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You and Me (Babe)

"You and Me (Babe)" is a song by English musician Ringo Starr, released as the final track on his 1973 album Ringo. Starr's fellow ex-Beatle George Harrison wrote the song along with Mal Evans, the Beatles' longtime aide and a personal assistant to Starr during the making of Ringo. The track serves as a farewell from Starr to his audience in the manner of a show-closing finale, by lyrically referring to the completion of the album. During the extended fadeout, Starr delivers a spoken message in which he thanks the musicians and studio personnel who helped with the recording of Ringo – among them, Harrison, John Lennon and Paul McCartney, and his producer, Richard Perry.

"You and Me (Babe)"
Song by Ringo Starr
from the album Ringo
Released2 November 1973
GenreRock, pop
Length4:59
LabelApple
Songwriter(s)George Harrison, Mal Evans
Producer(s)Richard Perry

The recording of "You and Me (Babe)" features a series of well-regarded guitar solos from Harrison, and backing from musicians such as Nicky Hopkins and Klaus Voormann. Jack Nitzsche and Tom Scott contributed the song's musical arrangements.

Background edit

A friend of the Beatles since 1960,[1] German musician and artist Klaus Voormann has suggested that Ringo Starr's first rock solo album, Ringo, elicited a Concert for Bangladesh-style spirit of goodwill from Starr's key collaborators on the project.[2] In addition to Starr's former Beatles bandmates and Voormann, the participants included Mal Evans,[3] originally a roadie for the group[4] and, by the late 1960s, an occasional lyricist, Apple Records A&R scout, and music producer.[5][nb 1] Evans also managed Splinter, a South Shields duo who began working with George Harrison in early 1973,[11] initially on the soundtrack for Apple Films' Little Malcolm.[12][13] In March that year, when sessions for Ringo were under way in Hollywood,[14] Harrison and Evans shared a house in Los Angeles and co-wrote a song for Starr's album, titled "You and Me (Babe)".[15] Evans had some lyrics for what he termed "a meditation song", and asked Harrison for help with the melody,[15] after which Harrison reworked the composition on a piano.[16]

Author Robert Rodriguez views Harrison's role in finishing "You and Me (Babe)" as "[a]ssisting the nascent songwriting career" of Evans,[17] who co-wrote Splinter's "Lonely Man" around this time.[18] Evans had also provided uncredited assistance to Paul McCartney in 1967 on song lyrics for the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album.[19][nb 2]

Composition edit

Beatles biographer Nicholas Schaffner describes the song as "a showbizzy send-off".[21] The lyrics allow Starr to farewell the listener, as he sings of having enjoyed entertaining them, "But it's getting late and it's time to leave."[22] Author Ian Inglis comments on the similarity between "You and Me (Babe)" and the Beatles songs "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" and "Good Night", through its incorporation of a songwriting device whereby the performer directly addresses his audience.[22] Musicologist Thomas MacFarlane similarly recognises the song as a musical example of breaking the fourth wall, particularly during the long coda.[23]

In the two middle eights, the lyrics refer to the convivial atmosphere that was a feature of the Los Angeles sessions for Ringo.[22] Starr concludes the second middle eight with a message to LP listeners, saying that despite the performance being over, he remains "Right here on this record spinning round, with the sound …"[16]

Another reference to the album comes in Starr's spoken line during the coda: "Well, it's the end of the night and I'd just like to say thank you to everyone involved in this piece of plastic we're making ..."[16] He then names three of the main session musicians on Ringo – fellow drummer Jim Keltner, Voormann and keyboard player Nicky Hopkins – before similarly thanking Harrison, ex-Beatles John Lennon and McCartney, producer Richard Perry, sound engineer Bill Schnee, and songwriter Vini Poncia.[16] He concludes the list by signing off as Ringo Starr. In MacFarlane's description, these closing acknowledgments provide the sonic equivalent of credits rolling on screen at the end of a "classic Hollywood film".[23]

