As an unapologetic Beatles Geek, stuff like this goes through my brain constantly. |
Fifty Years of The White Album My first taste was during a snowball fight on my home street during the blizzard of â69. January or February I believe it was. Before the moon landing, before Woodstock, before the New York Mets became the Amazinâs. We were posted on one side of the street in front of âThe New House On the Blockâ (actually 6 years old at this point), and fighting against the guys on the other side of the street. I donât know who was on what team, or even if there were actually designated teams. But I do remember throwing snowballs alongside Kevin, traditionally my âbest friendâ, although the separation by one grade in school and my lack of participation in organized sports made this more a role of my own imagining. (Kevin played pretty much every sport available.) But we did share one thing in common. And it came out once again with his singing an odd-sounding song: âHappy ever after in the marketplace.â âWhat is that song.â âItâs from the new Beatlesâ album. My sisterâs boyfriend brought it over. âHappy ever after in the market place,ââ he continued. Repeatedly. Our common bond was being Beatles fans. Oddly enough, my curiosity did not lead me to ask further questions about this new album. In all honesty, the idea that the Beatles still put out ânew albumsâ wasnât on my radar. Yes, I bought the âHey Judeâ 45 the previous summer. And I did overplay my copy of âMagical Mystery Tourâ. But I remained ignorant of their actual progress as an ongoing musical entity. I just saved my allowance and bought a record if a song struck me. And right now, this âHappy ever afterâŚâ crap wasnât doing it for me. It was shortly after this that my brother Fred started telling me about this âdouble albumâ that the Beatles had put out. He told me about all these wonderful songs that it contained. I knew all about it before I ever heard a note. Several of the songs appeared in a fake book I purchased from my then guitar teacher. I tried teaching myself some of the songs from the written page (I had a good foundation in reading music thanks to that same guitar teacher and a guy named Mel Bay), but none of that prepared me for the sonic experience of finally hearing the album byâŚThem! It was sometime in the spring of 1970 that my ears finally got to open that particular box of candy. I informed my brother Fred that I saw it on sale for the unheard of low price of $4.44 at Kleinâs Department Store. Not having the money myself, I knew heâd take the bait. Shortly thereafter, the album entered the our home. And even though it was my brotherâs, the fact that it was in the house meant I had legal access to it. (Sorry, Fred!) I vaguely remember the first complete listening. I do remember it was a nice Saturday morning in Spring. I was cranking it on the living room stereo. The one with the 20 pound tone arm that destroyed all things vinyl. What stands out is hearing âHelter Skelterâ for the first time. The fade out and back in kind of freaked me out, along with Ringoâs ââŚblistersâŚâ exclamation. (For the longest time I thought it was John.) I donât remember hearing âRevolution 9â for the first time, but Iâm sure I absolutely hated it. I did for a long time thereafter. I played it constantly. I prayed for rain every day that summer, because rain meant Mom wouldnât make me go to the community pool, and Iâd get to stay inside. Fred was working during the day, so the double disc was mine if only for the one hour, thirty-three minutes and thirty-five seconds it took to play, not counting flipping from side 1 to side two, changing discs, and then flipping from side three to side 4. (Those of you who grew up in the digital age will never know the struggle!) And a complete listening was required. Listening to the White Album is like watching a favorite movie. You canât come in or leave in the middle. I heard lots of joy in this record. The laughing and merriment on âOb-La-Di, Ob-La-Daâ, the silliness of âBungalow Billâ, the happy chatter at the beginning of âRevolution 1â. I heard experimentation. The weirdness of âWild Honey Pieâ, the spookiness of that untitled track after âCry Baby Cryâ, and I even got to appreciate âRevolution 9â. I had this feeling of âthey had a lot of fun making this record. You can just hear it. You can FEEL it!â The more I listened, the more I fell in love with the music. Friends and I discussed and argued. What was âRevolution 9â âaboutâ? Why does John say âdonât you know that you can count me outâŚinâ, but on the fast version itâs merely ââŚcount me outâ? Whoâs actually singing what? It had to be John singing âWhy Donât We Do It in the Road?â because Paul would never sing something like that. No, Ed, thatâs NOT little kids singing the âla la laâsâ on âOb-La-DiâŚâ, itâs the Beatles themselves. We went back and forth on that one for a long time. (I was right, Ed. Sorry.) Why is Eric Clapton thanked in the credits? Who is that awful woman singing on âBungalow Billâ? And of course I was curious as to how John and Paul worked as a duo. My guitar teacher at the time explained that John wrote the words and Paul wrote the music. (He was a talented musician and teacher, but somewhat old school, and I guess from that perspective all songwriting duos worked as âlyricist and composerâ. At the time, I had no reason to think otherwise.) Eventually, I bought my own copy. I had to. Fred got married, moved out, and took his records with him. I needed that music. Listening to it became a regular ritual. I went through many copies, including a Capitol label pressing, white vinyl, Mobile Fidelity, the eventual CD release, and of course I got the 50th anniversary edition for Christmas. And I still listen. In its entirety. And those years of listening along with learning the groupâs story and knowing the tension within the band at this time, and all writing and working separately andâŚwell, you can get all that stuff somewhere elseâŚI realize there is a story here. The four sides fit together like the four movements of a symphony, with the Beatles themselves (mainly John and Paul) trying to outdo each other. Side 1 Paul starts us off strong. âBack in the U.S.S.R.