• Dylan's Mishearing of "I Want To Hold Your Hand"

    From Norbert@21:1/5 to All on Sat Feb 1 15:58:47 2025
    I've read an account that on meeting Dylan for the first time, the
    Beatles offered him a drink. Dylan asked for "cheap wine." The Beatles
    also offered him speed, which Dylan declined. Dylan proposed instead
    that they smoke marijuana. The Beatles admitted to him that they had
    never used it -- which astonished Bob. "What about your song, the one
    about getting high?" Eventually, the issue was sorted out; Dylan had
    misheard the lyric "I can't hide" from "I Wanna Hold Your Hand" as "I
    get high."

    Dylan or a colleague of his then produced a joint, which Dylan lit up
    and offered to John. John, instead, handed the cigarette to Ringo, whom
    he pronounced "My royal taster." Ringo smoked the entire thing, and
    went into a laughing fit. The other guys agreed to partake of the
    substance, and at least two of them, John and Paul, became regular users
    -- so much so, that when Lennon's retiring personal assistant showed his understudy Fred Seaman the ropes of his new job, he showed him about
    procuring Thai stick for John.

    Just curious: Does anyone in here still smoke weed? I used to, for a
    while. However, I find today's marijuana culture, at least in suburban Massachusetts, disturbing. There are now three dope dispensaries in my
    small town, and the regulars shuffle up and down the street, murmuring
    to themselves in Jeffrey Dahmer monotones about how that want to
    purchase Greenland, take over Canada, and rename the Gulf of Mexico.
    These people have doped themselves into thinking they ARE Donald Trump.

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  • From super70s@21:1/5 to Norbert on Sat Feb 1 12:29:12 2025
    On 2025-02-01 15:58:47 +0000, Norbert said:

    and at least two of them, John and Paul, became regular users
    -- so much so, that when Lennon's retiring personal assistant showed his understudy Fred Seaman the ropes of his new job, he showed him about procuring Thai stick for John.

    I believe Paul is still a user, at least occasionally if not regularly.
    TMZ or somebody had a clip of him walking on stage during some obscure
    rapper's (or comedian's?, I forget) show and they had purportedly
    shared a joint backstage just before.

    To me it's kind of pitiful to see someone of Willie Nelson's age
    indulge, even if it apparently didn't shorten his own life any.

    Some people just never "grow out" of it. It becomes a psychological if
    not physical addiction like a lot of other vices, and easy access does
    compound the problem.

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  • From Will-Dockery@21:1/5 to All on Sat Feb 1 22:29:32 2025
    Norbert wrote:
    I've read an account that on meeting Dylan for the first time, the
    Beatles offered him a drink. Dylan asked for "cheap wine." The
    Beatles
    also offered him speed, which Dylan declined. Dylan proposed instead
    that they smoke marijuana. The Beatles admitted to him that they had
    never used it -- which astonished Bob. "What about your song, the one
    about getting high?" Eventually, the issue was sorted out; Dylan had misheard the lyric "I can't hide" from "I Wanna Hold Your
    Hand" as "I
    get high."

    Dylan or a colleague of his then produced a joint, which Dylan lit up
    and offered to John. John, instead, handed the cigarette to Ringo, whom
    he pronounced "My royal taster." Ringo smoked the entire thing,
    and
    went into a laughing fit. The other guys agreed to partake of the
    substance, and at least two of them, John and Paul, became regular users
    -- so much so, that when Lennon's retiring personal assistant showed his understudy Fred Seaman the ropes of his new job, he showed him about procuring Thai stick for John.

    Just curious: Does anyone in here still smoke weed? I used to, for a
    while. However, I find today's marijuana culture, at least in suburban Massachusetts, disturbing. There are now three dope dispensaries in my
    small town, and the regulars shuffle up and down the street, murmuring
    to themselves in Jeffrey Dahmer monotones about how that want to
    purchase Greenland, take over Canada, and rename the Gulf of Mexico.
    These people have doped themselves into thinking they ARE Donald Trump.