Recording edit

After arriving in Los Angeles from London for a Beatles-related business meeting on 10 March 1973, Harrison admitted to being "knocked out" by the quality of the demos Starr had recorded at Sunset Sound Recorders over the previous week.[24] Harrison played on Lennon's contribution, "I'm the Greatest",[25] and participated in the recording of two songs he himself had written or co-written for Starr's album: "Photograph" and "Sunshine Life for Me".[26][27] The basic track for "You and Me (Babe)" was also taped during these sessions, which lasted until 27 March.[28] The line-up of musicians included Starr (drums), Harrison (electric guitar), Hopkins (electric piano), Poncia (acoustic guitar) and Voormann (bass).[29] Harrison's soloing provides what author Alan Clayson terms "a deft fretboard obligato" throughout the recording,[30] encouraged by Starr's spoken "Come on, lads – play it for me, boys" at the start of the playout.[16]

Overdubs on the basic track included a marimba part,[15] played by percussionist Milt Holland.[31] Underlining the song's role as a show finale,[32] "You and Me (Babe)" also received orchestral string and horn overdubs.[33] The horn parts, played and arranged by Tom Scott,[34] were recorded at Sunset Sound on 12 May, while Jack Nitzsche added orchestration to the song on 29 June, at Warner Bros. Records' Burbank studio.[35]

Release edit

Apple Records released Ringo in November 1973,[36] with "You and Me (Babe)" sequenced as the final track, following the Starr–Poncia composition "Devil Woman".[37] Combined with the album opener, "I'm the Greatest", in which Starr reprised his Billy Shears persona from Sgt. Pepper, the song suggested a loose conceptual framework for Ringo in the manner of the Beatles' 1967 LP.[38][nb 3] According to authors Chip Madinger and Mark Easter, "You and Me (Babe)" was briefly considered for release as a single.[40]

The album was a commercial and critical success,[41][42] as reviewers praised Starr's achievement in coaxing quality contributions from his former bandmates without his personality being lost in the process.[43] The closing monologue in "You and Me (Babe)" conveyed the spirit of collaboration among the former Beatles, nearly four years after their break-up,[44] although on no single track did they all participate.[45][46][nb 4]

In 1975, London-based recording engineer David Hentschel covered "You and Me (Babe)", along with all the other tracks on Ringo,[51] for his album Sta*rtling Music.[52][53] An experimental work featuring Hentschel on ARP synthesizer,[54] the album was one of the first releases on Starr's short-lived record label, Ring O' Records.[55]

Critical reception edit

In his contemporaneous review for Rolling Stone, Ben Gerson wrote of the song: "It is the infectious 'You and Me (Babe),' Ringo's final song, into which all the bittersweet [Beatles] reunion sentiments pour. George on this cut plays better than he has in years; his uncanny knack for peeling away the harmonies and realigning them is fully with him here. He keeps cooking well into the fade-out." Gerson listed the track among the album's "three most wonderful songs", along with "I'm the Greatest" and "Photograph".[56]

NME critic Bob Woffinden remarked on the album's loose concept as a stage show, due to "I'm the Greatest" and "You and Me (Babe)" "effectively open[ing] and clos[ing] proceedings" together with the inclusion of "Ringo's name in lights" on the Sgt. Pepper-like LP cover.[57] Alan Betrock of Phonograph Record described "You and Me (Babe)" as a "fine" song and a "suitable finish", saying that it combined "Good Night" with elements from the Rolling Stones' "Something Happened to Me Yesterday". He welcomed these and other "throwbacks" on Ringo as a sign that the former Beatles had "learned to live with their past" and were now free of the negativity and resentment that had occasionally surfaced in their lyrics, artwork and legal actions.[58]

Beatles historian Bruce Spizer views the song as "the perfect closer" for Ringo and compares it with the similarly effective "Good Night", sung by Starr in 1968 to close the Beatles' White Album.[16] Robert Rodriguez describes it as "slick" and "a rather syrupy lounge band impression", redeemed by "one of [Harrison's] sharper post-Beatles solos".[15]

Among Harrison biographers, Elliot Huntley dismisses the song for its show tune qualities, describing it as "syrupy",[59] while Simon Leng views the composition as a "corny effort" that "trades on Starr's chummy stage persona" and pales alongside the "effortless pop craft" of "Photograph".[60] Leng concludes of "You and Me (Babe)": "Here Harrison was writing with a specific singer in mind, and the song reveals nothing other than his ability to write to order."[61] Ian Inglis welcomes the song's "warm and positive message" and views its reprise of the Beatles' technique of directly addressing the listener as a "great success".[22]

