>when im 64
>helter skelter
>invents toy story music >invents heavy metal too >wtf kind of drugs were they giving him?
Also
>the long and winding road
>invents elton john and billy joels discographies
>invents heavy metal
That's not Dave Davies.
who is that nigga Elvis?
pure lsd, brick weed and boomer adderall. the toolbelt of the 60s
He was into the avant garde scene way before John so he was always looking for new types of songs to write. He was also confident as fuck so he didn't second guess himself and just did whatever songs that interested him at the time which is why he could go from god-tier songs to granny shit back to back.
yeah he always struck me as the most confident. like he got himself to a place where he couldn't make mistakes even if he was
the kinks more like the stinks
>none of it sounds good
wow! should've stuck to pop music, the beatles never really went past it
>invents heavy metal
He didn't invent a shit. It's just stupid Beatles fans being insufferable and looking for new things to add to their snowball of someone else's success.
If he was so confident, then why didn't he record the drums himself instead of putting that dweeb Ringo behind the kit?
Who did then
His dad taught him to play a shit ton of instruments when he was a kid. That plus being a genius songwriter and tons of LSD.
>Kickstarts The Rolling Stones careers by giving them I wanna be your man as a throw away song
>Literally invites George Harrison to joing thus creating his career too
Based Macca, yet Harrison wouldn't stop shit talking him years later, even though he would be a nobody without Paul.
>invents toy story music
Ahem
Vivaldi
obsessed and parroting lazy opinions borrowed from hack "rock critics". Paul fans are so fucking stupid
>toy story music
that was randy newman retard
None of what I said is an opinion though. Literally what happened.
sure buddy
>Mick Jagger recalled the song in 1968:
>We knew [the Beatles] by then and we were rehearsing and Andrew brought Paul and John down to the rehearsal.
>They said they had this tune, they were really hustlers then. I mean the way they used to hustle tunes was great: 'Hey Mick, we've got this great song.' So they played it and we thought it sounded pretty commercial, which is what we were looking for, so we did it like Elmore James or something. I haven't heard it for ages but it must be pretty freaky 'cause nobody really produced it. It was completely crackers, but it was a hit and sounded great onstage.
>McCartney stated in 2016
>We were friends with them, and I just thought "I Wanna Be Your Man" would be good for them. I knew they did Bo Diddley stuff. And they made a good job of it.