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2022 FBG, 172 to 1 Beatles Countdown 1-25 lists... And 173 to 1 Countdown from 1-64 lists! (6 Viewers)

Hey Jude
2022 Ranking: 4
2022 Lists: 42
2022 Points: 628
Ranked Highest by: Holly (1) OH dad (2) @BobbyLayne (2) Doug (2) @ConstruxBoy (2) @prosopis (2) Rob (3) @Yankee23Fan (3) @lardonastick (4) @Dinsy Ejotuz (4) Son2 (5) @Wrighteous Ray (5) @pecorino (6) @Alex P Keaton (6) @PIK95 (7) @John Maddens Lunchbox (7) @jamny (7)
2019 Ranking/Lists/Pts: 11/18/271

Getz: Received a vote in all 25 slots, except for #22.  I had this at #18, down from #10 in 2019. #24 and #25 votes by DocHolliday and WorrierKing were the three points needed to place this in 4th place. 24 more votes and 357 points led this to a rise from #11 in 2019.


Krista4
My 2019 ranking:  14


2019 write-up:

Hey Jude (single, 1968)

I initially placed this in my second tier, with notes that read in part, "Why is half the song nananas?  Did Paul McCartney look into the future and just see himself as a 78-year-old man who didn’t want to have to sing at his shows and could just turn it into a sing-along?  Does anyone actually listen to the whole song?  Pleasurably?  Needs 50% fewer "nanana"s".  Then I forced myself to keep listening to the song over and over, and it kept moving up my rankings despite the "nanana"s and later because of them (more on that below).  Paul actually did not intend for the "nanana"s to go on so long, but said he was having so much fun that he just kept going.  

As everybody knows, Paul wrote this song for Julian Lennon while Julian's parents were in the midst of the divorce; the song was initially written as "Hey Jules."  Paul came up with the song as he drove to visit them:   "I thought, as a friend of the family, I would motor out to Weybridge and tell them that everything was all right: to try and cheer them up, basically, and see how they were.... I started singing: 'Hey Jules – don't make it bad, take a sad song, and make it better...' It was optimistic, a hopeful message for Julian..."  John acknowledged the song as "one of Paul's masterpieces," and though he knew the song had been written to Julian, he also saw another meaning:  "I always heard it as a song to me.  If you think about it, Yoko's just come into the picture.  He's saying, 'Hey, Jude - hey, John.'  I know I'm sounding like one of those fans who reads things into it, but you can hear it as a song to me.  The words 'go out and get her' - subconsciously he was saying, 'Go ahead, leave me.' ...The angel inside him was saying, 'Bless you.'"

Listening to the song as if both Paul and John were singing directly to Julian gives it a sweetness that launches it into my first tier solely by virtue of that fact.  Layering in the emotion that John describes above, where he believes Paul is giving him a blessing, makes their vocals even more meaningful and touchingly beautiful.  I feel a warmth and generosity in John's vocal in the song that he didn't often show.  While John credits Paul wholly with this song, John did have one significant contribution:  when Paul first played it for John, he said he would be changing the line "the movement you need is on your shoulder" because "it sounds like a parrot."  John thought it was the best line in the song, though, and convinced Paul not to take it out, saying, "I know what it means - it's great."  That encouragement from John continues to affect Paul:  "Then I could see it through his eyes.  So when I play that song, that's the line when I think of John and I sometimes get a little emotional during that moment."

Luckily someone else has already done a thorough analysis of the song's lyrical structure, so I can skip that part.  As mentioned above, one of my favorite aspects of this song are the vocals, which I think Paul and John imbue with such warmth and richness as to expand the song from "buck up, kid" to a grander vision of how good life can be.  It's like the optimism of "Here Comes The Sun" x 1000, swollen into a pure joy that was rarely seen from the band at this point (or from John at any point).  Another aspect I particularly love about the song is the way it builds, which to me makes all this optimism believable.  It starts softly, with Paul's voice sounding warm and hopeful but not yet fully convincing.  At each verse and then the bridge, additional instrumentation or vocal comes in - first the guitar and a light tambourine, then the drums, then the backing vocals, then the harmonies.  With each addition, Paul's voice becomes stronger and more confident, moving from hopeful to insistent that everything is going to be all right, not just for Julian or John, but more broadly for the world as a whole.  By the "nanana"s, the band has reached a state of jubilation, and the "nanana"s extend for so long because they were so exhilarated that they didn't want to stop.  With that background, I found a whole new appreciation for the "nanana"s.  

I'm tempted, as always, to do an analysis of the structure of the song or the various ways in which the musicality is stunning.  But I don't think this song is best enjoyed that way.  I think you just have to let it envelop you, let it transport you to this euphoric, blissful place that it establishes.

One fun note about the recording is that Paul started the final take without realizing that Ringo had gone to the bathroom:  "...while I was doing it I suddenly felt Ringo tiptoeing past my back rather quickly, trying to get to his drums. And just as he got to his drums, boom boom boom, his timing was absolutely impeccable. So I think when those things happen, you have a little laugh and a light bulb goes off in your head and you think, 'This is the take!'  And you put a little more into it. You think, 'oh, ####! This has got to be the take, what just happened was so magic!'"  

After the recording was done, George Martin tried to get the band to cut down the length of the song, saying at over seven minutes it would not be played on the radio.  The band won out, and guess what?  It was still played on the radio.  A lot.  "Hey Jude" sold 10 million copies and had a longer run at #1 - nine weeks - than any other Beatles song.

Fun fact:  listen first for an "oh" ~2:56 and then a "####### hell" ~2:58 that was left in the mix.  John claimed this was Paul, but the more believable story is that it was John's reaction to flubbing a lyric just before that.

Mr. krista:  "That song just keeps going.  How long do you think they were in the studio nana'ing before they gave up the ghost and quit?  How many more nananas did they actually do before the fade out?  Like 15-20 minutes?  They nanana for so long you forget it’s a cheer up song for John Lennon’s kid after John Lennon abandoned his family.  Then he had nothing to do with Julian, after beating up his mom.  Man, your heroes will disappoint you every time.  What I’m saying is I don’t like it much."

Suggested cover:  Wilson Pickett

2022 Supplement:  The biggest question here will be, does fatguy like this song any better than he did in 2019?  My sources say no.

Paul has said that what I consider the only less-than-perfect part of the song, the endless nah-nahs, were not meant to go on so long, but they were having so much fun in the studio that they just kept improvising and extending it.  The song that had started of one of concern for Julian became, in the lyrics and then in the recording, a “moment of celebration.”

Oh!  Paul has also clarified that the swearing midway through was indeed him after he flubbed the piano part, not John as some people claimed.  My bad, John.

However, I was right about why Paul still sings this one at his shows, which is that he loves the communal aspect of the sing-along.  Wait…after reviewing the tape, it appears I actually claimed he did it because his voice needs a break after being weakened through the years.  Close enough.

Shortly after mixing, Paul slipped this song to a DJ at the Vesuvio Club, on a night when Mick Jagger happened to be there, too.  After it played, Mick marveled that, “That’s something else!  It’s like two songs!”  Yes yes, it was.

I assume Getz will have linked the live version of this from the David Frost Show :yes: , so let’s all take a moment to marvel again at how dreamy Paul was then.

Pic of Paul with Julian, 1968:  https://imgur.com/kekDE2j

Guido Merkins

In 1968, things were not going well for the Beatles.  Brian Epstein died and suddenly the pressure of business started to intrude on their relationship as friends and bandmates. Further complications in their private lives, like John going through a divorce with his first wife, Cynthia also didn’t help.

Paul loved John, but also loved Cynthia and John’s son Julian.  So Paul got in his car and went to visit Cyn and Julian.  As he’s driving over, these words start coming to him “Hey Jules, don’t make it bad….” and so was born, perhaps, the song that became the Beatles biggest hit ever, Hey Jude.

Hey Jude is interesting for many reasons, but mostly for the long sing a long at the end that fades out and makes the song over 7 minutes long.  When they were done recording George Martin said something like “it’s great, but it’ll never get played on the radio because it’s too long.”  John’s response was “they will if it’s ####### us…”  Truer words were never spoken Mr Lennon.  John, never one to dish out too much praise was effusive in his praise for Hey Jude.  He felt that the lyrics were written by Paul in a moment of true pain and that they were real.  John especially liked the line “the movement you need is on your shoulder” which Paul thought he’d have to change, but for once John surprised him by loving that line and telling Paul to keep it.  The other cool thing is the “####in’ hell” at around the 3 minute mark after Paul hit a bad note on the piano.  It’s mixed so low it’s hard to hear, but it’s there.  

When I first got into the Beatles, Hey Jude was one that I loved, especially the fade out.  I remember trying to remember the melody to that before I owned the song on any kind of physical media.  Once I heard it on the radio, I can remember fumbling around for a tape and a tape recorder so I could record it and never forget it again.  So for a bit, all I had was the fade out because I had caught the radio station when the song was almost over.  One of my favorite YouTube videos is of the Beatles performing the song on the David Frost show in 1968.  The interaction between John and Paul is always good, but here John forgets to sing and Paul looks at him and John kind of rolls his eyes.  Then when John comes in correctly the second time, Paul has a big grin.  Love it.  Watch it all the time.

 
Done.  One of five voters to be finished with all 25.

 

1.--Hey Bulldog(30)

2.--Eleanor Rigby(12)

3.--Help!(11)

4.--A Hard Days Night(15)

5.--Get Back(26)

6.--Ticket To Ride(16)

7.--Day Tripper(32)

8.--Let It Be(8)

9.--I Feel Fine(51)

10.--I Want To Hold Your Hand(21)

11.--While My Guitar Gently Weeps(5)

12.--Rain(42)

13.--She Loves You(38)

14.--Things We Said Today(37)

15.--I Should Have Known Better(93)

16.--Mother Nature's Son(104)

17.--I Saw Her Standing There(43)

18.--Hey Jude(4)

19.--Hello Goodbye(56)

20.--We Can Work it Out(29)

21.--Helter Skelter(35)

22.--Here Comes The Sun(6)

23.--Paperback Writer(47)

24.--Two Of Us(41)

25.--Norwegian Wood(9)

 
Guess The Final Order Of The Top 15 Contest (after song 4)

Shaft41-21

Tom Hagen-20

ekbeats-16

landrys hat-16

fatguyinalittlecoat-13

falguy-13

Binky The Doormat-12

Murph-12

Pip's Invitation-12

lardonastick-11

BobbyLayne-11

Heckmanm-11

Simey-9

5 = exact guess, 3 = one off either way, 1 = guess made Top 15

 

Hey Jude

landrys hat-3

Heckmanm-3

Tom Hagen-1

Pip's Invitation-1

ekbeats-1

BobbyLayne-1

Murph-1

lardonastick-1

Simey-1

Binky The Doormat-1

falguy-1

Shaft41-

fatguyinalittlecoat-

 
Three songs left...
 