    This would make a great scene in a sequel to A Complete Unknown.


    This is a response to the post seen at: http://www.jlaforums.com/viewtopic.php?p=682971714#682971714

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  • From Norbert@21:1/5 to All on Sun Feb 2 11:36:30 2025
    I assume Paul still smokes it. I remember reading, after McCartney
    married Heather Mills, that she did not approve of the drug -- and that
    he had promised to quit it. My gut reaction was: "That marriage is not
    long for the world."

    Some people can function on marijuana. The Beatles exemplified this (it
    was LSD and smack that took Lennon out). Pete Townshend was a heavy
    user of pot until 1969 or so, and he later stated that: "The problem
    with marijuana is that in te long-term it turns you into a softball."

    Other people become literally insane on the stuff, and develop schizophrenia-like symptoms; they believe in *nothing but* paranoid
    delusions. This applies to the Trump/Alt-Right-Q-Anon freaks who hang
    out around the dispensaries in my area.

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  • From Norbert@21:1/5 to All on Mon Feb 3 11:55:01 2025
    XPost: rec.music.dylan

    Growers of marijuana found ways to make it very powerful, but something
    else is going on. Today's users, at least in suburban Massachusetts,
    are permanently paranoid and delusional. Maybe, if not certainly, they
    suffer underlying mental eealth issues.

    And when did potheads go right=wing? Not just right, but radical,
    Trumpian Alt-Right? Such stances would have been unthinkable among me
    and my fellow smokers of a few decades earlier.

    I quit smoking marijuana because the high was no longer pleasurable.
    Instead, it made me anxious.

    Looking at the screw-ups mumbling Trumpspeak to themselves as they
    shuffle, glazed-eyed to the nearest dispensary, I'm glad I quit while I
    was ahead. At the same time, I know that *no* amount of any drug would
    have turned me into a Putin-worshipping misogynist.

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  • From pamina58@21:1/5 to All on Tue Feb 4 13:46:06 2025
    XPost: rec.music.dylan

    Paul is chummy with Putin...

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  • From Norbert@21:1/5 to All on Tue Feb 4 21:48:01 2025
    XPost: rec.music.dylan

    I'm reading a merchant mariner's memoir, whose author made two voyages
    into Russian waters in the 70s. One of the author's hard-drinking
    shipmates liked to challenge Russians to drinking contests with prizes
    at stake. There was never a want for Russians who were eager to
    compete. During the contests, the American sailor would play "Back in
    the USSR," to the delight of everyone.

    What the Russian contenders did not know is that the American guy had a
    supply of everclear, and that he would lace the bottles of Stolichnaya
    from which the Russians were served with the grain alcohol.

    He won every contest, to the great embarrassment of the Russians.

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  • From Geoff@21:1/5 to W.Dockery on Wed Feb 5 14:12:02 2025
    XPost: rec.music.dylan

    On 5/02/2025 8:08 am, W.Dockery wrote:
    On Tue, 4 Feb 2025 13:46:05 +0000, pamina58 wrote:

    Paul is chummy with Putin...

    Wow, that's weird!

    Not as weird as pamina58 !

    --
    geoff

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  • From pamina58@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 5 11:53:42 2025
    XPost: rec.music.dylan

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ueCxeQC5-YU

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  • From pamina58@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 5 13:19:53 2025
    https://www.beatlesbible.com/1964/08/28/bob-dylan-turns-the-beatles-on-to-cannabis/

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  • From Norbert@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 5 16:32:43 2025
    "I'm afraid we only have champagne"!!!

    So the Beatles, or at least John and Paul began using pot after the
    release of A Hard Day's Night and before the writing & recording of
    Rubber Soul. AHDN is really good, but the evolution evident in Rubber
    Soul is astounding. Goldman, for one, argued that marijuana was a key
    factor in the musical changes.

    Of course, John and Paul were supremely focused on their work -- and
    marijuana was a different thing back then. There was no dawn-till-dusk
    dope digestion followed with Fox.

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  • From Norbert@21:1/5 to All on Tue Feb 18 23:34:14 2025
    XPost: rec.music.dylan

    Same here.

    I need to correct myself on something. I wrote, sincerely but mistaken,
    that Albert Goldman attributed the change in the Beatles' songwriting
    style to their marijuana use. No; Goldman actually wrote that Peter
    Brown ascribed the guys' stylistic changes to pot. Goldman, in fact,
    devoted several eloquent paragraphs to his own argument that the change
    in style was due to McCartney's copping of black musical styles.

    And he was right. McCartney has owned up to this -- to, e.g., his
    efforts to play bass like "the Motown Guy," James Jamerson.

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  • From super70s@21:1/5 to Norbert on Tue Feb 18 18:52:27 2025
    On 2025-02-18 23:34:14 +0000, Norbert said:

    Same here.

    I need to correct myself on something. I wrote, sincerely but mistaken,
    that Albert Goldman attributed the change in the Beatles' songwriting
    style to their marijuana use. No; Goldman actually wrote that Peter
    Brown ascribed the guys' stylistic changes to pot. Goldman, in fact,
    devoted several eloquent paragraphs to his own argument that the change
    in style was due to McCartney's copping of black musical styles.

    And he was right. McCartney has owned up to this -- to, e.g., his
    efforts to play bass like "the Motown Guy," James Jamerson.

    Did you catch him doing Golden Slumbers/The End on the SNL special?

    Poor guy can't seem to hit those high notes anymore but hell he's 82.

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  • From Geoff@21:1/5 to Geoff on Wed Feb 19 14:34:15 2025
    On 19/02/2025 2:29 pm, Geoff wrote:
    On 19/02/2025 1:52 pm, super70s wrote:
    On 2025-02-18 23:34:14 +0000, Norbert said:

    Same here.

    I need to correct myself on something.  I wrote, sincerely but mistaken, >>> that Albert Goldman attributed the change in the Beatles' songwriting
    style to their marijuana use.  No; Goldman actually wrote that Peter
    Brown ascribed the guys' stylistic changes to pot.  Goldman, in fact,
    devoted several eloquent paragraphs to his own argument that the change
    in style was due to McCartney's copping of black musical styles.

    And he was right.  McCartney has owned up to this -- to, e.g., his
    efforts to play bass like "the Motown Guy," James Jamerson.

    Did you catch him doing Golden Slumbers/The End on the SNL special?

    Poor guy can't seem to hit those high notes anymore but hell he's 82.


    General strength and 'weight' behind the voice not the same.
    Understandably ...

    Time to repost this video maybe ;- )

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nxds-5YSWw8&list=PLAD0A805F5392754C&index=17

    --
    geoff

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  • From Geoff@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 19 14:29:07 2025
    On 19/02/2025 1:52 pm, super70s wrote:
    On 2025-02-18 23:34:14 +0000, Norbert said:

    Same here.

    I need to correct myself on something.  I wrote, sincerely but mistaken,
    that Albert Goldman attributed the change in the Beatles' songwriting
    style to their marijuana use.  No; Goldman actually wrote that Peter
    Brown ascribed the guys' stylistic changes to pot.  Goldman, in fact,
    devoted several eloquent paragraphs to his own argument that the change
    in style was due to McCartney's copping of black musical styles.

    And he was right.  McCartney has owned up to this -- to, e.g., his
    efforts to play bass like "the Motown Guy," James Jamerson.

    Did you catch him doing Golden Slumbers/The End on the SNL special?

    Poor guy can't seem to hit those high notes anymore but hell he's 82.


    General strength and 'weight' behind the voice not the same.
    Understandably ...

    --
    geoff

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  • From super70s@21:1/5 to Geoff on Tue Feb 18 21:05:38 2025
    On 2025-02-19 01:34:15 +0000, Geoff said:

    On 19/02/2025 2:29 pm, Geoff wrote:
    On 19/02/2025 1:52 pm, super70s wrote:
    On 2025-02-18 23:34:14 +0000, Norbert said:

    Same here.

