The White Album by The Beatles
The Beatles |
After the Show come true.Fractured , dislocated and expansive.The
Beatles – make it the Legendary plain white.came out in Nov 1968. Its arrived
at a time when both the group and the world had changed irrevocably : The
former since their first forays into fame and fortune,the latter scarred by the
ongoing war in Vietnam and the Assasination of Martin Luther King, to touch
upon the tip of the iceberg.
From the inside,maybe everything was not going to be alright,
despite John Lennon’s assurances on the rousing Revolution1 just one of many
highlight on what is perhaps The Beatles most ambitious Studio Album.
he power of rock and roll is a constantly amazing process. Although it is Bob Dylan who is the single most important figure in rock and roll; and although it is the Rolling Stones who are the embodiment of a rock and roll band; it is nonetheless Our Boys. The Beatles, who are the perfect product and result of everything that rock and roll means and encompasses.
he power of rock and roll is a constantly amazing process. Although it is Bob Dylan who is the single most important figure in rock and roll; and although it is the Rolling Stones who are the embodiment of a rock and roll band; it is nonetheless Our Boys. The Beatles, who are the perfect product and result of everything that rock and roll means and encompasses.
Never has this been so plainly evident as
on their new two-album set. The
Beatles (Apple SWBO 101).
Whatever else it is or isn't, it is the best album they have ever released, and
only the Beatles are capable of making a better one. You are either hip to it,
or you ain't.
The impact of it is so overwhelming that
one of the ideas of the LP is to contain every part of extant Western music
through the all-embracing medium of rock and roll, that such categorical and
absolute statements are imperative. Just a slightly closer look shows it to be
a far more deliberate, self-conscious, pretentious, organized and structured,
coherent and full,more perfect album
than Sgt. Pepper's Lonely
Hearts Club Band.
Sgt. Pepper's applied the concept of the symphony to
rock and roll, adding an incredible (and soon overused) dimension to rock and
roll. Nothing could have been more ambitious than the current release: The
Beatles is the history and synthesis of Western music. And that, of course is
what rock and roll is, and that is what the Beatles are.
Rock and roll, the first successful art
form of the McLuhan age, is a series of increasing hybrids of musical styles,
starting from its basic hybrid of country and western music and black American
music (blues, if you will). That merger represents the distantly effected
marriage of the music of England and Africa, a yin and yang that could be
infinitely extended.
Not only the origin of rock and roll, but
also the short history of it can be seen as a series of hybridizations, the
constantly changing styles and fads, as rock assimilates every conceivable
musical style (folk, blues, soul, Indian; classical, psychedelic, ballad,
country) not only a recent process, but one that goes back to the Drifters,
Elvis Presley, Little Richard, Buddy Holly, and so on. Rock and roll's
longevity is its ability to assimilate the energy and style of all these
musical traditions. Rock and roll at once exists and doesn't exist; that is why
the term "rock and roll" is the best term we have, as it means
nothing and thus everything — and that is quite possibly the musical and
mystical secret of the most overwhelming popular music the world has known.
By attempting such a grandiose project
with such deliberation and honesty, they have left themselves extremely
vulnerable. There is not the dissemblance of being "our boys" from Hard Day's Night, nor the
disguise of Sgt. Pepper's Band; it is on every level an explanation and an
understanding of who and what the Beatles are.
As usual, the personal honesty is met with
an attack. (The secret is that innocence is invulnerable, and those who rush
too quickly for the kill, are just themselves dead.) On the level of musical
ignorance, I read the very first review of this record that appeared; it was in
the New York Times. In about 250 words the "critic" dismissed the
album as being neither as good as the Big Brother Cheap Thrills LP nor as the forthcoming Blood, Sweat
and Tears album. You come up with only one of two answers about that reviewer:
he is either deaf or he is evil.
Those who attacked the Beatles for their
single "Revolution," should be set down with a good pair of earphones
for a listen to Side Four, where the theme of the single is carried out in two
different versions, the latter with the most impact. And if the message isn't
clear enough, "Revolution No. 9" is followed by "Goodnight."
To say the Beatles are guilty of some kind
of revolutionary heresy is absurd; they are being absolutely true to their
identity as it has evolved through the last six years. These songs do not deny
their own "political" impact or desires, they just indicate the channelling
for them.
