Tumgik
sounwise · 1 year
Text
The audience [at the first concert in Washington DC in February 1964], despite the various parental presences, was mostly teenage, and very hot. In the seat next to me, a little girl was bouncing up and down and saying, ‘Aren’t they just great? Aren’t they just fabulous?’ ‘Yes, they are,’ I said, somewhat inadequately for her, I suppose. ‘Do you like them too, sir?’ she asked. ‘Yes, I do rather,’ I said, all too aware that she couldn’t understand what this old man was doing sitting next to her! But perhaps she was put more at ease when the boys played a song like ‘I Want to Hold Your Hand’, and everybody in the audience started singing with them, for then Judy and I just found ourselves standing up and screaming along with the rest. That may sound daft, but it was exactly the same screaming that adults do at football matches. And for us especially, in the midst of sixty thousand people who were all enjoying themselves to the full, identifying completely with the people who were performing, people we knew intimately, people with whom we had made all the records and every little bit of music—in that situation it was all too easy to scream, to be swept up in that tremendous current of buoyant happiness and exhilaration.
[—from All You Need Is Ears, George Martin]
88 notes · View notes
sounwise · 1 year
Text
DAYTRIPPIN’: And speaking of Denny, I know it’s a rather obvious thing to say, but in doing my research for this interview, including watching a lot of videos, it really hit home for me that Denny was quite visible and a major presence in this band. I know there are reports from him that he felt like a sideman at times, but his face was out there front and center. JUBER: Absolutely. There is no question that Wings as a core group is the Paul, Linda and Denny ensemble. This is where it carries over into getting Wings into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Wings was not just Paul McCartney post-Beatles. Wings was Paul McCartney’s group post Beatles, if that makes sense. If you go see Paul now and when he does a Wings song in his set, it’s great but there is something missing. You’re not hearing Linda’s voice; you’re not hearing Denny’s voice; you’re not getting the qualities that they brought to Paul’s work. It was a tempering. I think Paul recognized that he needed a foil, without John being around. Obviously, no one could fill in for John Lennon but Denny has his own eclecticism with his g*psy/folk sensibilities with an R&B voice and rock guitar prowess. And Linda was kinda the glue. Things just worked better with Linda there in the room because she was Paul’s soulmate and the female balancing part of his creative energy. There was a dynamic that happened and, as much as Paul will perform a Wings song and you tap your foot and sing along with it and think, “What a great song,” it doesn’t sound like Wings. I do appreciate the fact that he plays some of those tunes though.
[—from “Exclusive: Ex-Wings guitarist, Laurence Juber, talks about attending ‘Paul McCartney University’” in Daytrippin’ Beatles Magazine (August 9, 2010)]
17 notes · View notes
sounwise · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Excerpt from the Beatles’ FBI file regarding the death threat they received in August 1964 ahead of their show in Denver, CO.
[Transcript beneath the cut:]
TO: DIRECTOR, FBI ATTENTION: FBI LABORATORY FROM: SAC, DENVER (9-new) (P) UNSUB [Unknown Subject]; THE BEATLES - VICTIMS EXTORTION OO [Office of Origin]: DENVER On 8-18-64, [redacted], Chief’s Office, Denver, Colorado, Police Department, advised that on this date he had received a threatening letter in the mail from the office of Mr. VERN BYERS, May D&F Company, Denver, Colorado, who is promoting the appearance of the BEATLES at the Red Rocks Amphitheater, Jefferson County, Colorado, 8-26-64. [Redacted] stated this letter enclosed another letter, which was addressed to the BEATLES, Denver, a.m., and marked urgent and important. The envelope was postmarked 8-17-64, Greeley, Colorado, a.m., and the letter was comprised of cut out letters from a magazine pasted on plain white paper, which reads as follows: “If you know what’s good for you cancel Denver engagement. I’ll be in the audience and I’m going to throw a hand grenade instead of jelly babies. “Beatle Hater”
165 notes · View notes
sounwise · 1 year
Text
GEORGE HARRISON: Once I was on an airplane that was in an electric storm. It was hit by lightning three times, and a Boeing 707 went over the top of us, missing by inches. I thought the back end of the plane had blown off. I was on my way from Los Angeles to New York to organize the Bangladesh concert. As soon as the plane began bouncing around, I started chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare/ Hare Rāma, Hare Rāma, Rāma Rāma, Hare Hare. The whole thing went on for about an hour and a half or two hours, the plane dropping hundreds of feet and bouncing all over in the storm, all the lights out and all these explosions, and everybody terrified. I ended up with my feet pressed against the seat in front, my seat belt as tight as it could be, gripping on the thing, and yelling Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare at the top of my voice. I know for me, the difference between making it and not making it was actually chanting the mantra. Peter Sellers also swore that chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa saved him from a plane crash once.
