tepista wrote:the pre-facial hair stuff was best, nerds.
I'm with Tep.
With the Beatles
Please Please Me
Revolver
Hard Day's Night
Rubber Soul
White Album
MMT
Pepper
Help!
Beatles For Sale
Abbey Road
Let it Be
I'm very interested in both of your reasoning. I love that stuff too, but it's rare-ish to hear this opinion.
For a start — The Beatles were genuinely peerless over those first albums. No one in popular music sounded like they did, wrote songs like they did or sung like they did. WtB and PPM packaged the soul of those great early Motown singles alongside Everly harmonies, Orbison's sense of drama, rockabilly guitars, and impressive stylistic depth (Ask My Why's Latin-esque stuff, Don't Bother Me's cha-cha) into great uptempo rock and roll. Really well written material (IIRC, most songs over the first few albums were designed to be possible singles), especially when you put it up against the Stones or the Kinks' early recordings.
The first couple of albums capture a shit hot live band with serious songwriting chops and something to prove, which is probably why they're my favourites.
tepista wrote:the pre-facial hair stuff was best, nerds.
I'm with Tep.
With the Beatles
Please Please Me
Revolver
Hard Day's Night
Rubber Soul
White Album
MMT
Pepper
Help!
Beatles For Sale
Abbey Road
Let it Be
I'm very interested in both of your reasoning. I love that stuff too, but it's rare-ish to hear this opinion.
For a start — The Beatles were genuinely peerless over those first albums. No one in popular music sounded like they did, wrote songs like they did or sung like they did. WtB and PPM packaged the soul of those great early Motown singles alongside Everly harmonies, Orbison's sense of drama, rockabilly guitars, and impressive stylistic depth (Ask My Why's Latin-esque stuff, Don't Bother Me's cha-cha) into great uptempo rock and roll. Really well written material (IIRC, most songs over the first few albums were designed to be possible singles), especially when you put it up against the Stones or the Kinks' early recordings.
The first couple of albums capture a shit hot live band with serious songwriting chops and something to prove, which is probably why they're my favourites.
Because Rock and Roll. Because 1-2-3-4. Because she was just 17. You know what I mean? Because we're rockin in 2x2. I like Strawberry Fields, but I like You Can't Do That better. Same reason Paul Revere & the Raiders are better than Pink Floyd. It's gotta be rock n roll music if you wanna dance with me.
We reach the parts other combos cannot reach
We beach the beachheads other armies cannot beach
We speak the tongues other mouths cannot speak
I'm reading this book about Revolver, so I gave it a couple spins again. "Tomorrow Never Knows" is still my favourite Beatles song by a far stretch and "Love You To" has surprisingly improved in my estimation. But I just can't warm to "Got To Get You Into My Life." Those horns just don't work with the Beatles. It's jarring and not in a way that makes the song more appealing.
"Grab some wood, bub.'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
I'm reading this book about Revolver, so I gave it a couple spins again. "Tomorrow Never Knows" is still my favourite Beatles song by a far stretch and "Love You To" has surprisingly improved in my estimation. But I just can't warm to "Got To Get You Into My Life." Those horns just don't work with the Beatles. It's jarring and not in a way that makes the song more appealing.
*grumble grumble grumble*
”INDER LOCK THE THE KISS THREAD IVE REALISED IM A PRZE IDOOT” - Thomas Jefferson
I'm reading this book about Revolver, so I gave it a couple spins again. "Tomorrow Never Knows" is still my favourite Beatles song by a far stretch and "Love You To" has surprisingly improved in my estimation. But I just can't warm to "Got To Get You Into My Life." Those horns just don't work with the Beatles. It's jarring and not in a way that makes the song more appealing.
I prefer the EW&F version.
Got a Rake? Sure!
IMCT: Inane Middle-Class Twats - Dr. M
" *sigh* it's right when they throw the penis pump out the window." -Hoy
I'm reading this book about Revolver, so I gave it a couple spins again. "Tomorrow Never Knows" is still my favourite Beatles song by a far stretch and "Love You To" has surprisingly improved in my estimation. But I just can't warm to "Got To Get You Into My Life." Those horns just don't work with the Beatles. It's jarring and not in a way that makes the song more appealing.
I prefer the EW&F version.
I won't say I like it exactly—there's a show biz slick to it—but it is better.
"Grab some wood, bub.'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
I'm reading this book about Revolver, so I gave it a couple spins again. "Tomorrow Never Knows" is still my favourite Beatles song by a far stretch and "Love You To" has surprisingly improved in my estimation. But I just can't warm to "Got To Get You Into My Life." Those horns just don't work with the Beatles. It's jarring and not in a way that makes the song more appealing.
Which book?
Love You To is one of those songs I usually skip, but always blows me away when it occasionally sneaks in. The fuzz/drone bits coming in and out are fantastic.
I'm reading this book about Revolver, so I gave it a couple spins again. "Tomorrow Never Knows" is still my favourite Beatles song by a far stretch and "Love You To" has surprisingly improved in my estimation. But I just can't warm to "Got To Get You Into My Life." Those horns just don't work with the Beatles. It's jarring and not in a way that makes the song more appealing.
Which book?
Love You To is one of those songs I usually skip, but always blows me away when it occasionally sneaks in. The fuzz/drone bits coming in and out are fantastic.
It's kind of proctological and not as much social history as I had hoped, but it's a decent account.
"Grab some wood, bub.'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
I knew that they were putting out a new and remastered (already?) edition, but I didn't know it'd be six discs. I probably have all the extras via all those boots, but still, hot diggity! So many versions of "Within You Without You" to skip over …
"Grab some wood, bub.'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft