Zegras11
Footballguy
64 List Rank: 135Think For Yourself
2022 Ranking: 106
2022 Lists: 3
2022 Points: 32
Ranked Highest by: @Encyclopedia Brown (11) @FairWarning (12) Krista(Sharon) (23)
2019 Ranking/Lists/Pts: NR
Getz comments: Just four more NR songs after this one. Sharon takes the Chalk lead back.
Krista4
My 2019 ranking: 149
2019 write-up:
Think for Yourself (Rubber Soul, 1965)
I shouldn't love a song just based on maracas and fuzzbox bass, but those are what do it for me in this song. I'd listen to that #### all day. Add in some soaring harmonies contrasted with gloomy George lyrics and performance, with an edge of the cynicism he'll be more blatant about in "Taxman" and "Piggies," and you got yourself a krista-approved keeper.
Mr. krista and I obviously think for ourselves, as his opinion is polar opposite: "Digging that fuzzy organ. I like that it rocks pretty hard. I could have done without most everything but the organ and the drums. Seems like a good mid-tempo rock where I could listen to it more and have it grow on me."
Suggested cover: Pete Shelley (RIP) In honor of the lyrics to "I'll Get You," I'll mention that I really really really really like this cover.
2022 Supplement: 2022 me likes more than just the fuzzy bass and has a greater appreciation for the lyrics and feel of this song. It was George’s first song about something other than girls/love that the Beatles recorded, though years later George couldn’t recall later toward whom his vitriol was targeted, saying it was “probably the government.” Seems a good guess, especially given the later works such as “Taxman” and “Piggies.” Regardless, this song represented a large leap in George’s songwriting abilities.
As much as I hate what he did to Let It Be, I must begrudgingly give credit to Phil Spector for the fuzzbox bass that I love so much in this song. George has said that he and many other musicians were so inspired by Spector’s sound on this version of “Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PWOkSyR_NhU that a fuzz box was invented. For this song, the group used a fuzzbox device called “The Tone Bender” that had been given to them in 1965.
Fun fact: a snippet of Paul and George working on the line “you’ve got time to rectify” from this song was used in the movie “Yellow Submarine.”
Guido Merkins
George Harrison wrote his first real song in 1964 which was Don’t Bother Me on the With the Beatles album. George often said that John and Paul “wrote all their bad songs before we became famous.” George did struggle at first to write a lot of great songs, but by 1965 and the Rubber Soul album, George was starting to come into his own with two great songs. Think For Yourself was one of those.
“Although your mind’s opaque, try thinking more for your own sake” plus the chorus of “think for yourself cause I won’t be there with you” kind of tells you the theme of the song. George is railing against those that live a life without thought. This is kind of George’s version of a Dylan song. Several songs that George wrote, including this one, show just as much cynicism as anything John wrote. George was forming his own voice.
Musically, the best part of the song is the fuzz bass, played by Paul. The fuzz bass acts like a lead guitar on the song with Paul also playing a normal bass line within the same song. I think I read somewhere that the fuzz bass was played on Paul’s Rickenbacker bass and the normal bass is the Hofner bass. Also, as is the case with most Beatles songs, the harmonies are exquisite on this song.
64 List Voters/Points: 2/55
64 List Top 5: 0
64 List Top 10: 0
64 List 1-25 votes: 0
64 List 26-64 votes: 2
#34 and #41 votes