Good Morning, Good Morning
From Beatles Wiki - Interviews, Music, Beatles Quotes
"Good Morning, Good Morning" | ||||
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Song by The Beatles | ||||
Album | Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band | |||
Released | 1 June 1967 | |||
Recorded | 8, 16 February-13, 28, 29 March 1967 | |||
Genre | Psychedelic Rock | |||
Length | 2:41
2:35 (mono version) |
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Label | Apple Records | |||
Writer | Lennon/McCartney | |||
Producer | George Martin | |||
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band track listing | ||||
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Quotes
“ | 'Good Morning, Good Morning' was fairly straight rock 'n' roll except for some strange beats on it and Sounds Incorporated (the group) playing their saxes and all that ... I often sit at the piano, working at songs, with the telly on low in the background. If I'm a bit low and not getting much done, then the words on the telly come through. That's when I heard the words, 'Good Morning, Good Morning.' It was a corn flakes advertisement. I was never proud of it. I just knocked it off to do a song. | „ |
—John Lennon, 1967 |
“ | When he was at home, he'd spend a lot of time lying in bed with a notepad. When he got up, he'd sit at the piano or he'd go from one room to the other listening to music, gawping at television and reading newspapers. He was basically dropping out from everything. | „ |
—Cynthia Lennon |
“ | It was about his boring life at the time. There's a reference in the lyrics to 'Nothing to do,' and 'Meet the wife.' There was an afternoon TV soap called Meet the Wife that John watched, he was that bored! | „ |
—Paul McCartney |
“ | Monday 13 March: Tape operator Richard Lush remembers what happened next. 'They spent a long time doing the [brass] overdub, about three hours or maybe longer, but John Lennon thought it sounded too straight. So we ended up flanging, limiting and compressing it, anything to make it sound unlike brass playing. It was typical John Lennon — he just wanted it to sound weird.' | „ |
—Mark Lewisohn, The Beatles Recording Sessions, p. 102, 1988 |
“ | Tuesday 28 March: John's lead vocal on 'Good Morning Good Morning' appeared here for the first time, finally filling the original four-track tape. This was then bumped down to two tracks in a reduction mix, onto which a lead guitar solo — played by Paul, not George — and backing vocals, by John and Paul, were overdubbed. The lead vocal was treated to ADT in remixing. | „ |
—Mark Lewisohn, The Beatles Recording Sessions, p. 105, 1988 |
“ | George Martin | „ |
—Summer of Love 1994 & 2006 |
“ | We write about our past. 'Good Morning, Good Morning,' I was never proud of it. I just knocked it off to do a song. But it was writing about my past so it does get the kids because it was me at school, my whole bit. | „ |
—John Lennon, 1968 |
“ | The basic tune was quite simple, but John wanted a very hard driving sound to punch it along. This is where the horns came in, three weeks after 'Good Morning, Good Morning' had been mixed down to allow for overdubbing. [...] John's rhythms, so natural to his ear, were the very devil for the six players to deliver in perfect time. They had to count like mad to know exactly when to do the 'stabs.' It was very easy for them to miss cues, and very hard indeed to hit them as one, bang on. [...] About three hours was spent doing the overdub on the evening of 13th March, but John thought it sounded too straight. We ended up flanging, limiting and compressing it, anything to make it sound less like brass playing. | „ |
—George Martin, Summer of Love 1994 & 2006 |
“ | A bit of gobbledygook, but nice words. | „ |
—John Lennon, 1972 |
“ | 'Good Morning' --John's. That was our first major use of sound effects, I think. We had horses and chickens and dogs and all sorts running through it. | „ |
—Paul McCartney, 1984 |
Interesting Web Resources
Have a listen:
Listen to the Kellogg's Cornflakes ad that inspired Lennon
(Tune appears near the end, at :37):
Listen to Burl Ives singing I Knew An Old Lady
(referenced by George Martin, above)