â is a rocker, with nice Beach Boys harmony and some fine guitar playing from George and drumming from Ringo. (Oops! I think thatâs Paul on almost everything.) John counters with âDear Prudenceâ (nice Travis picking, John), then takes us through the past. âGlass Onionâ re-introduces us to Strawberry Fields, Lady Madonna and the Walrus. Paul gets weird (âWild Honey Pieâ), John gets weird (âThe Continuing Story of Bungalow Billâ), and GeorgeâŚbrings in Eric Clapton?! âWhile My Guitar Gently Weepsâ is probably the best thing George has written up to this point in his career as a Beatle. And he doesnât trust the guitar solo to anyone in the band, not even himself. Heâs topped his bandmates, but Johnâs not done. âHappiness is a Warm Gunâ takes us through hobnail boots, mother superiors and firearms, using distorted guitar, weird time changes, and finally bringing us into a simple do-wop style. John gets in the last word and gives us some nice simple rock and roll. Side 2 Paul starts us off again. âMartha My Dearâ, a nice song about a boy and his dog. Johnâs response? âIâm So Tiredâ. Guitars. Electric guitars. Two, with a bass and drums. Just like when they started out. Mumbling by John, and Paul goes all âYesterdayâ on us with an acoustic guitar number. No string quartet on âBlackbird, however. Just a foot tap and a (duh!) bird. âYou want animals?â asks George. Call in the âPiggiesâ. A harpsichord, and they sound very United Kingdom here. We never heard the British-ness in âYeah, yeah, yeahâ. âThey donât sound English when they sing.â âPiggiesâ could almost be a Kinks song. What does Paul do? Pulls a Zimmerman. His Dylan on âRocky Raccoon (another animal?!) is nothing like his Little Richard on a song like âIâm Downâ. And more acoustic guitar, honky tonk piano, and hey! When was the last time we heard John play harmonica? We havenât heard from John for the last three songs, so the next one has to beâŚRingo? With a solo writing credit? âDonât Pass Me Byâ surprises everyone. Love the fiddle. But still no John. Paul does raunch (âWhy Donât We Do It In the Roadâ) and ballad (âI Willâ). Where is Mr. Lennon? Once again John closes the side with his own solo acoustic number. âJuliaâ evokes his mother, his soon-to-be second wife (âocean childâ) and proves that he can easy listen with Macca any day of the week. Once again, the last word goes to Beatle John. Side 3 Drums, a nice electric guitar riff, and itâs apparently somebodyâs âBirthdayâ. A fun song. How could there be tension in this band? It sounds like all four Fabs are present, but this has Paul written all over it. John counters with âYer Bluesâ. A blues? Thatâs the Stonesâ domain. More of that good old two guitar, bass and drum thingy. And a nod to Dylan in the lyrics. And just as Paul answered âIâm So Tiredâ with an acoustic guitar, he does the same again with âMother Natureâs Sonâ. And John volleyâs back with âEverybodyâs Got Something To Hide Except Me and My Monkeyâ. And John continues with âSexy Sadieâ. But itâs not really about Sadie. The Maharishi left John very disillusioned and he says it here without saying it. And acoustic-boy Macca gives us âHelter Skelterâ. Again, you can look elsewhere for all the controversy surrounding this song. The big news here is that after Ringo complains about his blisters, George does something heâs never done before. âLong, Long, Longâ closes the side of an album. Heâs opened an album side (âWithin You, Without Youâ, âHere Comes the Sunâ), and heâs even opened an album (âTaxmanâ). But the last song on the side of a Beatles album always seems to be a big final statement. And more often than not that spot seems reserved for John. How George got in I donât know. But weâre coming in for one last round of âGive-âEm-Everything-Weâve-Gotâ. Side 4 Two Revolutions here. One at the beginning, one almost at the end. Add the single and that makes three. The studio chatter at the beginning of âRevolution 1â again gives the impression of four musicians really getting along in the creation of their art. The song is a shock to those of us who were used to the fast version backing âHey Judeâ in the fall of 1968. And then Paul gives us one of his âgranny songsâ (Johnâs words). âHoney Pieâ even has one of those opening verses that was the fashion about thirty or forty years earlier. And George gives us one last hurrah. âSavoy Truffleâ once again gives a nod to Mr. Clapton (whose love of sweets inspired this song), and George even references one of Paulâs earlier contributions to this collection. And abrupt ending and âCry Baby Cryâ jumps in with no introduction. John in full force. A nice little ditty, with some fine bass playing, and an untitled acoustic coda by Paul. Is it supposed to be the end of âCry Baby Cryâ or the beginning of⌠âRevolution 9â. The low point of the album. John fought to get it on the record. Somehow he won. Why is this track here. Years of repeated listening has revealed this to be absolutely necessary to the collection. All the back and forth of the previous 28 songs means nothing unless John gets in the last dig. And he digs deep. Is it a big âFuck you, the Beatles is my band and Iâll do what I wantâ? Or is it just a joke before John really has the last word? âGood Nightâ. Since the credit reads âLennon & McCartneyâ and Ringo is singing, it seems like anybodyâs guess who actually wrote it. Time has revealed that it is John who has the last word on this unique, bizarre collection. The Beatles are, after all, Johnâs band, and he ends with no original Beatle in sight. An orchestra and vocal by the last member to join. âGood night, everybody, everywhere. Good night.â |