Rock and roll has indeed become a style
and a vehicle for changing the system. But one of the parts of the system to be
changed is "politics" and this iscludes "new Left"
politics. There is no verbal recognition required for the beautifully organized
music concrete version of "Revolution." A good set of earphones
should deliver the message to those we have so far been able to reach. Maybe
this album would be a good gift for them, "with love from me to you."
***
As to the Beatles, it is hard to see what
they are going to do next. Like the success of their earlier albums and the
success of all others in this field, whether original artists or good imitative
ones, the success of it is based on their ability to bring these other
traditions to rock and roll (and not vice versa, like the inevitable excesses
of "folk-rock," "raga-rock" and "acid-rock") and
especially in the case of Dylan, the Stones, the Beatles and to a lesser extent
all the other good groups in rock and roll, the ability to maintain their own
identity both as rock and roll and as the Beatles, or as Bob Dylan, or as the
Rolling Stones, and so on.
Thus, the Beatles can safely afford to be
eclectic, deliberately borrowing and accepting any outside influence or idea or
emotion, because their own musical ability and personal/spiritual/artistic
identity is so strong that they make it uniquely theirs, and uniquely the
Beatles. They are so good that they not only expand the idiom, but they are
also able to penetrate it and take it further.
"Back in the USSR," this album's
first track, is, of course, a perfect example of all this: it is not just an
imitation (only in parts) of the Beach Boys, but an imitation of the Beach Boys
imitating Chuck Berry. This is hardly an original concept or thing to do: just
in the past few months we have been deluged with talk of "going back to
rock and roll," so much that the idea (first expressed in the pages of
Rolling Stone) is now a tiresome one. because it is, like all other superficial
changes in rock and roll styles, one that soon becomes faddish, over-used and
tired-out.
In the past few months we have seen the
Turtles doing The Battle of
the Bands and Frank Zappa
and the Mothers with their Ruben
and the Jets. The Turtles were unable to bring it of (they had to ability
to parody, but not the talent to do something new with the old style) and the
Mothers were able to operate within a strictly circumscribed area with their
usual heavy-handed satirization, a self-limiting process.
It is all open to the Beatles. It would be
too simple to say that "Back In the USSR" is a parody, because it
operates on more levels than that: it is fine contemporary rock and roll and a
fine performance thereof; it is also a superb commentary on the United States
S. R., hitting every insight — "honey, disconnect the phone." As
well as a parody, it's also a Beatles song.
The song is undoubtedly the result of Paul
McCartney's three trips to the United States in 1968 before the album was made
(not including a four day visit to New York this past November after the album
was done). It is the perfect introductory song for this set. What follows is a
trip through the music of the US (SR).
From here on, much of the material is from
India, songs' the Beatles came back with after their sojourn at the Maharishi's
table. "Dear Prudence" is about a girl the Beatles met while
meditating in India. The Beatles were always trying to get her to come out of
her room to play, and this is about her.
"Looking through a Glass Onion"
is, of course, the Beatles on the subject of the Beatles. Whatever they may
feel about people who write about their songs and read things into them, it has
undoubtedly affected them, eating away at their foundations and always forcing
that introspection and that second thought. And so here is a song for all those
trying to figure it out — don't worry, John's telling you right here, while he
is rolling another joint.
Part of the phenomenal talent of the
Beatles is their ability to compose music that by itself carries the same
message and mood as the lyrics. The lyrics and the music not only say the same
thing, but are also perfectly complementary. This comes also with the
realization that rock and roll ismusic, not literature, and that the
music is the most important aspect of it.
"Obladi Oblada," where they take
one of the familiar calypso melodies and beats, is a perfect example. And it's
not just a calypso, but a rock and roll calypso with electric bass and drums.
Fun music for a fun song about fun. Who needs answers? Not Molly or Desmond
Jones, they're married with a diamond ring and kids and a little "Obladi
Oblada." All you need is Obladi Oblada.
"Wild Honey Pie" makes a nice
tribute to psychedelic music and allied forms.
"Bungalow Bill," the mode of the
Saturday afternoon kiddie shows, is a tribute to a cat the Beatles met in
Marrakesh, an American tiger hunter ("the All American bullet headed saxon
mother's son"), who was there accompanied by his mother. He was going out
hunting, and this song couldn't put the American in better context, with his
cartoon serial morality of killing.