0 songs to be posted - 5 voters
 

Encyclopedia Brown---25

DaVinci---25

Krista (TJ/Alex)---25

Getzlaf15---25

John Maddens Lunchbox---25

1 song to be posted - 15 voters
2 songs to be posted - 21 voters
3 songs to be posted - 30 voters

 
I ranked this song as my #17 favorite. I really did play a drinking game to this song in college where you had to drink to every na. Obviously your bottle of beer never left your lips for very long halfway through the song, so we did change it to Jude, which required much drinking as well, but not as much. 

As for the song itself, I think it is a great song. I love the spirit of it for Julian, and it is uplifting in general. There are lots of na na na nas in it, but I tell you what, if you ever see him live, the experience of hearing thousands of people singing those na na na nas in unison is goose bump city. Time goes by so fast in the togetherness, that you don't even realize how long you've been doing it. Even if you never experience that part live, there is still stuff going on within those na's. Yeah Yeah Yeah

*I just read the live stuff was covered. Sorry for the repeat. Still, Hey hey You you Get Off of my Cloud...

 
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I did get a pedicure once. It was actually 3 years ago, today, in fact. It was glorious.
I should have asked if you painted your toenails. Do you?  I have never gotten a pedicure. I don't like for my toes to be messed with.

 
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I ranked this song as my #17 favorite. I really did play a drinking game to this song where you had to drink for every na. Obviously your bottle of beer never left your lips for very long halfway through the song, so we did change it to Jude, which required much drinking as well, but not as much. 

As for the song itself, I think it is a great song. I love the spirit of it for Julian, and it is uplifting in general. There are lots of na na na nas in it, but I tell you what, if you ever see him live, the experience of hearing thousands of people singing those na na na nas in unison is goose bump city. Time goes by so fast in the togetherness, that you don't even realize how long you've been doing it. Even if you never experience that part live, there is still stuff going on within those na's. Yeah Yeah Yeah

*I just read the live stuff was covered. Sorry for the repeat. Still, Hey hey You you Get Off of my Cloud...
Dear god, were you drinking kombucha?

 
I should have asked if you painted your toenails. I have never gotten a pedicure. I don't like for my toes to be messed with.
I never got them painted, and I was a little hesitant about sitting there having someone go to work on my feet, but with the bath and the bag of warm parrafin, or whatever it was, it was a relaxing time. You should try it once, at least.

I never would have even thought of getting a pedicure, but my wife was meticulous about her nails. She went to the nail salon religiously. On her last birthday, back in 2019, I arranged for her to go get her nails done with some of her best friends. I had to go with her, because I basically had to carry her to and from the car and into the chairs. She jokingly said I should get a pedicure, since I was sitting around. I got to sit there and get a pedicure and hang out with her and her friends for the day, holding her hand. She was really happy.

Good memories. Happy Birthday, Baby Girl. 

 
I never got them painted, and I was a little hesitant about sitting there having someone go to work on my feet, but with the bath and the bag of warm parrafin, or whatever it was, it was a relaxing time. You should try it once, at least.

I never would have even thought of getting a pedicure, but my wife was meticulous about her nails. She went to the nail salon religiously. On her last birthday, back in 2019, I arranged for her to go get her nails done with some of her best friends. I had to go with her, because I basically had to carry her to and from the car and into the chairs. She jokingly said I should get a pedicure, since I was sitting around. I got to sit there and get a pedicure and hang out with her and her friends for the day, holding her hand. She was really happy.

Good memories. Happy Birthday, Baby Girl. 
I had them done for several years until a year ago. Gal that cut my hair for eight years started doing them. Best thing ever. Then she moved away.

 
I never got them painted, and I was a little hesitant about sitting there having someone go to work on my feet, but with the bath and the bag of warm parrafin, or whatever it was, it was a relaxing time. You should try it once, at least.

I never would have even thought of getting a pedicure, but my wife was meticulous about her nails. She went to the nail salon religiously. On her last birthday, back in 2019, I arranged for her to go get her nails done with some of her best friends. I had to go with her, because I basically had to carry her to and from the car and into the chairs. She jokingly said I should get a pedicure, since I was sitting around. I got to sit there and get a pedicure and hang out with her and her friends for the day, holding her hand. She was really happy.

Good memories. Happy Birthday, Baby Girl. 
That's a great memory.  Three of my toenail areas hurt sometimes when I cut them, and I'm scared the tech will make it hurt more. My mom always tells me I should go, and that they could help with that. I do soak my feet very often, but that's due to skin problems, which is another reason I don't want them messed with. I may go some day. Three of my nephews have gone with my mom to get pedicures. 

 
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Hey Jude
2022 Ranking: 4
2022 Lists: 42
2022 Points: 628
Ranked Highest by: Holly (1) OH dad (2) @BobbyLayne (2) Doug (2) @ConstruxBoy (2) @prosopis (2) Rob (3) @Yankee23Fan (3) @lardonastick (4) @Dinsy Ejotuz (4) Son2 (5) @Wrighteous Ray (5) @pecorino (6) @Alex P Keaton (6) @PIK95 (7) @John Maddens Lunchbox (7) @jamny (7)
2019 Ranking/Lists/Pts: 11/18/271
Great write-ups!   :clap:

That video is all kinds of awesome.  I particularly love the kid behind Ringo who has absolutely no sense of the beat. He's just clapping all willy-nilly.  Also love that drunk Bill Murray is in the video. He hasn't aged a day.  The na-na-na-nas definitely grow on you after watching the fun they had singing that part. 

 
Guess The Final Order Of The Top 15 Contest (after song 4)

Shaft41-21

Tom Hagen-20

ekbeats-16

landrys hat-16

fatguyinalittlecoat-13

falguy-13

Binky The Doormat-12

Murph-12

Pip's Invitation-12

lardonastick-11

BobbyLayne-11

Heckmanm-11

Simey-9

5 = exact guess, 3 = one off either way, 1 = guess made Top 15

 

Hey Jude

landrys hat-3

Heckmanm-3

Tom Hagen-1

Pip's Invitation-1

ekbeats-1

BobbyLayne-1

Murph-1

lardonastick-1

Simey-1

Binky The Doormat-1

falguy-1

Shaft41-

fatguyinalittlecoat-
Don’t count me out yet, the top 3 on my prediction list are the top 3 on the actual list. The question is, in what order?

 
I ranked this song as my #17 favorite. I really did play a drinking game to this song in college where you had to drink to every na. Obviously your bottle of beer never left your lips for very long halfway through the song, so we did change it to Jude, which required much drinking as well, but not as much. 

As for the song itself, I think it is a great song. I love the spirit of it for Julian, and it is uplifting in general. There are lots of na na na nas in it, but I tell you what, if you ever see him live, the experience of hearing thousands of people singing those na na na nas in unison is goose bump city. Time goes by so fast in the togetherness, that you don't even realize how long you've been doing it. Even if you never experience that part live, there is still stuff going on within those na's. Yeah Yeah Yeah

*I just read the live stuff was covered. Sorry for the repeat. Still, Hey hey You you Get Off of my Cloud...
In the GP4 thread, you brought up a few hilarious run-ins you had with the cops. Did any of those happen after the Hey Jude drinking game? 😄

 
While we await the top 3 . Here's my list

1    
2    Let It Be (8)
3    Get Back (26)
4    Yesterday (10)
5    Here Comes The Sun (6)
6    The Long And Winding Road (23)
7    Help! (11)
8    Can't Buy Me Love (49)
9    Hey Jude(4)
10    Come Together (20)
11    Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown) (9)
12    A Hard Day's Night (15)
13    
14    When I'm Sixty-Four (73)
15    Don't Let Me Down (25)
16    Paperback Writer (47)
17    I Saw Her Standing There (43)
18    Got To Get You Into My Life (27)
19    
20    I Want To Hold Your Hand (21)
21    Tell Me What You See (111)
22    Something (7)
23    While My Guitar Gently Weeps (5)
24    I've Got A Feeling (46)
25    Eleanor Rigby (12)

 
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In the GP4 thread, you brought up a few hilarious run-ins you had with the cops. Did any of those happen after the Hey Jude drinking game? 😄
No, but when I would occasionally cross paths with one of the arresting officers downtown, she would ask me if I was staying out of the Tequila Bar. "Yes, Officer Woodward."  😇

 
Hey Jude broke up a string of 3 straight George songs. He's well represented in the top 10.  :thumbup:

So far only 2 songs have more than 3 #1 votes (Tomorrow Never Knows and While My Guitar Gently Weeps). Each having 5.  A testament to the quality of songs produced by the band. I'll have a bunch more useless stats to publish when we conclude

 
I've liked Hey Jude less and less over the last 35+ years but it sticks in 6th place on my list. While the sing-a-long ending doesn't do it for me, it's the sing-a-long part that I dislike, not the nananas. Let Paul and the boys sing it, but shut your pie hole wanna-be singers. Such great turns of phrases in this song, the melody and the seamless move into the end portion are all just butter. I don't suppose it'll ever leave my top 10 despite its long, slow inexorable slide lower. 

