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The Beatles (1 Viewer)

What I thought when pre-ordering it.

The new Blu-ray videos (reportedly with extensive restoration), 96/24 hi-res audio and 5.1 surround sound mixes are very appealing, not to mention the book and new video intros by the surviving McCartney and Starr.

* Not sure if I mentioned it above, but liked the Harrison Apple Years box set. Even Electronic Sounds is fun as background music, cool sound track to Wonder Wall (I already had the film). I think All Things Must Pass may have benefitted from a re-master, sounding like it had a bit more sonic definition, both in instrumental separation and vocal articulation, compared to the original slurry of stacked layers in Phil Spector's signature "Wall of Sound" production. Also thought Dark Horse* was, well, kind of a dark horse in his catalog and underappreciated.

The first box set (chronologically later, just released first) was called the Dark Horse years, for his label, but I definitely like the Apple Years box better.

 
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Bob Magaw said:
What I thought when pre-ordering it.

The new Blu-ray videos (reportedly with extensive restoration), 96/24 hi-res audio and 5.1 surround sound mixes are very appealing, not to mention the book and new video intros by the surviving McCartney and Starr.

* Not sure if I mentioned it above, but liked the Harrison Apple Years box set. Even Electronic Sounds is fun as background music, cool sound track to Wonder Wall (I already had the film). I think All Things Must Pass may have benefitted from a re-master, sounding like it had a bit more sonic definition, both in instrumental separation and vocal articulation, compared to the original slurry of stacked layers in Phil Spector's signature "Wall of Sound production". Also thought Dark Horse* was, well, kind of a dark horse in his catalog and underappreciated.

The first box set (chronologically later, just released first) was called the Dark Horse years, for his label, but I definitely like the Apple Years box better.
Yeah the original mix of All Things Must Pass by Phil Spector was atrocious. The remaster is MUCH superior.

 
Pete Best...Why??

Ok, so we interrupt the story briefly to discuss why Pete Best was canned. Here are the theories...

1. His personality didn't fit with the band.

Yeah, I don't know. I've heard it both ways. Pete, maybe was a bit more quiet than the others, although they didn't kick George out for being quiet. Maybe Pete didn't hang out with them as much as they hung out with each other. Pete claims he did everything the rest of them did. This might have a bit of validity. Maybe Ringo's personality fit in better with the other three.

2. Pete refused to cut his hair in the "Beatles" cut.

No. Not buying this one. I just don't believe they would have kicked him out for that.

3. Pete was always late for gigs and such.

Once again, I've read things that said that Pete was the MOST punctual of the four and actually handled their bookings before Brian came along, so I don't know. Not buying this one much either, I don't think.

4. Pete was the best looking one and all the girls liked him, so they fired him out of jealousy.

REALLY not buying this one. Everything I've read indicates that none of the Beatles had any problems finding women.

5. They thought Ringo was a better drummer than Pete.

85% correct, IMO with the other 15% probably being his personality. Ringo is/was/will always be a better drummer than Pete Best. Listen to Love Me Do on the Anthology. Pete is awful. He also sounds boring and uneventful on the Decca Audition. If, as Pete claims, everybody in Liverpool copied his 4 on the floor bass drum, it was only because that's a great stomping sound live. Other than that, Pete didn't inject anything interesting. Ringo, whatever his technical limitations, always did something interesting and you can often identify Beatles songs with the drums alone, something you could never have done with Pete Best.

Thoughts??

Next...The Beatles hit it big
I agree it was because Pete wasn't as good a drummer as Ringo. And I also feel Ringo is constantly under rated as a drummer. As you say he always brought something a little different and that in itself speaks to the talent he had. The jazz drummers I have known have always spoken better of Ringo than the rock drummers. I think too many rock drummers want to be power drummers and don't recognize you don't have to be that or play that style to be good.
Ringo has taste. Never overplays and always seems to find the right part to fit the song. His fills are unusual in that they always seem to start in the wrong place, but he makes it work.Technically, not a great drummer, but possibly the PERFECT drummer for the Beatles. I, seriously, can't think of a single drummer that would have been better in that band.
I admit to not appreciating Ringo much prior to this thread. Thankful for being enlightened.

It kind of reminds me of the SNL bit, when Lorne Michaels held up a check ($100, $1,000?) and stating that if they got back together, they could divide it up any way they wanted, if they wanted to give Ringo less. Ringo noted in a late Anthology interview about how he felt unappreciated and lacked confidence and self-esteem in his musicianship around the time of the White album (forgot he may have been the first to threaten to quit, before George, John, etc., but John and Paul were effusive with their praise and Ringo got over it, averting that earlier pre-break up crisis). Paul officially brought an end to the Beatles with the announcement during the press junket for McCartney, his first solo album, bumming out Lennon, who wanted to do it several months earlier, but was talked out of it at the time by McCartney. :)

 
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Revolver

OK, so when we last left off, Rubber Soul was released to glowing reviews and, as usual, brisk sales. Those who thought the Beatles couldn't get any better, however, were wrong.

It should be noted that 1966 was the end of the Beatles as a touring band, so the studio became a more important part of their work and as advanced as Rubber Soul might have seemed, it would be NOTHING compared to the jump they would take on the next album.

When I say jump, I don't really mean songwriting. The songs written on Rubber Soul could be the best in their catalogue. When I say jump, I'm referring to the sounds that were coming out the studio. First, Revolver is a much more electric album than Rubber Soul. Loud, distorted guitars everywhere. Second, Revolver employed backward tapes. I'm Only Sleeping, Tomorrow Never Knows, and Rain, which wasn't a part of Revolver, but was recorded during the Revolver sessions. Third, loud bass. Thumping bass which hadn't been heard in that way before on a Beatles record. Paul started playing a Rickenbacker and played more in the style that he started with on Drive My Car. Fourth, everything was limited and compressed. That's where the sounds for the drums came from. You'll notice the sound of Ringo's drums were much better on Revolver. She Said She Said and Rain are Ringo showcases. Fifth, styles. The album contained Indian music, rock, jazz, children's music, soul, classical ballads, and psychedelic music.

One track in particular sounded like it came from another planet. A song that started off life in the studio as Mark I, almost like it was a prototype of a new kind song or something, and it kind of was. The song would eventually be called Tomorrow Never Knows, which one of Ringo's butchering the English language phrases. John sat in front of George Martin with a guitar and stummed earnestly on a C Major chord "Turn off your mind relax and float downstream..." It modulated only once, to B flat major for "It is not dying..." Anyway, John's instructions were he wanted to sound like the Dali Lama shouting from the highest mountaintop, except he still wanted to be heard. He also had the idea of a thousand monks chanting. What they finally discovered is that if you run John's voice through a Leslie speaker, which is the rotating speaker inside a Hammond Organ, it takes on this kind of wavering quality. In addition, the song is made up of a bunch of tape loops. Some backwards. Some heavily distorted. Meanwhile Ringo and Paul play this hypnotic beat behind it all. Really, Tomorrow Never Knows is decades into the future. It's really the first techno song based upon its beat alone.

It should be noted that many of the sounds that were coming out of the studio for Revolver were the result of the Beatles never ending search for new sounds and a new recording engineer named Geoff Emerick. Geoff, being young and curious was willing to try many things that the Beatles other recording engineers were not. Emerick's work on Revolver and Sgt Pepper is detailed brilliantly in a book called Here, There, and Everywhere written by Emerick himself.

I have mentioned a bunch of technical stuff, but what about the songs?? George was growing with three great songs. Taxman with snarling guitar and bass, Love You To which was Indian flavored and the brooding I Want To Tell You. Paul had Eleanor Rigby, one of those songs that will still be around 100 years from now, Here, There, and Everywhere, For No One, featuring a horn solo by Alan Civil and the thumping Got To Get You Into My Life. John had the dreamy I'm Only Sleeping, the growling She Said She Said, the soaring And Your Bird Can Sing and the previously mentioned Tomorrow Never Knows.

Revolver also had an art cover, the first time the Beatles really had done that. Their old Hamburg friend Klaus Voorman created a collage and drew some pictures of the Beatles. It was a very eye catching cover.

Revolver was definately an album that presented a changing Beatles. It was the last album my mom bought from the Beatles. I'm sure they lost some fans because the music was so different from what had come before, but they gained a lot of new fans. For what it's worth, Revolver is consistently a top 2 or 3 album in almost every list of great albums. It's place is richly deserved. To me, it is the Beatles at their absolute best.

For most artists, this would be their all time achievement and there would be nowhere to go but down. The Beatles had other ideas.

Next...Sgt Pepper
For me, On The Corner by Miles Davis in the mid-'70s was one of the most advanced albums of the second half of the 20th century, arguably decades ahead of its time with its Afro-Indian-Funk-Rock-Jazz amalgam, but good point, in some ways, the Indian vibe and otherworldly beats and loops of Tomorrow Never Knows anticipated it by about a decade. They did get a big assist from Emerick in helping realize, sculpt and shape their pioneering soundscapes and path breaking musical vistas with cutting edge recording studio techniques (aforementioned experimentation like pushing Lennon's vocals through the Leslie rotating organ speaker, the seagull backward loops, but also including technical innovations such as close mic'ing of instruments, "direct injection" of the bass into the sound board, and later new instruments, such as the mellotron brought by Lennon but played by Paul on the Strawberry Fields sessions, and George's Moog synth on four songs from Abbey Road). George Martin was very sophisticated musically, scoring the double string quartet for Yesterday and some of the incidental music in at least one of the movies, he could compose and orchestrate classical music. As the Beatles began to broaden their musical horizons (by listening to classical music, for instance), they were better able to help Martin help them realize the increasingly complex sounds and refined music they were hearing in their heads. So Paul could say, I loved the instrument in that Bach orchestral piece, and Martin had the knowledge, background, experience and ear to recognize and identify - piccolo trumpet. Which promptly had a featured solo by the greatest instrumentalist in Britain for Penny Lane. He was also an invaluable go-between in the difficult sessions for the free-form ascending orchestral crescendo used in the middle passage of A Day In The Life.

Emerick mentioned in his great recording book (I'm at the first Sgt. Pepper chapter) that at times Harrison had trouble nailing the guitar solo, and it was actually Paul who played on his Taxman, as well as the song Sgt. Pepper (probably mentioned already in the thread).

The great American classical composer Phillip Glass stated that in his opinion, it was George's profound influence on Western pop and rock through his introduction of the sitar and Indian sounds (he was completely randomly exposed to the sitar during the filming of the restaurant scene in Help!, after being intrigued banged out the part in Norwegian Wood [[?]], and was turned onto a Ravi Shankar album by the Byrds, who became his musical guru, inspiration and guiding light - BTW, I think singer/pianist Norah Jones is his daughter?) that would be his lasting musical legacy. Not the Beatles. Dunno about that, but a powerful testament.

Also mentioned in the Emerick book, Eric Clapton, who famously played lead on While My Guitar Gently Weeps (after listening told George we have a problem, it isn't "Beatley" enough, which they solved by the much used double tracking, later even automated, to give it that signature wobbly sound :) ) and later had an affair with and eventually married George's wife Pattie, who he met on the Hard Days Night shoot, remaining friends, was among the first to encourage George that the Beatles may not have been the ideal set up to show case his skills, dominated as it was by the Lennon/McCartney song writing axis, which must have validated his own sense of the worth of his musical talent, coming from the "guitar god".

 
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Revolver

OK, so when we last left off, Rubber Soul was released to glowing reviews and, as usual, brisk sales. Those who thought the Beatles couldn't get any better, however, were wrong.