Personnel edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ One of the Beatles' closest aides, Evans briefly ran their Apple record label in 1968.[6] Among his credits on Apple's releases, Evans produced various songs by Badfinger, including part of their soundtrack for Starr's movie The Magic Christian (1969) and the 1970 single "No Matter What",[7] as well as co-producing "New Day" by Jackie Lomax, and the Elastic Oz Band's 1971 Oz magazine benefit single, "God Save Us".[8] Later in the 1970s, Evans co-produced a solo album by Who drummer Keith Moon, Two Sides of the Moon (1975),[9] released on Track Records.[10]
  2. ^ According to Beatles biographer Ian MacDonald, it was Evans who came up with that album's title, to serve as an alternative persona for the band.[20]
  3. ^ MacFarlane comments that through these two songs, Harrison and Lennon each advance such an overarching concept, whereas McCartney's sole writing contribution, the ballad "Six O'Clock", sees him "relegated to a supporting role" on Ringo.[39]
  4. ^ Following Starr's example, Harrison used the fourth wall-defying device on several of his recordings, starting with the 1974 song "Far East Man".[47] Over that track's introduction, he intones a dedication to Frank Sinatra[48][49] and hopes that Sinatra covers the song at his next Las Vegas concert engagement.[50]

References edit

  1. ^ Rodriguez, pp. 83, 85.
  2. ^ Leng, pp. 138–39.
  3. ^ O'Dell, pp. 246–47.
  4. ^ Clayson, pp. 105–06.
  5. ^ Spizer, pp. 50, 338, 341.
  6. ^ Doggett, pp. 30–31, 36, 82.
  7. ^ Spizer, p. 338.
  8. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, pp. 77, 102.
  9. ^ Doggett, pp. 240–41.
  10. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, p. 150.
  11. ^ Leng, p. 142.
  12. ^ Badman, pp. 90, 129.
  13. ^ Michael Simmons, "Cry for a Shadow", Mojo, November 2011, pp. 84–85.
  14. ^ Madinger & Easter, pp. 500–01.
  15. ^ a b c d Rodriguez, p. 35.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Spizer, p. 308.
  17. ^ Rodriguez, p. 158.
  18. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, p. 370.
  19. ^ Rodriguez, p. 241.
  20. ^ MacDonald, p. 206fn.
  21. ^ Schaffner, p. 161.
  22. ^ a b c d Inglis, p. 56.
  23. ^ a b MacFarlane, p. 89.
  24. ^ Badman, pp. 91, 92.
  25. ^ Doggett, p. 199.
  26. ^ Spizer, p. 306.
  27. ^ MacFarlane, pp. 88–89.
  28. ^ Badman, p. 91.
  29. ^ Leng, pp. 139–40.
  30. ^ Clayson, p. 242.
  31. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, p. 212.
  32. ^ Woffinden, p. 77.
  33. ^ Spizer, pp. 306, 308.
  34. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, p. 213.
  35. ^ Madinger & Easter, p. 507.
  36. ^ Badman, p. 111.
  37. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, p. 128.
  38. ^ MacFarlane, pp. 88, 89.
  39. ^ MacFarlane, pp. 89, 109.
  40. ^ Madinger & Easter, p. 506.
  41. ^ Rodriguez, pp. 143, 157.
  42. ^ Frontani, p. 156.
  43. ^ Schaffner, pp. 160–61.
  44. ^ Carr & Tyler, p. 109.
  45. ^ Clayson, p. 243.
  46. ^ Woffinden, p. 75.
  47. ^ MacFarlane, pp. 92, 108.
  48. ^ Huntley, p. 111.
  49. ^ MacFarlane, p. 108.
  50. ^ Madinger & Easter, p. 444.
  51. ^ Clayson, p. 271.
  52. ^ Bob Woffinden, "Ringo Starr: Everyone One of Us Has All We Need …", NME, 12 April 1975; available at Rock's Backpages (subscription required).
  53. ^ Castleman & Podrazik, p. 313.
  54. ^ Clayson, pp. 271–72.
  55. ^ Woffinden, p. 78.
  56. ^ Ben Gerson, . Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 1 October 2007. Retrieved 1 July 2013., Rolling Stone, 20 December 1973, p. 73 (retrieved 22 January 2014).
  57. ^ Woffinden, pp. 75, 84.
  58. ^ Alan Betrock, "Ringo Starr: Ringo", Phonograph Record, December 1973; available at Rock's Backpages (subscription required).
  59. ^ Huntley, p. 97.
  60. ^ Leng, pp. 139, 140.
  61. ^ Leng, p. 140.