 
Abbey Road Medley
2022 Ranking: 3
2022 Lists: 43
2022 Points: 816
Ranked Highest by: @simey (1) @DocHolliday (1) @neal cassady (1) @turnjose7 (1) @zamboni (1) @Dwayne Hoover (1) @shuke (1) @Ted Lange as your Bartender (1) @jwb (2) @pecorino (2) @ekbeats (2) @Uruk-Hai (3) @Dr. Octopus (3) @Binky The Doormat (3) @Pip's Invitation (3) @Dinsy Ejotuz (3) @krista4 (3) @Anarchy99 (3) @Westerberg (3)  
2019 Ranking/Lists/Pts: 5/20/397

Getz comments:  EIGHT first place votes! (2nd highest) and 19 TOP THREE VOTES. 23 more votes and 419 more points than in 2019, and moves from #5 to #3, Medley only had one more vote (43-42) than "Hey Jude," but had a 24-10 advantage in Top 4 votes.
After 35 lists were in: 14 votes for 264 points. 9th place.
Final 36 lists: 29 votes for 552 points.
Missed #2 by 43 points. #2 had seven more votes.
26 Top 5 votes and 31 Top 10 votes


Krista4
My 2019 ranking:  3

2019 write-up:

Abbey Road medley (Abbey Road, 1969)

First, because I promised, and what I need in my life is more ranking, that I would indicate my favorite segments within this song as well, here we go:

She Came In Through The Bathroom Window

Polythene Pam

The End

Golden Slumbers

You Never Give Me Your Money

Carry That Weight

Sun King

Mean Mr. Mustard

This is just phenomenal and probably doesn’t get to be #1 or #2 just because there’s so much to it, including some parts I like significantly less than others.  At its peaks, though, it’s my favorite song; as I already mentioned in a prior write-up (that no one read), the last 23 seconds of “Polythene Pam” leading into the first 47 seconds of “She Came In Through The Bathroom Window” is one of my three favorite Beatles song, along with the bridge in “Something” and the drum fills in “Strawberry Fields Forever.”

Paul described the idea of the “montage” of songs as they referred to it:  ““We did it this way because John and I had a number of songs, which were great as they were, but we'd finished them.  It often happens that you write the first verse of a song and then you've said it all, and can't be bothered to write a second verse, repeating or giving a variation.  So, I said to John, 'Have you got any bits and pieces, which we can make into one long track?'  And he had, and we made a piece that makes sense all the way through.”

While it might have been a desire to use up some loose ends, Paul also had a vision of this melding into an “operatic structure,” or perhaps it could be called “symphonic” instead.  It certainly has that feel to me, successfully combining disparate parts in a flowing fashion, displaying a dozen or more musical styles within the context of one integrated piece.  I think we can call it A BEATLES SHOWCASE!

Mr. krista on the medley as a whole:  “Better than the sum of its parts.  Guided by Voices records remind me of this.  This mixture of disparate styles thrown in there.  In a good Guided by Voices record I usually hate 30% of it but somehow together it seems so complete ”

It’s going to be easier, though not in any way freaking easy, to break this down piece by piece.

You Never Give Me Your Money

This was written by Paul as a rare protest song from him, against the new manager that he had not wanted to bring on:  “This was my lambasting Allen Klein’s attitude to us:  no money, just funny paper, all promises and it never works out.” Like John’s “Happiness Is A Warm Gun,” it’s a mashing together of three different parts. It’s a medley within The Medley!  I love this one; it’s like a “Best of Paul,” with so many different parts and segues and styles thrown in.  His vocal work is fantastic in this song segment, as are all the chord and tempo changes that I won’t go into because I have eight parts to write up.  Sheesh. 

The first portion is the skewering of Allen Klein that Paul mentioned.  George agreed with the sentiment:  “'’Funny paper' – that's what we get. We get bits of paper saying how much is earned and what this and that is, but we never actually get it in pounds, shillings and pence. We've all got a big house and a car and an office, but to actually get the money we've earned seems impossible."  It starts with a melancholy vocal and poignant piano that emphasizes the downbeat nature with some nice pregnant pauses, then adds urgency from the increased tom-tom sound and insistent vocals into the next section.

The second portion is a look back at how the band spent its early years, with some nostalgia but no sappiness.  It describes how the guys didn’t have many prospects and were uncertain their futures, until they decided to dive headlong into the music business and pursue “that magic feeling.”  I love Paul’s jaunty piano work, his bass playing, and old-fashioned ragtime sound, and in particular his singing style and the way he presents “that magic feeling.”

The third portion, including the guitar solo leading into it, is my favorite part; this section is another reference (like “Two Of Us”) to Paul and Linda’s penchant for hopping in the car and getting lost in the countryside.  The rising vocals swell into a major key while Ringo offers a nice counterpoint on to every measure, with guitars and tambourines increasing the urgency, until they fall away into that countdown sequence that you probably find fun and intriguing (if you’re me) or annoying.

Mr. krista: “McCartney was the band dad, wasn’t he? This is Band Dad saying like “#### you guys.”  But it really kind of rocks.”

Suggested cover:  Glenn Tilbrook

Sun King

My favorite part of this one is the soaring transition into it from the prior section, which, as in “Tomorrow Never Knows,” Paul accomplished by including some tape loops, this time with bells, birds, bubbles and crickets.  That transition sets a nice dreamy mood, but this segment of the medley is kind of boring to me, and I’m oddly not that into the rich vocals, including the harmonies.  Maybe it’s all slightly too languid for my taste, even though it sets an appropriately stark mood.  If this comes on the radio in isolation, I always think it’s going to be “Don’t Let Me Down” and then get disappointed.  Paul does a nice bass line, though, as well as some interesting counter-melodies on the organ, and I’m amused by the partly-Spanish gibberish they string together. John thoughtfully called this segment, “a piece of garbage I had around.”    

Fun fact: The guitar part was heavily influenced by Fleetwood Mac’s “Albatross.”   

Mr. krista: “I don’t really care for it singularly that much but I like its inclusion in there.  It breaks it up.” 

Suggested cover:  Gomez

Mean Mr Mustard

This segment was written along with “Polythene Pam” while the lads were in India.  Once they decided to make the medley, John changed the reference in this part from “sister Shirley” to “sister Pam” so that it would link with the latter.  John’s inspiration:  “I'd read somewhere in the newspaper about this mean guy who hid five-pound notes, not up his nose but somewhere else. No, it had nothing to do with cocaine.”Although this is my least favorite section of the medley, I wouldn’t go so far as to say it’s “a bit of crap,” as John did.  I like Paul’s cheesy backing vocal and the silliness of the segment in this small of a dosage, but I find myself just killing time to get to the next segment.

As a reminder from my prior write-up (which no one read), this segment was intended to be followed by “Her Majesty,” and when the latter was cut out of the medley, this one lost its final chord, which became part of “Her Majesty” instead. The build-up in this song seems to lead well into “Polythene Pam” anyway.

Mr. krista: “I don’t care for it all that much.”

Suggested cover:  Cornershop

Polythene Pam

LOOK OUT!

As I stated above, the end of this building into the beginning of the next segment is not just my favorite part of this medley, but my favorite part of almost any Beatles song.  This was recorded through with “She Came In Through the Bathroom Window,” so it makes sense that that transition is so compelling.  I get a little bored with the prior two portions of the medley, but beginning here and all the way through “The End,” it rocks my face off.

The character “Polythene Pam” was conceived from a combination of two people.  The first was a girl nicknamed “Polythene Pat,” whom the guys knew from their Cavern Club days, and who garnered the nickname because of her proclivity to eat polythene.  She had a friend who worked at a factory and got her a never-ending supply, which she ate raw as the Good Lord intended, or sometimes would burn and then eat it after it cooled down.  Nom!  The second inspiration was the girlfriend of poet Royston Ellis, who joined John and Ellis for a sleepover (ahem) one night.  As described by Ellis:  “We'd read all these things about leather and we didn't have any leather but I had my oilskins and we had some polythene bags from somewhere. We all dressed up in them and wore them in bed. John stayed the night with us in the same bed. I don't think anything very exciting happened and we all wondered what the fun was in being 'kinky.'”  John remembered it as an actual sexual encounter, though:  “perverted sex in a polythene bag.”

I love every second of this segment, starting with John’s stabbing riffs during the intro, so thrashing for an acoustic guitar, followed by George and Paul joining with their distinctive guitar and bass lines and Ringo on his tom-toms, continuing through John’s Scouse vocal and then the swirling harmonies.  The entire segment is an intense propulsive groove and full of blasting energy, but it’s George’s guitar solo and that final build that make this, together with the next segment, the most rocking part of the song.

Fun fact: You can hear Paul overshoot his bass note ~0:45.  He wanted to fix it, but the others insisted he leave in the mistake.

Mr. krista: “Love it  Awesome track.  Rocks super hard.  Sounds like a great Who song.  Better because the Beatles are a better band.  Really funny lyrics, too.”

Suggested cover:   Bee Gees

She Came In Through The Bathroom Window

Though there are some competing stories, this is most likely based on an incident involving the “Apple Scruffs,” the name given to the girls who would hang out around the studio hoping to see the Beatles.  A few of them found a ladder and actually entered Paul’s house through an open bathroom window while Paul wasn’t home, proceeding to rummage around, meet Martha the sheepdog, and even abscond with some photos and clothing.

As discussed, the lead in to this is perfect, and then Paul’s “oh look out!’ launches us excitedly into the pulse of this song.  I ####### love the harmonies on the chorus, love the guitar work and especially the little “responses” at the end of every line, love the interplay of the bass and guitar, love Ringo’s fills that keep propelling everything ever-more-urgently along, love the off-the-beat handclaps.  My face is missing having been rocked off.  “Oh yeah.”

Mr. krista:  “Also really funny lyrics.  I really like it.  It’s that jivey, bouncy number.  If Paul McCartney had a little less talent and a little more hacker, he’d so be [name redacted.”]  I think he’s just too decent of a person.  Or maybe just so much more true to the music.”

Suggested cover:  Ike & Tina Turner  (see Bee Gees on "Polythene Pam" above)

Golden Slumbers

First and foremost, IT’S FUNNY BECAUSE IT’S TRUE.   :lmao:

Now that we have that out of the way, back to the serious stuff.  This one was conceived by Paul based on a lullaby he found in a songbook at his father’s house.  The song contained lyrics by the poet Thomas Dekker, but Paul couldn’t read music so adapted the lyrics using his own tune.  This was recorded at the same time as “Carry That Weight,” which might account for the fabulous transition.  Speaking of transitions, I wish there were one between this and “Polythene Pam” before it; sounds too chopping to me without that.  These two were initially recorded while John was out due to his car accident; John recorded some backing vocals for “Carry That Weight” about six weeks later but doesn’t appear on this section, so just Paul, Ringo, and George here, along with about a squillion orchestral musicians.

There’s a lot of speculation about the words’ meanings, from mourning the disintegration of the band to longing for his mother to wondering why krista4 ditched him (I might have added that last one), but I don’t particularly care about the lyrics on this one.  Paul’s vocal is the standout, as even Alleged Paul Hater Mr. krista states below; it is gently yearning and chillingly beautiful.  It would be impossible to choose a favorite Paul vocal among the Beatles songs, just as it would be a monumental, perhaps Christ- or at least Salk-like accomplishment to rank 204 Beatles songs, but if one were to be so brazen, she might rank this near the top.  George also contributes a Paul-like fantastic bass line that adds to the emotional reach of this segment.

It’s a perfect lullaby…you know, other than the shout-y bits.

Mr. krista:  “Paul’s vocal is the standout.  Once the lullaby is over, I think you could do without the strings.  It’s strong enough with just his voice and the Beatles.”

Suggested cover:  Ben Folds  (see also Phil Collins on "The End" below)

Carry That Weight

My notes from our initial listening sessions said simply, “####### rocks, dawg.”  No idea why I was channeling a Samuel L. Jackson/Randy Jackson mash-up.

This is another of the segments dealing with Paul’s dissatisfaction with Allen Klein: “We were taking so much acid and doing so much drugs and all this Klein #### was going on and getting crazier and crazier and crazier. Carry that weight a long time: like for ever!  … It was serious, paranoid heaviness and it was just very uncomfortable.”  Poor Allen Klein:  unlike Jane Asher who at least got some love songs, too, he got a bunch of Paul’s #### songs.  Wait, no, he was a #### who deserved it.  

After a new lyrical section (“Boy, you’re gonna carry that weight”), the segment reprises “You Never Give Me Your Money” with new lyrics in its section section, and then repeats the guitar’s arpeggio from the counting section to lead into “The End.” The first part is fantastic and notable for having all four Beatles singing in unison, with Ringo prominently heard!  And I love these reprises as a way to link the entire medley together, and besides I loved them in the first segment, too.  

Mr. krista: “This is a great idea for them all to sing about themselves.  Also a great sing-along idea.  Can’t play that in a bar without half the people singing along.”

Suggested cover:  It ain't gonna be for everyone:  Noah and the Whale  (see also Phil Collins on "The End" below)

The End

It’s A RINGO SHOWCASE!  OK, maybe not quite, but it does feature the only extended Ringo drum solo in Beatles history, and I’m running out of chances to declare anything A RINGO SHOWCASE!  No other songs had contained such a solo, because Ringo in particular hated them. Per Paul:  “Ringo would never do drum solos. He hated those guys who went on and on, incessantly banging while the band goes off and has a cup of tea or something.  And when he joined The Beatles we said, "Ah, what about drum solos then?", thinking he might say, 'Yeah, I'll have a five-hour one in the middle of your set,' and he said, 'I hate 'em!'  We said, 'Great! We love you!'” But on this segment, Paul asked Ringo if he would do a “token solo,” which Ringo resisted until George Martin convinced him to the “bloody solo” he hated.  Geoff Emerick got a kick out of the whole scenario:  “Usually, you have to try to talk drummers out of doing solos! He didn't want to do it, but everybody said, 'No, no, it'll be fantastic!' So he gave in – and turned in a bloody marvelous performance! … It’s not just a drummer going off.”  Ringo’s solo is so beautifully Ringo; as the Human Metronome, it focuses on the beat more than ostentatious flourishes, then reintroduces the full band with a helluva groove.

In addition to the RINGO SHOWCASE!, this segment is notable for containing the band's only instance of Paul, John, and George playing the guitar solo together, which amazingly was a John idea, and he even sent Yoko out of the studio for it to be recorded in private.  In each sequence, the solo begins with Paul, moves to George, and ends with John; I find George’s parts particularly brilliant..  They managed it in one take, which Emerick described resulting from “all the bad blood, all the fighting, all the crap that had gone down between the three former friends was forgotten….  John, Paul, and George looked like they had gone back in time, like they were kids again, playing together for the sheet enjoyment of it.”  He called their joy as a heartwarming “high point of summer 1969,” never failing to make him smile.

Paul’s “very cosmic, philosophical” (per John) final line – “And in the end, the love you take, is equal to the love you make” – sounds kind of simplistic to me, but, whether or not intended, it formed a fitting and poignant farewell, and a graceful exit as the last line recorded by the Beatles together on a record.  The orchestral flourish that follows is appropriately grand and majestic, then marching downward into a thoughtful finish that leaves you feeling like it’s all been tied neatly together.  

Mr krista: “Love the jam in the middle.  I think I and many people first heard that on Paul’s Boutique.  I’d like to know how they recorded Ringo’s drums to sound so monstrous in that solo. Sounded like Dave Grohl or something. Must have festooned that place with 15 microphones.”

Suggested cover:  I wanted to find one with just "The End" in isolation, but since there was nothing suitable, in honor of the RINGO SHOWCASE!, here's Phil Collins on the last three segments.

2022 Supplement:  Oh HELL no. 

Guido Merkins

When John and Paul agreed to record Abbey Road, John wanted a straight forward rock album, just a collection of songs.  Paul wanted to create kind of a suite of songs and connect them.  So the compromise was the side one was just songs.  Side two was the suite of songs.  This is how we get the Abbey Road Medley.

The medley starts with Paul’s You Never Give Me Your Money, which refers to Allan Klein literally never giving money only “funny paper.”  Then goes to John’s Sun King which starts when You Never Give Me Your Money fades with crickets.  Sun King features some mock Latin/Spanish that the Beatles had fun with.  Puns like “cake-and-eat-a” and “chicka-ferdy”, which means FU in Liverpool.  Then comes John again with Mean Mr Mustard about a miserly old man who kept a “10 bob note up his nose.”  Then a very forceful stumming on an acoustic that sounds like an electric (the Who and Stones were probably influences here), which brings us to John’s Polythene Pam, a song which I’ve always though of like Long Tall Sally, a girl “so good looking she looks like a man.”  I love the line “she’s the kind of a girl that makes the ‘News of the World’” in John’s very strong Liverpool accent.  Makes me smile whenever he sings it.  Then there is this great chord progression which gets them from Polythene Pan to She Came in Through the Bathroom Window by Paul.  Apparently this really happened to Paul.  A fan tried to get in to him through the bathroom window.  The song ends and there is a brief moment of silence.

Then the final song cycle begins with Paul’s Golden Slumbers, which is a gentle piano ballad that Paul got the lrycis from some other song, but made up his own melody.  Then Ringo comes in for Carry that Weight with the Beatles (except John who was recovering from an accident) for Carry That Weight.  There is a brief refernce to You Never Give Me Your Money on the line “I never give you my pillow….”  For the finale, which begins with “Oh yeah, alright….” we hear the ONLY recorded drum solo in Ringo’s career followed by a lead guitar dual from Paul, George, and John (in that order) before giving was to a single piano note and the line “And in the end.  The love you take is equal to the love you make” and it ends.

There is so much to say about the Medley.  It seems to reference the Beatles past (yeah yeah yeah in Polythene Pam) and yet break new ground (drum and extended guitar solos were not usually a part of their act).  It is a unique experience in their catalogue and a huge influence on every prog rock act in the 70s, for better and for worse.  I love the solos and if you listen close, you can really hear and tell which one is which (they each play approx a bar before the next one plays and go through 3 cycles).  John is the easiest to tell because it’s pure rhythm.  I love the way they go from song to song, sometimes by fading, sometime by actually playing their way to the next song.  I love George’s little flourish at the very end.  Perfect way to end a Beatles album, or was it?  If you listen long enough there is one of the first hidden track in the history of rock.  Her Majesty was supposed to be in the medley between Mean Mr Mustard and Polythene Pam.  Paul didn’t like it’s placement, so told the engineer to cut it out.  He did and stuck it to the end of the tape.  Paul liked the way it sounded that way, so they kept it.

 
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Abbey Road Medley
2022 Ranking: 3
2022 Lists: 43
2022 Points: 816
Ranked Highest by: @simey (1) @DocHolliday (1) @neal cassady (1) @turnjose7 (1) @zamboni (1) @Dwayne Hoover (1) @shuke (1) @Ted Lange as your Bartender (1) @jwb (2) @pecorino (2) @ekbeats (2) @Uruk-Hai (3) @Dr. Octopus (3) @Binky The Doormat (3) @Pip's Invitation (3) @Dinsy Ejotuz (3) @krista4 (3) @Anarchy99 (3) @Westerberg (3)  
2019 Ranking/Lists/Pts: 5/20/397

Getz comments:  EIGHT first place votes! (2nd highest) and 19 TOP THREE VOTES. 23 more votes and 419 more points than in 2019, and moves from #5 to #3, Medley only had one more vote (43-42) than "Hey Jude," but had a 24-10 advantage in Top 4 votes.
After 35 lists were in: 14 votes for 264 points. 9th place.
Final 36 lists: 29 votes for 552 points.
Missed #2 by 43 points. #2 had seven more votes.


Krista4
My 2019 ranking:  3

2019 write-up:

Abbey Road medley (Abbey Road, 1969)

First, because I promised, and what I need in my life is more ranking, that I would indicate my favorite segments within this song as well, here we go:

She Came In Through The Bathroom Window

Polythene Pam

The End

Golden Slumbers

You Never Give Me Your Money

Carry That Weight

Sun King

Mean Mr. Mustard

This is just phenomenal and probably doesn’t get to be #1 or #2 just because there’s so much to it, including some parts I like significantly less than others.  At its peaks, though, it’s my favorite song; as I already mentioned in a prior write-up (that no one read), the last 23 seconds of “Polythene Pam” leading into the first 47 seconds of “She Came In Through The Bathroom Window” is one of my three favorite Beatles song, along with the bridge in “Something” and the drum fills in “Strawberry Fields Forever.”

Paul described the idea of the “montage” of songs as they referred to it:  ““We did it this way because John and I had a number of songs, which were great as they were, but we'd finished them.  It often happens that you write the first verse of a song and then you've said it all, and can't be bothered to write a second verse, repeating or giving a variation.  So, I said to John, 'Have you got any bits and pieces, which we can make into one long track?'  And he had, and we made a piece that makes sense all the way through.”

