The Beatles (album)
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The Beatles is the eponymous ninth official album by The Beatles, a double album released in 1968. It is often referred to as The White Album as it has no text other than the band's name (and, on the early LP releases, a serial number) on its plain white sleeve, which was designed by pop artist Richard Hamilton. The album was the first album The Beatles undertook following the death of their manager Brian Epstein. Originally planned to be titled A Doll's House, The Beatles is often hailed as one of the major accomplishments in popular music.
In 1997, The Beatles was named the 10th greatest album of all time in a 'Music of the Millennium' poll conducted by HMV, Channel 4, The Guardian and Classic FM. In 1998, Q magazine readers placed it at number 17, while in 2000 the same magazine placed it at number 7 in its list of the 100 Greatest British Albums Ever.[1] In 2001, the TV network VH1 named it as the 11th greatest album ever.[2] In 2006, the album was chosen by Time Magazine as one of the 100 best albums of all time.[3] It was ranked number 10 in Rolling Stone's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time in 2003.[4]
According to the Recording Industry Association of America, The Beatles is the Beatles' best-selling album at 19-times platinum and the tenth-best-selling album of all time in the United States.
Demos and genesis of early material
In May 1968, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, and George Harrison assembled at Kinfauns, Harrison’s home in Esher, and demoed 23 songs, most of which would end up on The Beatles.
The majority of these songs were conceived during the group's visit to Rishikesh, India in the spring of 1968, where they undertook a transcendental meditation course with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Each of the Beatles left Rishikesh before the end of the course for various reasons, with Ringo Starr and then Paul McCartney departing first, and Lennon and George Harrison departing together later.
According to some reports, Lennon left Rishikesh because he felt personally betrayed by rumors that Maharishi had made sexual advances toward a young woman. Shortly after he decided to leave, Lennon wrote a song called "Maharishi" which included the lyrics, "Maharishi/You little twat"; the song became "Sexy Sadie". According to several authors (Brown and Gaines, 1983; Miles, 1998; Spitz, 2005; Cynthia Lennon, 1978), however, Alexis Mardas (aka "Magic Alex") deliberately engineered these rumours because he was bent on undermining the Maharishi's influence over each Beatle. Regardless of the motivations behind Lennon's departure, the Rishikesh retreat, which was also attended by music figures such as Donovan, Mike Love, and Paul Horn, marked a period of extraordinary musical experimentation and songwriting creativity for the Beatles.
Recording sessions
The Beatles was recorded between 30 May 1968 and 14 October 1968, largely at Abbey Road Studios, with some sessions at Trident Studios. Although productive, the sessions were reportedly undisciplined and sometimes fractious, and they took place at a time when tensions were growing within the group. Concurrent with the recording of this album, the Beatles were launching their new multimedia business corporation Apple Corps, an enterprise that proved to be a source of significant stress for the band.
The sessions for The Beatles marked the first appearance in the studio of Lennon's new girlfriend and artistic partner Yoko Ono, who would thereafter be a more or less constant presence in all Beatle sessions. Prior to Ono's appearance on the scene, the individual Beatles had been very insular during recording sessions, with influence from outsiders strictly limited.
Author Mark Lewisohn reports that The Beatles held their first and only 24-hour recording/producing session near the end of the creation of The Beatles, the final mixing and sequencing for the album, attended by Lennon, McCartney, and producer George Martin.[5]
Division and discord in the studio
Despite the album's official title, which emphasized group identity, studio efforts on The Beatles captured the work of four increasingly individualized artists who frequently found themselves at odds. The band's work pattern changed dramatically with this project, and by most accounts the extraordinary synergy of The Beatles' previous studio sessions was harder to come by during this period. Sometimes McCartney would record in one studio for prolonged periods of time, while Lennon would record in another, each man using different engineers.[5] At one point in the sessions, George Martin, whose authority over the band in the studio had waned, spontaneously left on vacation, leaving Chris Thomas in charge of producing.[6] During one of these sessions, while recording "Helter Skelter," Harrison reportedly ran around the studio while holding a flaming ashtray above his head.[5]
Long after the recording of The Beatles was complete, George Martin mentioned in interviews that his working relationship with The Beatles changed during this period, and that many of the band's efforts seemed unfocused, often yielding prolonged jam sessions that sounded uninspired.[7] On 16 July recording engineer Geoff Emerick, who had worked with the group since Revolver, announced he was no longer willing to work with the group out of disgust with the deteriorating work environment.
