We use the information you provide about someone else to inform them of our services. We do not share this information with outside parties unless required to do so by law. We use the information you provide about yourself when placing a request/order only to complete that request/order. To make this notice easy to find, we make it available on our homepage and at every point where personally identifiable information may be requested. To better protect your privacy we provide this notice explaining our online information practices and the choices you can make about the way your information is collected and used. The only thing we ever got close doing was that Mary Hopkin album.Your privacy is important to us. (chuckles) Paul did the “Mellow Yellow” session and added the clap and the giggle. Rumor has it that Paul McCartney sang background on “Atlantis.”ĭonovan: No. Donovan, in a Jinterview with NMEįrom an interview with Goldmine, October 16, 2008: So it’s about being cool, laid-back, and also the electrical bananas that were appearing on the scene – which were ladies vibrators. ‘They call me Mellow Yellow, I’m the guy who can calm you down.’ Lennon and I used to look in the back of newspapers and pull out funny things and they’d end up in songs. ![]() His voice is likely somewhere in the mix at the end of the song amid the revelry.ĭonovan had recently helped out McCartney on another “Yellow” song: He provided the “sky of blue, sea of green” line in “ Yellow Submarine.” Both songs hit #2 US in 1966. ![]() McCartney dropped by the session and was captured on tape saying “Mellow Yellow” and doing some cheering. He was rumored to be the whispering voice saying “quite rightly,” but that was Donovan. Paul McCartney appears somewhere on this track, but it’s not clear where. Donovan had a small part in coming up with the lyrics for “ Yellow Submarine“, and McCartney played bass guitar (uncredited) on portions of Donovan’s Mellow Yellow album. Paul McCartney can be heard as one of the background revellers on this track, but the “quite rightly” whispering answering lines in the chorus is not McCartney but rather Donovan himself. This definition was re-affirmed in an interview with NME magazine: “it’s about being cool, laid-back, and also the electrical bananas that were appearing on the scene – which were ladies’ vibrators.” According to The Rolling Stone Illustrated Encyclopedia of Rock and Roll, he admitted later the song made reference to a vibrator an “electrical banana” as mentioned in the lyrics. According to Donovan’s notes, accompanying the album Donovan’s Greatest Hits, the rumour that one could get high from smoking dried banana skins was started by Country Joe McDonald in 1966, and Donovan heard the rumour three weeks before “Mellow Yellow” was released as a single. The song was rumoured to be about smoking dried banana skins, which was believed to be a hallucinogenic drug in the 1960s, though this aspect of bananas has since been debunked. 1.) Outside the US, “Mellow Yellow” peaked at No. (Both Good Vibrations by The Beach Boys and Winchester Cathedral by The New Vaudeville Band kept it from hitting No. ![]() “ Mellow Yellow” is a song written and recorded by Scottish singer-songwriter Donovan.
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