While it might have been a desire to use up some loose ends, Paul also had a vision of this melding into an “operatic structure,” or perhaps it could be called “symphonic” instead.  It certainly has that feel to me, successfully combining disparate parts in a flowing fashion, displaying a dozen or more musical styles within the context of one integrated piece.  I think we can call it A BEATLES SHOWCASE!

Mr. krista on the medley as a whole:  “Better than the sum of its parts.  Guided by Voices records remind me of this.  This mixture of disparate styles thrown in there.  In a good Guided by Voices record I usually hate 30% of it but somehow together it seems so complete ”

It’s going to be easier, though not in any way freaking easy, to break this down piece by piece.

You Never Give Me Your Money

This was written by Paul as a rare protest song from him, against the new manager that he had not wanted to bring on:  “This was my lambasting Allen Klein’s attitude to us:  no money, just funny paper, all promises and it never works out.” Like John’s “Happiness Is A Warm Gun,” it’s a mashing together of three different parts. It’s a medley within The Medley!  I love this one; it’s like a “Best of Paul,” with so many different parts and segues and styles thrown in.  His vocal work is fantastic in this song segment, as are all the chord and tempo changes that I won’t go into because I have eight parts to write up.  Sheesh. 

The first portion is the skewering of Allen Klein that Paul mentioned.  George agreed with the sentiment:  “'’Funny paper' – that's what we get. We get bits of paper saying how much is earned and what this and that is, but we never actually get it in pounds, shillings and pence. We've all got a big house and a car and an office, but to actually get the money we've earned seems impossible."  It starts with a melancholy vocal and poignant piano that emphasizes the downbeat nature with some nice pregnant pauses, then adds urgency from the increased tom-tom sound and insistent vocals into the next section.

The second portion is a look back at how the band spent its early years, with some nostalgia but no sappiness.  It describes how the guys didn’t have many prospects and were uncertain their futures, until they decided to dive headlong into the music business and pursue “that magic feeling.”  I love Paul’s jaunty piano work, his bass playing, and old-fashioned ragtime sound, and in particular his singing style and the way he presents “that magic feeling.”

The third portion, including the guitar solo leading into it, is my favorite part; this section is another reference (like “Two Of Us”) to Paul and Linda’s penchant for hopping in the car and getting lost in the countryside.  The rising vocals swell into a major key while Ringo offers a nice counterpoint on to every measure, with guitars and tambourines increasing the urgency, until they fall away into that countdown sequence that you probably find fun and intriguing (if you’re me) or annoying.

Mr. krista: “McCartney was the band dad, wasn’t he? This is Band Dad saying like “#### you guys.”  But it really kind of rocks.”

Suggested cover:  Glenn Tilbrook

Sun King

My favorite part of this one is the soaring transition into it from the prior section, which, as in “Tomorrow Never Knows,” Paul accomplished by including some tape loops, this time with bells, birds, bubbles and crickets.  That transition sets a nice dreamy mood, but this segment of the medley is kind of boring to me, and I’m oddly not that into the rich vocals, including the harmonies.  Maybe it’s all slightly too languid for my taste, even though it sets an appropriately stark mood.  If this comes on the radio in isolation, I always think it’s going to be “Don’t Let Me Down” and then get disappointed.  Paul does a nice bass line, though, as well as some interesting counter-melodies on the organ, and I’m amused by the partly-Spanish gibberish they string together. John thoughtfully called this segment, “a piece of garbage I had around.”    

Fun fact: The guitar part was heavily influenced by Fleetwood Mac’s “Albatross.”   

Mr. krista: “I don’t really care for it singularly that much but I like its inclusion in there.  It breaks it up.” 

Suggested cover:  Gomez

Mean Mr Mustard

This segment was written along with “Polythene Pam” while the lads were in India.  Once they decided to make the medley, John changed the reference in this part from “sister Shirley” to “sister Pam” so that it would link with the latter.  John’s inspiration:  “I'd read somewhere in the newspaper about this mean guy who hid five-pound notes, not up his nose but somewhere else. No, it had nothing to do with cocaine.”Although this is my least favorite section of the medley, I wouldn’t go so far as to say it’s “a bit of crap,” as John did.  I like Paul’s cheesy backing vocal and the silliness of the segment in this small of a dosage, but I find myself just killing time to get to the next segment.

As a reminder from my prior write-up (which no one read), this segment was intended to be followed by “Her Majesty,” and when the latter was cut out of the medley, this one lost its final chord, which became part of “Her Majesty” instead. The build-up in this song seems to lead well into “Polythene Pam” anyway.

Mr. krista: “I don’t care for it all that much.”

Suggested cover:  Cornershop

Polythene Pam

LOOK OUT!

As I stated above, the end of this building into the beginning of the next segment is not just my favorite part of this medley, but my favorite part of almost any Beatles song.  This was recorded through with “She Came In Through the Bathroom Window,” so it makes sense that that transition is so compelling.  I get a little bored with the prior two portions of the medley, but beginning here and all the way through “The End,” it rocks my face off.

The character “Polythene Pam” was conceived from a combination of two people.  The first was a girl nicknamed “Polythene Pat,” whom the guys knew from their Cavern Club days, and who garnered the nickname because of her proclivity to eat polythene.  She had a friend who worked at a factory and got her a never-ending supply, which she ate raw as the Good Lord intended, or sometimes would burn and then eat it after it cooled down.  Nom!  The second inspiration was the girlfriend of poet Royston Ellis, who joined John and Ellis for a sleepover (ahem) one night.  As described by Ellis:  “We'd read all these things about leather and we didn't have any leather but I had my oilskins and we had some polythene bags from somewhere. We all dressed up in them and wore them in bed. John stayed the night with us in the same bed. I don't think anything very exciting happened and we all wondered what the fun was in being 'kinky.'”  John remembered it as an actual sexual encounter, though:  “perverted sex in a polythene bag.”

I love every second of this segment, starting with John’s stabbing riffs during the intro, so thrashing for an acoustic guitar, followed by George and Paul joining with their distinctive guitar and bass lines and Ringo on his tom-toms, continuing through John’s Scouse vocal and then the swirling harmonies.  The entire segment is an intense propulsive groove and full of blasting energy, but it’s George’s guitar solo and that final build that make this, together with the next segment, the most rocking part of the song.

Fun fact: You can hear Paul overshoot his bass note ~0:45.  He wanted to fix it, but the others insisted he leave in the mistake.

Mr. krista: “Love it  Awesome track.  Rocks super hard.  Sounds like a great Who song.  Better because the Beatles are a better band.  Really funny lyrics, too.”

Suggested cover:   Bee Gees

She Came In Through The Bathroom Window

Though there are some competing stories, this is most likely based on an incident involving the “Apple Scruffs,” the name given to the girls who would hang out around the studio hoping to see the Beatles.  A few of them found a ladder and actually entered Paul’s house through an open bathroom window while Paul wasn’t home, proceeding to rummage around, meet Martha the sheepdog, and even abscond with some photos and clothing.

As discussed, the lead in to this is perfect, and then Paul’s “oh look out!’ launches us excitedly into the pulse of this song.  I ####### love the harmonies on the chorus, love the guitar work and especially the little “responses” at the end of every line, love the interplay of the bass and guitar, love Ringo’s fills that keep propelling everything ever-more-urgently along, love the off-the-beat handclaps.  My face is missing having been rocked off.  “Oh yeah.”

Mr. krista:  “Also really funny lyrics.  I really like it.  It’s that jivey, bouncy number.  If Paul McCartney had a little less talent and a little more hacker, he’d so be [name redacted.”]  I think he’s just too decent of a person.  Or maybe just so much more true to the music.”

Suggested cover:  Ike & Tina Turner  (see Bee Gees on "Polythene Pam" above)

Golden Slumbers

First and foremost, IT’S FUNNY BECAUSE IT’S TRUE.   :lmao:

Now that we have that out of the way, back to the serious stuff.  This one was conceived by Paul based on a lullaby he found in a songbook at his father’s house.  The song contained lyrics by the poet Thomas Dekker, but Paul couldn’t read music so adapted the lyrics using his own tune.  This was recorded at the same time as “Carry That Weight,” which might account for the fabulous transition.  Speaking of transitions, I wish there were one between this and “Polythene Pam” before it; sounds too chopping to me without that.  These two were initially recorded while John was out due to his car accident; John recorded some backing vocals for “Carry That Weight” about six weeks later but doesn’t appear on this section, so just Paul, Ringo, and George here, along with about a squillion orchestral musicians.

There’s a lot of speculation about the words’ meanings, from mourning the disintegration of the band to longing for his mother to wondering why krista4 ditched him (I might have added that last one), but I don’t particularly care about the lyrics on this one.  Paul’s vocal is the standout, as even Alleged Paul Hater Mr. krista states below; it is gently yearning and chillingly beautiful.  It would be impossible to choose a favorite Paul vocal among the Beatles songs, just as it would be a monumental, perhaps Christ- or at least Salk-like accomplishment to rank 204 Beatles songs, but if one were to be so brazen, she might rank this near the top.  George also contributes a Paul-like fantastic bass line that adds to the emotional reach of this segment.

It’s a perfect lullaby…you know, other than the shout-y bits.

Mr. krista:  “Paul’s vocal is the standout.  Once the lullaby is over, I think you could do without the strings.  It’s strong enough with just his voice and the Beatles.”

Suggested cover:  Ben Folds  (see also Phil Collins on "The End" below)

Carry That Weight

My notes from our initial listening sessions said simply, “####### rocks, dawg.”  No idea why I was channeling a Samuel L. Jackson/Randy Jackson mash-up.

This is another of the segments dealing with Paul’s dissatisfaction with Allen Klein: “We were taking so much acid and doing so much drugs and all this Klein #### was going on and getting crazier and crazier and crazier. Carry that weight a long time: like for ever!  … It was serious, paranoid heaviness and it was just very uncomfortable.”  Poor Allen Klein:  unlike Jane Asher who at least got some love songs, too, he got a bunch of Paul’s #### songs.  Wait, no, he was a #### who deserved it.  