It should be noted that 1966 was the end of the Beatles as a touring band, so the studio became a more important part of their work and as advanced as Rubber Soul might have seemed, it would be NOTHING compared to the jump they would take on the next album.

When I say jump, I don't really mean songwriting. The songs written on Rubber Soul could be the best in their catalogue. When I say jump, I'm referring to the sounds that were coming out the studio. First, Revolver is a much more electric album than Rubber Soul. Loud, distorted guitars everywhere. Second, Revolver employed backward tapes. I'm Only Sleeping, Tomorrow Never Knows, and Rain, which wasn't a part of Revolver, but was recorded during the Revolver sessions. Third, loud bass. Thumping bass which hadn't been heard in that way before on a Beatles record. Paul started playing a Rickenbacker and played more in the style that he started with on Drive My Car. Fourth, everything was limited and compressed. That's where the sounds for the drums came from. You'll notice the sound of Ringo's drums were much better on Revolver. She Said She Said and Rain are Ringo showcases. Fifth, styles. The album contained Indian music, rock, jazz, children's music, soul, classical ballads, and psychedelic music.

One track in particular sounded like it came from another planet. A song that started off life in the studio as Mark I, almost like it was a prototype of a new kind song or something, and it kind of was. The song would eventually be called Tomorrow Never Knows, which one of Ringo's butchering the English language phrases. John sat in front of George Martin with a guitar and stummed earnestly on a C Major chord "Turn off your mind relax and float downstream..." It modulated only once, to B flat major for "It is not dying..." Anyway, John's instructions were he wanted to sound like the Dali Lama shouting from the highest mountaintop, except he still wanted to be heard. He also had the idea of a thousand monks chanting. What they finally discovered is that if you run John's voice through a Leslie speaker, which is the rotating speaker inside a Hammond Organ, it takes on this kind of wavering quality. In addition, the song is made up of a bunch of tape loops. Some backwards. Some heavily distorted. Meanwhile Ringo and Paul play this hypnotic beat behind it all. Really, Tomorrow Never Knows is decades into the future. It's really the first techno song based upon its beat alone.

It should be noted that many of the sounds that were coming out of the studio for Revolver were the result of the Beatles never ending search for new sounds and a new recording engineer named Geoff Emerick. Geoff, being young and curious was willing to try many things that the Beatles other recording engineers were not. Emerick's work on Revolver and Sgt Pepper is detailed brilliantly in a book called Here, There, and Everywhere written by Emerick himself.

I have mentioned a bunch of technical stuff, but what about the songs?? George was growing with three great songs. Taxman with snarling guitar and bass, Love You To which was Indian flavored and the brooding I Want To Tell You. Paul had Eleanor Rigby, one of those songs that will still be around 100 years from now, Here, There, and Everywhere, For No One, featuring a horn solo by Alan Civil and the thumping Got To Get You Into My Life. John had the dreamy I'm Only Sleeping, the growling She Said She Said, the soaring And Your Bird Can Sing and the previously mentioned Tomorrow Never Knows.

Revolver also had an art cover, the first time the Beatles really had done that. Their old Hamburg friend Klaus Voorman created a collage and drew some pictures of the Beatles. It was a very eye catching cover.

Revolver was definately an album that presented a changing Beatles. It was the last album my mom bought from the Beatles. I'm sure they lost some fans because the music was so different from what had come before, but they gained a lot of new fans. For what it's worth, Revolver is consistently a top 2 or 3 album in almost every list of great albums. It's place is richly deserved. To me, it is the Beatles at their absolute best.

For most artists, this would be their all time achievement and there would be nowhere to go but down. The Beatles had other ideas.

Next...Sgt Pepper
For me, On The Corner by Miles Davis in the mid-'70s was one of the most advanced albums of the second half of the 20th century, arguably decades ahead of its time with its Afro-Indian-Funk-Rock-Jazz amalgam, but good point, in some ways, the Indian vibe and otherworldly beats and loops of Tomorrow Never Knows anticipated it by about a decade. They did get a big assist from Emerick in helping realize, sculpt and shape their pioneering soundscapes and path breaking musical vistas with cutting edge recording studio techniques (aforementioned experimentation like pushing Lennon's vocals through the Leslie rotating organ speaker, the seagull backward loops, but also including technical innovations such as close mic'ing of instruments, "direct injection" of the bass into the sound board, and later new instruments, such as the mellotron brought by Lennon but played by Paul on the Strawberry Fields sessions, and George's Moog synth on four songs from Abbey Road).George Martin was very sophisticated musically, scoring the double string quartet for Yesterday and some of the incidental music in at least one of the movies, he could compose and orchestrate classical music. As the Beatles began to broaden their musical horizons (by listening to classical music, for instance), they were better able to help Martin help them realize the increasingly complex sounds and refined music they were hearing in their heads. So Paul could say, I loved the instrument in that Bach orchestral piece, and Martin had the knowledge, background, experience and ear to recognize and identify - piccolo trumpet. Which promptly had a featured solo by the greatest instrumentalist in Britain for Penny Lane. He was also an invaluable go-between in the difficult sessions for the free-form ascending orchestral crescendo used in the middle passage of A Day In The Life.

Emerick mentioned in his great recording book (I'm at the first Sgt. Pepper chapter) that at times Harrison had trouble nailing the guitar solo, and it was actually Paul who played on his Taxman, as well as the song Sgt. Pepper (probably mentioned already in the thread).

The great American classical composer Phillip Glass stated that in his opinion, it was George's profound influence on Western pop and rock through his introduction of the sitar and Indian sounds (he was completely randomly exposed to the sitar during the filming of the restaurant scene in Help!, after being intrigued banged out the part in Norwegian Wood [[?]], and was turned onto a Ravi Shankar album by the Byrds, who became his musical guru, inspiration and guiding light - BTW, I think singer/pianist Norah Jones is his daughter?) that would be his lasting musical legacy. Not the Beatles. Dunno about that, but a powerful testament.

Also mentioned in the Emerick book, Eric Clapton, who famously played lead on While My Guitar Gently Weeps (after listening told George we have a problem, it isn't "Beatley" enough, which they solved by the much used double tracking, later even automated, to give it that signature wobbly sound :) ) and later had an affair with and eventually married George's wife Pattie, who he met on the Hard Days Night shoot, remaining friends, was among the first to encourage George that the Beatles may not have been the ideal set up to show case his skills, dominated as it was by the Lennon/McCartney song writing axis, which must have validated his own sense of the worth of his musical talent, coming from the "guitar god".
There is no doubt that the one that benefitted the most from the breakup of the band was George Harrison. His reputation doubled after the Beatles. I mean, at the end of the band and the very beginning of his solo career he was at the height of his powers as a songwriter. While My Guitar Gently Weeps, Something, Here Comes The Sun and everything on All Things Must Pass.

All Things Must Pass, IMO, is the best solo Beatles album. i think better than Band On The Run, Imagine, or Plastic Ono Band. Just a stunning piece of work from somebody who most people in the 60s thought was just riding Lennon and McCartney's coat tails. Heck, Frank Sinatra thought John and Paul wrote Something. Nobody thought George had that in him.

 
And as far as Emerick's book and George's guitar skills. George, to me, was not the most intuitive guitar player in the world. He needed some time to work things out. He couldn't just pick it up and nail it on the first try. That's not who he was. I don't think it's a coincidence that some of his best solos were in the later years, when they weren't touring and he had some time to work the solos out. Once he started playing the slide, that really cemented his sound. I think his background in Indian music helped him approach the slide not like a blues man, but like somebody trying to get droning type sounds out of the guitar, almost like a sitar.

People can hate on Harrison all they want as a guitar hero, but his sound on slide is totally unique. Nobody does that like him.

 
Agree, ATMP is imo EASILY the greatest post-Beatles solo work.

All Things Must Pass

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5RuCLQHmFN4

One thing I didn't appreciate as much about the Emerick book is it could get almost gossipy and speculative about personality at times, was almost a McCartney hagiography (he was later employed on Band on the Run, and I can believe Paul was the most engaged and involved in the studio, so maybe they had the most occasion to interact?), and he was at times highly critical of not only Harrison's intuitiveness and efficiency in the studio, but even imaginativeness and chops. There are many examples, but some of the guitar solos to close The End on Abbey Road and on ATMP are almost ethereal and angelic. The greatest musicians have an exceptional gift and facility with TONE (whether singing or playing), I thought he had a beautiful, singing tone and melodic lyricism. Keith Richards was called the human riff. What would that have made Lennon/McCartney, the human melody? Part of the power of the Beatles, a secret weapon maybe, was that Harrison and Lennon could both play lead and rhythm (Hendrix was one of the greatest leads, but thought you weren't a complete guitarist without rhythm ability, and he was one of the best there, too), though I take it George did more lead at the beginning? Paul could, too, and for that matter, they were multi-instrumentalists, that could play bass in a pinch, keys/synths. In old Frankenstein movies you see Tesla Coils arcing electrical discharge bursts into the lab. In Harrison's ability to play rhythm, lead, harmonize as a singer, even if he wasn't generally viewed as indispensable to the Beatles as song writers Lennon/McCartney, he was kind of arcing between them, an invaluable catalyst facilitated their epochal musical "communication and dialogue". For that alone, his contribution was priceless. Personality-wise, too, he seemed pretty laid back and low key, and that might have been a necessity in combination with Lennon and McCartney, who could have egos. At their best, the Beatles were like one brain in four bodies, and it is impossible to overstate the contribution George (and Ringo) played in that synergy.

Living In The Material World biopic

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fEL4_qadPp4

In the great Harrison biopic Living In The Material World, Ringo talked about how coming up, they fought like crazy for fame. When it happened, they wanted it (or at least some of its most inconvenient and frightening trappings) to end. But it didn't. That was the deal. George no doubt had and felt a complicated relationship with the Beatles. For one reason, I don't know if suppressed is the right word (he admitted he didn't have a ton of songs at the beginning), his work was held back at times, because of the brilliance of Lennon/McCartney. The latter specifically mentioned ATMP must have been like diarrhea, he had so many songs stockpiled from the end of the Beatles. You could see the dark side when frustration boil up in the famous scene in Let It Be. But there was a great scene in the biopic where Harrison is watching an early video of a TV appearance, and you could see different emotions, he didn't take it too seriously and laughed at his hair cut, but you could also see pride in his eyes for what they accomplished together. It was good to see the surviving three Beatles get together for Anthology, and let bygones be bygones before George passed (all things must). Ditto, hearing Paul reportedly patched some things up with John before he died.

* Come to think of it, on their own songs, John and Paul would modulate their vocals a lot, and could scream rockers or sing hushed ballads. It seems George delivered a lot of the lead vocals for his songs in an almost kind of monotone speech (no wailing vocal parts on Taxman, Within You Without You, Blue Jay Way, It's All Too Much, While My Guitar Gently Weeps, Something, Here Comes The Sun, post-Beatles solo works from ATMP, LITMW, etc.), which gave then a kind of calmness, and perhaps nice contrast to the at times volcanic deliveries of Lennon and McCartney.

 
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Amazing that ATMP went #1, despite I think being the first TRIPLE album (?), at least in pop/rock, not sure about classical or jazz?

Than a year later, so did ANOTHER triple album, Concert For Bangladesh? Wasn't this also pioneering as the first huge benefit concert, anticipating, influencing and inspiring Geldof, We Are The World, Live 8, etc.?

