Cosmic Funnies

titsay
i don't do bad sauce passes
Misplaced Lens Cap
Not today Justin
Sade Olutola

shark vs the universe
No title available
DEAR READER
Keni
AnasAbdin
No title available
$LAYYYTER

Janaina Medeiros

roma★

#extradirty
Xuebing Du
Peter Solarz
Jules of Nature
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

seen from Canada

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Hong Kong SAR China

seen from Canada

seen from Germany

seen from China
seen from Spain
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from Austria

seen from Somalia
seen from United States
@ledswine
George helping Ringo write Octopus’s Garden in Let It Be (1969)
Paul McCartney during Rockestra recording sessions in 1978.
George Harrison and Pattie Boyd visiting Monte Carlo, Monaco, 1966.
Paul applying Linda’s make-up before a show. Date unknown.
You were only waiting for this moment to arrive...
Come get this dick-fil-a
I’m tired of y'all reblogging this every Sunday
One of you shit heads are saving this post and waiting until Sunday to reblog it
I will fucking find you
1st August 1971 | George messes up his own lyric & smiles so wide right after.
October 9th, 1971 (Hotel Syracuse, New York): John and Yoko celebrate John’s 31st birthday in their hotel room in Syracuse, New York, surrounded by friends and guests. John conducts a nostalgic singalong session, during which he lapses into a song by his old, estranged (and absent) fiancé.
JOHN: Why he had to go, I don’t know, he wouldn’t say…
“My father once said to me, ‘I play the notes you never hear.’ He focused on touch and control partly because he never thought he was any good, really. He knew he was good at smaller things: not hitting any off notes, not making strings buzz, not playing anything that would jar you. ‘Everyone else has played all the other bullshit,’ he would say. ‘I just play what’s left.’” - Dhani Harrison
“George was the best guitarist in the group. I mean, we were all pretty good, but George was lead guitar. John would take turns because John was good too. He had a more primitive style, but George was more technical, more practical, and we all thought he was a great guitar player. The nice thing was that he didn’t really emulate anyone.” - Paul McCartney
“Do you know that George wanted to redo his guitar solos on ‘Gimme Some Truth’ and ‘How Do You Sleep?’ That’s the best he’s ever fucking played in his life! He’d never get that feeling again. He’d go on forever if you let him.” - John Lennon
“He loved to find the right note, and if you listen to anything he’s playing the solo on, he certainly did. If I had him on my records, you didn’t have to read it. You’d just – ‘Oh that’s George’. He found that incredible…it’s like haunting and emotional sound he got from his slide-ish guitar.” - Ringo Starr
“He was clearly an innovator. George, to me, was taking certain elements of R&B and rock and rockabilly and creating something unique.” - Eric Clapton
“Eric himself said about his playing, ‘those little lines and little melodies that George creates, they’re little gems, they’re just beautiful.’” - Klaus Voormann
“He was a very thoughtful player. I never saw him do any improvisation at all. In our interactions, with me, he worked in a way I’ve never seen anyone else work. He worked on the solo in the studio, he sat in the control booth, plugged the guitar into the board, and had the tape played over and over. He worked out exactly what he was going to play, and laid it down. He could develop an instrumental hook, and that is much harder than playing a hot solo. He could develop a simple little melodic idea that would be repeated in the course of a song, so that you would never be able to hear the song without hearing this hook. He was really good at that.” - David Bromberg
“George would play three notes, then stop, and say, ‘No. I don’t care for that note there. Let me think.’ He’d search around, and, after a while, he’d have this solo that was a masterpiece. I started to appreciate that approach later on in life. In my early days, I was more into just going for it.” - Alvin Lee
Continuar lendo
Happy 54th birthday to the Sgt Peppers album!
Paul McCartney♪♬ John Lennon
George Harrison, 1964 © Genesis Publications/Ringo Starr
“You know, there’s that famous old saying, you’ll always hurt the one you love. And we [The Beatles] all love each other and we all know that. But we still sort of hurt each other, occasionally. You know… where we just misunderstand each other and we go off, and it builds up to something bigger than it ever was. Then we have to come down to it and get it over with, you know. Sort it out. And so we’re still really very close people.”
— Ringo Starr Interviewed by David Wigg in London, 21st of January 1969