TransWikia.com

Why did Paul and George often share the same mic?

Music Fans Asked by Bebs on August 31, 2021

As I was looking at Beatles old live performances, I noticed that Paul and George are often singing in the same microphone :

Beatles

The awesomeness of this setup also comes from the fact that Paul is left handed so it matches well with George.

Is there another reason from that? Was it technical limitations from that time (maybe they didn’t have enough microphones or mixing tables inputs were limited…?).

3 Answers

I've found a bunch of other different combinations of microphone sharing between the Beatles. Here's George and John:

George and John

Here's Paul and John:

Paul and John

Here's George, Paul, and John:

George, Paul, and John

Here's Paul and Ringo (though obviously this is a little more recent):

Paul and Ringo

A Google Image search of "Beatles sharing microphones" doesn't seem to turn up photos of George and Paul any more frequently than John and Paul, though photos of all three and of George and John are both less frequent.

I also found a few forum posts asking the same question, and a variety of potential answers (along with bad puns and off-topic arguing, because, you know, they're forums) was offered, including:

  1. It made it easier for the two back up singers to harmonize.
  2. On 8 track recorders, there would be 3 tracks for the guitars and 3 tracks for kit, which would leave two tracks for the vocals.
  3. It looks cool!
  4. Early Beatles songs usually had only John or Paul singing lead, so George didn't need a microphone.

According to Ringo Starr, it's the first one:

John and Paul always sang into the same microphone when they did harmonies, and if George was singing he'd be on the same mic too. And that’s why the harmonies are so great because they’re close to each other and they can hear each other.

I should note that Ringo could be talking about singing in the studio, rather than live. However, a lot of well known artists implement/have implemented microphone sharing when performing live, whether occasionally or frequently, like:

Correct answer by Joe Kennedy on August 31, 2021

I believe perhaps John exercised his authority as Leader of the group early-on & demanded his own mic setup. He looks authoritative in this setup, such as on the Ed Sullivan Show.

Answered by Bob on August 31, 2021

My theory is that being fans of the Everly Brothers the Beatles liked the look of the two guys singing into the same mike. Then again in the old days without fold-back monitors, it would help when singing harmonies.

enter image description here

Answered by stew on August 31, 2021

Add your own answers!

Ask a Question

Get help from others!

© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP