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The Gibson J-160e acoustic has a P-90 pickup attached to the neck, so it is both an acoustic and an electric guitar. The electric sound of the J-160e is heard all over Please Please Me and With The Beatles, as well as I Feel Fine and No Reply On 'This Boy', John is playing the J-160e purely acoustic, not plugged into any amp. George, however, does plug his J-160e into a Vox AC-30. George plays lead rhythm as well as the slide part on the end Please check out our podcast @GearThereEverywhere deep dive episode on This Boy, where we conclude that George used the J-160e for both rhythm and slide guitar • MYSTERY SOLVED: A Slide on "This Boy"? | E... The Beatles recorded This Boy on October 17, 1963 at EMI Studios. It was released as the b-side to I Want To Hold Your Hand. John, Paul and George sang live three-part harmonies, Ringo played brushes on his drum kit, Paul played his Hofner bass, and John and George played their J-160e's George overdubbed the slide part at the end, and he had to tune down his high E-string to D in order to play the octave slide ups (on the D and high E strings simultaneously). It's not necessary to tune the other strings to a different pitch for this slide part, so I'm technically tuned to EADGBD I'm using my 1966 Gibson J-160e, which has Ernie Ball pure nickel roundwound strings on it (The Beatles used Gibson Sonomatic pure nickel roundwounds on theirs). For George's parts, I'm plugged into my Vox AC-30C2X amp INTERESTING NOTES: 0:01 John's intro includes the pinky on the D-string 4th fret, as well as an open A-string ringing out 0:07 John plays a forceful glissando on Em7 0:07 George plays a regular Em sandwiched between two Em7's 0:10 George plays a different strumming pattern- two downs, then 5 up-downs 0:26 George plays a B note on the A-string before the final Em7 of the verse 0:46 George temporarily switches to all down strums like John 0:52 John doesn't bar the entire 2nd fret, so his Bm chord here includes an open high E-string X24430 0:59 John plays D7 X5453X, while George plays D9 X54555 1:12 John and George both pause briefly on the D7/D9 1:20 George initially plays an E7. then switches to an E9 1:25 John does not play the final beat of the bridge, probably because he had to belt out the vocal 'till he's seen you cry' 1:29 George again plays a different strumming pattern- two downs, then 5 up-downs 1:46 John plays a single open A-string note here 1:58 The slide guitar enters- see the notes above that mention the alternate tuning. George starts out by playing the octave notes without a slide, on the D and high E strings (similar to Please Please Me and From Me to You) and then uses the slide for the F#-A part. Reverb tails were added to each F#-A. I'm using the Waves Abbey Road Plates plug-in to bring in reverb just on that note MY GEAR: 1966 Gibson J-160e Vox AC-30C2X Neumann TLM-103 D'Addario Medium Glass Slide #thebeatles #thisboy #gibsonj160e 2:01