The sudden departures were not limited to EMI personnel. On 22 August, drummer Ringo Starr abruptly left the studio, explaining later that he felt his role was minimized compared to that of the other members, and that he was tired of waiting through the long and contentious recording sessions. [7] Lennon, McCartney and Harrison pleaded with Starr to return, and after two weeks he did. In Starr's absence, however, McCartney played drums on the tracks that eventually emerged as "Back in the U.S.S.R." and "Dear Prudence." Upon Starr's return, he found his drum kit decorated with red, white and blue flowers, a welcome-back gesture from Harrison.[7] The reconciliation was, however, only temporary, and Starr's exit served as a precursor of future "months and years of misery," in Starr's words. [7] Indeed, after The Beatles was completed, both Harrison and Lennon would stage similar, and similarly unpublicized, departures from the band. [7] McCartney, whose public departure in 1970 would mark the formal end of the band's ensemble, described the sessions for The Beatles as a turning point for the group. Up to this point, he observed, "the world was a problem, but we weren't. You know, that was the best thing about the Beatles, until we started the breakups, like the White Album and stuff. Even the studio got a bit tense then." [7]
Other musicians
Eric Clapton, at Harrison's invitation, provided lead guitar for Harrison's "While My Guitar Gently Weeps". Harrison soon reciprocated by collaborating on the song "Badge" for Cream's last album Goodbye. George explains in The Beatles Anthology that Clapton's presence temporarily alleviated the studio tension and that all band members were on their best behavior during his time with the band in the studio.
Clapton was not the only outside musician to sit in on the sessions. Nicky Hopkins provided piano for "Revolution" and a few others; several horns were also recorded on the album version of "Revolution". "Savoy Truffle" also features the horn section. A bluegrass fiddler was recruited for "Don't Pass Me By," and a team of orchestral players and soothing background singers ended up being important contributors to "Good Night."
Despite these contributions, and the presence and influence of Ono, no external contributors to The Beatles are listed in the album notes.
Technical advances
The sessions for The Beatles were notable for the band's formal transition from 4-track to 8-track recording. As work on this album began, Abbey Road Studios possessed, but had yet to install, an 8-track machine that had supposedly been sitting in a storage room for months. This was in obedience to EMI's policy of testing and customizing new gear, sometimes for months, before putting it into use in the studios. The Beatles recorded "Hey Jude" and "Dear Prudence" at Trident Studios in central London, which had an 8 track recorder.[5] When they found out about EMI's 8 track recorder they insisted on using it, and engineers Ken Scott and Dave Harries took the machine (without authorization from the studio chiefs) into the Number 2 recording studio for the group to use.[5]
Songs
Although most of the songs on any given Beatles album are usually credited to the songwriting team of "Lennon/McCartney," that description is often misleading, and rarely more so than on The Beatles. With this album, each of the four band members began to showcase the range and depth of his individual songwriting talents, and to display styles that would be carried over to his eventual solo career. Indeed, some songs that the individual Beatles were working on during this period eventually were released on solo albums (John Lennon's "Look At Me" and "Child of Nature," eventually retitled "Jealous Guy"; Paul McCartney's "Junk" and "Teddy Boy"; and George Harrison's "Not Guilty").
Many of the songs on the album display experimentation with unlikely musical genres, borrowing directly from such sources as 1930s dance-hall music (in "Honey Pie"), classical chamber music (in "Piggies"), the avant-garde sensibilities of Yoko Ono and Karlheinz Stockhausen (in "Revolution 9"), and the overproduced sentimentality of lift music (in "Good Night"). Such diversity was quite unprecedented in global pop music in 1968, and the album's sprawling approach provoked (and continues to provoke) both praise and skepticism from observers.[8]' "Revolution 9," in particular, a densely layered eight-minute-and-thirteen-second sound collage, has attracted bewilderment and disapproval from both fans and music critics over the years.
The only western instrument available to the group during their Indian visit was the acoustic guitar, and thus most of the songs on The Beatles were written and first performed on that instrument. Some of these songs remained acoustic on The Beatles (notably "Dear Prudence", "Julia", "Blackbird" and "Mother Nature's Son") and were recorded in the studio either solo, or by only part of the group.