"While My Guitar Gently Weeps"
is one of George Harrison's very best songs. There are a number of interesting
things about it: the similarity in mood to "Bluejay Way" recalls
California, the simple Baja California beat, the dreamy words of the Los
Angeles haze, the organic pace lapping around every room as if in invisible
waves.
Harrison's usual style, in lyrics, has
been a slightly self-righteous and preaching approach, which we have here
again. One cannot imagine it being a song about a particular person or
incident, rather a general set of incidents, a message, like a sermon, impersonally
directed to everyone.
And this song speaks at still another
level, the very direct one of the title: it is a guitarist's song about his
guitar, how and why and what it is that he plays. The music mimics the linear,
continuous line of the lead guitarist. It is interesting to note that the song
opens with a piano imitating the sound of an electric guitar playing the
heavily Spanish lead line well before the guitar picks up the lead. I am
willing to bet something substantial that the lead guitarist on this cut is
Eric Clapton, yet another involution of the circular logic on which this song
so superbly constructed as a musical piece.
The title, "Happiness Is A Warm
Gun," comes from an advertisement John read in an American rifle magazine.
That makes this track the first cousin of "Revolution." The three
parts of it; the break into the wonderful 1954 C-Am-F-G style of rock and roll,
with appropriate "Bang Bang, choo, choo." What can you say about this
song except what is obvious?
Part of the success of the Beatles is
their ability to make everything they do understandable and acceptable to all
listeners. One needn't have an expert acquaintance to dig what they are doing
and what they are saying. The other half of letting rock and roll music be
receptive of every other form and style of music, is that rock and roll must be
perfectly open and accessible to every listener, fulfilling the requirement of
what it is — a popular art.
Paul demonstrates throughout the album his
incredible talent as one of the most prolific and professional songwriters in
the world today. It's embarrassing how good he is, and embarrassing how he can
pull off the perfect melody and arrangement in any genre you would care to
think of.
Just name it and Paul will do it, like
say, for instance, a love song about a dog in the Gilbert and Sullivan style,
with a little ragtime, a little baroque thrown in. "Martha, My Dear,"
about Paul's English sheepdog of the same name, with hairy puns ("when you
find yourself in the thick of it") and all. And of course, it works on the
level of the send-up and also as an inherently good song, standing fully on its
own merits.
"Blackbird" is one of those
beautiful Paul McCartney songs in which the yin-yang of love is so perfectly
fitted: the joy and sorrow, always that ironic taste of sadness and melancholy
in the lyric and in the minor notes and chords of the melody (remember —
"Yesterday," "Eleanor Rigby," "Good Day
Sunshine," prominently among many.) The irony makes it so much more
powerful.
Not only irony: these songs and
"Blackbird" share other qualities — the simplicity and sparseness of
instrumentation (even with strings) make them penetrate swiftly and
universally. This one is done solely with an acoustic guitar. And of course
there is the lyric: "Take these sunken eyes and learn to see; All your
life you were only waiting for this moment to be free."
"Rocky Raccoon" is another one
of those McCartney offhand tour-de-force's. Perhaps the Mound City Blues
Blowers, circa 1937? Paul is so incredibly versatile not only as a writer, but
also as a singer and a musician. Dig the vocal scatting, the saloon-hall piano;
then the perfect phrasing, enunciation, the slurring (as in the phrase
"I'm gonna get that boy..."). The song is so funny and yet dig the
lyrics: "To shoot off the legs of his rival." Not just to kill, mind
you, but to maim. And so why does this song come off so funny? Death is funny.
"I Will" is simply another
romantic ballad from Paul's pen. He uses every available musical device and
cliché available — melodies, instrumentations, arrangements, harmonies,
everything — and he does something entirely original, entirely enjoyable,
entirely professional.
***
If Paul can do songwriting as easily as
some people do crossword puzzles (and that is not to say that he is flippant or
careless, because Paul has allowed himself to display his absolute professional
ability with song to a point that it can only be seen as a form of personal
honesty), John's songs are agonizing personal statements. They are painful to
hear.
"Julia" is a song to his mother,
whom John saw killed in a car accident when he was 14 years old. It is the most
emotionally revealing piece on the album. The whole world has been witness to
the personal lives of the Beatles, and it seems that a record album is the most
appropriate place for such a message, sung to, sung for, his mother. And as
always, John is protected by his innocence.
