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Magical Mystery Tour was started on April 25 1967 at around 7:30 in the evening. The history of the recording of this song is actually quite extensive. I'll spare you the essay and cut right to it. After some rehearsal the group recorded the basic rhythm track which consisted of two guitars (Lennon and harrison), piano (McCartney) and drums (Starr). According to Mark Lewisohn, "Three takes were made, the third being best and this was then subjected to five reduction mixes, down to one track of a new tape, the final edition – 'take eight' – being marked ‘best basic.’”. This particular session wrapped up at around 3:45am the next morning. Whuf. The April 26 session took place in EMI Studio Three shortly after 7pm. With the previous days rhythm track reduced down to track one of new tape, three new overdubs could now be recorded. The first dub to be done were the backing vocal shouts ("weve got everything you need..." satisfaction guaranteed..." etc...). These were all added to track four of the tape. After this McCartney decided to overdub bass. This was added to track three. After that was done, according to Mark Lewisohn, "...he said they should add even more instruments. All of them, Paul, Ringo, John, George, Neil (Aspinall), and Mal (Evans), then picked up any old instruments that were lying around – maracas, bells, tambourines. They put on headphones and banged and played them to the music.” This was recorded onto track three. Another reduction mix was made. This session wrapped up around 2am the next morning... April 27 saw McCartney record his lead vocals and shouting the now famous opening line of the song, "Roll up, Roll Up for the Magical Mystery Tour! Step right this way!" aswell as the completion of Lennon and Harrisons backing vocals. The recording process was now complete. THE GUITAR PARTS: The guitars in the original recording are pretty buried in the mix, which kind of stinks because they're both so cool. Lennon delivers one hell of a performance on his 1964 Gibson J160e. Couple of things to take note of... In the choruses, he can be heard playing a descending sequence of D, Csus, B/G, Bb/G At 0:46, Lennon does sort of an arpeggiated strum on the open E chord. Only happens once in the song. At around 1:50, Lennon plays a G chord early. He ends the song on an open D7 Harrison either used his 1961 Fender Stratocaster "Rocky", or his 1965 Epiphone Casino plugged into either a Fender Bassman or Vox UL730. Couple of notable things here... His track was treated with either heavy ADT or some kind of tape flange. Sounds so cool on the record. I used ADT on my demonstration. Harrison actually stays on an open E5 chord (009970) for essentially the whole song. Same chord voicing that Lennon used 2 years prior for Day Tripper. He does not follow the G and A chords. At 1:40, he kind of does a slow upstroked rake over the strings into the last verse. GEAR USED: 2003 Gibson J160e 2015 Epiphone Casino Warm Audio WA47 Tube Consenser Mic SOFTWARE USED Logic Pro WAVES Abbey Road Collection REDD Desk RS124 Compressor ADT (on Epiphone Casino) J37 Tape Machine Thats about it! My videos are made for more experienced guitar players who may benefit from watching a "playthrough" of a song. I am not a teacher.