“Eric said the only way he’d play on it is if he sounded like the Beatles”:
How Ken Scott Confirmed the Truth Behind Clapton’s Uncredited Solo on While My Guitar Gently Weeps
Eric Clapton’s appearance on a Beatles track is still one of the great surprises of The White Album—a guest spot from a musician the band adored. And according to Abbey Road engineer Ken Scott, it almost didn’t happen unless one very specific condition was met.
“The only way he’d play on it is if he sounded like the Beatles—not Eric Clapton,” Scott said recently.
That caveat changed everything about the way his solo was recorded.
How Clapton’s Solo Became “Beatle-ised”
To meet Clapton’s request, Scott and Chris Thomas used one of Abbey Road’s most groundbreaking inventions: ADT—Artificial/Automatic Double Tracking.
Originally created in 1966 by EMI engineer Ken Townsend to save John Lennon from singing doubled vocals he hated recording, ADT subtly detuned and delayed a signal to create a natural “double.”
On “While My Guitar Gently Weeps,” ADT added a wobble and swirl to Clapton’s guitar that softened its blues edges and blended it into the Beatles’ sonic world.
“Eric played it, and it was really good,” George Harrison said.
“But he said, ‘It’s not Beatle-y enough.’
So we put it through the ADT to wobble it a bit.”
The Strange Part: Almost Nobody Remembers the Session
Scott says he has no memory of the actual moment Clapton entered the studio—something he’s tried to recover for years.
He checked with:
• John Smith, tape op – also remembers nothing
• Chris Thomas, producing while George Martin was on holiday – nothing
• Even hypnotherapy didn’t help Scott recall the session
The one consistent piece they all remember?
Clapton’s request to not sound like himself.
The Beatles didn’t just bring Clapton in—they bent the Abbey Road toolbox around him until he blended seamlessly into their world. The most famous guest solo in their catalog was literally engineered to sound less like Clapton… and more like them.
.................................the blog nobody reads
Monday, December 01, 2025
Make me sound like a Beatle . . . . While My Guitar Gently Weeps (Eric Clapton uncredited guitar lick)
On Sontag . . . . .
“I envy paranoids; they actually feel people are paying attention to them.”
Susan Sontag, Interview with Leslie Garis, the New York Times 1992
!!! ??? !!!
As an art student we all went around reading On Photography and thinking we were the bees knees and it took me a while to realise how ordinary, how mundane and ultimately how terribly bourgeois her views actually were! A lifetime to realise some is really boring . . . . . was that actually allowed? it almost upset me . . . . . . . almost
Trout Mask Replica instrumental || The Captain Beefheart & The Magic Band Appreciation Society | member Zane Kordich drops a hot one . . .
Wow check this out
Zane of the Appreciation society dropped by long enough tob their F/B page to post this:
Zane Kordich
The Captain Beefheart & The Magic Band Appreciation Society
I recently compiled all the "Bush Recording" Trout Mask Replica instrumental takes from the Grow Fins boxset into a playlist (without all the dead air between takes on the boxset) in tracklist order. I've found this to be great as a way to isolate the astonishingly tight musicianship of the Magic Band. I thought I'd share it here for anyone interested!
Youtube playlist:Here's the playlist of Clear Spot instrumentals!There's a great bootleg of instrumental takes from the Decals sessions that I've found similarly enjoyable to dive into (hearing Japan in a Dishpan and Flash Gordon's Ape without the horn overdubs is revelatory!), and the newest deluxe reissue of Clear Spot had some beautifully clear instrumental takes that really let you soak in Bill Harkleroad AKA Zoot Horn Rollo's incredible guitar lines.
"The guys all worked their asses off on the "Decals" stuff, and probably more so on the Trout Mask Stuff, because it was a completely new musical world we all entered, so it took a complete alteration of how we thought about music. "
start the week with this . . . . some Imelda May will shake us up!
Sunday, November 30, 2025
Doctors, Professors, Kings & Queens, The Big Ol' Box Of New Orleans [Shout! Factory] | BUTTERBOY
VA - Doctors, Professors, Kings & Queens, The Big Ol' Box Of New Orleans [2004] (4 x CDs)
and NOW we are REALLY talking! Another N’Orleans compilation and check the track listing to see what you might have been missing . . . . . .this IS the home of doctors, professors, Kings and Queens! On a big ole Mardi Gras Day! . . . now this is more thorough than the previous set and has everything for the more discerning listener . . .not that the first set was no good but I expect fans would have all those tracks and this is the real deal and has more obscure and earlier tracks too . . . . .it is SMOKIN’ HOT!