Individual compositions
Lennon's contributions to the album are generally more hard-edged lyrically than his previous output, a trend which carried over to his solo career. Examples include his pleas for death on "Yer Blues", his parodic "Glass Onion," which mocks fans who read too much into Beatles' lyrics (see also Paul is dead), and what may be references to drug addiction in "Happiness Is a Warm Gun" ("I need a fix..."). Lennon's intensely personal "Julia" may be seen as foreshadowing his later song "Mother" from his first solo album, John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band; the political "Revolution 1" begins a pattern of overtly political songs like "Give Peace a Chance" and "John Sinclair"; "Revolution 9" reflects extensive contribution and influence from Yoko Ono, another feature of much of Lennon's solo output. Lennon's songs on The Beatles embrace a wide array of styles, including blues ("Yer Blues"), acoustic ballads ("Julia", and "Cry Baby Cry"), and rock ("Everybody's Got Something to Hide Except Me and My Monkey"). Lennon would later describe his contributions to "The White Album" as among his favorite songs recorded with the Beatles.
McCartney's songs for the album include pop ballads ("I Will"), the proto-heavy metal "Helter Skelter", a Beach Boys homage ("Back in the U.S.S.R."), a Bob Dylan parody ("Rocky Raccoon"), a Little Richard parody "(Why Don't We Do It in the Road?)", a music-hall foxtrot ("Honey Pie"), and a soft acoustic ballad ("Blackbird"), among others. The soothing, stripped-down "I Will" and the ska-tinged "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da" foreshadow themes of McCartney's solo career.
Harrison's sparse ballad "Long, Long, Long" is stylistically quite similar to much of his solo output. His songs on The Beatles also includes the lyrically sophisticated "While My Guitar Gently Weeps", a chronicle of gastronomic excess and dental trauma in "Savoy Truffle", and a class-driven piece of social commentary in "Piggies". Even Ringo Starr was given leave to include the first song composed entirely by himself to be included on a Beatles' album, the countryish "Don't Pass Me By".
As a reflection of the sharp reduction in Lennon and McCartney's joint songwriting, several fragmental, incomplete songs and song ideas were recorded and released on the album ("Why Don't We Do It in the Road?", "Wild Honey Pie," and an untitled McCartney snippet at the end of "Cry Baby Cry"). On previous albums, such undertakings might have been either abandoned or collaboratively developed before release, but here again, The Beatles represented a change of course for the band. The trend continued for the rest of the band's recording career: such song fragments were presented by joining them together as a long suite of songs on side two of Abbey Road.
Self-reflection and change
Many of the songs are personal and self-referencing; for example, "Dear Prudence" was written about actress Mia Farrow's sister, Prudence, who attended the transcendental meditation course with The Beatles in Rishikesh. Often she stayed in her room, engaged in Transcendental Meditation. "Julia" was the name of Lennon's beloved but frequently absent mother, who died during his youth. "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" expresses concern over being "bought and sold," a theme in later songs about Harrison himself, such as "Handle with Care," recorded with The Traveling Wilburys. "Glass Onion" is a Beatles song about Beatles songs.
Some of the songs on The Beatles mark important changes in the band's recording style. Previously, no female voices were to be heard on a Beatles album, but Yoko Ono made her first vocal appearance on this record, adding backing vocals in "Birthday" (along with Pattie Harrison and Linda Eastman); Yoko also sang backing vocals and a solo line on "The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill" and, as noted earlier, was a strong influence on Lennon's musique concrète piece, "Revolution 9," an avant-garde sound collage that McCartney initially did not want to include on the album.[7]
Compositions not included
A number of songs were recorded in demo form for possible inclusion but were not incorporated as part of the album. These included "Mean Mr. Mustard" and "Polythene Pam" (both of which would be used for the medley on Abbey Road); "Child of Nature" (recorded with drastically different lyrics as "Jealous Guy" for Lennon's Imagine), "Jubilee" (later retitled "Junk" and released on McCartney's first solo LP); "Etcetera" (a now-lost McCartney composition); "Circles" (which Harrison would return to fourteen years later on his album "Gone Troppo"); "Something" (which ended up on Abbey Road); and "Sour Milk Sea" (which Harrison gave to friend and Apple artist Jackie Lomax for his first LP, Is This What You Want). Other songs recorded for, but ultimately left off The Beatles received significant exposure via bootlegs, notably Harrison's "Not Guilty" (which he would eventually re-record as a solo track and release on his 1979 self-titled album, George Harrison) and Lennon's manic "What's the New Mary Jane".
