Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Beatles included "Day Tripper" in the set list for their December 1965 UK tour. [ 49 ] [ 98 ] They continued to perform it live throughout 1966. [ 102 ] [ 103 ] When they played it at Cleveland's Municipal Stadium on 14 August, [ 104 ] the song triggered a crowd invasion that some commentators likened to the race riots that had recently ...
The Beatles recorded "We Can Work It Out" at EMI Studios (later Abbey Road Studios) in London on 20 October 1965, [10] during the sessions for their Rubber Soul album. Along with Lennon's "Day Tripper", the song was earmarked for a non-album single that would accompany the release of the new LP. [11]
The Beatles, "Day Tripper" – accompanied by a group of go-go dancers; Part 2. Paul McCartney/Marianne Faithfull, "Yesterday" – starts with McCartney miming to the Beatles' 1965 track and cuts abruptly, at the start of the second verse, to Faithfull miming to her recent recording, which she sings in a different key [17] [nb 1]
During that time, the Beatles played their final concert tour, in the US and Canada, and included "Yesterday", "Nowhere Man", "If I Needed Someone" and "Day Tripper" in their set list. [101] In February 1976, following the expiration of the Beatles' 1967 contract with EMI, Yesterday and Today was made available as an import in the UK via EMI ...
The group recorded "Day Tripper" and "We Can Work It Out" during the Rubber Soul sessions for release as a single accompanying the album. [52] To avoid having to promote the single with numerous television appearances, [53] [54] the Beatles chose to produce film clips for the two songs, the first time they had done so for a single.
[21] [43] It was the Beatles' first UK single since the "Day Tripper" / "We Can Work It Out" double A-side in December 1965. [21] [44] The new record showed profound changes in the Beatles' image, after the band had spent the first half of 1966 largely out of the public eye. [45]
Daytripper or day-tripper may refer to: Day-tripper or daytripper, a person undertaking a day trip, a recreational activity "Day Tripper", a song by the Beatles; Daytripper (comics), a Marvel Comics character, Amanda Sefton, created in 1976 and part of the X-Men stories; Daytripper, a series from DC Comics' imprint Vertigo, created in 2010
Like many of the group's other songs, "I Like to Rock" is sung by Myles Goodwyn, accompanied by blues rock electric guitar and hard rock sounds. The final verse of the song includes the main guitar riffs to the Beatles' "Day Tripper" and the Rolling Stones' "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" played simultaneously, in tribute to these bands.