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File:I've Just Seen a Face solo.ogg

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I've_Just_Seen_a_Face_solo.ogg (Ogg Vorbis sound file, length 12 s, 71 kbps, file size: 104 KB)

Summary

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Media data and Non-free use rationale
Description This is a sample from the recording "I've Just Seen a Face" by the artist the Beatles.
Author or
copyright owner
Artist: the Beatles
Songwriter: Lennon–McCartney
Producer: George Martin
Copyright: Sony Music Publishing
Source (WP:NFCC#4) The U.S. Albums box set (2014), Rubber Soul mono CD.
Date of publication 6 August 1965
Use in article (WP:NFCC#7) I've Just Seen a Face
Purpose of use in article (WP:NFCC#8) The audio sample is used for identification in the context of critical commentary of the work for which it serves as sample. It makes a significant contribution to the user's understanding of the article, which could not practically be conveyed by words alone.
  • The musicologist Walter Everett writes about how the solo uses a technique employed extensively on Help!, where two guitars play at once to provide a contrasting effect. (Everett, Walter (2006). "Painting Their Room in a Colorful Way: The Beatles' Exploration of Timbre". In Womack, Kenneth; Davis, Todd F. (eds.). Reading the Beatles: Cultural Studies, Literary Criticism, and the Fab Four. Albany: State University of New York Press. pp. 71–94. ISBN 0-7914-6716-3.)
  • In his 2007 book Can't Buy Me Love, author Jonathan Gould writes about how the solo shifts the song from cut to common time and goes on to compare Harrison's playing style during the solo to the sound jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt and the French jazz organization Le Hot Club. (Gould, Jonathan (2007). Can't Buy Me Love: The Beatles, Britain, and America. New York: Three Rivers Press. ISBN 978-0-307-35338-2. Page 278.)
  • Musicologist Alan W. Pollack characterizes the solo as a "'countrified', rhythmically flat rendering". (Pollack, Alan W. (1993). "Notes on 'I've Just Seen a Face'". soundscapes.info.)
  • Music scholar Terence J. O'Grady writes that the solo "approximates Bluegrass style in rhythmic regularity". (O'Grady, Terence J. (1979). "Rubber Soul and the Social Dance Tradition". Ethnomusicology. 23 (1): 87–94. doi:10.2307/851340. ISSN 0014-1836) and (O'Grady, Terence J. (1983). The Beatles: A Musical Evolution. Boston: Twayne. ISBN 0-8057-9453-0. Page 80.)
Not replaceable with
free media because
(WP:NFCC#1)
No free alternative exists.
Not replaceable with
textual coverage because
(WP:NFCC#1)
Prose alone would not serve the same encyclopedic purpose as prose with an accompanying audio sample.
Minimal use (WP:NFCC#3) File is 12 seconds long, which is less than 10% of the original 2 minutes and 2 seconds.
Respect for
commercial opportunities
(WP:NFCC#2)
Its reduced quality of 22050 hz does not compete with the commercial opportunities of its owner.
Fair useFair use of copyrighted material in the context of I've Just Seen a Face//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:I%27ve_Just_Seen_a_Face_solo.oggtrue

Licensing

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File history

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current15:27, 15 November 202112 s (104 KB)Tkbrett (talk | contribs)Uploading an excerpt from a non-free work using File Upload Wizard

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Transcode status

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Format Bitrate Download Status Encode time
MP3 143 kbps Completed 15:27, 15 November 2021 0.0 s

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