After a new lyrical section (“Boy, you’re gonna carry that weight”), the segment reprises “You Never Give Me Your Money” with new lyrics in its section section, and then repeats the guitar’s arpeggio from the counting section to lead into “The End.” The first part is fantastic and notable for having all four Beatles singing in unison, with Ringo prominently heard!  And I love these reprises as a way to link the entire medley together, and besides I loved them in the first segment, too.  

Mr. krista: “This is a great idea for them all to sing about themselves.  Also a great sing-along idea.  Can’t play that in a bar without half the people singing along.”

Suggested cover:  It ain't gonna be for everyone:  Noah and the Whale  (see also Phil Collins on "The End" below)

The End

It’s A RINGO SHOWCASE!  OK, maybe not quite, but it does feature the only extended Ringo drum solo in Beatles history, and I’m running out of chances to declare anything A RINGO SHOWCASE!  No other songs had contained such a solo, because Ringo in particular hated them. Per Paul:  “Ringo would never do drum solos. He hated those guys who went on and on, incessantly banging while the band goes off and has a cup of tea or something.  And when he joined The Beatles we said, "Ah, what about drum solos then?", thinking he might say, 'Yeah, I'll have a five-hour one in the middle of your set,' and he said, 'I hate 'em!'  We said, 'Great! We love you!'” But on this segment, Paul asked Ringo if he would do a “token solo,” which Ringo resisted until George Martin convinced him to the “bloody solo” he hated.  Geoff Emerick got a kick out of the whole scenario:  “Usually, you have to try to talk drummers out of doing solos! He didn't want to do it, but everybody said, 'No, no, it'll be fantastic!' So he gave in – and turned in a bloody marvelous performance! … It’s not just a drummer going off.”  Ringo’s solo is so beautifully Ringo; as the Human Metronome, it focuses on the beat more than ostentatious flourishes, then reintroduces the full band with a helluva groove.

In addition to the RINGO SHOWCASE!, this segment is notable for containing the band's only instance of Paul, John, and George playing the guitar solo together, which amazingly was a John idea, and he even sent Yoko out of the studio for it to be recorded in private.  In each sequence, the solo begins with Paul, moves to George, and ends with John; I find George’s parts particularly brilliant..  They managed it in one take, which Emerick described resulting from “all the bad blood, all the fighting, all the crap that had gone down between the three former friends was forgotten….  John, Paul, and George looked like they had gone back in time, like they were kids again, playing together for the sheet enjoyment of it.”  He called their joy as a heartwarming “high point of summer 1969,” never failing to make him smile.

Paul’s “very cosmic, philosophical” (per John) final line – “And in the end, the love you take, is equal to the love you make” – sounds kind of simplistic to me, but, whether or not intended, it formed a fitting and poignant farewell, and a graceful exit as the last line recorded by the Beatles together on a record.  The orchestral flourish that follows is appropriately grand and majestic, then marching downward into a thoughtful finish that leaves you feeling like it’s all been tied neatly together.  

Mr krista: “Love the jam in the middle.  I think I and many people first heard that on Paul’s Boutique.  I’d like to know how they recorded Ringo’s drums to sound so monstrous in that solo. Sounded like Dave Grohl or something. Must have festooned that place with 15 microphones.”

Suggested cover:  I wanted to find one with just "The End" in isolation, but since there was nothing suitable, in honor of the RINGO SHOWCASE!, here's Phil Collins on the last three segments.

2022 Supplement:  Oh HELL no. 

Guido Merkins

When John and Paul agreed to record Abbey Road, John wanted a straight forward rock album, just a collection of songs.  Paul wanted to create kind of a suite of songs and connect them.  So the compromise was the side one was just songs.  Side two was the suite of songs.  This is how we get the Abbey Road Medley.

The medley starts with Paul’s You Never Give Me Your Money, which refers to Allan Klein literally never giving money only “funny paper.”  Then goes to John’s Sun King which starts when You Never Give Me Your Money fades with crickets.  Sun King features some mock Latin/Spanish that the Beatles had fun with.  Puns like “cake-and-eat-a” and “chicka-ferdy”, which means FU in Liverpool.  Then comes John again with Mean Mr Mustard about a miserly old man who kept a “10 bob note up his nose.”  Then a very forceful stumming on an acoustic that sounds like an electric (the Who and Stones were probably influences here), which brings us to John’s Polythene Pam, a song which I’ve always though of like Long Tall Sally, a girl “so good looking she looks like a man.”  I love the line “she’s the kind of a girl that makes the ‘News of the World’” in John’s very strong Liverpool accent.  Makes me smile whenever he sings it.  Then there is this great chord progression which gets them from Polythene Pan to She Came in Through the Bathroom Window by Paul.  Apparently this really happened to Paul.  A fan tried to get in to him through the bathroom window.  The song ends and there is a brief moment of silence.

Then the final song cycle begins with Paul’s Golden Slumbers, which is a gentle piano ballad that Paul got the lrycis from some other song, but made up his own melody.  Then Ringo comes in for Carry that Weight with the Beatles (except John who was recovering from an accident) for Carry That Weight.  There is a brief refernce to You Never Give Me Your Money on the line “I never give you my pillow….”  For the finale, which begins with “Oh yeah, alright….” we hear the ONLY recorded drum solo in Ringo’s career followed by a lead guitar dual from Paul, George, and John (in that order) before giving was to a single piano note and the line “And in the end.  The love you take is equal to the love you make” and it ends.

There is so much to say about the Medley.  It seems to reference the Beatles past (yeah yeah yeah in Polythene Pam) and yet break new ground (drum and extended guitar solos were not usually a part of their act).  It is a unique experience in their catalogue and a huge influence on every prog rock act in the 70s, for better and for worse.  I love the solos and if you listen close, you can really hear and tell which one is which (they each play approx a bar before the next one plays and go through 3 cycles).  John is the easiest to tell because it’s pure rhythm.  I love the way they go from song to song, sometimes by fading, sometime by actually playing their way to the next song.  I love George’s little flourish at the very end.  Perfect way to end a Beatles album, or was it?  If you listen long enough there is one of the first hidden track in the history of rock.  Her Majesty was supposed to be in the medley between Mean Mr Mustard and Polythene Pam.  Paul didn’t like it’s placement, so told the engineer to cut it out.  He did and stuck it to the end of the tape.  Paul liked the way it sounded that way, so they kept it.
If I didn't think including the whole melody as one song was a bit unfair, I would have easily had this No. 1 as it's one of the most wonderful album sides in rock history.

 
43 votes for #3, and each scored 170 points.  And I only dropped one slot, as I didn't have it.

 

1 --Oliver Humanzee(Dad)---3541

2 --DocHolliday---3530

3 --Getzlaf15---3514

 
Clapton gets a ton of hate on this board. I'm not a huge fan of his solo records (although I do like most of them), but I'm a huge fan of his playing. 
I am quirky on EC. I loved Cream. And I liked some of his solo 80's stuff. Everything else doesn't move me much (which is actually a ton of his catalog).

 
I am quirky on EC. I loved Cream. And I liked some of his solo 80's stuff. Everything else doesn't move me much (which is actually a ton of his catalog).
Derek and the Dominoes is an all-time classic. I can't imagine anyone that loves music hating that album - but everyone is different.

 
Guess The Final Order Of The Top 15 Contest (after song 3)

Tom Hagen-23

Shaft41-22

ekbeats-19

landrys hat-17

Binky The Doormat-15

fatguyinalittlecoat-14

falguy-14

Murph-13

Pip's Invitation-13

BobbyLayne-12

Heckmanm-12

lardonastick-11

Simey-10

5 = exact guess, 3 = one off either way, 1 = guess made Top 15


 

Abbey Road Medley

Tom Hagen-3

ekbeats-3 (his 4th ekbeat)

Binky The Doormat-3

landrys hat-1

Heckmanm-1

Pip's Invitation-1

BobbyLayne-1

Murph-1

Simey-1

falguy-1

Shaft41-1

fatguyinalittlecoat-1

lardonastick-

 
Two songs left to post...

0 songs left to post: 7
1 song left to post: 24
2 songs left to post: 40

 

 
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If I didn't think including the whole melody as one song was a bit unfair, I would have easily had this No. 1 as it's one of the most wonderful album sides in rock history.
In their recording sessions they called it The Long One, because it is several short songs that connect into one long piece. It's legal and fair!!

Anyway, I love the Medley, and all of its styles and parts.

Whenever I hear it, I often think of an incident when I worked in a big resort in Florida. There was a section on the property called The Springs. It was somewhat secluded with a smallish pool, and several trees around it. It was boring if you had to be in that section, because all there was to do was to make sure nobody drowned, and everything was ok with the pool, equipment, etc.  There were speakers around the pool, and inside the Springs office was the controls to the music played there. Usually we just put in one of these big flat tapes that looked like a giant 8 track, and it played a couple hours of specific music. There was also a cassette player on the system. One day I put in Abbey Road. The Medley was playing and a woman came in, and she asked me if I would ask a woman that was bathing in the sun topless to put her top back on, because her young son kept staring at her. I said Ok, and I told her that the woman is probably European where they sun bathe topless. I remember Polythene Pam was playing as I walked around the pool and towards the woman, and I was trying really hard not to grin too much. Oh look out!  I felt sorta like I had a mask on since I was wearing sunglasses.  I knelt down beside her, and asked her if she didn't mind putting on her top, because there was a young man around that was a little too interested in her breast. I started laughing, and thank God she did too. She was a good sport, and she didn't mind putting on her top. As I walked away she was singing to She Came In Through The Bathroom Window.  Anyway, that was my first time having to ask a guest to put her top on, but it wouldn't be the last time during my time there. 

 
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Abbey Road Medley
2022 Ranking: 3
2022 Lists: 43
2022 Points: 816
Ranked Highest by: @simey (1) @DocHolliday (1) @neal cassady (1) @turnjose7 (1) @zamboni (1) @Dwayne Hoover (1) @shuke (1) @Ted Lange as your Bartender (1) @jwb (2) @pecorino (2) @ekbeats (2) @Uruk-Hai (3) @Dr. Octopus (3) @Binky The Doormat (3) @Pip's Invitation (3) @Dinsy Ejotuz (3) @krista4 (3) @Anarchy99 (3) @Westerberg (3)  
2019 Ranking/Lists/Pts: 5/20/397

Getz comments:  EIGHT first place votes! (2nd highest) and 19 TOP THREE VOTES. 23 more votes and 419 more points than in 2019, and moves from #5 to #3, Medley only had one more vote (43-42) than "Hey Jude," but had a 24-10 advantage in Top 4 votes.
After 35 lists were in: 14 votes for 264 points. 9th place.
Final 36 lists: 29 votes for 552 points.
Missed #2 by 43 points. #2 had seven more votes.


Krista4
My 2019 ranking:  3

2019 write-up:

Abbey Road medley (Abbey Road, 1969)

First, because I promised, and what I need in my life is more ranking, that I would indicate my favorite segments within this song as well, here we go:

She Came In Through The Bathroom Window

Polythene Pam

The End

Golden Slumbers

You Never Give Me Your Money

Carry That Weight

Sun King

Mean Mr. Mustard

This is just phenomenal and probably doesn’t get to be #1 or #2 just because there’s so much to it, including some parts I like significantly less than others.  At its peaks, though, it’s my favorite song; as I already mentioned in a prior write-up (that no one read), the last 23 seconds of “Polythene Pam” leading into the first 47 seconds of “She Came In Through The Bathroom Window” is one of my three favorite Beatles song, along with the bridge in “Something” and the drum fills in “Strawberry Fields Forever.”

Paul described the idea of the “montage” of songs as they referred to it:  ““We did it this way because John and I had a number of songs, which were great as they were, but we'd finished them.  It often happens that you write the first verse of a song and then you've said it all, and can't be bothered to write a second verse, repeating or giving a variation.  So, I said to John, 'Have you got any bits and pieces, which we can make into one long track?'  And he had, and we made a piece that makes sense all the way through.”

While it might have been a desire to use up some loose ends, Paul also had a vision of this melding into an “operatic structure,” or perhaps it could be called “symphonic” instead.  It certainly has that feel to me, successfully combining disparate parts in a flowing fashion, displaying a dozen or more musical styles within the context of one integrated piece.  I think we can call it A BEATLES SHOWCASE!

Mr. krista on the medley as a whole:  “Better than the sum of its parts.  Guided by Voices records remind me of this.  This mixture of disparate styles thrown in there.  In a good Guided by Voices record I usually hate 30% of it but somehow together it seems so complete ”

It’s going to be easier, though not in any way freaking easy, to break this down piece by piece.

You Never Give Me Your Money

This was written by Paul as a rare protest song from him, against the new manager that he had not wanted to bring on:  “This was my lambasting Allen Klein’s attitude to us:  no money, just funny paper, all promises and it never works out.” Like John’s “Happiness Is A Warm Gun,” it’s a mashing together of three different parts. It’s a medley within The Medley!  I love this one; it’s like a “Best of Paul,” with so many different parts and segues and styles thrown in.  His vocal work is fantastic in this song segment, as are all the chord and tempo changes that I won’t go into because I have eight parts to write up.  Sheesh. 

The first portion is the skewering of Allen Klein that Paul mentioned.  George agreed with the sentiment:  “'’Funny paper' – that's what we get. We get bits of paper saying how much is earned and what this and that is, but we never actually get it in pounds, shillings and pence. We've all got a big house and a car and an office, but to actually get the money we've earned seems impossible."  It starts with a melancholy vocal and poignant piano that emphasizes the downbeat nature with some nice pregnant pauses, then adds urgency from the increased tom-tom sound and insistent vocals into the next section.

The second portion is a look back at how the band spent its early years, with some nostalgia but no sappiness.  It describes how the guys didn’t have many prospects and were uncertain their futures, until they decided to dive headlong into the music business and pursue “that magic feeling.”  I love Paul’s jaunty piano work, his bass playing, and old-fashioned ragtime sound, and in particular his singing style and the way he presents “that magic feeling.”

The third portion, including the guitar solo leading into it, is my favorite part; this section is another reference (like “Two Of Us”) to Paul and Linda’s penchant for hopping in the car and getting lost in the countryside.  The rising vocals swell into a major key while Ringo offers a nice counterpoint on to every measure, with guitars and tambourines increasing the urgency, until they fall away into that countdown sequence that you probably find fun and intriguing (if you’re me) or annoying.

Mr. krista: “McCartney was the band dad, wasn’t he? This is Band Dad saying like “#### you guys.”  But it really kind of rocks.”

Suggested cover:  Glenn Tilbrook

Sun King

My favorite part of this one is the soaring transition into it from the prior section, which, as in “Tomorrow Never Knows,” Paul accomplished by including some tape loops, this time with bells, birds, bubbles and crickets.  That transition sets a nice dreamy mood, but this segment of the medley is kind of boring to me, and I’m oddly not that into the rich vocals, including the harmonies.  Maybe it’s all slightly too languid for my taste, even though it sets an appropriately stark mood.  If this comes on the radio in isolation, I always think it’s going to be “Don’t Let Me Down” and then get disappointed.  Paul does a nice bass line, though, as well as some interesting counter-melodies on the organ, and I’m amused by the partly-Spanish gibberish they string together. John thoughtfully called this segment, “a piece of garbage I had around.”    

Fun fact: The guitar part was heavily influenced by Fleetwood Mac’s “Albatross.”   

Mr. krista: “I don’t really care for it singularly that much but I like its inclusion in there.  It breaks it up.” 

Suggested cover:  Gomez

Mean Mr Mustard

This segment was written along with “Polythene Pam” while the lads were in India.  Once they decided to make the medley, John changed the reference in this part from “sister Shirley” to “sister Pam” so that it would link with the latter.  John’s inspiration:  “I'd read somewhere in the newspaper about this mean guy who hid five-pound notes, not up his nose but somewhere else. No, it had nothing to do with cocaine.”Although this is my least favorite section of the medley, I wouldn’t go so far as to say it’s “a bit of crap,” as John did.  I like Paul’s cheesy backing vocal and the silliness of the segment in this small of a dosage, but I find myself just killing time to get to the next segment.

As a reminder from my prior write-up (which no one read), this segment was intended to be followed by “Her Majesty,” and when the latter was cut out of the medley, this one lost its final chord, which became part of “Her Majesty” instead. The build-up in this song seems to lead well into “Polythene Pam” anyway.

Mr. krista: “I don’t care for it all that much.”

Suggested cover:  Cornershop

Polythene Pam

LOOK OUT!

As I stated above, the end of this building into the beginning of the next segment is not just my favorite part of this medley, but my favorite part of almost any Beatles song.  This was recorded through with “She Came In Through the Bathroom Window,” so it makes sense that that transition is so compelling.  I get a little bored with the prior two portions of the medley, but beginning here and all the way through “The End,” it rocks my face off.

The character “Polythene Pam” was conceived from a combination of two people.  The first was a girl nicknamed “Polythene Pat,” whom the guys knew from their Cavern Club days, and who garnered the nickname because of her proclivity to eat polythene.  She had a friend who worked at a factory and got her a never-ending supply, which she ate raw as the Good Lord intended, or sometimes would burn and then eat it after it cooled down.  Nom!  The second inspiration was the girlfriend of poet Royston Ellis, who joined John and Ellis for a sleepover (ahem) one night.  As described by Ellis:  “We'd read all these things about leather and we didn't have any leather but I had my oilskins and we had some polythene bags from somewhere. We all dressed up in them and wore them in bed. John stayed the night with us in the same bed. I don't think anything very exciting happened and we all wondered what the fun was in being 'kinky.'”  John remembered it as an actual sexual encounter, though:  “perverted sex in a polythene bag.”

I love every second of this segment, starting with John’s stabbing riffs during the intro, so thrashing for an acoustic guitar, followed by George and Paul joining with their distinctive guitar and bass lines and Ringo on his tom-toms, continuing through John’s Scouse vocal and then the swirling harmonies.  The entire segment is an intense propulsive groove and full of blasting energy, but it’s George’s guitar solo and that final build that make this, together with the next segment, the most rocking part of the song.

Fun fact: You can hear Paul overshoot his bass note ~0:45.  He wanted to fix it, but the others insisted he leave in the mistake.

Mr. krista: “Love it  Awesome track.  Rocks super hard.  Sounds like a great Who song.  Better because the Beatles are a better band.  Really funny lyrics, too.”

Suggested cover:   Bee Gees

She Came In Through The Bathroom Window

Though there are some competing stories, this is most likely based on an incident involving the “Apple Scruffs,” the name given to the girls who would hang out around the studio hoping to see the Beatles.  A few of them found a ladder and actually entered Paul’s house through an open bathroom window while Paul wasn’t home, proceeding to rummage around, meet Martha the sheepdog, and even abscond with some photos and clothing.

As discussed, the lead in to this is perfect, and then Paul’s “oh look out!’ launches us excitedly into the pulse of this song.  I ####### love the harmonies on the chorus, love the guitar work and especially the little “responses” at the end of every line, love the interplay of the bass and guitar, love Ringo’s fills that keep propelling everything ever-more-urgently along, love the off-the-beat handclaps.  My face is missing having been rocked off.  “Oh yeah.”

Mr. krista:  “Also really funny lyrics.  I really like it.  It’s that jivey, bouncy number.  If Paul McCartney had a little less talent and a little more hacker, he’d so be [name redacted.”]  I think he’s just too decent of a person.  Or maybe just so much more true to the music.”

Suggested cover:  Ike & Tina Turner  (see Bee Gees on "Polythene Pam" above)

Golden Slumbers

First and foremost, IT’S FUNNY BECAUSE IT’S TRUE.   :lmao:

Now that we have that out of the way, back to the serious stuff.  This one was conceived by Paul based on a lullaby he found in a songbook at his father’s house.  The song contained lyrics by the poet Thomas Dekker, but Paul couldn’t read music so adapted the lyrics using his own tune.  This was recorded at the same time as “Carry That Weight,” which might account for the fabulous transition.  Speaking of transitions, I wish there were one between this and “Polythene Pam” before it; sounds too chopping to me without that.  These two were initially recorded while John was out due to his car accident; John recorded some backing vocals for “Carry That Weight” about six weeks later but doesn’t appear on this section, so just Paul, Ringo, and George here, along with about a squillion orchestral musicians.

There’s a lot of speculation about the words’ meanings, from mourning the disintegration of the band to longing for his mother to wondering why krista4 ditched him (I might have added that last one), but I don’t particularly care about the lyrics on this one.  Paul’s vocal is the standout, as even Alleged Paul Hater Mr. krista states below; it is gently yearning and chillingly beautiful.  It would be impossible to choose a favorite Paul vocal among the Beatles songs, just as it would be a monumental, perhaps Christ- or at least Salk-like accomplishment to rank 204 Beatles songs, but if one were to be so brazen, she might rank this near the top.  George also contributes a Paul-like fantastic bass line that adds to the emotional reach of this segment.

It’s a perfect lullaby…you know, other than the shout-y bits.

Mr. krista:  “Paul’s vocal is the standout.  Once the lullaby is over, I think you could do without the strings.  It’s strong enough with just his voice and the Beatles.”

Suggested cover:  Ben Folds  (see also Phil Collins on "The End" below)

Carry That Weight

My notes from our initial listening sessions said simply, “####### rocks, dawg.”  No idea why I was channeling a Samuel L. Jackson/Randy Jackson mash-up.

This is another of the segments dealing with Paul’s dissatisfaction with Allen Klein: “We were taking so much acid and doing so much drugs and all this Klein #### was going on and getting crazier and crazier and crazier. Carry that weight a long time: like for ever!  … It was serious, paranoid heaviness and it was just very uncomfortable.”  Poor Allen Klein:  unlike Jane Asher who at least got some love songs, too, he got a bunch of Paul’s #### songs.  Wait, no, he was a #### who deserved it.  

After a new lyrical section (“Boy, you’re gonna carry that weight”), the segment reprises “You Never Give Me Your Money” with new lyrics in its section section, and then repeats the guitar’s arpeggio from the counting section to lead into “The End.” The first part is fantastic and notable for having all four Beatles singing in unison, with Ringo prominently heard!  And I love these reprises as a way to link the entire medley together, and besides I loved them in the first segment, too.  

Mr. krista: “This is a great idea for them all to sing about themselves.  Also a great sing-along idea.  Can’t play that in a bar without half the people singing along.”

Suggested cover:  It ain't gonna be for everyone:  Noah and the Whale  (see also Phil Collins on "The End" below)

The End

It’s A RINGO SHOWCASE!  OK, maybe not quite, but it does feature the only extended Ringo drum solo in Beatles history, and I’m running out of chances to declare anything A RINGO SHOWCASE!  No other songs had contained such a solo, because Ringo in particular hated them. Per Paul:  “Ringo would never do drum solos. He hated those guys who went on and on, incessantly banging while the band goes off and has a cup of tea or something.  And when he joined The Beatles we said, "Ah, what about drum solos then?", thinking he might say, 'Yeah, I'll have a five-hour one in the middle of your set,' and he said, 'I hate 'em!'  We said, 'Great! We love you!'” But on this segment, Paul asked Ringo if he would do a “token solo,” which Ringo resisted until George Martin convinced him to the “bloody solo” he hated.  Geoff Emerick got a kick out of the whole scenario:  “Usually, you have to try to talk drummers out of doing solos! He didn't want to do it, but everybody said, 'No, no, it'll be fantastic!' So he gave in – and turned in a bloody marvelous performance! … It’s not just a drummer going off.”  Ringo’s solo is so beautifully Ringo; as the Human Metronome, it focuses on the beat more than ostentatious flourishes, then reintroduces the full band with a helluva groove.

In addition to the RINGO SHOWCASE!, this segment is notable for containing the band's only instance of Paul, John, and George playing the guitar solo together, which amazingly was a John idea, and he even sent Yoko out of the studio for it to be recorded in private.  In each sequence, the solo begins with Paul, moves to George, and ends with John; I find George’s parts particularly brilliant..  They managed it in one take, which Emerick described resulting from “all the bad blood, all the fighting, all the crap that had gone down between the three former friends was forgotten….  John, Paul, and George looked like they had gone back in time, like they were kids again, playing together for the sheet enjoyment of it.”  He called their joy as a heartwarming “high point of summer 1969,” never failing to make him smile.

Paul’s “very cosmic, philosophical” (per John) final line – “And in the end, the love you take, is equal to the love you make” – sounds kind of simplistic to me, but, whether or not intended, it formed a fitting and poignant farewell, and a graceful exit as the last line recorded by the Beatles together on a record.  The orchestral flourish that follows is appropriately grand and majestic, then marching downward into a thoughtful finish that leaves you feeling like it’s all been tied neatly together.  

Mr krista: “Love the jam in the middle.  I think I and many people first heard that on Paul’s Boutique.  I’d like to know how they recorded Ringo’s drums to sound so monstrous in that solo. Sounded like Dave Grohl or something. Must have festooned that place with 15 microphones.”

Suggested cover:  I wanted to find one with just "The End" in isolation, but since there was nothing suitable, in honor of the RINGO SHOWCASE!, here's Phil Collins on the last three segments.

2022 Supplement:  Oh HELL no. 

Guido Merkins

When John and Paul agreed to record Abbey Road, John wanted a straight forward rock album, just a collection of songs.  Paul wanted to create kind of a suite of songs and connect them.  So the compromise was the side one was just songs.  Side two was the suite of songs.  This is how we get the Abbey Road Medley.

The medley starts with Paul’s You Never Give Me Your Money, which refers to Allan Klein literally never giving money only “funny paper.”  Then goes to John’s Sun King which starts when You Never Give Me Your Money fades with crickets.  Sun King features some mock Latin/Spanish that the Beatles had fun with.  Puns like “cake-and-eat-a” and “chicka-ferdy”, which means FU in Liverpool.  Then comes John again with Mean Mr Mustard about a miserly old man who kept a “10 bob note up his nose.”  Then a very forceful stumming on an acoustic that sounds like an electric (the Who and Stones were probably influences here), which brings us to John’s Polythene Pam, a song which I’ve always though of like Long Tall Sally, a girl “so good looking she looks like a man.”  I love the line “she’s the kind of a girl that makes the ‘News of the World’” in John’s very strong Liverpool accent.  Makes me smile whenever he sings it.  Then there is this great chord progression which gets them from Polythene Pan to She Came in Through the Bathroom Window by Paul.  Apparently this really happened to Paul.  A fan tried to get in to him through the bathroom window.  The song ends and there is a brief moment of silence.

Then the final song cycle begins with Paul’s Golden Slumbers, which is a gentle piano ballad that Paul got the lrycis from some other song, but made up his own melody.  Then Ringo comes in for Carry that Weight with the Beatles (except John who was recovering from an accident) for Carry That Weight.  There is a brief refernce to You Never Give Me Your Money on the line “I never give you my pillow….”  For the finale, which begins with “Oh yeah, alright….” we hear the ONLY recorded drum solo in Ringo’s career followed by a lead guitar dual from Paul, George, and John (in that order) before giving was to a single piano note and the line “And in the end.  The love you take is equal to the love you make” and it ends.

There is so much to say about the Medley.  It seems to reference the Beatles past (yeah yeah yeah in Polythene Pam) and yet break new ground (drum and extended guitar solos were not usually a part of their act).  It is a unique experience in their catalogue and a huge influence on every prog rock act in the 70s, for better and for worse.  I love the solos and if you listen close, you can really hear and tell which one is which (they each play approx a bar before the next one plays and go through 3 cycles).  John is the easiest to tell because it’s pure rhythm.  I love the way they go from song to song, sometimes by fading, sometime by actually playing their way to the next song.  I love George’s little flourish at the very end.  Perfect way to end a Beatles album, or was it?  If you listen long enough there is one of the first hidden track in the history of rock.  Her Majesty was supposed to be in the medley between Mean Mr Mustard and Polythene Pam.  Paul didn’t like it’s placement, so told the engineer to cut it out.  He did and stuck it to the end of the tape.  Paul liked the way it sounded that way, so they kept it.
I should have known Her Majesty was the first hidden track in history. Some may not like it but it seems to lighten things after that ending.

 
I have not been able to check this thread since Friday due to life, and have spent some time today catching up.  And, man, what time well spent it was.  This thread, as the 2019 one, as well as the solo one, are just incredible gifts.  I have read every word of every write-up, both re-reading the 2019 one, as well as the 2022 supplement (Krista, "Oh HELL no" made me laugh out loud) and Guido's marvelous contributions.  Now, it may appear I haven't read them, because, at this point in my life, my memory is not always super great.  Heck, sometimes, I don't remember things I wrote, much less someone else.  Heck, sometimes, I don't remember things I wrote, much less someone else.  

Having a chance to win the Top 15 prediction contest is exciting; although I did spend an inordinate amount of time trying to analyze all the idiosyncratic machinations of this collection of Apple Scruffs to properly assess their wiles.  But I do the same thing with the NCAA brackets, and generally finish 168th, which is remarkable when there are only 167 entrants.  My prediction of the top 2 are the top 2, so it's a matter of whether I get 5 on each one or 3.  

I won't comment on the 15 songs that have been posted, because they are all awesome, and the Beatles are awesome, and even the ones posted before these last 15 are awesome and all your posters are awesome and this thread is awesome and Eric Clapton is awes..whoops, got a little carried away there.  

I can't wait to update my kids tonight, especially the three who submitted lists.  What a gift to share this band, this music and this thread with my kids.  

I wish I had the time tonight to just sit and listen to every Beatles song and bask.  

 
From my research over the years, I do not believe the Golden Slumbers medley was ever performed in its entirely . . . either live or in the studio. From what I can tell, it was engineered and pieced together as a hybrid composition from separate recordings of the individual songs and threaded together. Similarly, I don't believe Paul solo has played all the individual songs together in a row before. Maybe the thread mainstays can add insight to this.

 
My list:

1. Tomorrow Never Knows

2. Abbey Road Medley

3.

4. Norwegian Wood

5. Yesterday

6. Hey Jude

7. 

8. Strawberry Fields Forever

9. Across The Universe

10. Let It Be

11. Eleanor Rigby

12. Something

13. The Long And Winding Road

14. Oh! Darling

15. While My Guitar Gently Weeps

16. Dear Prudence

17. She's Leaving Home

18. For No One

19. Got To Get You Into My Life

20. You've Got To Hide Your Love Away

21. Help!

22. If I Fell

23. Here Comes The Sun

24. A Hard Day's Night

25. I Want You (She's So Heavy)

 

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