Sources edit

  • Keith Badman, The Beatles Diary Volume 2: After the Break-Up 1970–2001, Omnibus Press (London, 2001; ISBN 0-7119-8307-0).
  • Roy Carr & Tony Tyler, The Beatles: An Illustrated Record, Trewin Copplestone Publishing (London, 1978; ISBN 0-450-04170-0).
  • Harry Castleman & Walter J. Podrazik, All Together Now: The First Complete Beatles Discography 1961–1975, Ballantine Books (New York, NY, 1976; ISBN 0-345-25680-8).
  • Alan Clayson, Ringo Starr, Sanctuary (London, 2003; ISBN 1-86074-488-5).
  • Peter Doggett, You Never Give Me Your Money: The Beatles After the Breakup, It Books (New York, NY, 2011; ISBN 978-0-06-177418-8).
  • Michael Frontani, "The Solo Years", in Kenneth Womack (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to the Beatles, Cambridge University Press (Cambridge, UK, 2009; ISBN 978-1-139-82806-2), pp. 153–82.
  • Elliot J. Huntley, Mystical One: George Harrison – After the Break-up of the Beatles, Guernica Editions (Toronto, ON, 2006; ISBN 1-55071-197-0).
  • Ian Inglis, The Words and Music of George Harrison, Praeger (Santa Barbara, CA, 2010; ISBN 978-0-313-37532-3).
  • Simon Leng, While My Guitar Gently Weeps: The Music of George Harrison, Hal Leonard (Milwaukee, WI, 2006; ISBN 1-4234-0609-5).
  • Ian MacDonald, Revolution in the Head: The Beatles' Records and the Sixties, Pimlico (London, 1998; ISBN 0-7126-6697-4).
  • Thomas MacFarlane, The Music of George Harrison, Routledge (Abingdon, UK, 2019; ISBN 978-1-138-59910-9).
  • Chip Madinger & Mark Easter, Eight Arms to Hold You: The Solo Beatles Compendium, 44.1 Productions (Chesterfield, MO, 2000; ISBN 0-615-11724-4).
  • Chris O'Dell (with Katherine Ketcham), Miss O'Dell: My Hard Days and Long Nights with The Beatles, The Stones, Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton, and the Women They Loved, Touchstone (New York, NY, 2009; ISBN 978-1-4165-9093-4).
  • Robert Rodriguez, Fab Four FAQ 2.0: The Beatles' Solo Years, 1970–1980, Backbeat Books (Milwaukee, WI, 2010; ISBN 978-1-4165-9093-4).
  • Nicholas Schaffner, The Beatles Forever, McGraw-Hill (New York, NY, 1978; ISBN 0-07-055087-5).
  • Bruce Spizer, The Beatles Solo on Apple Records, 498 Productions (New Orleans, LA, 2005; ISBN 0-9662649-5-9).
  • Bob Woffinden, The Beatles Apart, Proteus (London, 1981; ISBN 0-906071-89-5).

babe, song, english, musician, ringo, starr, released, final, track, 1973, album, ringo, starr, fellow, beatle, george, harrison, wrote, song, along, with, evans, beatles, longtime, aide, personal, assistant, starr, during, making, ringo, track, serves, farewe. You and Me Babe is a song by English musician Ringo Starr released as the final track on his 1973 album Ringo Starr s fellow ex Beatle George Harrison wrote the song along with Mal Evans the Beatles longtime aide and a personal assistant to Starr during the making of Ringo The track serves as a farewell from Starr to his audience in the manner of a show closing finale by lyrically referring to the completion of the album During the extended fadeout Starr delivers a spoken message in which he thanks the musicians and studio personnel who helped with the recording of Ringo among them Harrison John Lennon and Paul McCartney and his producer Richard Perry You and Me Babe Song by Ringo Starrfrom the album RingoReleased2 November 1973GenreRock popLength4 59LabelAppleSongwriter s George Harrison Mal EvansProducer s Richard PerryThe recording of You and Me Babe features a series of well regarded guitar solos from Harrison and backing from musicians such as Nicky Hopkins and Klaus Voormann Jack Nitzsche and Tom Scott contributed the song s musical arrangements Contents 1 Background 2 Composition 3 Recording 4 Release 5 Critical reception 6 Personnel 7 Notes 8 References 9 SourcesBackground editA friend of the Beatles since 1960 1 German musician and artist Klaus Voormann has suggested that Ringo Starr s first rock solo album Ringo elicited a Concert for Bangladesh style spirit of goodwill from Starr s key collaborators on the project 2 In addition to Starr s former Beatles bandmates and Voormann the participants included Mal Evans 3 originally a roadie for the group 4 and by the late 1960s an occasional lyricist Apple Records A amp R scout and music producer 5 nb 1 Evans also managed Splinter a South Shields duo who began working with George Harrison in early 1973 11 initially on the soundtrack for Apple Films Little Malcolm 12 13 In March that year when sessions for Ringo were under way in Hollywood 14 Harrison and Evans shared a house in Los Angeles and co wrote a song for Starr s album titled You and Me Babe 15 Evans had some lyrics for what he termed a meditation song and asked Harrison for help with the melody 15 after which Harrison reworked the composition on a piano 16 Author Robert Rodriguez views Harrison s role in finishing You and Me Babe as a ssisting the nascent songwriting career of Evans 17 who co wrote Splinter s Lonely Man around this time 18 Evans had also provided uncredited assistance to Paul McCartney in 1967 on song lyrics for the Beatles Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band album 19 nb 2 Composition editBeatles biographer Nicholas Schaffner describes the song as a showbizzy send off 21 The lyrics allow Starr to farewell the listener as he sings of having enjoyed entertaining them But it s getting late and it s time to leave 22 Author Ian Inglis comments on the similarity between You and Me Babe and the Beatles songs Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band and Good Night through its incorporation of a songwriting device whereby the performer directly addresses his audience 22 Musicologist Thomas MacFarlane similarly recognises the song as a musical example of breaking the fourth wall particularly during the long coda 23 In the two middle eights the lyrics refer to the convivial atmosphere that was a feature of the Los Angeles sessions for Ringo 22 Starr concludes the second middle eight with a message to LP listeners saying that despite the performance being over he remains Right here on this record spinning round with the sound 16 Another reference to the album comes in Starr s spoken line during the coda Well it s the end of the night and I d just like to say thank you to everyone involved in this piece of plastic we re making 16 He then names three of the main session musicians on Ringo fellow drummer Jim Keltner Voormann and keyboard player Nicky Hopkins before similarly thanking Harrison ex Beatles John Lennon and McCartney producer Richard Perry sound engineer Bill Schnee and songwriter Vini Poncia 16 He concludes the list by signing off as Ringo Starr In MacFarlane s description these closing acknowledgments provide the sonic equivalent of credits rolling on screen at the end of a classic Hollywood film 23 Recording editAfter arriving in Los Angeles from London for a Beatles related business meeting on 10 March 1973 Harrison admitted to being knocked out by the quality of the demos Starr had recorded at Sunset Sound Recorders over the previous week 24 Harrison played on Lennon s contribution I m the Greatest 25 and participated in the