"I'm So Tired" begins in the
manner of the late night jazz singer ("I wonder should I get up and fix
myself a drink") if not, again, one of the many early styles of rock and
roll with those elegantly placed electric guitar chops. And again, it uses this
only as a base, a take off point to go on into completely modern, extremely
powerful choruses: "You know, I'd give you everything I've got for a
little peace of mind," where everything — arrangement, vocal,
instruments, melody — perfectly evokes the agony of the plea.
David Dalton says of this song: "It
reminds me of how many changes John has gone through since he was the plump
cheeky leader of the Fab Four. Jesus Christ, Sgt. Pepper leading the Children's
Crusade through Disneyland: a voyage to India as victims of their own
propaganda; Apple, a citadel of Mammon... Even two years ago, the image of
Lennon as a martyr would have seemed ludicrous, but as his trial approaches, a
gaunt spiritual John hardly recognizable as his former self emerges. This
metamorphosis has taken place only at the cost of an incredible amount of
energy, and the weariness of this song seems to fall like the weight of
gravity."
Other songs on side two include one by
George and one by Ringo. George's "Piggies" is an amazing choice to
follow "Blackbird" with such an opposite mood and message;
"Blackbird" so encouraging, "Piggies" so smug (though
accurate: "what they need's a damn good whacking"). Ha! By
comparison, both "Piggies" and Ringo's polka, "Don't Pass Me
By" (trust Ringo to find the C&W music of any culture) are weak
material against some of the superb numbers, although on their own, they're
totally groovy.
But it brings forward two interesting
points: neither Paul's near-genius ability with notes nor John's rock and
rolling edge of honesty are sine
qua non for the Beatles. The
taste and sense of rightness in their music, to choose the perfect musical
setting, the absolutely right instrument, are just as important.
The second is that there is almost no
attempt in this new set to be anything but what the Beatles actually are: John,
Paul, George and Ringo. Four different people, each with songs and styles and
abilities. They are no longer Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, and it is
possible that they are no longer the Beatles.
When they get together, it's "Why
Don't We Do It In the Road," which — whatever else it may sound like — tain't
nothin' but a Beatles field holler. This is one of many observations to be made
about this album. It is at once both their simplest (plain white cover) and yet
most complex effort to date.
Someone will do the work, and maybe come
up with a list of old and new rock and roll songs and styles which each of
these tracks is supposed to be based on. "Birthday" might be Hendrix
or Cream, maybe even Larry Williams. The point is that it is, like "Helter
Skelter" and "Everybody's Got Something to Hide" as well, all of
these, the very best traditional and contemporary elements in rock and roll
brightly are suffused into the Beatles. The "hard rock" aspect of the
Beatles is one often overlooked and neglected, often times purposely in the
attempt to get them to be something they are not. They are a rock and roll
band, after all, and they can do that thing. The straight rock is some of their
most exciting and mature material. (They don't, however, cut the best of the
Stones or of the Who).
If "Birthday" is based on, say,
the guitar licks of Jimi Hendrix or Clapton, it takes what is best from it and
uses it in its own fashion, perfectly within context and joined with something
new in rock and roll sound
recording, which in this case is the wavering piano sound, obtained by
using the leakage from the original piano track onto an empty track as the
final take for the mix.
In "Everybody's Got Something to Hide
Except Me and My Monkey," all the old elements of the Beatles are brought
back, right up to date, including use of all the old fashions and conventions
in such a refreshingly new manner.
Take the structure of the song, for
example: it is based on the old I-IV-V twelvebar progression in approach, but
in actuality they never do the old thing. From IV they go to VII. When they get
back to V after that, they take the most unusual way — in sound and melody — to
get back to I. They also use those old Beatle harmonic tones. (By way of
comparison, set this song against what Steppenwolf is now popular at doing with
this same material).
"Helter Skelter" is again both
traditional and contemporary — and excellent. The guitar lines behind the
title words, the rhythm guitar track layering the whole song with that
precisely used fuzztone, and Paul's gorgeous vocal. Lord, what a singer! Man,
you can't sit still. No wonder you have blisters on your fingers.
As completely wide-open eyed artists,
sensitive like all others in McLuhanville, they are of course caught up and
reflective in their music of what's happening around them, especially the
recent scenes they have been through.
***
Many of these songs — if not the vast
majority of them — were written while the Beatles were with the Maharishi.
"Everybody's Got Something to Hide" is certainly reflective of it in
its lyric. "Sexy Sadie" is the Maharishi. The harmonies and other
vocal lines are exquisite, especially the "s's." The lyrics and the
vocal delivery are so sincere and yet so sarcastic. John is still John.
"You may be a lover, but you ain't no
dancer." What a choice for the next track.
Another very deliberate parody is
"Yer Blues," a song that does away with most all of this "blues
revival" nonsense out of Great Britain these days. With the exceptions of
Eric Clapton, the Jeff Beck Group, and maybe one or two as-yet unfamous
individuals, the Beatles are simply better at it. And that makes it so ludicrous.
The organ riff at the end of the last
chorus so perfectly tells the whole story; it is based on the very boring and
repetitious style of these new blues musicians who will pound the shit out of
some mediocre change or short riff as if it is the riff which has got them to such
incredible heights of feeling and style.
The Beatles of course, make it
interesting, because it is so stylistically in context with the piece in which
it is set. Same with the opening lyric "Yes I'm lonely wanna die."
The line "black cloud crossed my mind" is in phrasing and content a
parody of the "black cat crossed my path," and yet a good line by
itself and as part of this song.
Forgetting the parody for a moment, it's a
very good modern rock and roll blues. Dig the lines "My mother was of the
sky/My father was of the earth/But I am of the universe/And you know what it's
worth."
Getting back to the message (even in the
title), here's Mr. Dalton again, on the English blues scene:
"The trendy transvestites of the
English blues scene: Pretentious and ludicrously out of context; drawing room
blues singers have created a cult of the blues bordering on intellectual
snobbery and purism. It is hard to imagine anything more incongruous: the
English blues fans fanatically denouncing a group for adding horns, fights
breaking out in the audience at the Clapton Blues Festival. Mr. Jones [Writes
the Beatles refer to in this song] is said to be Dylan's grisly portrait of the
folk purist, with his intellectual hang-ups, who could not accept the brash
commercial forces of rock and roll. The blues purist who looks down on Soul
Music as a debased commercial form is just Mr. Jones in a sheepskin
jacket."
* * *
If you take any one of these songs and
really get down with it, to where every piece of excellence and craftsmanship
is explained and understood fully (and it's always just as good, and always
even better, when you do), whatever you say about that one song is as true for
the rest.
"Revolution No. 1" is a better
piece, in texture and substance, than the single, although the latter was
better as a single. "No. 1" carries
the message more easily and more successfully. The horns at the end are a gas,
and even, I think, a little "Daytripper" by George on the left
earphone.
"Honey Pie" is another one of those
perfect Paul McCartney evocations of a whole musical are, understanding the
essence so finely, that it could be as good as the original. Lovin' the rhymes:
crazy-lazy, tragic-magic frantic-Atlantic. He not only is able to re-create
such moods and eras with his melody, his words, his arrangements,
instrumentation, but also with his voice. He is equally expert in all these
areas.
"Honey Pie" is also a more
sophisticated version of "When I'm 64," just as "Savoy
Truffle" is a more sophisticated look at "Lucy In the Sky With
Diamonds," and "Back in the USSR," a more sophisticated
"Sgt. Pepper." It is unlikely that "With A Little Help From My
Friends" will ever be topped as a song for Ringo. The question is whether
they are better songs. I am inclined to think so, but
only the acquaintance of time will tell, and it doesn't really matter anyway.
If these are weaker songs, they are the
only flaws of this album set. It is a relatively minor point, and considered at
a longer view, an almost irrelevant one. No creative persons in history were
able to match their own brilliance with absolute consistency.
"Cry Baby Cry," hits me at first
as a throwaway, but the further acquaintance says this: another top-notch
Beatles song. Every time they are exploring and opening new possibilities and
combinations. Every time they make them work.
So many factors enter into the success of
the Beatles in what they do. Some of them have been touched on. In addition to
everything else, they are excellent musicians (Ringo's drumming on this LP is
his best, and among the very best to be heard on any rock and roll record;
George's leads are continually well-placed, well-written and well-played). We
see them all in their varied strengths on this record.
In short, it is the new Beatles record and
fulfills all our expectations of it. In general, you could say that this new
release (excellent) stands in the same relationship to Sgt. Pepper (incredible) as Revolver (excellent) was toRubber Soul (incredible). And that is to say, the
next one ought to be incredible.
Have a Good Day. .
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