Concert For Bangladesh film (vimeo)

https://vimeo.com/66413717

Album

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ex8MoEBgpfY

Concert For George film (posthumous)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j9Dr1anRP9w







 
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Yeah they're all over the innernets. The stereo mixes, anyway.If you can get onto what.cd I hear they are free leech over there. I don't have an account there, unfo.
Oh. OK. I knew about that.I just wanted to know if you had the actual CDsSo they sound really good, huh?
Well I got the FLAC, which is lossless, and yeah it sounds awesome, much better than the old CDs I've had forever.What I'll probably do, truth be told, is buy the stereo box set and download some of the earlier albums in mono as well. It's cool to hear some of that early stuff in stereo but that's not really the way it was "meant" to sound. From what I can tell the mono box set is gonna be damn near impossible to get anyway, though the packaging looks really cool.
The FLAC in the metal apple form is awesome (it is stereo only), I think a level above the CD remasters. Just got a Yamaha receiver (old Denon didn't have HDMI inputs) with 192/24 decode chip that can play the DTS Master Audio 5.1 surround sound on films like Yellow Submarine, Magical Mystery Tour, etc (also good for Blu-ray audio, high-res, 5.1 surround sound versions of Pink Floyd's DSOM, WYWH, Endless River and Gilmour's latest solo album). Also want to get a "universal" OPPO Blu-ray/DVD player that can handle stuff like DVD-Audio for the second Disc on Love that is high-res audio and I think a 5.1 surround mix (also have Larks Tongues In Aspic and Red by King Crimson with recent Steve Wilson re-mixes in this format), as well as SACD for a Harrison double live CD with Clapton in Japan from the Dark Horse Box.

The Mono box is still in print and available, I think, so it turned out to not be as rare or limited as initially thought. It doesn't have Yellow Submarine, Abbey Road or Let It Be (stereo only mixes?), and two discs of Mono Masters instead of the Past Masters stereo counterpart, with significant song overlap, albeit different respective mono and stereo mixes. The mono was sold in box form only, unlike the stereo catalog, which was sold separately (and at that time, came with several minute, mini-making of featurettes on the individual albums, not counting the Past Masters discs - which weren't albums, but singles collections). The stereo box actually had the docs collected on a separate disc.

I always used to think of mono as retrograde, but not anymore. My first comparison was the title song of Sgt. Pepper, supposedly with dramatically different mono and stereo mixes, and therefore a great litmus or acid test for detecting and showcasing differences. In the stereo mix, the guitar solo at the end was kind of submerged if not buried in the mix. In them mono mix, it was much more prominent and exploded out of the speakers in a different way. I was instantly sold on the value of having both formats and mixes, as each has relative strengths and weaknesses (especially early stereo, before engineers learned to mix it, could just have vocals on one side and instruments on the othe other, so thin sounding and unbalanced, or even more distractedly, with gimmicky ping ponging effects - later stereo like Sgt. Pepper, Magical Mystery Tour and Abbey Road is pretty awesome, too). Anyways, I like having both.

There is an instrumental musical passage in the Harrison biopic of early/mid-period Beatles that is hard to describe. But in the context of earlier bubble gum genre discussions, or of having "soft", dated, legacy of a byegone era lyrics about teenage love, I found it incredibly contemporary sounding. The rhythm is very tight, hard but clean, sort of like a perfect Sly Stone song, maybe not that funky, but very rocking, with an addictive beat and groove. It stood out as still sounding way better than anything being made today, imo. I don't listen to much new music lately, and haven't for a while. Sometimes it is good to hear new stuff, but generally, I'd just prefer to listen to classic material like this (or Floyd, or Kind of Blue by Miles, circa- Atlantic/Impulse Coltrane, etc.).

 
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saintsfan said:
Revolver

OK, so when we last left off, Rubber Soul was released to glowing reviews and, as usual, brisk sales. Those who thought the Beatles couldn't get any better, however, were wrong.

It should be noted that 1966 was the end of the Beatles as a touring band, so the studio became a more important part of their work and as advanced as Rubber Soul might have seemed, it would be NOTHING compared to the jump they would take on the next album.

When I say jump, I don't really mean songwriting. The songs written on Rubber Soul could be the best in their catalogue. When I say jump, I'm referring to the sounds that were coming out the studio. First, Revolver is a much more electric album than Rubber Soul. Loud, distorted guitars everywhere. Second, Revolver employed backward tapes. I'm Only Sleeping, Tomorrow Never Knows, and Rain, which wasn't a part of Revolver, but was recorded during the Revolver sessions. Third, loud bass. Thumping bass which hadn't been heard in that way before on a Beatles record. Paul started playing a Rickenbacker and played more in the style that he started with on Drive My Car. Fourth, everything was limited and compressed. That's where the sounds for the drums came from. You'll notice the sound of Ringo's drums were much better on Revolver. She Said She Said and Rain are Ringo showcases. Fifth, styles. The album contained Indian music, rock, jazz, children's music, soul, classical ballads, and psychedelic music.

One track in particular sounded like it came from another planet. A song that started off life in the studio as Mark I, almost like it was a prototype of a new kind song or something, and it kind of was. The song would eventually be called Tomorrow Never Knows, which one of Ringo's butchering the English language phrases. John sat in front of George Martin with a guitar and stummed earnestly on a C Major chord "Turn off your mind relax and float downstream..." It modulated only once, to B flat major for "It is not dying..." Anyway, John's instructions were he wanted to sound like the Dali Lama shouting from the highest mountaintop, except he still wanted to be heard. He also had the idea of a thousand monks chanting. What they finally discovered is that if you run John's voice through a Leslie speaker, which is the rotating speaker inside a Hammond Organ, it takes on this kind of wavering quality. In addition, the song is made up of a bunch of tape loops. Some backwards. Some heavily distorted. Meanwhile Ringo and Paul play this hypnotic beat behind it all. Really, Tomorrow Never Knows is decades into the future. It's really the first techno song based upon its beat alone.

It should be noted that many of the sounds that were coming out of the studio for Revolver were the result of the Beatles never ending search for new sounds and a new recording engineer named Geoff Emerick. Geoff, being young and curious was willing to try many things that the Beatles other recording engineers were not. Emerick's work on Revolver and Sgt Pepper is detailed brilliantly in a book called Here, There, and Everywhere written by Emerick himself.

I have mentioned a bunch of technical stuff, but what about the songs?? George was growing with three great songs. Taxman with snarling guitar and bass, Love You To which was Indian flavored and the brooding I Want To Tell You. Paul had Eleanor Rigby, one of those songs that will still be around 100 years from now, Here, There, and Everywhere, For No One, featuring a horn solo by Alan Civil and the thumping Got To Get You Into My Life. John had the dreamy I'm Only Sleeping, the growling She Said She Said, the soaring And Your Bird Can Sing and the previously mentioned Tomorrow Never Knows.

Revolver also had an art cover, the first time the Beatles really had done that. Their old Hamburg friend Klaus Voorman created a collage and drew some pictures of the Beatles. It was a very eye catching cover.

Revolver was definately an album that presented a changing Beatles. It was the last album my mom bought from the Beatles. I'm sure they lost some fans because the music was so different from what had come before, but they gained a lot of new fans. For what it's worth, Revolver is consistently a top 2 or 3 album in almost every list of great albums. It's place is richly deserved. To me, it is the Beatles at their absolute best.

For most artists, this would be their all time achievement and there would be nowhere to go but down. The Beatles had other ideas.

Next...Sgt Pepper
For me, On The Corner by Miles Davis in the mid-'70s was one of the most advanced albums of the second half of the 20th century, arguably decades ahead of its time with its Afro-Indian-Funk-Rock-Jazz amalgam, but good point, in some ways, the Indian vibe and otherworldly beats and loops of Tomorrow Never Knows anticipated it by about a decade. They did get a big assist from Emerick in helping realize, sculpt and shape their pioneering soundscapes and path breaking musical vistas with cutting edge recording studio techniques (aforementioned experimentation like pushing Lennon's vocals through the Leslie rotating organ speaker, the seagull backward loops, but also including technical innovations such as close mic'ing of instruments, "direct injection" of the bass into the sound board, and later new instruments, such as the mellotron brought by Lennon but played by Paul on the Strawberry Fields sessions, and George's Moog synth on four songs from Abbey Road).George Martin was very sophisticated musically, scoring the double string quartet for Yesterday and some of the incidental music in at least one of the movies, he could compose and orchestrate classical music. As the Beatles began to broaden their musical horizons (by listening to classical music, for instance), they were better able to help Martin help them realize the increasingly complex sounds and refined music they were hearing in their heads. So Paul could say, I loved the instrument in that Bach orchestral piece, and Martin had the knowledge, background, experience and ear to recognize and identify - piccolo trumpet. Which promptly had a featured solo by the greatest instrumentalist in Britain for Penny Lane. He was also an invaluable go-between in the difficult sessions for the free-form ascending orchestral crescendo used in the middle passage of A Day In The Life.

Emerick mentioned in his great recording book (I'm at the first Sgt. Pepper chapter) that at times Harrison had trouble nailing the guitar solo, and it was actually Paul who played on his Taxman, as well as the song Sgt. Pepper (probably mentioned already in the thread).

The great American classical composer Phillip Glass stated that in his opinion, it was George's profound influence on Western pop and rock through his introduction of the sitar and Indian sounds (he was completely randomly exposed to the sitar during the filming of the restaurant scene in Help!, after being intrigued banged out the part in Norwegian Wood [[?]], and was turned onto a Ravi Shankar album by the Byrds, who became his musical guru, inspiration and guiding light - BTW, I think singer/pianist Norah Jones is his daughter?) that would be his lasting musical legacy. Not the Beatles. Dunno about that, but a powerful testament.

Also mentioned in the Emerick book, Eric Clapton, who famously played lead on While My Guitar Gently Weeps (after listening told George we have a problem, it isn't "Beatley" enough, which they solved by the much used double tracking, later even automated, to give it that signature wobbly sound :) ) and later had an affair with and eventually married George's wife Pattie, who he met on the Hard Days Night shoot, remaining friends, was among the first to encourage George that the Beatles may not have been the ideal set up to show case his skills, dominated as it was by the Lennon/McCartney song writing axis, which must have validated his own sense of the worth of his musical talent, coming from the "guitar god".
There is no doubt that the one that benefitted the most from the breakup of the band was George Harrison. His reputation doubled after the Beatles. I mean, at the end of the band and the very beginning of his solo career he was at the height of his powers as a songwriter. While My Guitar Gently Weeps, Something, Here Comes The Sun and everything on All Things Must Pass.All Things Must Pass, IMO, is the best solo Beatles album. i think better than Band On The Run, Imagine, or Plastic Ono Band. Just a stunning piece of work from somebody who most people in the 60s thought was just riding Lennon and McCartney's coat tails. Heck, Frank Sinatra thought John and Paul wrote Something. Nobody thought George had that in him.
George did benefit the most initially but once he exhausted his backlog from the Beatles he came down to Earth IMO.

Living in the Material World is decent but comes off as preachy. Dark Horse has some good tracks but came at a time when George's voice was very hoarse, no pun intended.

33 1/3 is very underappreciated but his self titled LP is uneven. Somewhere in England, Extra Texture and Gone Troppo were all disappointments. Cloud Nine was a tremendous comeback though. I like Brainwashed, released posthumously, but you can tell he wasn't quite finished.

I would probably rank ATMP as the best but not by a wide margin over Plastic Ono Band, Imagine, Ram or Band on the Run. Actually I think Paul has been on a nice run of damn good solo LPs since Flaming Pie though a lot of Beatles fans stopped listening a long time ago and think of Paul's solo career as lightweight

 
Here's a nice recent article...

http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol...icle6820697.ece

Exclusive: John Lennon, the lost interviews

John Lennon did many brilliant things in his life, but arguably one of his most inspired acts was his deliberate destruction of the Beatles in 1969 just 40 years ago this month. It didnt seem that way then, not to tens of millions of devastated Beatles fans around the world, and not to Paul McCartney, who, feeling abandoned, went off to his farm in Scotland and into a deep depression.

But if Lennon, whod started the group that evolved into the Beatles, hadnt murdered his creation at that moment, if the band had somehow struggled on through their rows into the 1970s, I doubt that youd be reading this article today.

By killing the Beatles before they could disappoint us, as they inevitably would have done when music fashions changed and the bands later albums didnt quite live up to the ones we still love, Lennon froze them for ever at their peak.

At the time of their break-up in 1969, I was an interviewer on Londons Evening Standard with the special task of covering rock music. Today, journalists are kept at arms length from stars by legions of publicists, but it was different then, for me anyway. Only now, looking back, do I fully appreciate the astonishing access to the Beatles

I had, from 1967, that Sgt Pepper high water of their careers, until 1972, when their dissolution was making its way through the High Court.

So I was at the Abbey Road studios in October 1968 to hear Yoko Ono be happily indiscreet about her affairs during her first two marriages, before ending the evening being given a personal concert by McCartney at the piano as he worked on a new song called Let It Be while from down the corridor I could hear John Lennon and the producer George Martin mixing Cry Baby Cry for the White Album.

Almost every conversation I had during those final febrile Beatle days ended up in my new little Sony recorder, where intimacies and opinions were caught on cassettes, and then stored away, forgotten and uncatalogued in an old Pickfords packing case. And its those tapes, unplayed in decades (if ever, in some cases), that I recently unearthed recordings that in some cases challenge views of the Lennon-McCartney relationship that have been held for 40 years.

Not all the interviews have survived. Cassettes were expensive then, and Im mortified to admit that I have one on which the names McCartney, Jagger and Hendrix have each been successively crossed out as the interviews were recorded over. Nor was everything that was recorded published. Much was off the record. Time heals. Now it doesnt matter that I write some of it here.

By 1969 there were rumours of strife in the Beatles camp, but on the surface it still seemed jolly enough. Then, while I was hanging around their Apple headquarters in Mayfair one day in September, I realised something was seriously wrong. There was a Beatles meeting in the boardroom that suddenly ended in a row, followed by much running up and down the stairs. But nobody was saying what it was about.

A few weeks later I got a call from John telling me hed just sent his MBE back to the Queen. He was in a giddy mood,

I reflected, as I typed out my story. But he was also acting so separately from the other Beatles that two days later I wrote a piece headlined "The Day the Beatles Died".

At the time I was half-afraid Id overstated my case, because to the outside world they were still very much alive. But no sooner was the article published than a white rose wrapped in Cellophane was delivered to my desk with the message "To Ray with love from John and Yoko".

From then on, when it came to covering Beatles affairs, my tape recorder and I would have the best possible source. And, just before Christmas that year, I would listen in astonishment (and some despair) as John, whod flown me out to join him and Yoko in Toronto, gleefully let me in on the secret of how hed destroyed the band.

"At the meeting Paul just kept mithering on about what we were going to do, so in the end

I just said, I think youre daft. I want a divorce."

He hadnt planned to say that, but once spoken, and although news of the split wasnt going to be announced until the Let It Be album came out the following May, the words were never withdrawn.

Of course, there are McCartney interviews on tape, too. While John was busy pulling the walls of the Beatles temple down around him, Paul eventually recovered from the setback enough to make his first solo album, McCartney. Usually astute with publicity, at this point he slipped up, putting out an ambiguous press statement along with his record in April 1970 that was interpreted as saying that hed broken up the band. Headlines of blame ran around the world. "How could he?" distressed fans wanted to know. "It was all a misunderstanding," he told me a few days later. "I thought, Christ, what have I done now? and my stomach started churning up.

I never intended the statement to mean Paul McCartney quits Beatles."

It was ironic. The Beatle who had most wanted the group to stay together, the biggest Beatles fan of all, was being blamed for its dissolution.

"Why didnt you write it when I told you in Canada?" John demanded when he realised that Paul had accidentally got the dubious honour of ending the worlds favourite group. As hed started it, he thought he should be the one to end it. "You asked me not to," I said. He was scornful. "Youre the journalist, Connolly, not me," he snapped.

What strikes me most, though, listening again to the tapes, is how prescient John was, how closely his ear was tuned to the changing mood of the times. As once hed instinctively known which songs to write and what pithy comments would grab a headline, somehow, while in the middle of the whirlpool that was the Beatles, hed seen the end approaching.

"The whole thing died in my mind long before all the rumpus started," he said in 1971 when I was spending a few days with him and Yoko in New York. "We used to believe the Beatles myth just as much as the public, and we were in love with them in just the same way. But basically we were four individuals who eventually recovered our own individualities after being submerged in a myth.

"I know a lot of people were upset when we finished, but every circus has to come to an end. The Beatles were a monument that had to be either changed or scrapped. As it happens, it was scrapped. The Beatles were supposed to be this and supposed to be that, but really all we were was a band that got very big.

"Actually, our best days were before we got that big, when we used to play for hours in clubs. My favourite number was always Elviss Baby Lets Play House. Wed make it last about 10 minutes, singing the same verse over and over.

I pinched one of the lines from it later to put in one of my own songs called Run for Your Life something about Id rather see you dead, little girl, than to see you with another man.

"Mick Jagger said we werent a good band as performers. But he never saw us at our best in Liverpool and Hamburg. We were the best bloody band there was. I know all the early rock songs much better than most of those Ive written myself."

During most of that time, however, John was in iconoclastic mode. It was as though, having made his decision, he couldnt smash his Beatle persona quickly, or outrageously, enough. He didnt want to be "one of four gods on the stage", he told me, so instead he invited the worlds press to his honeymoon bedside for a week "in aid of world peace". Then, not minding that he was being widely ridiculed, not to mention chastised by his formidable Aunt Mimi for "making an exhibition of himself", he appeared naked with Yoko on an album of electronic music called Two Virgins, before really chasing controversy with a series of erotic lithographs featuring Yoko, and sometimes himself too.

"Why do you draw so much cunnilingus?" I asked him during the trip to Canada, as I passed the lithographs for him to sign. "Because I like it," the one-time moptop grinned merrily. Londons Metropolitan Police would later close down his exhibition in a West End gallery. They didnt like it.

At the time, Yoko was much publicly blamed for the Beatles demise, and she certainly might have played her part more tactfully. But she was only one of several catalysts. And John, as Ive been hearing again on my tapes, was absolutely besotted by her, this sexy, mysterious artist who matched the zany dottiness in him.

"It was Yoko that changed me," he teases her during one conversation in 1970. "She forced me to become avant-garde and take me clothes off when all I wanted to do was become Tom Jones. And now look at me! Did you know avant-garde is French for bull####?" Then, referring to how shed begun to join him on stage, he goes on: "Weve only got to play four bars and she grabs the microphone and shes off Aggghhh! Take her anywhere and she does her number for you." In the background, Yoko giggles. She was his pal.

The John Lennon I recorded was a very funny man who liked to paint himself ironically as the indignant butt of his own stories. "Did you see that Time magazine is saying that George is a philosopher?" he asked me one day. "And theres an article in The Times , that Ive actually thought about sending to Pseuds Corner [in Private Eye] anonymously, of course saying how Paul is this great musician. One a philosopher, another a great musician. Where does that leave me?"

"The nutter?" I hear myself suggest.

"Yes. Im the nutter. F*** em all."

Today he would have been a star as a stand-up comedian with a line in self-mockery. And, having returned from a session of primal therapy in California in 1970, he was more loquacious than ever. He could have done a whole act on the subject of what made people like him want to become famous. "There you are up on the stage like an Aunt Sally waiting to have things thrown at you. Its like always putting yourself on trial to see if youre good enough for Mummy and Daddy. You know, Now will you love me if I stand on my head and fart and play guitar and dance and blow balloons and get an MBE and sing She Loves You now will you love me?" It was a typical Lennon rant, but he was smiling all the time.

On another occasion, talking about his song Not a Second Time from the Beatles second LP, in a conversation devoted to his music, he says: "That was the one where that f***ing idiot Thomas Mann (he meant William Mann, the Times music critic) talked about the aeolian cadence at the end being like Mahlers Song of the Earth . They were just chords like any other chords. It was the first intellectual bull#### written about us." Then the knowing pause. "Still, I know it helps to have bull#### written about you."

Later, saying how a favourite of his songs, You Cant Do That, was his attempt at being Wilson Pickett, he becomes mock-anguished when admitting it was "a flip side because Cant Buy Me Love [Pauls song] was so f***ing good".

He was competitive with Paul, yes, and, when relations between the two were really bad, vituperative, as evidenced in a line in a song about his former partner on his Imagine album: "The sound you make is Muzak to my ears."

Paul had to have been hurt, and a few months later in New York even John would admit slightly ruefully: "I suppose it was a bit hard on him" But, as he would so often say, "They were just the words that came out of my mouth at the time."

In truth, he always knew how good Paul was, without necessarily liking everything he did.

"I only ever asked two people to work with me as a partner," he would boast of his talent-spotting abilities. "One was Paul McCartney and the other Yoko Ono. Thats not bad, is it?" Indeed, I recall a writer from an underground magazine being snide about Pauls song Let It Be, presumably assuming John would agree. He didnt.

"Paul and me were the Beatles," he would emphasise to me privately. "We wrote the songs." And on the subject of his debt to the young McCartney, he was actually generous. "I didnt write much material early on, less than Paul, because he was quite competent on guitar.

Paul taught me quite a lot of guitar, really."

Those who see John as the towering greatest of the great should reflect on that: John Lennon quietly, happily admitting how much he owed to Paul McCartney. And while he could be flattering about some of Pauls songs he liked For No One particularly ("that was one of his good ones. All his semi-classical ones are best, actually") he was disarmingly dismissive about several of his own. "I Am the Walrus didnt mean anything," he says, consigning to the pointless bin the work of a generation of Beatles anoraks whod tried to interpret its lyrics, while he always hated Yes It Is, didnt think he sang Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds very well ("I was so nervous I couldnt sing, but I like the lyrics"), and admits that he and Paul would give the lousy songs they wrote to George and Ringo to sing.

But Its Only Love from the Help! album was the one that earned his greatest ire. "Its the most embarrassing song I ever wrote. Everything rhymed. Disgusting lyrics. Even then I was so ashamed of the lyrics, I could hardly sing them. That was one song I really wished Id never written," he says. Then, after another comic pause: "Well, you can say that about quite a few." And the ones he liked? "Across the Universe was one of my favourites. I gave it at first to the World Wildlife Fund, but they didnt do much with it, and then we put it on the Let It Be album. It missed it as a record but maybe the lyrics will survive. And Strawberry Fields Forever meant a lot. Come Together is another favourite. It started off as a slogan song for Timothy Learys wife, but I never got around to finishing it. Everyone takes it as meaning come together in peace, but theres the other meaning too!" Actually, he was proud of quite a few In My Life, Im a Loser, Girl

"When I was in therapy I was asked to go through a book of all the songs Id written, line by line. I just couldnt believe Id written so many."

Interestingly, and its something Ive only realised listening again to the tapes, no matter how much John publicly criticised Paul, in none of my interviews with Paul did he ever criticise John. Quite the contrary. "On Abbey Road

I would like to have sung harmony with John, like we used to. And I think he would have liked me to. But I was too embarrassed to ask him."

I always wished Id been involved in the Beatles early happier days, but my role was to cover the final act of their career, and to observe the fallout, mostly, though not totally, with John. There were some bizarre and revealing moments during those days. Visiting a Native American village in upstate New York the day after his

30th birthday, he showed that even he, in his enthusiasm, could get it wrong. "When I used to see cowboys-and-Indians films when I was a kid in Liverpool, I was always on the side of the Indians," he told the assembled group, not realising how patronising he sounded.

Im sure when he said he wanted a divorce from the Beatles he never imagined how complicated, or expensive for all of them, it would be. But by October 1971, when he was living in New York, he was beginning to get a good idea. Asking me to be a go-between, he gave me a message to take to Paul suggesting that perhaps the two of them could solve at least one of their differences without either Allen Klein, his manager, or Lee Eastman, Pauls manager and also Linda McCartneys father, becoming involved. Back in London I delivered the message, but in the end it was inevitably lawyers who sorted out their problems.

Listening to the tapes, and hearing Johns singsong voice again after all these years, has led to some poignant memories. But what has stayed with me most from all the interviews is the vitality of the man, and that straight-faced, British, tongue-in-cheek delivery he had. A very generous person, he would say: "I cant think about money. It rains in and rains out.

"I always wanted to be an eccentric millionaire, and now I am." John on his education made me laugh: "If Id had a better education, I wouldnt have been me. When I was at grammar school I thought Id go to university, but I didnt get any GCEs. Then I went to art school and thought Id go to the Slade and become a wonder. But I never fitted in. I was always a freak, I was never lovable. I was always Lennon!"

Then theres John, as forthright as ever when I suggested he might like to write a musical. "No. No musicals. I loathe musicals. I never did have a plan for doing one. My cousin made me sit through some f***ing musical twice. I just hate them. They bore me stiff. I think theyre just horrible. Even Hair. And theyre always lousy music." What he would have made of Cirque du Soleils Las Vegas show Love, an interpretation of the Beatles records, would have been interesting to know.

John, talking about a Hare Krishna group whod been painting a little temple in the grounds of Tittenhurst Park near Ascot, which was briefly his home, was typical. "I had to sack them. They were very nice and gentle, but they kept going around saying peace all the time. It was driving me mad. I couldnt get any f***ing peace."

And finally theres John in 1970 being ominously prophetic. "Im not going to waste my life as I have been, which was running at 20,000 miles an hour. I have to learn not to do that, because I dont want to die at 40."

He was 40 and two months when he was murdered by a mad fan in New York in 1980.

I was due to interview him for The Sunday Times the following day
Great article about Lennon and the end of the Beatles (albeit a bit long). I especially liked the part about how, in Lennon's opinion, the four of them had all believed in the myth of the Beatles and loved it as much as the public, and than only later recovered their individualities from that myth they were submerged in.

Something else rewatching Anthology and the Harrison biopic reminded me of. Martin talked about how Lennon and McCartney had each other to help write songs collaboratively. George was by himself. It isn't obvious to me why he couldn't have collaborated with Lennon or McCartney (maybe they just sort of agreed to primarily divide the kingdom up amongst themselves two ways, as far as the publishing royalties, and thought George would have been an unnecessary and expensive third wheel?). Than again, that is how it was with the Stones, mostly Jagger and Richards? Not sure if The Who was mostly Pete Townshend?

As noted above, he admitted he didn't have a lot of songs in the beginning, so perhaps it was just by choice, until later?

 
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After it appeared on Spotify, I gave All Things Must Pass a spin for the first time in years. Apple Jam is still pretty unlistenable but elsewhere Harrison's great songs somehow mesh perfectly with Spector's over the top production.

 
Godsbrother said:
saintsfan said:
Revolver

OK, so when we last left off, Rubber Soul was released to glowing reviews and, as usual, brisk sales. Those who thought the Beatles couldn't get any better, however, were wrong.

It should be noted that 1966 was the end of the Beatles as a touring band, so the studio became a more important part of their work and as advanced as Rubber Soul might have seemed, it would be NOTHING compared to the jump they would take on the next album.

When I say jump, I don't really mean songwriting. The songs written on Rubber Soul could be the best in their catalogue. When I say jump, I'm referring to the sounds that were coming out the studio. First, Revolver is a much more electric album than Rubber Soul. Loud, distorted guitars everywhere. Second, Revolver employed backward tapes. I'm Only Sleeping, Tomorrow Never Knows, and Rain, which wasn't a part of Revolver, but was recorded during the Revolver sessions. Third, loud bass. Thumping bass which hadn't been heard in that way before on a Beatles record. Paul started playing a Rickenbacker and played more in the style that he started with on Drive My Car. Fourth, everything was limited and compressed. That's where the sounds for the drums came from. You'll notice the sound of Ringo's drums were much better on Revolver. She Said She Said and Rain are Ringo showcases. Fifth, styles. The album contained Indian music, rock, jazz, children's music, soul, classical ballads, and psychedelic music.

One track in particular sounded like it came from another planet. A song that started off life in the studio as Mark I, almost like it was a prototype of a new kind song or something, and it kind of was. The song would eventually be called Tomorrow Never Knows, which one of Ringo's butchering the English language phrases. John sat in front of George Martin with a guitar and stummed earnestly on a C Major chord "Turn off your mind relax and float downstream..." It modulated only once, to B flat major for "It is not dying..." Anyway, John's instructions were he wanted to sound like the Dali Lama shouting from the highest mountaintop, except he still wanted to be heard. He also had the idea of a thousand monks chanting. What they finally discovered is that if you run John's voice through a Leslie speaker, which is the rotating speaker inside a Hammond Organ, it takes on this kind of wavering quality. In addition, the song is made up of a bunch of tape loops. Some backwards. Some heavily distorted. Meanwhile Ringo and Paul play this hypnotic beat behind it all. Really, Tomorrow Never Knows is decades into the future. It's really the first techno song based upon its beat alone.

It should be noted that many of the sounds that were coming out of the studio for Revolver were the result of the Beatles never ending search for new sounds and a new recording engineer named Geoff Emerick. Geoff, being young and curious was willing to try many things that the Beatles other recording engineers were not. Emerick's work on Revolver and Sgt Pepper is detailed brilliantly in a book called Here, There, and Everywhere written by Emerick himself.

I have mentioned a bunch of technical stuff, but what about the songs?? George was growing with three great songs. Taxman with snarling guitar and bass, Love You To which was Indian flavored and the brooding I Want To Tell You. Paul had Eleanor Rigby, one of those songs that will still be around 100 years from now, Here, There, and Everywhere, For No One, featuring a horn solo by Alan Civil and the thumping Got To Get You Into My Life. John had the dreamy I'm Only Sleeping, the growling She Said She Said, the soaring And Your Bird Can Sing and the previously mentioned Tomorrow Never Knows.

Revolver also had an art cover, the first time the Beatles really had done that. Their old Hamburg friend Klaus Voorman created a collage and drew some pictures of the Beatles. It was a very eye catching cover.

Revolver was definately an album that presented a changing Beatles. It was the last album my mom bought from the Beatles. I'm sure they lost some fans because the music was so different from what had come before, but they gained a lot of new fans. For what it's worth, Revolver is consistently a top 2 or 3 album in almost every list of great albums. It's place is richly deserved. To me, it is the Beatles at their absolute best.

For most artists, this would be their all time achievement and there would be nowhere to go but down. The Beatles had other ideas.

Next...Sgt Pepper
For me, On The Corner by Miles Davis in the mid-'70s was one of the most advanced albums of the second half of the 20th century, arguably decades ahead of its time with its Afro-Indian-Funk-Rock-Jazz amalgam, but good point, in some ways, the Indian vibe and otherworldly beats and loops of Tomorrow Never Knows anticipated it by about a decade. They did get a big assist from Emerick in helping realize, sculpt and shape their pioneering soundscapes and path breaking musical vistas with cutting edge recording studio techniques (aforementioned experimentation like pushing Lennon's vocals through the Leslie rotating organ speaker, the seagull backward loops, but also including technical innovations such as close mic'ing of instruments, "direct injection" of the bass into the sound board, and later new instruments, such as the mellotron brought by Lennon but played by Paul on the Strawberry Fields sessions, and George's Moog synth on four songs from Abbey Road).George Martin was very sophisticated musically, scoring the double string quartet for Yesterday and some of the incidental music in at least one of the movies, he could compose and orchestrate classical music. As the Beatles began to broaden their musical horizons (by listening to classical music, for instance), they were better able to help Martin help them realize the increasingly complex sounds and refined music they were hearing in their heads. So Paul could say, I loved the instrument in that Bach orchestral piece, and Martin had the knowledge, background, experience and ear to recognize and identify - piccolo trumpet. Which promptly had a featured solo by the greatest instrumentalist in Britain for Penny Lane. He was also an invaluable go-between in the difficult sessions for the free-form ascending orchestral crescendo used in the middle passage of A Day In The Life.

Emerick mentioned in his great recording book (I'm at the first Sgt. Pepper chapter) that at times Harrison had trouble nailing the guitar solo, and it was actually Paul who played on his Taxman, as well as the song Sgt. Pepper (probably mentioned already in the thread).

The great American classical composer Phillip Glass stated that in his opinion, it was George's profound influence on Western pop and rock through his introduction of the sitar and Indian sounds (he was completely randomly exposed to the sitar during the filming of the restaurant scene in Help!, after being intrigued banged out the part in Norwegian Wood [[?]], and was turned onto a Ravi Shankar album by the Byrds, who became his musical guru, inspiration and guiding light - BTW, I think singer/pianist Norah Jones is his daughter?) that would be his lasting musical legacy. Not the Beatles. Dunno about that, but a powerful testament.

Also mentioned in the Emerick book, Eric Clapton, who famously played lead on While My Guitar Gently Weeps (after listening told George we have a problem, it isn't "Beatley" enough, which they solved by the much used double tracking, later even automated, to give it that signature wobbly sound :) ) and later had an affair with and eventually married George's wife Pattie, who he met on the Hard Days Night shoot, remaining friends, was among the first to encourage George that the Beatles may not have been the ideal set up to show case his skills, dominated as it was by the Lennon/McCartney song writing axis, which must have validated his own sense of the worth of his musical talent, coming from the "guitar god".
There is no doubt that the one that benefitted the most from the breakup of the band was George Harrison. His reputation doubled after the Beatles. I mean, at the end of the band and the very beginning of his solo career he was at the height of his powers as a songwriter. While My Guitar Gently Weeps, Something, Here Comes The Sun and everything on All Things Must Pass.All Things Must Pass, IMO, is the best solo Beatles album. i think better than Band On The Run, Imagine, or Plastic Ono Band. Just a stunning piece of work from somebody who most people in the 60s thought was just riding Lennon and McCartney's coat tails. Heck, Frank Sinatra thought John and Paul wrote Something. Nobody thought George had that in him.
George did benefit the most initially but once he exhausted his backlog from the Beatles he came down to Earth IMO.

Living in the Material World is decent but comes off as preachy. Dark Horse has some good tracks but came at a time when George's voice was very hoarse, no pun intended.

33 1/3 is very underappreciated but his self titled LP is uneven. Somewhere in England, Extra Texture and Gone Troppo were all disappointments. Cloud Nine was a tremendous comeback though. I like Brainwashed, released posthumously, but you can tell he wasn't quite finished.

I would probably rank ATMP as the best but not by a wide margin over Plastic Ono Band, Imagine, Ram or Band on the Run. Actually I think Paul has been on a nice run of damn good solo LPs since Flaming Pie though a lot of Beatles fans stopped listening a long time ago and think of Paul's solo career as lightweight
Absolutely. No doubt.

What amazes me about the Beatles, if you think about it, is that they all fill in each other's weak spots.

George could write good songs, but not necessarily a lot of them very quickly. So he could have two or three good songs on a Beatles album which were different in texture to the John and Paul songs. Near the end, his best songs were almost equal quality with John and Paul's best, but he couldn't do it in the quantities and John and Paul could. John and Paul prolific nature gave him some space to do what he did well. Work things out. During his solo career, it was up to him to come up with everything and, most of the time, he wasn't up to it and it resulted in albums with a few good moments and lots of forgettable ones.

Paul was prolific. Wrote lots of stuff. Not all of it is very good, though. In fact, a great deal of it is not good. In the Beatles, not only did he not have to come up with as much, which made it so mostly the good stuff would end up on a record, but also John was there to tell him when something was not very good. John being his equal and his best friend, he would take that from John where he wouldn't take it from anyone else. John also helped Paul with lyrics, which is not Paul's strong suit. John would also add a little bit of irony or anger to Paul's optimism, which balanced it nicely. During his solo career, there was nobody in his life to be that sounding board.

John was smart and caustic. But John could also be a bit too angry. A bit too political. Trying too hard to get a point across rather than going for a sound. Example, John wanted Help to be a ballad. Paul and George said, no, speed it up. it's a hit. Same thing with Revolution. John didn't recognize that speeding those songs up made the songs sound even MORE angry or MORE desperate. He thought lyrically and not musically as much. John also was not very musically literate. Paul was able to give musical direction to Lennon's ideas. Paul had greater popular sensibilities, so he would often take the edge off of John's more political work. During John's solo career, there was nobody to soften it up a bit so the message could be heard by more people.

Ringo...well, Ringo just needed a band that fit his quirky style. The Beatles gave him that. Ringo's not a great song writer, but as the everyman in the Beatles, John and Paul could give him stuff and he would get it over with charm. You'll notice in his solo career, John, Paul, and George wrote songs for him. Ringo in many ways was the rallying point for the entire band. They all loved Ringo, even when they couldn't stand each other at certain times...

 
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I agree and I think that is why George blossomed again with Cloud Nine and the Traveling Wilburys. George didn't have to carry the full load with Jeff Lynne, Tom Petty, Bob Dylan and Roy Orbison around.

I also agree with what you say about Paul's work but I don't think it was a problem so much with his writing as it was his production and the fact that he was surrounded by yes men.

Aside from Band on the Run and Ram, Paul's best solo stuff was when he was working with a producer that would challenge him. I think what has really benefited Paul's later work over the last 20 years is his willingness to work with different producers. They have been able to reign Paul in quite a bit and the result has been a dramatic improvement in quality IMO.

I think this issue with John's solo career was the impact that Yoko had on him. John relied on Paul as much as Paul did on John and let's face it there was a HUGE drop off from Paul to Yoko.

You are spot-on with Ringo. His self-titled LP is the closest the Beatles ever came to a reunion...

 
Already noted, but I wished Yoko had married the late Sonny Bono and they adopted Bono of U2, for the Bono-Ono-Bono Project. Lateral thinking creativity specialist and writer Edward De Bono could have done the liner notes. :)

If augmented by Bonzo (late John Bonham, who did play on McCartney's Rockestra), the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band (Magical Mystery Tour film, Neil Innes of the Rutles) and Apolo Ohno could learn to sing, it could be the Bonzo-Bono-Ono-Ohno-Bono-Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Project.

 
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Latest issue of MOJO is dedicated to the Beatles 1 re-master coming out in November, including a year-by-year look at their hits from '63-'70, their films with the director from Let It Be and an excerpt from a new book about the critical importance, even necessity, of the rivalry and competition between Lennon and McCartney being a driving force in the evolution of their sound and style.

http://www.mojo4music.com/artist/the-beatles/

Started the Lewisohn (first of trilogy) as well as Emerick books.



 
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What is the opinion of John as a guitar player?I was reading about Stu Sutcliffe, and how after his death Paul took on the bass even though he was a much better player than John because he knew that John would never accept a "subservient" role in the band.In those days, the least talented guy was the bass player. Paul changed that, obviously.I have read that John was a "capable", "better than average", "decent" rhythm guitar player.
Technically, Paul was certainly the better guitar player. John was a very distinct and unique player though. I think it worked out for the best. Paul got to put all that talent to use and redefine the role of a bass player.John REALLY dominated the Beatles in those early years. I could see John getting his way on that.
Technically John was not a great guitar player but he had a style. His mother taught him how to play a banjo and George & Paul used to tease John when he played guitar because he would only play 5 strings. Obviously he overcame that handicap and became a capable guitar player.George and Paul were much better guitar players. Really when it came to playing instruments Paul was the most talented of all the Beatles.Hey Saints Fan, I did finally get the Beatles Remastered Box set (stereo)! Actually my wife got me it on the usb Apple instead of CDs and it is awesome. It offers the music in both MP3 and FLAC format. Obviously I was able to easily load the MP3 format on my iPod. Now I need to figure out how best to play it in FLAC -- I understand the quality is much better than a standard CD.
Could you hear much difference in the FLAC compared to the CD, GB?

I had been streaming it from the computer to HT stereo via Apple TV, but realized later Airplay down-converts the signal. Recently I was able to plug the USB stem directly into the receiver. Weirdly at first, everything sounded like it was in an echo chamber, but it turned out to be one of the receiver's settings.

I've been very impressed by the sound, and that is on top of the already high expectations based on the CD remasters. The upcoming 1 remaster has a lot of video, so curious how the new and latest restoration work has gone in that medium. Also the Blu-ray hi-res audio (even higher than the USB Apple - 192/24) and 5.1 surround re-mix potential.

 
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Wanted to give you Beatle fans an update on something I've been working on. I am in the bass player in a Christian band. We play at the 7 PM Mass every week. We decided we wanted to do a fundraiser for the parish. One of the guys in the band knows Randy Jackson from Zebra. Make a long story short, we are doing a show with Randy paying tribute to, you guessed it, the Music of the Beatles. We are doing a set, then Randy's doing a set, then we are going to finish the show together. It's taking place next Saturday, March 27th.

One thing I've realized while playing these Beatles songs for 8 months. These songs are in some ways simple, in some ways very unconventional and difficult. I've heard that said, but I don't know that I fully realized what that meant until I've slept with these songs for the last 8 months

Vocal harmonies are VERY complex and quite frankly difficult. Very hard songs to sing. The Beach Boys would probably be tougher, but I think the Beatles might be more unconventional. Can't think of another rock band other than those two that would be this hard to sing. The vocal buildup on Day Tripper is VERY difficult. It's not like Twist and Shout where the voices build on each other. They actually go up the scale. Very hard to sing. We ended up playing that part on the keyboard because it sounded like crap when we tried it. On Help, the background vocals are difficult, but very beautiful. If you just focus on the background, it's very pretty in what is a fast rock song. It's almost a counter melody. Very complex. Really, all of them are hard. We did they best we could and dropped those parts we couldn't do. If I Fell is being sung by Randy because none of us could sing it. Forget the low harmony. Didn't even try it. Nobody could quite do it right.

Strange chords in places you don't expect. More than once, somebody said "What key is this song in?" and it's difficult to tell sometimes. If I Fell, for example. I think it's D Major, but because of that opening part, which isn't in D Major and isn't repeated, who knows. The opening chord in A Hard Day's Night?? Took us a bit to get that one because Paul's not playing the root on the bass, so the chord that's written isn't really the full chord.

The ending of Ticket To Ride and Drive My Car seem to be kind of free for alls. Play anything you want in the key of D or A and sing over it. They did this with a lot of songs. Hello Goodbye is another one, that they do that ending part where the song almost ends and they tack on something at the end. Almost like a different song. Actually, most of their songs are like that. Middle eights often sound like it's a completely different song.

Rhythm. For all the Ringo haters out there, but more than once our drummer and I had problems. One of the songs (All My Loving, I think) has Ringo hitting 16th notes on the hi hat. He had difficulty with that at first. I still don't know that he's playing 16th notes. We had to work on it for awhile. Ticket To Ride, the rhythm is very unconventional and it took us a bit to get it right. Not to mention, strange time signatures. Drive My Car has a measure of 9/8 right at the beginning which we never did get quite right. We had to change it a bit. Revolution has a measure of 2/2 right in the middle of 4/4. Keeps it from being just a conventional blues progression.

So if possible, this Beatle nut for the past 30 years comes away even MORE impressed with their music than I was before. Pretty cool.
Elsewhere in the thread, it was noted what a coincidence it was that the beginning and end parts of A Day In The Life (despite being in different keys and and tempo?) fit together so well. The part above about the conjoining of disparate elements even within individual songs (let alone albums) describing a lot of Beatles material, actually, reminded me of that process. They seemed to have a lot of practice and experience with that sort of thing, to the point they may have collectively developed an almost expectation and confidence that anything was possible in songwriting as well as the studio.
 
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What is the opinion of John as a guitar player?I was reading about Stu Sutcliffe, and how after his death Paul took on the bass even though he was a much better player than John because he knew that John would never accept a "subservient" role in the band.In those days, the least talented guy was the bass player. Paul changed that, obviously.I have read that John was a "capable", "better than average", "decent" rhythm guitar player.
Technically, Paul was certainly the better guitar player. John was a very distinct and unique player though. I think it worked out for the best. Paul got to put all that talent to use and redefine the role of a bass player.John REALLY dominated the Beatles in those early years. I could see John getting his way on that.
Technically John was not a great guitar player but he had a style. His mother taught him how to play a banjo and George & Paul used to tease John when he played guitar because he would only play 5 strings. Obviously he overcame that handicap and became a capable guitar player.George and Paul were much better guitar players. Really when it came to playing instruments Paul was the most talented of all the Beatles.Hey Saints Fan, I did finally get the Beatles Remastered Box set (stereo)! Actually my wife got me it on the usb Apple instead of CDs and it is awesome. It offers the music in both MP3 and FLAC format. Obviously I was able to easily load the MP3 format on my iPod. Now I need to figure out how best to play it in FLAC -- I understand the quality is much better than a standard CD.
Could you hear much difference in the FLAC compared to the CD, GB?

I had been streaming it from the computer to HT stereo via Apple TV, but realized later Airplay down-converts the signal. Recently I was able to plug the USB stem directly into the receiver. Weirdly at first, everything sounded like it was in an echo chamber, but it turned out to be one of the receiver's settings.

I've been very impressed by the sound, and that is on top of the already high expectations based on the CD remasters. The upcoming 1 remaster has a lot of video, so curious how the new and latest restoration work has gone in that medium. Also the Blu-ray hi-res audio (even higher than the USB Apple - 192/24) and 5.1 surround re-mix potential.
Yeah I think so. The only way I was able to play it was also plugging it in directly to the receiver in our theater and it sounds incredible but of course the acoustics in there are really good so that may have been as much or more of the reason.

 
In one of the docs (possibly for the Let It Be disc itself, or maybe Anthology), George Martin talked about how Billy Preston had a kind of emollient property to alleviate some of the friction that had been plaguing the individual Beatles up to that time. Harrison described it as the band being on their best behavior when they were hosting a guest. If that was intentionally planned, smart move by Harrison. He also brought in Clapton for While My Guitar Gently Weeps (regarding the title, he was into the I Ching at the time, and claimed he would write about the first words his eyes came to in a randomly opened book or magazine while visiting his patents home, ant it was gently weeps) to get that song completed when it wasn't getting attention from the others. That wasn't the first time another musician augmented the Beatles (Martin's double string quartet arrangement for Yesterday, piccolo trumpet in Penny Lane and the orchestra for A Day In The Life, etc.), but it was the first time with a musician playing a Beatle instrument, in this case guitar. It is a great song, made better by Clapton.

I think Preston was the first (and only) time a non-Beatle got a co-writing credit, on several songs. Sometimes former bassist Stu Sutcliffe, ex-drummer Pete Best, manager Brian Epstein and producer/engineer George Martin were variously and confusingly called the "fifth" Beatle (how many can there be? :) ), but perhaps Preston can make a case. When I think of Let It Be, I think of the multiple controversies with the early filming (George argued with Paul and quit for a time), how the project was scuppered for a time when they couldn't agree on a mix and Abbey Road was prioritized to completion, as well as Spector's signature "Wall of Sound" sweetened versions of three songs ultimately officially released, which Paul reportedly wasn't happy with - as already noted above, Harrison removed what he much later considered some excessive reverb and echo in the ATMP remaster. Amidst all that, I forgot that some of the tracks were actually based on their famous rooftop (last) concert. I assumed they used studio versions. I'll have to listen again with that mind. I agree with saintsfan that while a song like Taking The 909 (?) is rough, it derives from that a lot of charm by returning to their roots after the long ascent up the studio mountain in the quest for increasing perfection. Also they kicked some serious hindquarters in THAT capacity, as well, bar-type rockers, harking back to their electric residencies in Hamburg and at the Cavern Club (alas, not very well documented musically). For their respective eras, when adjusted and compensated through the lens of time, they may have been "harder" in their time, than Black Sabbath, Deep Purple and AC/DC, etc. were in their time?

The genesis of this post was just wanting to say that I love hearing Preston every time. I have at least three films graced by his presence (not counting individual Harrison solo albums). Let It Be, and the Concerts For Bangladesh AND George. He grooves and is so soulful on organ (does he play a Hammond B3 on the roof, or just electric piano?) and keys every time, gifted musician and by contemporary accounts from George, Ringo and Martin, sounds like a great person to have in the studio and on stage.

 
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Beatles Movies

So, in 1964, the Beatles were the hottest thing in entertainment. The occupied the top 5 spots in the singles charts (an unheard of scenario) and the top two spots in the album charts (an even more unheard of scenario). In this climate, it was natural to try and cash in with a movie. So, United Artists, with a shoestring budget, decided to record "A Day In The Life" of the Beatles. They got this guy named Richard Lester to direct the movie, who the Beatles admired because he was a great comic director. Great, cheeky, English humor. So, they shot a movie and called it A Hard Day's Night, which was just something Ringo had said after a grueling day in the studio. It's basically the Beatles playing themselves as they ride to a TV performance on a train. Or as they put it "in a train and in a room, in a car and a room, and a room and a room." Paul's grandfather was kind of the "mixer" of the movie getting the boys into trouble throughout. Paul's grandfather was played by Irish actor William Brambell who starred in a show in Britain called "Steptoe and Son", which was similar to the American Standford and Son. On Steptoe, they call him a "dirty old man", which is why they keep calling him a "clean old man" in A Hard Day's Night.

Personally, I think this is among the greatest rock and roll movies ever. It's funny, irreverent, sharp, and the music throughout is great. Ringo is a natural on camera and John's sense of humor comes across really well. Can't Buy Me Love might as well be the template on which all future music videos are based. Quick edits, strange camera angles, the Beatles running around a field clowning around. It has everything.

So, A Hard Day's Night was a critical and commercial success, so the next movie they had more money, so Help! is in color and it goes on locations, like the Bahamas. Ringo is the star of the show again as a cult tries to get back a sacrificial ring that was sent to Ringo, so it causes the Beatles to run around trying to avoid having Ringo killed. Once again, kind of a shallow script, but it allows the Beatles personalities and their music shine through. I like Help!, but IMO, it's not as good as A Hard Day's Night. At times Help! looks too much like the Beatles know they are in a movie. It's not as natural as A Hard Day's Night, IMO. However, the music was once again superior and this movie did have some things about it that was innovative. If you watch it, then watch the TV show Batman, you can see the influence. The cartooniness. Also, once again, Ticket To Ride was a music video over a decade before anybody even knew what a video was.

After Brian Epstein died, they tried to make their own TV movie. They called it Magical Mystery Tour, and basically the idea was to drive around the country on a bus and wait for things to happen and film them. The script for this made A Hard Day's Night and Help! look like a complex plot. Once again, music great, but to me, this movie was just four guys on acid who thought they could release anything and it would be good. Magical Mystery Tour marks the first time the Beatles did something that the public didn't love and the critics had a field day. There were several problems with the movie. First, it was shown on the BBC in black and white, so a lot of the psychadelic imagery didn't come through. Second, they really didn't have a plan for the movie, so it turned into this hodgepodge that really didn't make sense. Third, it was shown on Boxing Day, so I think the last thing anyone expected to see was I Am The Walrus. However, I will say, the music segments are, once again, groundbreaking. I Am The Walrus is just insane as a song and the video totally brings that out. To me, Magical Mystery Tour is OK if you focus on the music videos. The rest of it is kind of strange.

Lastly, Let It Be. Let It Be is interesting in that it's almost the Beatles making a movie about breaking up. They seemed to be having so much fun on the other three movies, but this one, they spend most of the time looking miserable. Paul and George get into an argument with the camera's rolling. It just doesn't look like they are having fun. The only time they looked like they were having a good time is at the end on the roof (which is an iconic Beatles image and if you want to know where U2 got the idea to play on the roof, this is where). Once again, the music performances are mostly good, especially the stuff on the roof. They are having so much fun playing kind of a lame song in One After 909, you can see why people were and are so drawn to them. They can take something mediocre and make it magical just with the force of their personality.

Overall, I would say that A Hard Day's Night is one of those iconic rock and roll movies that will be remembered for years as being one of the best in it's genre. The others have good and bad moments, but the only movie that people 100 years from now might know by the Beatles is A Hard Day's Night.
Pink Floyd At Pompeii is one of my current favorites, but as far as critically acclaimed, A Hard Days Night is arguably the greatest rock film ever. Certainly one of. It was added to the Criterion collection recently (which also had rock film classics like Gimme Shelter, as much for its end of the hippy ethos sociological time capsule quality [[the recently passed Albert Mayles, one of America's greatest documentarians with Ken Burns and Errol Morris, also did the Beatles First Visit film, as well as Criterion's Grey Gardens, just lampooned by Bill Hader and Fred Armisen on Showtime's Documentary Now series]] as for the music and performances, as well as the Monterey Pop Festival, with Harrison's guru Ravi Shankar, Otis Redding and the US debut of Hendrix [[?]], not sure what others are commonly cited - maybe Woodstock, Pennbraker did one on Bob Dylan titled Don't Look Back?). There are a lot of extras and supplements on the Criterion version. They do a great job of capturing the Beatles personalities, group dynamics and the Beatlemania craze. Part of that was the screen writer I think was from Liverpool and helped capture their language and humor in the dialogue. That, and some of the hand held camera work gave it a quasi-documentary feel and lent it some authenticity and verisimilitude. Like all of the films, the music alone can give it a compelling watchability.Help! Isn't as good, but still has things to recommend it, agreed. The music. As alluded to, Lester later won an award (MTV, VH1, other?) as the father of the music video. Lennon later complained that he was an extra in his own movie. Realistically, they weren't really actors, but as noted, Ringo was kind of a natural (also did the Magic Christian and Caveman in the '70s). It succeeds on some levels as a surreal comedy. They got bored a lot (most filming is sitting around and waiting for camera and lighting set ups), smoked pot copiously, spaced on lines or ruined takes by giggling incessantly, testing good natured AHDN director Lester's patience at times (and they didn't work together again). It is in color, due to the bigger budget, accompanying fame and their elevated stature. It came out on Blu-ray, but reportedly wasn't restored, used same source as the DVD with exact same extras, so kept that for now.

Magical Mystery Tour, broadcasting it in black and white, like you said, was a mistake, it suffers without color. At that time, there were only like two channels (now we have hundreds), so if it was intended for family viewing around the holiday, I think Boxers Day is 12-26, than that was seemingly miscalculated. Not sure what the kiddies made of Ringo' s obese "aunt" somewhat disturbingly making out with some random dude after a stop by the beach, I Am The Walrus is *MASSIVELY* trippy :) , than there is the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah band segment with the stripper, etc. But again, the music is great. While it got slammed by critics at the time (in the extras, it was funny seeing the normally supremely confident McCartney somewhat divided about taking full credit/blame for the final product :) ), the passage of time has perhaps rehabilitated its image somewhat. In retrospect it seems Ill-advised to film without a professional producer, director or script writer (ya think?), but in addition to being into the avant garde, Harrison mentioned Stockhausen in the context of Paul's Tomorrow Never Knows loops, they may have been influenced by French/Italian cinema verite, which could be casually plotted, scripted and filmed?

Let It Be is great for the reasons mentioned. Document of the breakup. Great music. Documentary quality.

Yellow Submarine was voiced by actors and only showed them in the end cameo (that is one reason for the Let It Be film, they were disappointed they needed to STAR in a film to satisfy the obligation to the studio for a final film). As always, great music. For me a kind of sentimental favorite as it is one of the first recollections I have of the Beatles growing up as a child. Some very psychedelic animation if you are in to that sort of thing (not unlike, for different reasons, Alice And Wonderland). I find it has aged very well (compared to, say, H. R. Puffnstuff and Liddsville, two other examples from childhood :) ), and perhaps like a Disney classic, has some timeless qualities and can be appreciated by adults as well as children. I've watched it with my wife and son many times and never seem to get tired of it.

Like almost everything, agree A Hard Day's Night has the most assured historical importance and place. Unless an unforeseen Beneath The Planet Of The Apes, Twelve Monkeys or Yucatan peninsula asteroid scenario unfolds, this should still be around in a century. Bach, Mozart and Beethoven endured. I think the Beatles, Pink Floyd, Miles, Coltrane will also. Because of its historical importance, not sure Let It Be will completely disappear, but it would help if they would re-release an official restored version, maybe with extras, to replace the OOP original. While I get why you don't reckon Yellow Submarine in the official Beatles canon (though the half and half soundtrack and score, which I like, are in the stereo box), I think that is going to be around for a long, long time. Help and Magical Mystery Tour are more era bound and products of their times.

* Speaking of Bach, Mozart and Beethoven, there is a tendency to think of art and culture as a linear progression, with the latest being most "mature" and advanced, and older being "retrograde" (even within the Beatles body of work, some don't dig the early period). But imo, it is very possible, likely even, that in some ways, those composers are unsurpassed, TO DATE. Centuries later. They are like Everest and K2 in the classical music mountain range (Wagner and Mahler were great, not sure I would would put either ahead of the trio of predecessors, at any rate, they were a long time between, like an aerial shot of mountain peaks poking through the cloud layer). I think Revolver (and most if not all their body of work), Dark Side Of The Moon, Kind Of Blue and A Love Supreme will similarly endure for a century or more. KOB is already nearly 60 years "old" and probably the most famous jazz album of the 20th century, it's zen-like (noted by pianist and session centerpiece/stylistic focal point Bill Evans in his famous liner note), uncomposed, improvisation-friendly within loose modal structure atmosphere keeping it seemingly eternally fresh, we still listen to Louis Armstrong nearly a century later).

 
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Watching Lennon and the Plastic Ono Band in Toronto with Yoko and Eric Clapton (bassist Klause Voorman played a lot with George later, and designed the Revolver cover), after McCartney reopening of the NY stadium, I think in 2009, around the same time as the 9-9-09 remasters and Beatles RB release.

Before putting it on, my wife implied, oh, no (no pun intended), please tell me that isn't the one with Yoko's appalling catterwauling. I remembered one long Ono-centric song (been a while), and figured I could FF through that. The first song had mild howling/yodeling. The second increased in intensity, but the guitars were so wailing, it was easily overlooked. By the third it had intensified to the level it was no longer possible to overlook. Than the FF song.

