
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Post by fourthousandholes on Dec 6, 2006 9:57:37 GMT -5
Interesting that the reversal of Yoko saying, "if you get naked" at the end of Revolution 9 comes out something like, "Look at me satan, please" posted in "the rotten apple 2" thread in one of the YouTube screens. ;D (Go ahead and say it "Lilith"; I know what you're thinking! )
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Post by beatlies on Dec 6, 2006 10:10:32 GMT -5
The Lord Buckley monologue with "Hey Jude" was first used by the Yardbirds with Eric Clapton before the Beatles (Hey Jude was in 1968). Then a group that used the name "The Nazz" formed: "The Nazz" is from the same monologue of Lord Buckley .....
Reminds one also of "NAZI" ---subliminally at least ......
"The Nazz took their name from the song "The Nazz are Blue" by The Yardbirds from their album Roger the Engineer. That song, in turn, took its title from Lord Buckley's comic monologue, "The Nazz," which is a re-telling of the story of Jesus of Nazareth. Formed in Philadelphia, USA in 1967, the psych-pop Nazz were not really Todd Rundgren's [WHO BECAME INVOLVED IN A FANMOUS PUBLIC FEUD WITH JOHN LENNON (charlie brill?) IN 1974-75 AND WAS SAID TO SUPPOSEDLY PARTLY INSPIRE MARK DAVID CHAPMAN'S HATRED FOR LENNON] first band, both he and Van Osten had earlier played with Woody's Truck Stop, who were basically a white blues band and released their own album on Smash in early 1969. Essentially a British-influenced mod band, the Nazz were quickly signed by Screen Gems Columbia who were looking for a replacement for The Monkees. 1968 saw the release of their debut album and a single Open My Eyes. Both were superb. The single was a high energy rocker with a compulsive beginning (which begged comparison to The Who's I Can't Explain), and beautifully blended harmonies. It received a lot of airplay in Britain, but inexplicably was not a hit. In the U.S. it was only a minor hit. It may well have been a much bigger hit, but many stations preferred to play its flip side Hello It's Me, which was also a minor hit when re-issued as the 'A' side to Crowded in 1969. The album was full of variety - aside from the stunning Open My Eyes, it contained a number of fine rock ballads such as See What You Can Be, Hello It's Me, and If That's The Way You Feel and other dynamic hard rock numbers such as Back Of Your Mind, When I Get My Plane and She's Goin' Down (the latter showing a distinct Hendrix influence). Despite its acclaim, in retrospect, as a superb album, Nazz did not sell, either in the U.S. or the UK. Released at the height of the American West Coast's heyday, perhaps it cut across the general musical tide that year. However, it became a sought after collectors' item. "
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Post by fourthousandholes on Dec 6, 2006 10:45:53 GMT -5
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Post by JoJo on Dec 6, 2006 17:19:52 GMT -5
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