    I need to correct myself on something.� I wrote, sincerely but mistaken, >>>> that Albert Goldman attributed the change in the Beatles' songwriting
    style to their marijuana use.� No; Goldman actually wrote that Peter
    Brown ascribed the guys' stylistic changes to pot.� Goldman, in fact,
    devoted several eloquent paragraphs to his own argument that the change >>>> in style was due to McCartney's copping of black musical styles.

    And he was right.� McCartney has owned up to this -- to, e.g., his
    efforts to play bass like "the Motown Guy," James Jamerson.

    Did you catch him doing Golden Slumbers/The End on the SNL special?

    Poor guy can't seem to hit those high notes anymore but hell he's 82.


    General strength and 'weight' behind the voice not the same. Understandably ...

    Time to repost this video maybe ;- )

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nxds-5YSWw8&list=PLAD0A805F5392754C&index=17

    Awesome musician. I particularly liked the shot when he cloned himself 8 times.

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  • From Geoff@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 19 18:30:51 2025
    On 19/02/2025 4:05 pm, super70s wrote:
    On 2025-02-19 01:34:15 +0000, Geoff said:

    On 19/02/2025 2:29 pm, Geoff wrote:
    On 19/02/2025 1:52 pm, super70s wrote:
    On 2025-02-18 23:34:14 +0000, Norbert said:

    Same here.

    I need to correct myself on something.  I wrote, sincerely but
    mistaken,
    that Albert Goldman attributed the change in the Beatles' songwriting >>>>> style to their marijuana use.  No; Goldman actually wrote that Peter >>>>> Brown ascribed the guys' stylistic changes to pot.  Goldman, in fact, >>>>> devoted several eloquent paragraphs to his own argument that the
    change
    in style was due to McCartney's copping of black musical styles.

    And he was right.  McCartney has owned up to this -- to, e.g., his
    efforts to play bass like "the Motown Guy," James Jamerson.

    Did you catch him doing Golden Slumbers/The End on the SNL special?

    Poor guy can't seem to hit those high notes anymore but hell he's 82.


    General strength and 'weight' behind the voice not the same.
    Understandably ...

      Time to repost this video maybe ;- )

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?
    v=nxds-5YSWw8&list=PLAD0A805F5392754C&index=17

    Awesome musician. I particularly liked the shot when he cloned himself 8 times.


    His Boh Rhap is incredible too.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Iiy_YfpVn0


    --
    geoff

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  • From Geoff@21:1/5 to W.Dockery on Sat Feb 22 23:46:00 2025
    XPost: rec.music.dylan

    On 21/02/2025 8:49 pm, W.Dockery wrote:
    On Tue, 18 Feb 2025 23:34:13 +0000, Norbert wrote:

    Same here.

    I need to correct myself on something.  I wrote, sincerely but mistaken,
    that Albert Goldman attributed the change in the Beatles' songwriting
    style to their marijuana use.  No; Goldman actually wrote that Peter
    Brown ascribed the guys' stylistic changes to pot.  Goldman, in fact,
    devoted several eloquent paragraphs to his own argument that the change
    in style was due to McCartney's copping of black musical styles.

    And he was right.  McCartney has owned up to this -- to, e.g., his
    efforts to play bass like "the Motown Guy," James Jamerson.

    That's fascinating information.

    There is nothing to 'own up about' in being influenced by a particular
    or different style or performer of music.

    --
    geoff

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  • From Norbert@21:1/5 to All on Sat Feb 22 15:03:03 2025
    XPost: rec.music.dylan

    "Acknowledged" would have been a better way of phrasing it, I agree.

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  • From Norbert@21:1/5 to All on Fri Feb 28 13:28:08 2025
    XPost: rec.music.dylan

    Sounds like an intense (in a bad way) experience.