Album sequencing, editing concerns, and release
The arrangement of the songs on The Beatles follows patterns and establishes symmetries that have been much analyzed over the years. For example, "Wild Honey Pie" is the fifth song from the beginning of the album and "Honey Pie" is the fifth song from the end. Also, three of the four songs containing animal names in their titles ("Blackbird", "Piggies", and "Rocky Raccoon") are grouped together. In a similar fashion, "Honey Pie" and "Savoy Truffle"(both referring to types of desserts) play back to back towards the end of the album. "Savoy Truffle", the fourth song from the end, contains a reference to "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da," the fourth song from the beginning. In addition, the album's four Harrison compositions are distributed evenly, with one appearing on each of the four sides. Each LP's first track is a McCartney composition marking a return to traditional rock n' roll ("Back in the USSR" and "Birthday"). Each LP concludes with a Lennon composition built around themes of childhood and innocence. ("Julia" and "Good Night.")
The Beatles was the first Beatles' album released by Apple Records, as well as their only original double album. Producer George Martin has said that he was against the idea of a double album at the time and suggested to the group that they reduce the number of songs in order to form a single album featuring their stronger work, but that the band decided against this.[9]
Singles
Although "Hey Jude" was not intended to be included on the album, it was recorded during the White Album sessions and was released as a stand-alone single before the release of "The Beatles." "Hey Jude's" B-side, "Revolution", was an alternate version of the album's "Revolution 1". Lennon had wanted the original version of "Revolution" to be released as a single, but the other three Beatles objected because it was too slow.[7] A new, faster version, with heavily distorted guitar and a high-energy keyboard solo from Nicky Hopkins was recorded, and was relegated to the flip side of "Hey Jude". The resulting release -- "Hey Jude" on side A and "Revolution" on side B -- emerged as the first release on the Beatles' new Apple Records label. It went on to become the best selling of all Beatles' singles in the US.
In the 1970s, the album tracks "Ob-La-Di-Ob-La-Da" and "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" were eventually released as single releases in several countries.
Mono version
The Beatles was the last Beatles' album to be released with a unique, alternate mono mix, albeit one issued only in the UK. Twenty-nine of the album's thirty tracks ("Revolution 9" being the only exception) exist in official alternate mono mixes.
Beatles' albums after The Beatles (except Yellow Submarine in the UK) occasionally had mono pressings in certain countries, but these editions – of Yellow Submarine, Let It Be, and Abbey Road – were in each case mono fold-downs from the regular stereo mixes.
In the U.S., mono records had already been phased out, so the U.S. release of The Beatles was the first Beatles' LP issued in the U.S. - only in stereo.
Sleeve
The album's sleeve was designed by Richard Hamilton, a notable pop artist who had organised a Marcel Duchamp retrospective at the Tate Gallery the previous year. Hamilton's design was in stark contrast to Peter Blake's vivid cover art for Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, and consisted of a plain white sleeve. The band's name was discreetly embossed slightly below the middle of the album's right side, and the cover also featured a unique stamped serial number, "to create," in Hamilton's words, "the ironic situation of a numbered edition of something like five million copies."[citation needed] Indeed, the artist intended the cover to resemble the "look" of conceptual art, an emerging movement in contemporary art at the time. Later vinyl record releases in the U.S. showed the title in grey printed (rather than embossed) letters. Early copies on compact disc were also numbered. Later CD releases rendered the album's title in black or grey.
The album's inside packaging included a poster, the lyrics to the songs, and a set of photographs taken by John Kelley during the autumn of 1968 that have themselves become iconic. This is the only sleeve of a Beatles' studio album not to show the members of the band on the front. In 1988, however, Capitol/EMI released a 2-cassette version of the album that featured the bandmembers' faces on the sleeve in the same arrangement as that of With The Beatles.