NEW ORLEANS
If you ever needed proof that New Orleans is less a city and more a living, breathing rhythm section, Doctors, Professors, Kings & Queens makes the case in four discs flat. Released in 2004 by Shout! Factory, this 85-track box set doesn’t just trace the city’s musical history, it throws you right into the second line and dares you not to dance.
This isn’t a dry museum piece. It’s sweaty, brassy, and gloriously alive. You get the big names, Fats Domino, Dr. John, The Meters, Irma Thomas, Professor Longhair, but the real magic is in the deep cuts and overlooked gems. Dave Bartholomew’s “Shrimp and Gumbo” is a spicy little number that rarely shows up on comps, and Eddie Bo’s “Check Your Bucket” is pure syncopated swagger. Balfa Toujours’ “Marshall’s Club” brings the Cajun heat, while The Wild Magnolias’ “New Suit” is a funked-up Mardi Gras Indian chant that still sounds ahead of its time.
The sequencing jumps eras and styles, but it works, zydeco rubs shoulders with bounce, brass band funk crashes into swamp pop, and somehow it all feels like one long, sweaty block party. Rebirth Brass Band’s “Feel Like Funkin’ It Up” and Kermit Ruffins’ “Drop Me Off in New Orleans” are modern classics that hold their own next to vintage sides from Smiley Lewis or Shirley & Lee.
What makes this box essential isn’t just the hits, it’s the way it stitches together the city’s musical DNA. You hear the continuum: from Congo Square to Tipitina’s, from second line to sound system. It’s a love letter to the groove that built a city. It captures the soul of New Orleans in all its brass-blasted, gumbo-thick glory. (Butterboy)
CD1
01 Galactic Featuring Theryl deClouet - Welcome to New Orleans 0:15
02 Kermit Ruffins - Drop Me Off in New Orleans 4:28
03 Fats Domino - I'm Walkin' 2:07
04 Dr. John - Iko Iko 4:08
05 Louis Armstrong & His Hot Seven - Potato Head Blues 2:55
06 Lil' Queenie & The Percolators - My Darlin' New Orleans 4:01
07 Iguanas - Para Donde Vas (Where Are You Going) 3:17
08 Anders Osborne & "Big Chief" Monk Boudreaux - Meet The Boyz on The Battlefront 4:37
09 Clarence "Frogman" Henry - Ain't Got No Home 2:19
10 Rebirth Brass Band - Feel Like Funkin' it Up 5:05
11 BeauSoleil - Zydeco Gris-Gris 3:38
12 Ernie K-Doe - Mother-In-Law 2:32
13 Marcia Ball - That's Enough of That Stuff 4:30
14 Radiators - Confidential 4:11
15 Meters - Hey Pocky A-Way 4:03
16 Jelly Roll Morton & His New Orleans Jazzmen - I Thought I Heard Buddy Bolden Say 3:13
17 Paul Sanchez - Foot of Canal Street 3:48
18 Vernet Bagneris & The Cast of One Mo' Time - Down in Honky Tonk Town 3:01
19 Huey (Piano) Smith & The Clowns - Rocking Pneumonia and The Boogie Woogie Flu 2:17
20 Jon Cleary & The Absolute Monster Gentlemen - More Hipper 5:28
21 Johnny Adams - Release Me 2:51
22 Sidney Bechet & His New Orleans Feet Warmers - Preachin' Blues 3:13
23 Clifton Chenier - Jambalaya 3:35
CD2
01 Leigh Harris - Dog Days 5:49
02 Earl King - No City Like New Orleans 4:33
03 Don Vappie & The Creole Jazz Serenaders - Salée Dames, Bon Jour 2:48
04 Balfa Toujours - Marshall's Club 3:42
05 Irma Thomas - You Can Have My Husband 3:13
06 Galactic - Go Go 3:04
07 New Orleans Klezmer All Stars - Not Too Eggy 2:11
08 Preservation Hall Jazz Band - St. James Infirmary 5:37
