Never ask me to name my favourite Beatles song, but my favourite Beatles Album is
Abbey Road. Released in September 1969, for me, there is not one track on that album which isn't worthy of being part of the jukebox and here's why:
In the autumn of 1990, when I was 13, my family was involved in putting on the local village pantomime
Dick Whittington and it was decided that
Octopus Gardens would make a great song for when
Dick is traveling to the palace to get rid of the rats. To get the music for the track, we borrowed the album from a family friend and being a Beatles fan back then, I tapped the whole album and from that moment, my appreciation for the Beatles took a whole new level. I think up to this point, my knowledge of Beatles music was mainly due to a tape of their 1962-1964 music.
Where do I start with what makes it so fantastic? One, the album contain tracks written and song by all four of them, you have Harrison's
Something and
Here's comes the sun, Starky's
Octopus gardens; together with Lennon and McCartney's classics as
Come together, Because and You never give me your money. Two, the second side is a melting pot of magical melodies that weave into each other, it isn't an album to put onto a random mix as you miss the sheer beauty of the composition. Three are the characters in the songs, you have the series killer in
Maxwell's Silver Hammer; Mean Mr Mustard, Polythene Pam; and the man in
Come Together who has to be good looking cause he is so hard to see. Then outside the characters there is a mixture of heart warming and heart breaking songs, which perhaps reflect the mind state of four friends who had reached the end of their time together. For a 13 year old girl with an over active imagination, it had everything and it has never failed to inspire me and I am a wee-bit older now. Have I sold it to you yet?
Lets go through the tracks: Side 1.
Come together
A brilliantly simple track sung by John Lennon, it is its simplicity that makes it perfect. Having listened to this album so many times, this song for me strikes a happy chord. A number of other artists have covered this, and it was on the HELP album for the War Child Charity where Paul McCartney played with Paul Weller and Oasis on the cover. You can't help thinking that John Lennon would have been part of that album too if he had been around. It was released as a double A-side single with
Something, which is track two on the album.
Come together, sung live by John Lennon in New York
Something
Possibly the best song George Harrison wrote whilst he was a Beatles, this love song refers to the relationship with his first wife Patti Boyd, who he had met on the film
A Hard Day's night. Boyd would go on to be the inspiration for the song
Wonderful Tonight, Layla and
Bell Bottom Blues written by Eric Clapton, her second husband.
Something gave the Beatles their 18th number one in the US surpassing Elvis Presley and won an Ivor Novella award for Best song musically and lyrically in 1969.
Something by the Beatles
Maxwell's Silver Hammer
Sung by McCartney, all you have to do is listen to the lyrics of this song and they tell you the story of
Maxwell. Paul described
Maxwell's Silver Hammer as "my analogy for when something goes wrong out of the blue, as it so often does, as I was beginning to find out at that time in my life. I wanted something symbolic of that, so to me it was some fictitious character called Maxwell with a silver hammer."
Maxwell's Silver Hammer
Oh! Darling
Another song sung by McCartney, he worked for a week to make sure his voice wasn't too clear on the track. This track is heavy influenced by the Rhythm and Blues music of New Orleans.
Oh! Darling by the Beatles
Octopus's Garden
Ringo would normally get to be lead vocal on one track of an album,
Octopus Gardens was performed and written by him after taking a two week holiday with his family and developing an interest in Octopus. Sometimes the inspiration is easy to see.
Octopus Garden, live version sung by Ringo Starr
I want you (She's so heavy)
For the last track of side one, Lennon takes back the lead vocal role for this gritty number. I actually miss my taped version of this song as you could hear the needle lift of the record right at the end of the music. Lennon wrote this number about his love for Yoko Uno and is one of the longest Beatles tracks ever lasting 8 minutes and containing only 14 words. Touching on the world of heavy metal, it one of the last track the Beatles recorded together as a band in September 1969.
I want you (she's so heavy) The Beatles
Side 2
Here comes the sun
Another perfect number for George Harrison and you can imagine yourself being in the back garden with a drink, which is actually where he wrote it in the back gardens of his friend's, Eric Clapton, house. You can hear Harrison's india influence coming through on the track and McCartney sings backing vocals. By putting this as the opening track of the second side, it shows the diversity between the heavy metal style to folk rock.
Here comes the sun - The Beatles
Because
Keeping it mellow, Lennon's vocal on
Because, follows on fantastically. The voices of Lennon, Harrison and McCartney are dubbed trice so it sounds as though there is a nine part harmony on the track. Cited as the favourite track of Lennon and McCartney on the album, it took them more than 5 hours of recording to get the track to a level they were happy with. Much is said about the unhappiness and the tension of recording this album, but there was still a level of dedication to creating the best material they could. I can't find a link to the Beatles' recording on You Tube.
The Medley: You never give me your money, Sun King, Mean Mr Mustard, Polythene Pam, She came through the bathroom window, Golden slumbers, Carry that weight and The End.
Staring with
You never give me your money, the medley was put together by George Martin and Paul McCartney. It was an attempted by George Martin to get Lennon and McCartney to think about their music seriously. The first track inspired by the Band's disputes with Alan Kein, leads into Lennon's
Sun King, which follows the same vein as
Because & Here's come the Sun. Using the nine-part harmonies with their voices, you could put these three tracks as singles on their own album. As you are starting to feel chilled and the heat from an Indian Summer,
The Sun King gives way for
Mean Mr. Mustard, a character that was inspired by a news article John Lennon read when he was in India and is another great example of characters The Beatles created in their songs,
Mean Mr. Mustard gave way to
Polythene Pam, another Lennon's character inspired by a real person he met in Jersey.
She's came through the bathroom window, written by McCartney, was also inspired by a fan who gained entry to his flat through the said window.
You never give me your money
Sun King, Mean Mr Mustard, Polythene Pam, She came in through the bathroom window
The last two tracks,
Golden Slummers & The End, for me anyway maybe suggests the end of the band and the fact that these four friends have simply moved in different directions. Although the later years of the band became more difficult with the death of Brian Epstein, the legal fights, I like to think of them as made it very, very big. Perhaps because I have always being able to listen to album in the cultural history surrounding it, has made me think that they they all knew that it was over by the end of the record for the Beatles, and too much is made of the arguments surrounding this album and not enough about the brilliance of it.
Golden Slummers, Carry that weight, The End
Hidden track:
Her Majesty
Lovely little track about the Queen.
Her Majesty by The Beatles
I urge you to go out and listen to this album. It maybe three years shy of being 50th year old, but it is fantastic for its age.