A review of the new Beatles disc, LOVE , with a short excerpt from one of the tracks.
I admit, my first reaction upon hearing about this disc was pretty cynical: There they go, repackaging the old material, yet again, to squeeze a few more bucks out of fans who already own all the original Beatles discs.Thankfully, a friend emailed me to say that the disc is great, so I requested it as a Christmas present.
And he s right: it s well worth the money.
LOVE was conceived by George Harrison and Canadian Guy Laliberté (the founder of the ) before Harrison s death. They asked George Martin to create a soundscape of around one and a half hour s length using any sound [he] needed from the original Beatles multi-track recordings (from George Martin s liner notes).
George asked his son Giles to work on the project with him. Giles came up with the breakthrough idea: he combined the drum beat and bass from Tomorrow Never Knows with the music and vocals of Within You Without You .
It works brilliantly, and it opened everyone s eyes to the creative potential of the project.
Many of the tracks are fundamentally unchanged from the familiar performances we ve heard hundreds of times before. For example, Eleanor Rigby , Something and Come Together are presented in their entirety.
Each track is given a new introduction, however, or an excerpt from another song is tacked on at the end to form a bridge to the next track.
The transition pieces make terrific use of Ringo s drums. Ringo doesn t get much credit for his contribution to the Beatles: it s hard to shine when you perform in the immense shadow cast by John Lennon and Paul McCartney.
But Ringo had to be creative. When Lennon and McCartney were going where no songwriter had gone before — particularly on the psychedelic material — Ringo had to invent a role for the drums.
During the intro to Get Back , at the end of Strawberry Fields Forever , and throughout Within You Without You / Tomorrow Never Knows , Ringo s drums constitute the core track around which George and Giles Martin build their experiments.
George and Giles actually managed to improve on some of the original performances by spicing them up with snippets of other songs. Lady Madonna is a good example: the original song is given a harder edge by inserting a different, two-part solo. I decided to make an excerpt available for you to download, because the best way to understand the concept of this disc is to hear it with your own ears.
This is Lady Madonna like you ve never heard it before. (Click on the link and wait a few seconds. If the song doesn t begin to play automatically, you re missing a plug-in and you ll have to click on the download link.
N.B. For additional amusement, look for the little esnips DJ and click on that icon.
You ll hear the Beatles as channelled through the Chipmunks after several cups of espresso. I have no explanation for it, but it s certainly amusing!)
Two songs are, in effect, brand new Beatles material.
The first I ve already mentioned: Within You Without You / Tomorrow Never Knows . The second is While My Guitar Gently Weeps . Beatles devotees may have heard George Harrison s demo recording on acoustic guitar, which was made available on Anthology 3.
For LOVE, George Martin wrote an unobtrusive string accompaniment for the demo version: just right to fill out the song. It is a beautiful tribute to George Harrison whose song-writing talents were underappreciated until after the Beatles had disbanded.
George s songwriting is prominent on this disc.
There are sixteen songs written by John Lennon (including short bridge excerpts), eleven by Paul McCartney, six by George Harrison, and one by Ringo ( Octopus s Garden ). Thus George and John are disproportionately represented on the disc vis-à-vis Paul.
Other highlights: Get Back / Glass Onion ; Drive My Car / What You re Doing ; Being For the Benefit of Mr.
Kite / I Want You / Helter Skelter ; and the new ending of Strawberry Fields Forever . In short, there s plenty of fresh material here to warrant the price of the disc.
g. Yesterday , with a Blackbird excerpt for its introduction). No doubt the material was chosen with the Cirque du Soleil performance uppermost in mind.
Hey Jude certainly benefits by truncating the na na na na, na na na na portion of the song, and rearranging a section of it for variety s sake.
Only the Beatles could pull that off.
commented on the I posted of Elvis Costello s Radio, Radio:
I remember, because I graduated from high school in 1981. Radio, Radio was made in 1979 — pre (launched Aug. 1, 1981).
There are two early videos that stand out in my mind. First up, Queen s Bohemian Rhapsody, made way back in 1975. It must have been years later that I saw it for the first time.
According to , this video has been widely hailed as the first true pop promo, launching the MTV age .
Pretty low tech to be cutting edge! But remember, videos were edited by hand back then … never mind computer generated images.
The other video that stands out in my memory is Sting and the Police performing Every Breath You Take. The images here fit the brooding music and sinister lyrics perfectly. But we ve jumped all the way to 1983 and the MTV era.
gives a special nod to Peter Gabriel s Sledgehammer (1986): to this day, considered one of the most important and influential music videos ever created … the most-played video in [MTV] s history .
Wikipedia adds, Most of Gabriel s videos employ sophisticated animation and other cutting edge special effects, and he has long been considered one of the music video s foremeost innovators . This shouldn t come as a surprise to anyone who was familiar with the theatricality of Genesis when Peter Gabriel led the band.
In case it has escaped anyone s notice, I m partial to British acts.
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