Critical assessments and the album's legacy
The Beatles were at the peak of their global influence and visibility in late 1968. "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band," released the previous year, had enjoyed a combination of commercial success, hyperbolic critical acclaim, and immense popular influence that had previously seemed inconceivable for a pop release. Time magazine, for instance, had written in 1967 that "Pepper" constituted a "historic departure in the progress of music -- any music," [10]while Timothy Leary, in a widely quoted assessment of the same period, declared that the band were prototypes of "evolutionary agents sent by God, endowed with mysterious powers to create a new human species." [11] After creating an album that had delivered such critical, commercial, and generational shockwaves, the Beatles faced the inevitable question of what they could possibly do to top it. The next full-length album, whatever it was, was destined to draw considerable scrutiny. The intervening release of "Magical Mystery Tour" notwithstanding, "The Beatles" represented the group's first major musical statement since "Pepper," and thus was a highly anticipated event for both the mainstream press and the youth-oriented counterculture movement with which the band had by this time become strongly associated. Expectations, to say the least, were high. The reviews were mixed.
- Tony Palmer, in The Observer, wrote shortly after the album's release: "If there is still any doubt that Lennon and McCartney are the greatest songwriters since Schubert, then . . . [the album The Beatles] . . . should surely see the last vestiges of cultural snobbery and bourgeois prejudice swept away in a deluge of joyful music making. . . ."[12]
- Richard Goldstein, writing in The New York Times on December 8, 1968, described the album as a "major success." [13]
- Another review in The New York Times, this one by Nik Cohn, considered the album "boring beyond belief" and described "more than half the songs" as "profound mediocrities." [14]
- Alan Smith, in an NME review entitled "The Brilliant, the Bad, and the Ugly," derided "Revolution #9" as a "pretentious" example of "idiot immaturity" and, in the following sentence, assigned the benediction "God Bless You, Beatles!" to "most of the rest" of the album.[15]
Smith's review established a pattern that has endured for much of the critical assessment that followed. Many of the reviews since 1968 -- and The Beatles surely ranks among the most-reviewed releases in rock history -- have tempered rapturous enthusiasm with a consistent note of skepticism about the album's seemingly undisciplined structure and perceived excesses. Unlike albums like Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and Revolver, The Beatles is a release that, four decades on, tends to provoke heated discussions of such topics as continuity, style, and integrity.
- The New Rolling Stone Album Guide praises the album but maintains that it has "loads of self-indulgent filler," identifying "Revolution #9" in particular as "justly maligned," and suggests that listeners in the CD era, who can program digital players to skip over unwanted tracks, may have an advantage over the album's original audience. [16]
Some contemporary critics say the album's inclusion of supposedly extraneous material is a part of its appeal. The music.com review contends that:
- "Each song on the sprawling double album The Beatles is an entity to itself, as the band touches on anything and everything they can. This makes for a frustratingly scattershot record or a singularly gripping musical experience, depending on your view, but what makes the White Album interesting is its mess." [17]
One important current trend in critical assessments of the album is to draw parallels between the band's disintegrating ensemble and the chaotic events of the tumultuous year in which The Beatles was created, 1968. Along these lines, Slant Magazine observed that:
- "(The album) reveals the popping seams of a band that had the pressure of an entire fissuring generational/political gap on its back. Maybe it's because it shows the Beatles at the point where even their music couldn't hide the underlying tensions between John, Paul, George, and Ringo, or maybe because it was (coincidentally?) released at the tail end of a year anyone could agree was the embittered honeymoon's end for the Love Generation, the year when, to borrow from a famous Yeats poem, the center decidedly could not hold ... for whatever reason, The Beatles is still one of the few albums by the Fab Four that resists reflexive canonization, which, along with society's continued fragmentation, keeps the album fresh and surprising." [18]
Cultural responses
Ian McDonald, in his book "Revolution in the Head," argues that The Beatles was the album in which the band's cryptic messages to its fan base became not merely vague but intentionally and perhaps dangerously open-ended, citing oblique passages in songs like "Glass Onion" (e.g., "the walrus was Paul") and "Piggies" ("what they need's a damn good whacking"). These pronouncements, and many others on the album, came to attract extraordinary popular interest at a time when more of the world's youth were using drugs recreationally and looking for spiritual, political, and strategic advice from The Beatles. Steve Turner, too, in his book "A Hard Day's Write," maintains that, with this album, "The Beatles had perhaps laid themselves open to misinterpretation by mixing up the languages of poetry and nonsense." [19] Bob Dylan's songs had been similarly mined for hidden meanings, but the massive countercultural analysis (or perhaps overanalysis) of The Beatles surpassed anything that had gone before. [20]
The search for hidden meanings within the songs reached its low point when cult leader Charles Manson used the record, and generous helpings of hallucinogens, to persuade members of his "family" that the album was in fact an apocalyptic message predicting a prolonged race war and justifying the murder of wealthy people. (See Helter Skelter (Manson scenario).) The album's strange association with a high-profile mass murder was one of many factors that helped to deepen the accelerating divide between those who were profoundly skeptical of the "youth culture" movement that had unfolded in the middle and late 1960s in England, the United States, and elsewhere, and those who admired the openness and spontaneity of that movement.
Even Lennon's seemingly direct engagement with the tumultuous political issues of 1968 in "Revolution 1" carried a nuanced obliqueness, and ended up sending messages the author may not have intended. In the album's version of the song, Lennon advises those who "talk about destruction" to "count me out." As McDonald notes, however, Lennon then follows the sung word "out" with the spoken word "in." At the time of the album's release -- which followed, chronologically, the up-tempo single version of the song, "Revolution," in which Lennon definitely wanted to be counted "out" -- that single word "in" was taken by many on the radical left as Lennon's acknowledgment, after considered thought, that violence in the pursuit of political aims was indeed justified in some cases. At a time of increasing unrest in the streets and campuses of Paris and Berkeley, the album's (seemingly more equivocal) lyrics seemed to many to mark a reversal of Lennon's position on the question, which was hotly debated during this period.[20]
Sales
The album was a major commercial success, spending a total of eight weeks at #1 in the UK (the first week being that of December 7, 1968), [21] and nine weeks at #1 in the United States (the first week being that of December 28, 1968). [22] Total US sales are estimated at over 19 million copies. [23] Excluding compilations, "The Beatles" has outsold all other Beatles album releases except "Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Heart's Club Band" and "Abbey Road," according to United World Chart.[24]
Re-issues
Two re-issues in 1978 (one by Capitol Records, the other by Parlophone) saw the album pressed on white vinyl, completing the look of the "white" album. In 1985, EMI Electrola released a DMM (direct metal mastered) white vinyl pressing of the album in Germany, which was imported to the United States in large numbers. Another popular white vinyl pressing was manufactured in France. The 1978 Parlophone white vinyl export pressing and the German DMM pressing are widely considered the best-sounding versions of the album.[citation needed] This is due to the use of the famed Neumann lathe on the 1978 export pressing and the use of the DMM process on the 1985 pressing.
In 1998, a 30th Anniversary reissue of the album was released on a 2-disc compact disc version, which was imported from the United Kingdom. The packaging of this release is virtually identical to its vinyl counterpart. It has the same pure white gatefold cover, complete with the title "The BEATLES" in a slightly raised, embossed graphic at a slight angle. There is also the now-classic sequentially numbered signification on the front of this cover, thus making this one a real limited edition. The interior to this cover features the song titles on the left-hand side, and the four black-and-white photos of the group members on the right. This version of the cover even accurately mimics the original British vinyl pressing from 1968, with the openings for the discs at the top rather than the sides. There are miniatures of the 4 full-colour glossy portrait photos included, as well as an exact replica of the poster with the photo collage on one side, and the album's complete song lyrics on the opposite side. The CDs are housed in black sleeves, which were also used for the original British album.
Influences, parodies and tributes
The album's cover, though stark and minimalistic, has been highly influential. Goth Rock band The Damned released The Black Album in 1980, and is considered the first album to draw influence from the cover, as well as the first band to use the term "Black Album". The 1984 Rob Reiner 'rockumentary' Spinal Tap also pays homage with their own 'Black Album', which is juxtaposed to the original by A&R staff Bobbi Fleckman, who notes in a debate about appropriate packaging material: 'What about the White album? There's was nothing on that cover'. The band are generally less enthusiastic, referring to it variously as 'a black mirror', 'none more black' and 'death'. In the 1990s, both Prince and Metallica released self-titled albums with their names printed against mostly plain black covers, and are both informally referred to as "The Black Album". In 2003, rapper Jay-Z released an album officially called The Black Album. Two compilations of Beatles material, released in 1973 as 1962–1966 and 1967–1970, are often referred to as "The Red Album" and "The Blue Album" respectively, in reference to their colour scheme. Both of Weezer's self-titled albums borrow from this idea as well and fans refer to them respectively as "The Blue Album" (1994) and "The Green Album" (2001). 311's self-titled release from 1995 is often referred to as "The Blue Album", and The Dells' 1973 self-titled album is often known as "The Brown Album", as is The Band's 1969 self-titled album.
