Harrison kicking ass:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T7qpfGVUd8c
I love this song, but I never understood the significance of some of it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cqOKvonLrH8
Harrison kicking ass:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T7qpfGVUd8c
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I do not think it was meant to be understood.
You need to go see Across the Universe, just to see Bono's rendition of this song in the movie, it is great.
Aother reason to like Rubber Soul, as well as Dear Prudence, which is another great Lennon song, which he wrote in 30 mins while in India about Mia Farrow's sister.
Yea I saw those; the voices were really over the top! When I was like in 1st or 2nd grade, one of my friends' aunt had the Beatles action figures. We snuck them out to play once and this stupid kid next door threw the Ringo doll over a fence; I had to kick his ass!!
I really want to see that movie.
Dear Prudence was in the White Album, though.
I hope you castrated him for that.
I did hurt him bad. But now I feel bad because that poor lady had saved those dolls for a long time, and we just used them to marry our Barbie's to!
Those things are probably worth a mint.
Nope...Rubber Soul...look it up.
Uh, Jim....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Beatles_(album)
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
I mean, come on, the song BEGINS with the airplane sound from "Back in the U.S.S.R"...
Rubber Soul
Sgt. Pepper
Revolver
Abbey Road
Incidentally, if you're going to argue what track was on what album, you'd probably better specify US or UK release. The UK albums always had more/different tracks.
Billboard's Top 100 albums, all time, contains the following Beatles albums:
01 - The Beatles - Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
03 - The Beatles - Revolver
05 - The Beatles - Rubber Soul
10 - The Beatles - The White Album
14 - The Beatles - Abbey Road
39 - The Beatles - Please Please Me
59 - The Beatles - Meet The Beatles
86 - The Beatles - Let It Be
Also appearing:
22 - John Lennon -Plastic Ono Band
76 - John Lennon - Imagine
1.Revolver
2.White Album
3.Abbey Road
4.Rubber Soul
5.Sgt. Pepper
I have the White Album right here.
Dear Prudence is the second song on the first cd, right after Back in the USSR.
I don't know how else to prove it to you.
Spurminator beat me to it.
By the way, "Happiness Is A Warm Gun" is the kind of song that makes me sad that we don't have songwriters like them anymore.
Yeah, they just dont make masturbation references like they used to :p
If you ascribe significance to any part of it, it's because you choose to, not because it's there.
The story, as I've read it in several places (the wikipedia entry on the song jives with what I've read elsewhere), goes that Lennon had threads of three songs that he was working on but couldn't finish. One was the little riff about pretty little policemen in a row -- that was Lennon intrigued with the cadence of a siren and trying to match it in music; one was the part about spending time in his garden (notice that there's a definite change in the song at that point -- very much like the middle of "A Day in the Life," which was also the combination of two incomplete songs); the third was about a corn flake. He couldn't make any of them work alone, so he started trying to put them together. Apparently, acid trips gave him the opening lyrics (" I am he as you are he as you are me and we are all together.") and the next line.
At some point during this process, Lennon learned that an English teacher at his grammar school was having students study Beatles lyrics for imagery and symbolism. Amused by that, Lennon came up with a verse that was full of absolute nothingness. That's the part that goes "yellow mother cus , dripping from a dead dog's eye."
He finished the track with some rips on Hare Krishna.
The irony in the end, is that Lennon used the Walrus as the character, lifting it from Lewis Carroll's "The Walrus and the Carpenter," but learned after the song was released that the Walrus in that poem was actually the villian.
In the end, the stuff about Hare Krishna has a pretty self-evident meaning, but the rest of the song is basically a bunch of unconnected nonsense.
It's still a great song, though.
that, or heroin.
FIFY. It's been fairly publicly acknowledged that it was never Lennon and McCartney, but rather Lennon or McCartney. Paul even said that they had a conversation in the later years, and there was only one song they were unclear as to who wrote it. Maybe they really did collaborate on that one.![]()
I'm pretty sure they collaborated on "A Day in the Life." Lennon wrote the main portion of the song and McCartney wrote the change in the middle.
Maybe that was the one song.It was probably an exaggeration by Paul, but nonetheless, it wasn't the tight songwriting duo that was presented to their fans.
Granted...but Dear Prudence and India happened almost 3 years after Rubber Soul came out....add to the fact that most people wouldn't have the US versions of the albums...unless they were vinyl. I think the UK versions have since been the only ones made on CD.
As for me...I think the most important album by The Beatles is probably Help...although I would probably consider White Album my favorite.
Help was a breakthrough I think...it's such a great album..and save for the last song on it...has some amazing stuff...Yesterday and Ticket To Ride are probably the stand out tracks on the album.
From what I read on the Anthology book...Lennon just made the lyrics up and they mean nothing. I think he said he had a friend who was a teacher and he told them they had a class discussing The Beatles and so he wrote nonsense lyrics that they could read into.
BTW it's "yellow matter cus "...not "yellow mother."....![]()
I also read that they (Beatles) complained when they were criticized for the movie they made (which is where that video came from) because people just didn't "get it".
The Walrus and the Eggman were supposed to mean something. And the fact that they were dressed up in costumes was supposed to symbolize something. But, I read that so many years ago.
I don't remember what it was about all too well.
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