[—interviewed by Mukunda Goswami on September 4, 1982 (printed in Chant and Be Happy: The Power of Mantra Meditation)]
16 notes · View notes
sounwise · 1 year
Text
David Spinozza on working on Ram with Paul:
Linda didn’t have much to do in the stu­dio, she just took care of the kids. The kids were there all the time, ev­ery day. They brought the whole fam­ily ev­ery day to the stu­dio and they stayed no mat­ter how long Paul stayed. If he was there at four o’clock in the morn­ing, ev­ery­body stayed. I thought to a cer­tain de­gree, it was dis­tract­ing. It was a nice, loose at­mos­phere, but dis­tract­ing. I re­ally don’t know what Linda did in the stu­dio aside from just sit there and make her com­ments on what she thought was good and what she thought was bad. She sang all right. I heard some of the things she sang on the al­bum and she sings fine, like any girl that worked in a High School glee club. She can hold a note and sing back­ground. Paul gives her a note and says, ‘Here Linda, you sing this and I’m go­ing to sing this,’ and she does… There’s one track, which is a cute thing, a blues tune, which I think has a pretty unique sound and I had fun do­ing ‘3 Legs’. Paul likes to dou­ble track a lot of things. We both played acous­tic on some tracks and then tripled. Some­times Paul played pi­ano but he never played bass while we were there. He over­dubbed the bass. It was a lit­tle weird, be­cause bass, drums and gui­tar would have been more com­fort­able, but that’s the way he works … Work­ing with Paul was fun, in as much as it was good to see how he works and where he’s com­ing from. But as a mu­si­cian, it wasn’t fun, be­cause it wasn’t chal­leng­ing or any­thing like that. But it was very good. Paul is def­i­nitely a song­writer, not a mu­si­cian, but he writes beau­ti­ful songs. In the stu­dio he’s in­cred­i­bly prompt and busi­nesslike. No smok­ing pot, no drinks, or car­ry­ing on, noth­ing. Just straight-ahead. He came in at nine in the morn­ing. We were all there and we would lis­ten to what we had done be­fore so that it would get us psyched ready to do the day’s work, then we went into the stu­dio and it was eight hours of just play­ing. He’s not a very loose cat, not ec­cen­tric in any way at all. Very much of a fam­ily man. He just wants to make good mu­sic.
[—from The Bea­t­les: Off the Record 2 - The Dream is Over, Keith Badman]
25 notes · View notes
sounwise · 1 year
Text
In 1965 [the Byrds] toured England and Paul invited us to his club, the Scotch of St James’s [sic]. He sent a limo to pick us up. He said he had been listening to our music. We were blown away. He took us for a ride through London in his Aston Martin, at great speed. He was really hip, he and John were so tight it was like one person at times. Unlike the Byrds, [where] Crosby would just leave you out to dry, the Beatles all defended each other to the hilt. If you criticised, say, George then they would all respond.
[—Roger McGuinn, in Paul McCartney: Now & Then, Tony Barrow and Robin Bextor]
[John and Paul] sort of had their own way of communicating. Hardly anything was spoken, they just knew what the other wanted or was getting at and they had the most amazing talent. […] Paul was an awesome musical presence. He was, like, ten feet tall with music and it was everything: folk, rock, musical hall, choral, it was all there. He was like a different animal with Lennon. When they were together they became something else, more than just the two of them together. That communication was incredible. It was like two high-speed computers just fizzing between each other.