recording of two songs he himself had written or co written for Starr s album Photograph and Sunshine Life for Me 26 27 The basic track for You and Me Babe was also taped during these sessions which lasted until 27 March 28 The line up of musicians included Starr drums Harrison electric guitar Hopkins electric piano Poncia acoustic guitar and Voormann bass 29 Harrison s soloing provides what author Alan Clayson terms a deft fretboard obligato throughout the recording 30 encouraged by Starr s spoken Come on lads play it for me boys at the start of the playout 16 Overdubs on the basic track included a marimba part 15 played by percussionist Milt Holland 31 Underlining the song s role as a show finale 32 You and Me Babe also received orchestral string and horn overdubs 33 The horn parts played and arranged by Tom Scott 34 were recorded at Sunset Sound on 12 May while Jack Nitzsche added orchestration to the song on 29 June at Warner Bros Records Burbank studio 35 Release editApple Records released Ringo in November 1973 36 with You and Me Babe sequenced as the final track following the Starr Poncia composition Devil Woman 37 Combined with the album opener I m the Greatest in which Starr reprised his Billy Shears persona from Sgt Pepper the song suggested a loose conceptual framework for Ringo in the manner of the Beatles 1967 LP 38 nb 3 According to authors Chip Madinger and Mark Easter You and Me Babe was briefly considered for release as a single 40 The album was a commercial and critical success 41 42 as reviewers praised Starr s achievement in coaxing quality contributions from his former bandmates without his personality being lost in the process 43 The closing monologue in You and Me Babe conveyed the spirit of collaboration among the former Beatles nearly four years after their break up 44 although on no single track did they all participate 45 46 nb 4 In 1975 London based recording engineer David Hentschel covered You and Me Babe along with all the other tracks on Ringo 51 for his album Sta rtling Music 52 53 An experimental work featuring Hentschel on ARP synthesizer 54 the album was one of the first releases on Starr s short lived record label Ring O Records 55 Critical reception editIn his contemporaneous review for Rolling Stone Ben Gerson wrote of the song It is the infectious You and Me Babe Ringo s final song into which all the bittersweet Beatles reunion sentiments pour George on this cut plays better than he has in years his uncanny knack for peeling away the harmonies and realigning them is fully with him here He keeps cooking well into the fade out Gerson listed the track among the album s three most wonderful songs along with I m the Greatest and Photograph 56 NME critic Bob Woffinden remarked on the album s loose concept as a stage show due to I m the Greatest and You and Me Babe effectively open ing and clos ing proceedings together with the inclusion of Ringo s name in lights on the Sgt Pepper like LP cover 57 Alan Betrock of Phonograph Record described You and Me Babe as a fine song and a suitable finish saying that it combined Good Night with elements from the Rolling Stones Something Happened to Me Yesterday He welcomed these and other throwbacks on Ringo as a sign that the former Beatles had learned to live with their past and were now free of the negativity and resentment that had occasionally surfaced in their lyrics artwork and legal actions 58 Beatles historian Bruce Spizer views the song as the perfect closer for Ringo and compares it with the similarly effective Good Night sung by Starr in 1968 to close the Beatles White Album 16 Robert Rodriguez describes it as slick and a rather syrupy lounge band impression redeemed by one of Harrison s sharper post Beatles solos 15 Among Harrison biographers Elliot Huntley dismisses the song for its show tune qualities describing it as syrupy 59 while Simon Leng views the composition as a corny effort that trades on Starr s chummy stage persona and pales alongside the effortless pop craft of Photograph 60 Leng concludes of You and Me Babe Here Harrison was writing with a specific singer in mind and the song reveals nothing other than his ability to write to order 61 Ian Inglis welcomes the song s warm and positive message and views its reprise of the Beatles technique of directly addressing the listener as a great success 22 Personnel editRingo Starr vocals drums percussion George Harrison electric guitars Nicky Hopkins electric piano Vini Poncia acoustic guitar Klaus Voormann bass Milt Holland marimba Tom Scott saxophones horn arrangement Jack Nitzsche string arrangementNotes edit One of the Beatles closest aides Evans briefly ran their Apple record label in 1968 6 Among his credits on Apple s releases Evans produced various songs by Badfinger including part of their soundtrack for Starr s