I was thinking, let alone letting my wife be in the band and SINGING like that, if before marriage she had even said that was her favorite DVD, and she had to play it all the time, that probably would have been a deal breaker. Was John, when it came to Yoko, so smitten, he lost all musical bearings, and all taste and judgement? Kind of like one of those American Idols contestant outtakes, where they actually think they have star potential. Or perhaps as has been said, he was going out of his way to deconstruct the Beatles myth, by whatever means at his disposal. That was one way.

I just thank GOD Lennon never had so much sway within his sphere of Beatles influence that we were subjected for posterity to the inimitable vocal stylings, heinous howling/yodeling and brutal sonic assault of Yoko, on tracks from Let It Be (The Long And Winding Road?) and Abbey Road (Something, Here Comes The Sun, Golden Slumbers/Carry That Weight/The End).

 
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Highlighting the eclectic personnel and material of Ringo's rotating cast All Starr band.

Pick Up The Pieces, famous Average White Band funk instrumental

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8jwjf01sq68

This is from my only Ringo concert DVD. Also has Dream Weaver and Love Is Alive, a hit from the Men At Work dude, and Frankenstein by Edgar Winter.

First band, with Joe Walsh

Rocky Mountain Way

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BhBQyIEUcHY

Life In The Fast Lane

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=05q4BZkfmgo

Todd Rundgren

I Saw The Light

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BapCX1RcIHI



 
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I hate to sully this thread but I was wondering what you guys thought of Yoko now claiming John was Bi-sexual? Now I don't care of course and it doesn't affect my opinion of him in any way. But it just seems wrong to put that out there after he is long gone and unable to speak for himself. I mean if he wanted the world to know that, he had a big platform to do so and didn't. It just doesn't seem right to out him like this if it is even true.

 
Watched McCartney and Wings Rockshow again recently.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p1UafXtokdE

Mini-concert 7-15-09 atop the marquee of the Ed Sullivan Theatre, taped for the Letterman show (mashup of Sullivan and the rooftop concert). Interview first, starts about 14:45 mark, show lasts nearly 25 minutes. He might have been playing with this band as a group for a decade plus, so maybe longer than Ringo with the Beatles and the Wings? Outstanding musicians.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t23dvnpiLYs





 
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Sgt. Peppers fun facts from the Emerick book:

By bringing in the multitrack of the orchestral crescendo in A Day In The Life from a low volume and steadily raising it, it had a much more dynamic range than the actual performance in the studio.

Similarly, to counteract the sonic decay of the massed piano note to end the track, he used faders to bring the sound up as it was diminishing, in order to sustain it longer.

Three aspects of McCartney's bass playing, in terms of style and relation to the rest of the instruments, tonally and the final sound.

Conceptually - Instead of typically laying down a bass groove on the rhythm track FIRST, starting with Lovely Rita, Paul began to layer in his bass playing last. With time to develop his parts with the whole in mind, he began to play not only more melodically (which he always had), but also more orchestrally.

Recording - Instead of their usual bass amp/speaker placement, it was situated in the middle of the studio. The associated room ambiance gave it a huge sound. I'm very familiar with the concept of overdubbing parts, especially on a landmark recording as complicated. I hadn't thought about how you could layer in not only different instruments at different times, but with completely different room ambiances and acoustic spaces, making for a more complex and richer sonic blend. He described this as a key, not just in the playing and mixing, of making the bass a lead instrument at times in the Beatles songs.

Mixing - Emerick, instead of using the bass and drums first to get his sonic balances down, got everything else in the mix done first, and like McCartney's playing itself, mixed in it last. This enabled him to make the bass sound the center of the mix, and surround the other instruments in a way that it was best positioned to feature it - as he described it, shaping the acoustic space so none of the instruments and song elements interfered with each other.

 
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Highlighting the eclectic personnel and material of Ringo's rotating cast All Starr band.

Pick Up The Pieces, famous Average White Band funk instrumental

Bob - would you come up with a couple Todd examples you really like that are a little more deep in the catalogue? You may have put that link in there to help people get a familiar ring but Todd gets labeled by those songs and though great, don't really represent him.

 
Don't want to hijack the Beatles thread with a Todd Rundgren discussion, but I guess it is tangentially related through Ringo?

My favorites by far:

Wizard, A True Star

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y9DVcBZto4E

Todd (didn't see full album, but below is Spark Of Life, one of my favorite tracks)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yy2FJzzpkFE

Rundgren was a multi-instrumentalist, similar to McCartney, Prince, and parts of Todd were all him, on bass, guitar, synths, drums. He was a pioneering synth user, with the Beatles (using Harrison's moog on Abbey Road), Wendy Carlos Williams (Turned On Bach, Clockwork Orange soundtrack/score), Sun Ra, Keith Emerson, not sure about Stevie Wonder (in the vanguard on synths with Higher Ground from Innervisions?), Herbie Hancock with The Headhunters, Vangelis (?). Somewhat like Eno on the Talking Heads Remain In Light and U2s Joshua Tree and Achtung Baby, he became a highly demanded studio engineer (see the VH1 classic albums on Meatloaf's Bat Out Of Hell), and in fact used money from that for some of his more artistic personal musical adventures. I have heard some of his work with the band Utopia, but not as well versed on that material. Also, he had great versatility and incredible range, even on individual albums above, and in addition to the more electronic stuff, could do perfect soul/pop songs, like the already noted I Saw The Light and Hello, It's Me, below, both from the earlier Something/Anything? (#173 on Rolling Stone's greatest album list)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-u3VEoxQLPE



 
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Don't want to hijack the Beatles thread with Todd Rundgren discussion, but I guess it is tangentially related through Ringo?

My favorites by far are Wizard, A True Star

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y9DVcBZto4E

and Todd (didn't see full album, but below is Spark Of Life, one of my favorite tracks)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yy2FJzzpkFE

Rundgren was a multi-instrumentalist, similar to McCartney, Prince, and parts of Todd were all him, on bass, guitar, synths, drums. He was a pioneering synth user, with the Beatles (using Harrison's moog on Abbey Road), Wendy Carlos Williams (Turned On Bach, Clockwork Orange soundtrack/score), Sun Ra, Keith Emerson, not sure about Stevie Wonder (in the vanguard on synths with Higher Ground from Innervisions?), Herbie Hancock with The Headhunters. He became a highly demanded studio engineer (see the VH1 classic albums on Meatloaf's Bat Out Of Hell), and in fact used money from that for some of his more artistic personal musical adventures. I have heard some of his work with the band Utopia, but not as well versed on that material. Also, he had incredible range, even on individual albums above, and in addition to the more electronic stuff, could do perfect soul/pop songs, like the already noted I saw The Light and Hello, It's Me, below, both from the earlier Something/Anything? (#173 on Rolling Stone's greatest album list)

Hello Its Me from Something/Anything

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-u3VEoxQLPE

Thanks Bob. Yeah, AWATS is still my favorite, but lots of good stuff. The album Todd is also tremendous. Love the Liars album too.

Recently was given the Les Paul award. He's lost the falsetto but still creating and working hard. Guy is a beast.

 
Highlighting the eclectic personnel and material of Ringo's rotating cast All Starr band.

Pick Up The Pieces, famous Average White Band funk instrumentalhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8jwjf01sq68

This is from my only Ringo concert DVD. Also has Dream Weaver and Love Is Alive, a hit from the Men At Work dude, and Frankenstein by Edgar Winter.

First band, with Joe Walsh

Rocky Mountain Wayhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BhBQyIEUcHY

Life In The Fast Lanehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=05q4BZkfmgo

Todd Rundgren

I Saw The Lighthttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BapCX1RcIHI

Bob - would you come up with a couple Todd examples you really like that are a little more deep in the catalogue? You may have put that link in there to help people get a familiar ring but Todd gets labeled by those songs and though great, don't really represent him.
Try faithful - love of the common man and The Verb To Love plus a good rendition of Rain and Strawberry FieldsAlso Want of a nail on Nearly Human

And of course Just One Victory on AWATS

And all of Liars

 
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Highlighting the eclectic personnel and material of Ringo's rotating cast All Starr band.

Pick Up The Pieces, famous Average White Band funk instrumental

All excellent - try seven rays, zen archer, parallel lines, pretending to care and don't you ever learn - along these same lines.

 
I've been listening to the 17 CD Thirty Days Twickenham set from 1969. Really interesting to hear songs as they were rehearsed and developed. Listening to them in the studio, you wouldn't get that they didn't get along anymore.

 
Happy 90th birthday to Sir George Martin. I love listening to him talk (YouTube has many interviews). He has an almost endless supply of anecdotes.

One of my favorites: John had written "Please Please Me" as a slow tempo Roy Orbison type of song. Martin had them play it at a faster tempo, and after they finished recording he told them, "That's going to be your first number-one song".

And it was.

 
Happy 90th birthday to Sir George Martin. I love listening to him talk (YouTube has many interviews). He has an almost endless supply of anecdotes.

One of my favorites: John had written "Please Please Me" as a slow tempo Roy Orbison type of song. Martin had them play it at a faster tempo, and after they finished recording he told them, "That's going to be your first number-one song".

And it was.
Read his book, "All You Need Is Ears," its pretty old but a fun read. I got it through the library. It gets a little slow at times as he gets deep into "recording sound" but some really good Beatles stories and insights.

 
Wonderwall Music by George Harrison

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UllxxMkG7uI

Promo from Harrison's Apple Years box set

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YguwctfaE48

Background

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wonderwall_Music

"Wonderwall Music is the soundtrack album to the 1968 film Wonderwall, and the debut solo release by English musician George Harrison. It was the first album to be issued on the Beatles' Apple record label, and the first solo album by a member of that band."

Wonderwall trailer ('68)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ReCKDmeAdXA

Harrison was a world music pioneer, and this soundtrack represents a mix of East and West (recorded in India and England), with classical Indian musicians as well as Clapton contributions - though generally compartmentalized genres. Potent psychedelia/trance fusion.

Electronic Sounds by Harrison

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BnkJAmVLVhM

Promo from Harrison's Apple Years box set

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8z6Ugne78eQ

Background

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_Sound

Moog synthesizer explorations, probably sub-optimal party music (unless with room clearing end game designs :) ). I can appreciate it as background music, not unlike some of Eno's more abstract ambient compositions and sonic excursions. Harrison purchased one of the first instruments, and The Beatles used it to great effect on Abbey Road.

 
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Probably my two favorite Beatles tracks:

It's All Too Much, called one of the all time greatest psychedelic freak outs (love Harrison's massively distorted guitar tone). As much as I love Lennon and McCartney, Harrison has become my favorite post-Beatle.



 
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A postcard in Lennon's Imagine showed Lennon holding a pig, in response to McCartney holding a Ram on the above album cover



 
Elton John Featuring John Lennon And The Muscle Shoals Horns, recorded live at Madison Square Gardens 11-28-74 (in what was to be Lennon's last major live gig). Elton John made a bet that the Lennon song they worked on together, Whatever Gets You Through The Night, would chart at #1. Somewhat unexpectedly after a few albums in a row that were savaged by the critics, it did (his only solo #1 in the US or UK?). Lennon lost the bet, presumably one he was happy to lose :) , but the condition was that he would join Elton John in concert. He played rhythm guitar and sang three songs (8-10 of 13 below), WGYTTN (43:03), Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds (47:43) and I Saw Her Standing There (53:59). I didn't listen to anything but the beginning yet, but Elton in his prime, opens with a killer rendition of my favorite song of his by far, Funeral For A Friend.   



 
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