09 Deacon John Moore - Going Back to New Orleans 2:45
10 Buckwheat Zydeco - Hot Tamale Baby 4:08
11 Neville Brothers - Fear, Hate, Envy, Jealousy 4:25
12 James Andrews - Poop Ain't Gotta Scuffle No More 5:37
13 Hawketts - Mardi Gras Mambo 2:16
14 George Lewis' Ragtime Band - Ice Cream 5:48
15 J. Monque'D - No Doubt About It 4:08
16 Dirty Dozen Brass Band With Danny Barker & Eddie Bo - Don't You Feel My Leg 4:17
17 Boozoo Chavis - Dog Hill 2:38
18 Zachary Richard - Au Bord De Lac Bijou 4:41
19 Tuba Fats' Chosen Few Brass Band - Mardi Gras in New Orleans 6:12
CD3
01 Dave Bartholomew - Shrimp and Gumbo 2:05
02 Dr. Michael White - St. Phillip Street Breakdown 5:01
03 Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown - Going Back to Louisiana 4:40
04 Aaron Neville - Tell it Like it Is 2:41
05 Coolbone - The Saints 3:15
06 Geno Delafose & French Rockin' Boogie - Canaille 3:06
07 Al Johnson - Carnival Time 2:41
08 Fredy Omar Con Su Banda - La Negra Tomasa 5:04
09 Shirley & Lee - Let The Good Times Roll 2:24
10 Tom McDermott & Evan Christopher - The Broken Windmill 3:53
11 Champion Jack Dupree - Way Down 3:49
12 Raymond Myles - Hallelujah 3:58
13 Smiley Lewis - I Hear You Knocking 2:45
14 Steve Riley and The Mamou Playboys - La Crève De Faim (Starvation 2-Step) 3:07
15 Red Stick Ramblers - Main Street Blues 4:37
16 Frankie Ford - Sea Cruise 2:44
17 Henry Butler - Tee-Nah-Nah 3:49
18 New Birth Brass Band - Smoke That Fire 3:06
19 Beau Jocque & The Zydeco Hi-Rollers - Give Him Cornbread 1:18
20 Chris Kenner - I Like it Like That 1:57
21 James Booker - Classified (Version Two) 3:08
22 Allen Toussaint - Southern Nights 3:35
CD4
01 Professor Longhair - Tipitina 2:39
02 Wild Magnolias - Party 4:43
03 Ellis Marsalis - Dr.Jazz 4:29
04 Troy Andrews - Ooh Poo Pah Doo 3:15
05 Sonny Landreth - South of I-10 3:40
06 Benny Spellman - Lipstick Traces (On A Cigarette) 2:25
07 Charmaine Neville Band With Reggie Houston & Amasa Miller - The Right Key But The Wrong Keyhole 5:46
08 Little Richard - Rip it Up 2:23
09 Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band - Royal Garden Blues 3:31
10 Anders Osborne - Stoned, Drunk & Naked 4:52
11 Bruce Daigrepont - Laissez Faire (Let it Be) 2:28
12 New Orleans Jazz Vipers - Digga-Digga-Do 5:25
13 Walter "Wolfman" Washington - Tailspin 3:03
14 Lloyd Price - Lawdy Miss Clawdy 2:32
15 Eddie Bo - Havin' Fun in New Orleans 5:01
16 Tim Laughlin - King of The Mardi Gras 4:03
17 Snooks Eaglin - Red Beans 3:53
18 Mem Shannon & The Membership - S.U.V. 3:43
19 Savoy-Doucet Cajun Band - 'Tits Yeux Noirs (Little Black Eyes) 3:49
20 Pete Fountain & His Band - Lazy River 3:39
21 Louis Armstrong & His Dixieland Seven - Do You Know What it Means to Miss New Orleans? 2:58
The Best of New Orleans [2018] (2 x CDs)
VA - The Best of New Orleans [2018] (2 x CDs)