[—Steve Miller, in Paul McCartney: Now & Then, Tony Barrow and Robin Bextor]
395 notes · View notes
sounwise · 1 year
Text
Paul then [after the Beatles’ return from their first stint in Hamburg] became in his own right, very much a songwriter and arranger. He would basically turn around and say, “We have the rough bones of it, this is how I see it, this is how I hear it.” But he would then leave it up to the rest of the band, so it wasn’t a case of, “It’s my song, I want this done and this played.” It was very much “That’s how I think it should go,” and then everybody gave input you know, but it came up with a great finished result, which stemmed from basically, you know. So in later years the Lennon and McCartney songwriting partnership, or McCartney and Lennon, whichever way they deem it, you know, didn’t surprise me. I mean the roots were already there. It was just a case of they had their platform and away they went.
[—Pete Best, in Paul McCartney: Now & Then, Tony Barrow and Robin Bextor]
15 notes · View notes
sounwise · 1 year
Text
Pete Best on his first impressions of Paul and the band dynamic in Hamburg:
Paul struck me at the time as being very confident, very humorous. And this was before I’d seen him performing. It was just the way he handled himself—he’d do anything for a little bit of a laugh. If there was a laugh going on he wanted to be part of it, it was like, “don’t take the attention away from me because I’m still a part of it, anything which is going on I want to be in it.” Humour was a big forte with them in those days, especially John and himself. But it was always, I wouldn’t say a battle, but it was interesting for me sitting at the back when they were performing—which goes a little bit away from my first impression of them—but actually to see them play off one another. You know, if John did something and it got the crowd laughing then Paul would automatically respond, you know, to get something, to get the crowd back to him again. And it went on like that but it was, from where I sat, it was great because the crowd was entertained all the time. […] It was always a two-man show between John and Paul. On some nights Paul would come out on top, and on other nights John would come out on top. What we would do, we would be quite interested to see, like, you know, who was going to win the cup tonight. The funny thing was it wasn’t something which finished on stage, it wasn’t like here we are—six, seven hours an night acting—then, when we came off stage we became different people. It sort of spilled over, it became our lifestyle, you know, our life pattern. The crazy antics would happen on the street, you know, you would have Paul walking up and down the Reeperbahn with a silver toupee on his head, you know, wanting to draw attention to himself. And you’d have John walking down doing the goose step. We were catapulting over one another, rolling, somersaulting on the street. It was like the stage show went on, we’d finished playing the music, but the Beatles were still on show. I think that was why the people of Hamburg took to us.
[—from Paul McCartney: Now & Then, Tony Barrow and Robin Bextor]
173 notes · View notes
sounwise · 1 year
Text
The Beatles onstage presented a line of three singer-guitarists standing toward the front, with the drummer sitting behind and above them on a small platform flanked by guitar amplifiers. [...] Their haircuts had been regularized into shiny, bowl-shaped helmets that framed their faces and enlarged their heads, giving them an almost childlike silhouette. They were dressed identically, coiffed identically, and the three in front were all of equal height. Yet their uniformity of appearance was offset by an almost complete lack of uniformity in their individual styles of performance. On the right side of the stage stood John Lennon, facing the audience squarely, his feet planted widely apart, his body flexing up and down at the knees in a motion that suggested Elvis Presley idling in neutral. Half-blind as he was without the glasses he refused to wear onstage, John’s naturally petulant expression was compounded by an air of obliviousness as he sang, his head tilted back, squinting down his nose at the blur of lights and shapes that swam before his eyes. Across the stage from his songwriting partner, Paul McCartney bounced and hopped and twisted as if his movements were being controlled by an apprentice puppeteer, the neck of his violin-shaped bass guitar alternately jerking up and down or sweeping across the stage as he turned to face his bandmates. In contrast to John, Paul seemed to take in everything that was happening around him onstage, as reflected on his face by a constant flow of smiles, frowns of concentration, surprised laughter, and histrionic double-takes—one moment the picture of crooning sincerity with his head bowed and his eyes raised, the next moment actually shaking from head to toe with the excitement of the music. A more sober form of concentration could be seen on the face of George Harrison as he stood in the middle of the band, his guitar held perfectly level and worn high on his body. George onstage was a collection of small, poised gestures: now stepping forward to take a solo, now leaning over to share a microphone with Paul or John on the chorus harmonies. Behind the others sat Ringo, surrounded by his new American-made drum set, the front head of his bass drum displaying the name of the band in stark black lettering. Raising his sticks high, fanning his hi-hat cymbals with his arm drawn across his body, Ringo seemed to vie with the audience for the attention of the three guitarists in front of him, at times actually lifting out of his seat with the enthusiasm of his playing. And on his face, mixed in with the sidelong glances and knowing grins that linked the Beatles to one another onstage, could be glimpsed a look of absolute astonishment that the others, if they did nothing else, managed to suppress.