movie The Magic Christian 1969 and the 1970 single No Matter What 7 as well as co producing New Day by Jackie Lomax and the Elastic Oz Band s 1971 Oz magazine benefit single God Save Us 8 Later in the 1970s Evans co produced a solo album by Who drummer Keith Moon Two Sides of the Moon 1975 9 released on Track Records 10 According to Beatles biographer Ian MacDonald it was Evans who came up with that album s title to serve as an alternative persona for the band 20 MacFarlane comments that through these two songs Harrison and Lennon each advance such an overarching concept whereas McCartney s sole writing contribution the ballad Six O Clock sees him relegated to a supporting role on Ringo 39 Following Starr s example Harrison used the fourth wall defying device on several of his recordings starting with the 1974 song Far East Man 47 Over that track s introduction he intones a dedication to Frank Sinatra 48 49 and hopes that Sinatra covers the song at his next Las Vegas concert engagement 50 References edit Rodriguez pp 83 85 Leng pp 138 39 O Dell pp 246 47 Clayson pp 105 06 Spizer pp 50 338 341 Doggett pp 30 31 36 82 Spizer p 338 Castleman amp Podrazik pp 77 102 Doggett pp 240 41 Castleman amp Podrazik p 150 Leng p 142 Badman pp 90 129 Michael Simmons Cry for a Shadow Mojo November 2011 pp 84 85 Madinger amp Easter pp 500 01 a b c d Rodriguez p 35 a b c d e f Spizer p 308 Rodriguez p 158 Castleman amp Podrazik p 370 Rodriguez p 241 MacDonald p 206fn Schaffner p 161 a b c d Inglis p 56 a b MacFarlane p 89 Badman pp 91 92 Doggett p 199 Spizer p 306 MacFarlane pp 88 89 Badman p 91 Leng pp 139 40 Clayson p 242 Castleman amp Podrazik p 212 Woffinden p 77 Spizer pp 306 308 Castleman amp Podrazik p 213 Madinger amp Easter p 507 Badman p 111 Castleman amp Podrazik p 128 MacFarlane pp 88 89 MacFarlane pp 89 109 Madinger amp Easter p 506 Rodriguez pp 143 157 Frontani p 156 Schaffner pp 160 61 Carr amp Tyler p 109 Clayson p 243 Woffinden p 75 MacFarlane pp 92 108 Huntley p 111 MacFarlane p 108 Madinger amp Easter p 444 Clayson p 271 Bob Woffinden Ringo Starr Everyone One of Us Has All We Need NME 12 April 1975 available at Rock s Backpages subscription required Castleman amp Podrazik p 313 Clayson pp 271 72 Woffinden p 78 Ben Gerson Ringo Starr Ringo Rolling Stone Archived from the original on 1 October 2007 Retrieved 1 July 2013 Rolling Stone 20 December 1973 p 73 retrieved 22 January 2014 Woffinden pp 75 84 Alan Betrock Ringo Starr Ringo Phonograph Record December 1973 available at Rock s Backpages subscription required Huntley p 97 Leng pp 139 140 Leng p 140 Sources editKeith Badman The Beatles Diary Volume 2 After the Break Up 1970 2001 Omnibus Press London 2001 ISBN 0 7119 8307 0 Roy Carr amp Tony Tyler The Beatles An Illustrated Record Trewin Copplestone Publishing London 1978 ISBN 0 450 04170 0 Harry Castleman amp Walter J Podrazik All Together Now The First Complete Beatles Discography 1961 1975 Ballantine Books New York NY 1976 ISBN 0 345 25680 8 Alan Clayson Ringo Starr Sanctuary London 2003 ISBN 1 86074 488 5 Peter Doggett You Never Give Me Your Money The Beatles After the Breakup It Books New York NY 2011 ISBN 978 0 06 177418 8 Michael Frontani The Solo Years in Kenneth Womack ed The Cambridge Companion to the Beatles Cambridge University Press Cambridge UK 2009 ISBN 978 1 139 82806 2 pp 153 82 Elliot J Huntley Mystical One George Harrison After the Break up of the Beatles Guernica Editions Toronto ON 2006 ISBN 1 55071 197 0 Ian Inglis The Words and Music of George Harrison Praeger Santa Barbara CA 2010 ISBN 978 0 313 37532 3 Simon Leng While My Guitar Gently Weeps The Music of George Harrison Hal Leonard Milwaukee WI 2006 ISBN 1 4234 0609 5 Ian MacDonald Revolution in the Head The Beatles Records and the Sixties Pimlico London 1998 ISBN 0 7126 6697 4 Thomas MacFarlane The Music of George Harrison Routledge Abingdon UK 2019 ISBN 978 1 138 59910 9 Chip Madinger amp Mark Easter Eight Arms to Hold You The Solo Beatles Compendium 44 1 Productions Chesterfield MO 2000 ISBN 0 615 11724 4 Chris O Dell with Katherine Ketcham Miss O Dell My Hard Days and Long Nights with The Beatles The Stones Bob Dylan Eric Clapton and the Women They Loved Touchstone New York NY 2009 ISBN 978 1 4165 9093 4 Robert Rodriguez Fab Four FAQ 2 0 The Beatles Solo Years 1970 1980 Backbeat Books Milwaukee WI 2010 ISBN 978 1 4165 9093 4 Nicholas Schaffner The Beatles Forever McGraw Hill New York NY 1978 ISBN 0 07 055087 5 Bruce Spizer The Beatles Solo on Apple Records 498 Productions New Orleans LA 2005 ISBN 0 9662649 5 9 Bob Woffinden The Beatles Apart Proteus London 1981 ISBN 0 906071 89 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title You and Me Babe amp oldid 1148429385, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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