    My parents met in Cambridge, MA., in the 60s, and I grew up with them
    playing stuff by Dylan, Donovan, and Cat Stevens. My mother eventually
    moved up to Gordon Lightfoot.

    Anyway, so I thought I liked Dylan. Or perhaps I was merely used to his
    stuff. Then, in the mid-1970s, a live Dylan concert was broadcast from Colorado. Joan Baez joined him onstage. I was eager to see it. But
    what Dylan proceeded to do was to make a mess. The songs were sloppy
    and barely recognizable. His longtime collaborator Joan Baez was out of
    sync with him,

    And I began to suspect that Dylan was an emperor with no Clothes.

    The same thing happened at Dylan's Grammy awards "speech/performance" in
    the early 90s. He couldn't play, sing, or deliver a speech. In that
    case, he was probably out of his mind on substances.

    Still, I think he's an emperor with no clothes. People deify him
    because they think they're supposed to.

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  • From Pluted Pup@21:1/5 to Norbert on Mon Mar 10 23:36:35 2025
    On Sun, 02 Feb 2025 03:36:30 -0800, Norbert wrote:

    I assume Paul still smokes it. I remember reading, after McCartney
    married Heather Mills, that she did not approve of the drug -- and that
    he had promised to quit it. My gut reaction was: "That marriage is not
    long for the world."

    Some people can function on marijuana. The Beatles exemplified this (it

    I thought they didn't use any drug when they were
    recording music.

    was LSD and smack that took Lennon out). Pete Townshend was a heavy
    user of pot until 1969 or so, and he later stated that: "The problem
    with marijuana is that in te long-term it turns you into a softball."

    Other people become literally insane on the stuff, and develop schizophrenia-like symptoms; they believe in *nothing but* paranoid delusions. This applies to the Trump/Alt-Right-Q-Anon freaks who hang
    out around the dispensaries in my area.

    That seems strange. Are you trying to say that marijuana
    is only bad if right wingers take it? So you have to
    determine someone's political leanings to tell whether
    a drug is good or bad?

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  • From Pluted Pup@21:1/5 to Norbert on Mon Mar 10 23:42:46 2025
    On Sat, 01 Feb 2025 07:58:47 -0800, Norbert wrote:

    I've read an account that on meeting Dylan for the first time, the
    Beatles offered him a drink. Dylan asked for "cheap wine." The Beatles
    also offered him speed, which Dylan declined. Dylan proposed instead
    that they smoke marijuana. The Beatles admitted to him that they had
    never used it -- which astonished Bob. "What about your song, the one
    about getting high?" Eventually, the issue was sorted out; Dylan had
    misheard the lyric "I can't hide" from "I Wanna Hold Your Hand" as "I
    get high."

    Is this Dylan's testimony or someone else's? Anyway what he
    said was not what he believed, he was hustling the Beatles
    into taking pot.

    Is it true that the Beatles used speed and offered it
    to others, or was that just part of Dylan's story?


    Dylan or a colleague of his then produced a joint, which Dylan lit up
    and offered to John. John, instead, handed the cigarette to Ringo, whom
    he pronounced "My royal taster." Ringo smoked the entire thing, and
    went into a laughing fit. The other guys agreed to partake of the
    substance, and at least two of them, John and Paul, became regular users
    -- so much so, that when Lennon's retiring personal assistant showed his understudy Fred Seaman the ropes of his new job, he showed him about procuring Thai stick for John.

    Just curious: Does anyone in here still smoke weed? I used to, for a
    while. However, I find today's marijuana culture, at least in suburban Massachusetts, disturbing. There are now three dope dispensaries in my
    small town, and the regulars shuffle up and down the street, murmuring
    to themselves in Jeffrey Dahmer monotones about how that want to
    purchase Greenland, take over Canada, and rename the Gulf of Mexico.
    These people have doped themselves into thinking they ARE Donald Trump.

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  • From Norbert@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 22 11:07:38 2025
    Journalist Al Aronowitz witnessed these events and later wrote up an
    account of them.

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