[—from Can’t Buy Me Love: The Beatles, Britain, and America, Jonathan Gould]
85 notes · View notes
sounwise · 1 year
Text
Paul was little seen in public during the following weeks [after the memorial service for Linda in June 1998]. To distract himself, he did some light work, hiring the up-and-coming musician Nitin Sawhney to mix a drum and bass version of ‘Fluid’, one of the tracks from the forthcoming second Fireman album. Sawhney lived and worked at the time in one room in a house in South London. Paul came over and spent the evening, chatting with the younger man about his life and interests, including the work of the Indian writer Rabindranath Tagore. ‘In love all of life’s contradictions dissolve and disappear’ was a Tagore maxim Paul had quoted in the liner notes of the Pipes of Peace album. Sawhney reflected that, as a British Asian, he had the Beatles to thank for introducing him to the classical music of his ancestral homeland, via the Beatles’ association with Ravi Shankar. Paul spoke to Nitin nonchalantly about ‘the band’ and ‘John’, knowing Sawhney would know immediately what he meant. He wore his legend lightly, helping the younger man relax. ‘He immediately put me at ease by saying, “I used to live in a place like this years ago and I wrote a track in a room like this called ‘Scrambled Eggs’ and it went on to become ‘Yesterday’.” I went, “Wow!” Then he played it on my guitar, which freaked me out as well.’ Paul went away having made a new friend.
[—from Fab: An Intimate Life of Paul McCartney, Howard Sounes]
78 notes · View notes
sounwise · 1 year
Text
To give [“Please Please Me”] a link with “Love Me Do” (in those days the pop business liked to hear some similarity and continuity between consecutive singles) the plaintive wailing harmonica was featured again, but a perked-up version this time. After the eight or ninth take the Beatles hoped they had succeeded in satisfying their record producer. As George Martin huddled with his engineer in the control room to hear back a couple of the earlier takes, Paul shouted from the studio floor: “What shall we do now?” Facetiously, Martin yelled back: “Why don’t you do ‘Blue Moon’?” To everybody’s great amusement the Beatles bounced straight into an impromptu up-tempo version of “Blue Moon.” Some sanity returned to the session with Martin pointing out dryly that time was limited and if nobody minded too much he’d like to hear another take of “Please Please Me.”
[—from John, Paul, George, Ringo & Me, Tony Barrow]
23 notes · View notes
sounwise · 1 year
Text
ROCK CELLAR: What are your most vivid memories of working on the Wings album Back to the Egg? LAURENCE JUBER: There were a lot of wonderful moments in that album. One that I remember in particular which really stands out was when we were working on “Spin It On” and we had done the track and then when it was time for me to do the solo, I was sitting in the control room right next to Paul, like eye-to-eye, and he was kind of coaxing stuff out of me that I didn’t know what I could do. And it was in that moment I really understood his creativity as a record producer, not just in terms of Paul McCartney songwriter, Beatle, etc. but the fact [of] his ability to engage artistically with a musician. ROCK CELLAR: From your experiences working with him, what do you think is the most underrated thing about Paul McCartney? LAURENCE JUBER: That’s a tricky question to answer, because I think that for me, it’s kind of the totality of Paul McCartney as an artist and everything that goes into that, whether it’s his songwriting, singing, his keyboard playing, his drumming, his bass playing, his guitar playing, all the ingredients that go into Paul McCartney as an artist. For me, at any rate, it’s important not to make a distinction between Paul McCartney the Beatle and Paul McCartney beyond the Beatles. But everything that he did within the Beatles is still reflected in his solo work. In terms of the whole package, that’s really kind of the point that I want to make, is that there’s just so much there there, and that even though sometimes perhaps the sound of a record may not necessarily be something that I find fully satisfying on a sonic studio kind of level, he always gets it done. And his work ethic, I think probably more than anything else, it’s just this incessant work ethic, whether it’s the constant making of records or the constant desire to be performing, is something that helped me learn a great deal about what it meant to be an artist.
