The Beatles – Candlestick Park – Part 4 (Last)

A rare recording of The Beatles playing at Candlestick Park. Songs: Paperback Writer, and I’m Down (Cut.)

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25 Responses to “The Beatles – Candlestick Park – Part 4 (Last)”

  1. I’m Down and Long Tall Sally may as well be the same song, hehe. Still, this is technically not I’m Down.

  2. OropherThranduil on June 30th, 2009 at 6:11 pm

    why john?

  3. OropherThranduil on June 30th, 2009 at 6:11 pm

    paul always gave everything onstage i think, but especially on long tall sally.

  4. Isnt it I ironic it cuts just before John does a guitar solo?

  5. It´s cut. Oh shit !!!!!!

  6. jinxremovingxo on June 30th, 2009 at 6:11 pm

    on the monitors… Rodger Daltrey had a speaker placed in front of him pretty early on… so he could hear over the four stacks… 67/69 ? the three dog night had them in 69 too…

  7. It was provided by McCune Sound Service.[2][ Bob Cavin, a former engineer at McCune Sound, designed the first monitor mixer designed expressly for foldback. He also designed the first foldback loudspeaker that had two different listening angles.

  8. This is from Wikipedia:
    In the early 60s, many sound engineers were wrestling with the problem of giving the artist enough of their own voice to stay in tune during a performance. Using foldback loudspeakers may have been developed independently by sound engineers in different cities who were trying to resolve this problem during the 60s. The 1st recorded time that a loudspeaker was used specifically for foldback was Judy Garland at the San Francisco Civic Auditorium on September 13, 1961. I

  9. You are correct sir. You know how it is when the years go rolling by. one flows into the next. they must have been “new” in 69? I’ll have to research more. I should have said that they were put into use in 1970. Still wrong but I’m sure they were invented a couple years before and put into full use in 69. Thanks.

  10. The Stones used them when returning to the road in ’69

  11. And it sounds like they can hear themselves in this concert, so it would have been easy to pick it up.

  12. BeatleSongPlayer on June 30th, 2009 at 6:11 pm

    Yeah, Paul (and the rest of them) knew this was their last show, so Paul wanted to end the show like they did in the “old days”. He just didn’t tell the others, but they picked up on it instantly (both songs are in the key of G) and knew where he was going with it.

  13. Paul really gives it his all when he lauches into Long Tall Sally.

  14. Yeah, John, George and Ringo did not know he was going to sing it. It was a shock to them.

  15. Actually The Difference is they Did I’m Down on The German, Japan, Philippine tour and Long Tall Sally on the US Tour.

  16. Monitor Speakers were invented around 1970

  17. the last song isnt i’m down but long tall sally.

  18. Debbielein8190 on June 30th, 2009 at 6:11 pm

    It must be difficult to sing when you can’t hear your voice..

  19. Yeah, it wasn’t to bad!

  20. You bet!

  21. It’s the same tour.

  22. Paperback Writer sounds great much better than the Japan shows.Don’t think they ever had vocal monitors, with all the screaming they couldn’t hear themselves.Their last gig and they sounded great!!

  23. why all songs they performed as same as the Japan tour in 1966?

  24. Sure, It may take a bit, I’ll have to get to it.

  25. Thanks! Could you let me know if you upload that rare stuff? Would like to check it out when you do!

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