This one doesn’t strut so much as it glides, a 2CD set that captures the humid, horn-soaked heartbeat of New Orleans without ever breaking a sweat. Released in 2018 by Metro Select and Union Square Music, The Best of New Orleans is less a history lesson and more a mixtape from a friend who knows the backstreets and jukeboxes by heart.There’s no rigid timeline here, just a rolling wave of rhythm and soul. You get the big names, sure, but the real flavor comes from the tracks that ripple outward, influencing scenes far beyond the Crescent City. James “Sugar Boy” Crawford’s “Jock-A-Mo” is a cornerstone, a raw chant that would echo through decades of Mardi Gras lore. Chris Kenner’s “I Like It Like That” is pure New Orleans propulsion, loose, joyful, and impossible to sit still through.Then there’s Li’l Millet & His Creoles’ “Rich Woman”, a swampy, swaggering cut that’s been covered and reinterpreted but never outdone. Clarence Garlow’s “Bon Ton Roula” brings the zydeco shuffle into the mix, while The Hawketts’ “Mardi Gras Mambo” and Professor Longhair’s “Go to the Mardi Gras” practically throw beads from the speakers. These aren’t just songs, they’re cultural touchstones, still pulsing through block parties, brass bands, and bounce tracks today.What makes this set sing is its refusal to overthink. It’s not trying to be definitiv, it’s trying to be alive. The sequencing feels like a neighborhood stroll, a little second-line here, a little backroom R&B there, with a brass band warming up just around the corner. It’s a celebration, plain and simple, one that knows the best way to honor New Orleans is to let the music do the talking. (Butterboy)
CD1
01 Lee Dorsey - Everything I Do Gohn Be Funky 3:09
02 Robert Parker - Barefootin' 2:44
03 Irma Thomas - I Did My Part 2:29
04 Meters - Keep on Marching 3:24
05 Dr. John - Tipitina 3:25
06 Art Neville - Cha Dooky 2:37
07 Dixie Cups - Iko, Iko 2:08
08 Fats Domino - Mardis Gras in New Orleans 2:18
09 Lee Dorsey - Ya Ya 1:45
10 Aaron Neville - Hercules 4:13
11 Meters - Cissy Strut 3:01
12 Tami Lynn - Mojo Hanna 3:26
13 Dr. John - A Little Closer to My Home 3:13
14 Snooks Eaglin - Yours Truly 4:23
15 Frankie Ford - Sea Cruise 2:47
16 Huey 'Piano' Smith - Tu 2:31
17 Johnny Adams - A Losing Battle 2:52
18 Chris Kenner - I Like it Like That 1:55
19 Sugar Boy & His Cane Cutters - Jock 2:27
20 Betty Harris - Nearer to You 2:56
21 Ernie K Doe - Here Comes The Girls 3:12
22 Allen Tousaint - Happy Times 2:08
23 Irma Thomas - Somebody Told You 2:34
24 Clarence 'Frogman' Henry - Ain't Got No Home 2:23
25 Aaron Neville - Cry Me a River 3:44
CD2
01 Louis Armstrong - West End Blues 3:11
02 Young Tuxedo Brass Band - John Casimir's Whoopin' Blues 3:15
03 Kid Ory - 29th and Dearborn 2:54
04 Henry 'Red' Allen and His Orchestra - Down in Jungle Town 2:51
05 Jelly Roll Morton - I Thought I Heard Buddy Bolden Say 3:17
06 Hawketts - Mardi Gras Mambo 2:19
07 Hawks - It's Too Late Now 2:09
08 Jessie Hill - Ooh Poo Pah Doo 4:26
09 Bobby Charles - See You Later Alligator 2:51
10 Clifton Chenier - Ay 2:42
11 Clarence Garlow - Bon Ton Roula 3:13
12 Smiley Lewis - I Hear You Knockin' 2:47
13 L'il Millett & His Creoles - Rich Woman 2:36
14 Benny Spellman - Fortune Teller 2:12
15 Eddie Bo - Every Dog Has Its Day 2:10
16 Roy Montrell - (Everytime I Hear) That Mellow Saxophone 2:25
17 Professor Longhair - Go The The Mardi Gras 2:44
18 Dave Bartholomew - Shrimp & Gumbo 2:07
19 Barbara Lynn - You're Gonna Need Me 2:26
20 Earl King - Trick Bag 2:42
21 Spiders - Witchcraft 2:36
22 King Oliver (Featuring His Orchestra) - St. James Infirmary 3:40
23 Eureka Brass Band - Lord, Lord, Lord 3:11
24 Sidney Bechet Quintet - Summertime 4:06
25 Fats Domino - Walking to New Orleans 1:56