[—from “Laurence Juber Q&A: New Albums ‘Selected Blends’ and ‘Journey to My Heartland’ with Dan Foliart; Paul McCartney & Wings Memories” in Rock Cellar Magazine (June 20, 2022)]
30 notes · View notes
sounwise · 1 year
Text
34 notes · View notes
sounwise · 1 year
Text
DAYTRIPPIN’: Let’s address the reputation Paul McCartney had at the time for treating members of Wings like “sidemen,” a charge that was leveled by other Wings members and played up quite a bit in the 1970s. JUBER: A sideman is typically a musician that is hired to play a role on stage and/or in the studio. For me specifically, to deliver a guitar solo, some groove and texture, a cool rhythm guitar part or whatever was appropriate. For example during the Back to the Egg period, as well as playing the obvious lead guitar stuff, I played bass guitar on “Love Awake,” slide acoustic on “After the Ball,” the Flamenco lead acoustic solo on “Goodnight Tonight.” So yes, I was a sideman, but the job assignment very much included considering myself a part of the band. I’m a bit of a chameleon stylistically and I think that I got the gig because I could play the bluesy lead stuff, but also other styles like the jazzy intro on “Baby’s Request.” What’s on the recordings represents the creative opportunities that Paul afforded me and he gave me a lot of leeway. The only times he ever told me what to specifically play was when he had a particular lick, like on “Daytime Nighttime Suffering.” Addressing the question in financial terms it was still a ‘work for hire’ and a reasonable improvement from what I was making as a studio musician. I’ve never had any complaints about the financial end of the arrangement. Early on, Paul had a bit of a reputation for not paying his bandmates well. This really goes back to when Wings first started and Paul had limited cash flow. There were financial issues because of the way the Beatles broke up and it took a while for those to be solved. Part of it was also Paul’s idea of creating Wings essentially from scratch. When the band first started, Paul told me that he [basically only] had an office and a phone, and got to work. I think he wanted to know the basic functions of the business end before he would hand it over to someone else. So basically the attitude was, “This is a small band and we’re going to get in a bus and go to a college and play at lunch time and share whatever money goes into the hat.” It’s a nice utopian kind of vision, but it became hard on the other guys as time wore on and didn’t quite fit with the fact that Paul was a still a megastar. By the time I joined the band things had changed, although the ‘esprit de corps’ was still there. In all its incarnations Wings sounded like a band, not like a solo McCartney project and I think that reflects well not only on Paul’s ability to share in the creative process, but also on the importance of Denny and Linda’s contributions, too. The other players brought their own personalities to the scene.
[—from “Exclusive: Ex-Wings guitarist, Laurence Juber, talks about having Paul McCartney as a boss” in Daytrippin’ Beatles Magazine (October 15, 2010)]
67 notes · View notes
sounwise · 1 year
Text
At the end of the day a farmer delivered a huge hog to the mansion [Tittenhurst Park]. It was John’s notion to parody the album jacket photograph of Paul McCartney’s Ram, which showed Paul wrestling with a ram; John would wrestle with a pig. We all went outside and stared at the large surly animal. It was much bigger than any of us had expected. John circled the animal warily. He liked the idea, but he didn’t like the hog. Dan stood poised to snap the picture. “Climb on its back, John, and grab its ears,” he said. John looked doubtful. He stepped closer to the animal. It let out a shrill, strange, sound. John stepped back, but we all urged him on. “You can do it, John,” I said. John approached the animal once again. “I can’t hold the friggin’ pig for too long. You get one shot and one shot alone,” he told Dan.