Bob and Tom's first comedy album, The White Album, released Christmas 1986, borrows its name from the Beatles' album, though the cover does not - rather, it features cartoon caricature portraits of the show's titular stars Bob Kevoian and Tom Griswold. This is the first of two Bob and Tom compilations to be named after or parody Beatles' albums (the other being their second release, Shabbey Road.) Both albums are out-of-print.
In 1979, the writer Joan Didion published a collection of essays in a volume entitled The White Album.
In 1982, Canadian comedians Bob and Doug McKenzie released their "Great White North" album, which Bob introduced as the "Great White Album."
Washington based band Sunny Day Real Estate released an album with an entirely pink cover, which became to be known as The Pink Album.
They Might Be Giants' 1986 self-titled debut album is referred to as The Pink Album for the colour of the record's centre label (and later the colour of the CD label), as well as to avoid confusion with the band's name and their later song "They Might Be Giants."
In 1987, Saturday Night Live comedian Dennis Miller released his first comedy album, entitled The Off-White Album, recorded live at George Washington University, featuring a likewise coloured album cover.
Electronica duo Orbital's first two albums are both titled Orbital and known colloquially as the "Green Album" (1991) and the "Brown Album" (1993), whilst their 2004 release has the formal title Blue Album.
In 1995, the Australian comedy duo Martin/Molloy released a double CD officially called The Brown Album, and in 1997 the band Primus released a CD with the same title.
In 1998, an album of new songs from The Simpsons, titled The Yellow Album, was released. The album's cover was a parody of the cover of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, which had already been done as a couch gag for an episode in the series.
In 2000, comedian Lewis Black released an album titled The White Album, with similar cover art, down to the capitalisation scheme of "Lewis BLACK".
In 2004, Brian Burton (also known as Danger Mouse) released The Grey Album, an unauthorised mashup remix album that was later distributed on the Internet, using samples from The White Album against the a cappella version of Jay-Z's Black Album. EMI and Apple sent Brian Burton cease and desist letters, which prevented official distribution of The Grey Album.
Also in 2004, Australian alternative band TISM released a 2 DVD/1 CD pack called The White Albun. An intentional misspelling of The White Album, its packaging was a white box with 'TISM' embossed on the front. At the end of the song "Cerebral Knievel" there is a short parody of "Revolution 9".
In 2006, Brian Molko of Placebo sings "You were Mother Nature's son" in the song "Song to Say Goodbye", which is a reference to the song "Mother Nature's Son" from the White Album.
Additionally, in 2007 The Hives released The Black and White Album
Later covers and coverage
- During a concert on October 31 1994, Phish played all the songs from The Beatles (except "Good Night") as one of the band's "Halloween musical costume" extravaganzas. The show has been released in its entirety as Live Phish Volume 13.
- In December 2005, the BBC show One World broadcast a two-hour retrospective on The White Album. Narrated by former Beatles' co-producer Chris Thomas - who went on to produce such luminaries as Pink Floyd, Elton John, Sex Pistols, Roxy Music, and Brian Eno - the broadcast features reworkings of songs from The Beatles from a large and diverse roster of independent artists such as Bardo Pond, Deerhoof, Toy, and Bedouin Soundclash.
Track listing
All songs credited to Lennon/McCartney, except where noted.