[—from Loving John: The Untold Story, May Pang]
91 notes · View notes
sounwise · 1 year
Text
Allen Klein was not the only person who fancied himself as the new Beatles’ manager: Robert Stigwood sought a meeting with them. Whether or not he had by then secured the funds necessary to acquire the controlling interest in NEMS Enterprises, the necessary financing would clearly not be difficult if he could show that he was to be, through NEMS, the Beatles’ personal manager, as Brian Epstein had been. The boys consented to attend a meeting, not least I supposed as they were concerned as to their future legal status vis-à-vis the company during the remaining period, albeit short, of their management contract with NEMS. Also, it was clear that they retained some respect for Clive and the Epstein family. The meeting convened in Brian’s old private office at Hille House, Stafford Street. As well as the Beatles, there were present Robert Stigwood, his partner David Shaw, Clive Epstein and myself. Stigwood did most of the talking, laying out the advantages his management would bring and dwelling at some length on his current success with the Bee Gees, Cream and other acts. He also emphasized his respect for the Beatles’ work and their worldwide success, and undertook to carry on Brian’s work to the best of his ability. The reaction was short and not sweet. The Beatles made it clear, reasonably politely, that they wanted no part of him. The principal spokesman was Paul McCartney. He said that no one could replace Brian and that in any event they intended at that time to manage themselves. Stigwood responded that in that case he would not seek to exercise his option to purchase the fifty-one percent of NEMS and that he and the other members of his organization would leave forthwith. The meeting had been brief and I don’t recall Clive, David Shaw, myself or the other three Beatles saying anything at all. There was no hanging about for cups of coffee and chat afterwards, but as the Beatles were leaving John Lennon said to me “That’ll please Geoffrey, won’t it!” I suppose my distaste for the whole Stigwood episode had become well known. While I was glad of John’s goodwill I felt at the same time that there were likely to be increasing difficulties with the Beatles in the months to come. In this I was not mistaken.
[—from I Should Have Known Better: A Life in Pop Management, Geoffrey Ellis]
15 notes · View notes
sounwise · 1 year
Text
Strictly speaking, prior to “Time Machines” the band was called “The Kids,” and before that it wasn’t called anything at all, and everything didn’t happen right away. Really everything started when I heard the Beatles. I came home from school at the moment when my father was taping “A Hard Day’s Night,” borrowed from a neighbor, onto a little Philips tape recorder. I’d heard some kind of scraps of the Beatles even before that, at someone else’s house. A tiny fragment of their concert (about five seconds) could be heard on the television, thereby demonstrating how far bourgeois culture had fallen. In class a photo of the Beatles was passed around: re-photographed multiple times, worn and cracked like an ancient idol, enough that by now it was impossible to tell who in it was who, but magic still emanated from it. So, I got home, and my father was taping “A Hard Day’s Night.” There was a sense that my entire life so far I’d been wearing cotton wool in my ears, and suddenly it had been taken out. I simply physically felt something within me churning, stirring, changing irrevocably. The Beatles days had started. Beatles were listened to from morning until evening. In the morning, before school, then immediately after and straight through until knock-off. On Sunday Beatles were listened to all day. Occasionally my Beatles-exhausted parents would kick me out onto the balcony together with the tape recorder, at which point I’d turn the volume up to full, so that everyone in the area would also listen to the Beatles. (original Russian text beneath the cut)
[—from Было, есть, будет… / It Was, It Is, It Will Be..., Andrey Makarevich (founder and frontman of Russia’s oldest active rock band, Машина Времени / Mashina Vremini / Time Machine)]
Собственно, до «Машины времени» ансамбль назывался «The Kids», а до этого он вообще никак не назывался, и все происходило не сразу. По-настоящему все началось, когда я услышал битлов. Я вернулся из школы в тот момент, когда отец переписывал «Hard day’s night», взятый у соседа, на маленький магнитофон «Филипс». Какие-то обрывки битлов я слышал и раньше, где-то в гостях. Крохотный кусочек их концерта (секунд пять) звучал по телевидению, демонстрируя тем самым, как низко пала буржуазная культура. В классе по рукам ходила фотка битлов, несколько раз переснятая, затертая и потрескавшаяся, как старая икона, и уже невозможно было понять, кто на ней кто, но магия от нее исходила. Так вот, я вернулся домой, и отец переписывал «Hard day’s night». Было чувство, что всю предыдущую жизнь я носил в ушах вату, а тут ее вдруг вынули. Я просто физически ощущал, как что-то внутри меня ворочается, двигается, меняется необратимо. Начались дни битлов. Битлы слушались с утра до вечера. Утром, перед школой, потом сразу после и вплоть до отбоя. В воскресенье битлы слушались весь день. Иногда измученные битлами родители выгоняли меня на балкон вместе с магнитофоном, и тогда я делал звук на полную, чтобы все вокруг тоже слушали битлов.
20 notes · View notes