Side one
- "Back in the U.S.S.R." – 2:43
- "Dear Prudence" – 3:56
- "Glass Onion" – 2:17
- "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da" – 3:08
- "Wild Honey Pie" – 0:52
- "The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill" – 3:13
- "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" (George Harrison) – 4:45
- "Happiness Is a Warm Gun" – 2:43
Side two
- "Martha My Dear" – 2:28
- "I'm So Tired" – 2:03
- "Blackbird" – 2:18
- "Piggies" (Harrison) – 2:04
- "Rocky Raccoon" – 3:32
- "Don't Pass Me By" (Ringo Starr) – 3:50
- "Why Don't We Do It in the Road?" – 1:40
- "I Will" – 1:45
- "Julia" – 2:54
Side three
- "Birthday" – 2:42
- "Yer Blues" – 4:00
- "Mother Nature's Son" – 2:47
- "Everybody's Got Something to Hide Except Me and My Monkey" – 2:24
- "Sexy Sadie" – 3:15
- "Helter Skelter" – 4:29
- "Long, Long, Long" (Harrison) – 3:03
Side four
- "Revolution 1" – 4:15
- "Honey Pie" – 2:40
- "Savoy Truffle" (Harrison) – 2:54
- "Cry Baby Cry" – 3:02
- "Revolution 9" – 8:13
- "Good Night" – 3:11
Personnel
- John Lennon: vocals, rhythm guitar, piano, handclaps, tape loops, sound effects, harmonium, harmonica
- Paul McCartney: vocals, bass guitar, piano, Hammond organ, keyboards, guitars, handclaps, tape loops
- George Harrison: lead guitar, handclaps, tape loops
- Ringo Starr: drums, percussion, handclaps, tape loops
- George Martin: keyboards, orchestral arrangements, production
- Eric Clapton: lead guitar on While My Guitar Gently Weeps
- Yoko Ono: vocals and tapes
- Maureen Starkey: vocals
- Pattie Harrison: vocals
- Mal Evans: handclapping, percussion
- Chris Thomas: keyboards and production
- The Mike Sammes Singers: vocals
Release history
Country | Date | Label | Format | Catalog |
---|---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | November 22 1968 | Apple Records | mono double LP | PMC 7067-8 |
stereo double LP | PCS 7067-8 | |||
United States | November 25 1968 | Apple, Capitol Records | double LP | SWBO 101 |
Worldwide reissue | July 20 1987 | Apple, Parlophone, EMI | double CD | CDP 7 46443-4 2 |
Japan | March 11 1998 | Toshiba-EMI | double CD | TOCP 51119-20 |
Japan | January 21 2004 | Toshiba-EMI | remastered LP | TOJP 60139-40 |
See also
- Paul is dead
- Karlheinz Stockhausen
- Yoko Ono
- Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
- Revolution 9
- Charles Manson
- The Grey Album
- Ken Mansfield
Notes
- ^ "The 100 Greatest British Albums Ever". Q. Retrieved 2007-11-20.
- ^ "2001 VH1 Cable Music Channel All Time Album Top 100". VH1. Retrieved 2007-11-19.
- ^ "The All-Time 100 Albums". Time. Retrieved 2007-11-20.
- ^ "The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2007-11-19.
- ^ a b c d e Lewisohn, Mark (1988). The Beatles Recording Sessions. New York: Harmony Books. ISBN 0-517-57066-1.
- ^ "The White Album @ Playhouse". BBC.
- ^ a b c d e f g h The Beatles Anthology (1995)
- ^ "Each song on the sprawling double album The Beatles is an entity to itself, as the band touches on anything and everything they can. This makes for a frustratingly scattershot record or a singularly gripping musical experience, depending on your view, but what makes the White Album interesting is its mess." http://www.music.com/release/the_beatles/1/
- ^ The Beatles Anthology DVD features an interview with Martin confirming this discussion.
- ^ Time magazine, September 27, 1967, page 128
- ^ Internet Movie Database, accessed 1/2/08. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0495276/bio
- ^ Norman, Phillip (1981). "Shout!". Fireside Press.
- ^ New York Times, December 8, 1968
- ^ "A Briton Blasts the Beatles," New York Times, December 15, 1968
- ^ New Musical Express, November 9, 1968
- ^ Brackett, Nathan (2004). The New Rolling Stone Album Guide. Simon and Schuster.
- ^ "White ALbum Review". Retrieved 2007-10-08.
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Slant Magazine review".
- ^ Turner, Steve (1996). A Hard Day's Write. London: Little Brown.
- ^ a b MacDonald, Ian (2005). Revolution in the Head: The Beatles' Records and the Sixties.
- ^ ttp://www.jpgr.co.uk/pcs7067.html
- ^ Those Were the Days, accessed 1/2/08, http://www.440.com/twtd/archives/dec28.html
- ^ Billboard Magazine
- ^ United World Chart
External links
- Beatle Blue White Album
- Beatle Blue White Album Uncut
- The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time
- A transcription and analysis of sounds and audible phrases in "Revolution 9"
- Further information on the album, including photographs of the packaging
- Dec. 20, 1968: Minneapolis Star review of the album
- Beatles comments on each song
- The Beatles ⚠ "
mbid
" is missing! at MusicBrainz