Wow. They released Rubber Soul in December of 65 and then Revolver in Aug of 66 and their record company thought they were losing popularity and might be replaced? It’s hard to imagine.
Don't know your age; but from the time they exploded onto the scene, it seemed like they came out with a single every week. Even by the time Rubber Soul and Revolver came out, it seemed like there was a slow down in production by their standards. By the time Penny Lane and Strawberry Fields Forever came out, it seemed like an eternity. Keep in mind I scarfed their records up like an addiction. The proverbial "British Invasion" was still in effect, so LOTS of great music at that time for competition. I can't speak to the rest of the planet, but The Monkees were arriving on the scene; AND they were on weekly television - and were quite popular at the time in the U. S. As for how record companies and their executives thought... pop music groups were just commodities.
@@jeffphakenewz8556what’s really wild is that they released all of their music in like less than eight years, and before a single member of the band was even 28 years old. Their output was unreal. That stuff alone is more than enough to disprove the “Paul is dead” theory to me. So you’re saying the real Paul died in 1966 and that the rest of them were able to find not only a total lookalike, but a total soundalike, AND this random lookalike and soundalike also had it in him to go on to write some of the absolute best music ever written? Really? Just a random lookalike guy also turned out to be the best songwriter ever? It’s laughable when you really think about it that way. I will definitely admit that it is a fun conspiracy to look into for sure, but easily disproven.
@@jeffphakenewz8556 yeah man, no need to get testy, I just got off on a tangent there lol. I was typing all of that and then they mentioned the Paul is dead stuff in the video so I just incorporated that into my comment. Not trying to insinuate that you believe in that stuff or anything like that. And you don’t have to respond, I was basically just thinking out loud there lol 🤙🏻
A music nerd friend had Sgt. Pepper on pre order and got it on release day. Him, me, and a small bunch of friends sat and listened to the whole album in silence. At the end we all sat open mouthed, knowing we'd just heard something massively important but not knowing what it was. Fact is, our world had just changed.
@@AlexRodriguez-hl1vu rubber soul is indeed amazing, and i actually prefer listening to it over sgt peppers, but i think sgt peppers is much more advanced in arrangements, production, and melodies. definitely unfolds a new perspective in music
I'll be 73 years old in July and I have been a fan of the Beatles since late 1963. Younger people don't understand the HUGE impact Sgt. Pepper had in the music world and how things changed for most every music artist after that. It was like an EXPLOSION that got everyone's attention. For this reason alone it is the greatest album of all time. The British REVOLVER album may have had the same effect in August 1966 but Captitol Records gave America a diluted Revolver.
@@STSGuitar16 The Capitol album for America had only eleven songs. Capitol left off THREE John Lennon songs: "I'm Only Sleeping" "Dr. Robert" "And Your Bird Can Sing" Capitol had these three songs on the "Yesterday...And Today" album they released in June 1966 and that album was nice in that it gathered together singles that the Beatles wouldn't put on an album (like "Day Tripper", "We Can Work It Out", and "Yesterday".
@@STSGuitar16 Because The Beatles were such prolific song writers and partly because they often excluded their singles from albums, Capitol, to make more money would sometimes rearrange the British albums and also round up singles and stick the on American albums. I liked that because listening habits were shifting from singles to albums. Apple did the same with "HEY JUDE" in February 1970 by rounding up ten singles to make an album. It was nice but they left off SIX singles that were unavailable to Americans on albums by Capitol Records: "I'M DOWN" "MISERY" "THERE'S A PLACE" "THE INNER LIGHT" "FROM ME TO YOU" "YOU KNOW MY NAME, LOOK UP THE NUMBER" These eventually made their way on future compilation albums but it was a couple of years after their breakup and Beatlemania had died down.
@@drewcampbell8555 well, there’s a lot of reasons why people say it’s the greatest ever made, but mainly it’s because of its Legacy. Whether legacy contributes to it being the greatest album ever, I’ll let you decide
I prefer Revolver which i think has aged better, although i think A Day In The Life is their greatest track and also Strawberry Field's Forever, although it wasn't on the album i think it's a groundbreaking single. Revolver was a much more band album with each member more involved than they were on Pepper. McCartney Wrote over half of the tracks. He played more lead guitar solo's than George. George was only mainly involved with his track Within You Without You. On Revolver they worked together better. George had 3 tracks and opened the album and Lennon brought more songs to the table. McCartney wrote some of his finest songs on Revolver. Lennon brought I'm Only Sleeping, She Said She Said and the awesome Tomorrow Never Knows, all great Psychedelic songs. Pepper was my favourite album when i was a lot younger but Revolver has just grown on me over the years. That's just my opinion. Also, i often wonder what Revolver would be like with Paperback Writer and Rain which were recorded during the Revolver session's. Just like Strawberry Field's and Penny Lane being on Pepper or Day Tripper and We Can Work It Out on Rubber Soul.
I never get tired of learning new stuff about the Beatles. It's does not get old. Love the excitement of most all of the comments everyone makes, young and old. When life gets so busy and hectic, I turn to the fascinating world of the Beatles. Never disappointed.
Same here. It still blows my mind how much they did in a short time and with very, very limited technology compared to what soon came after, and what we have today...omg, it's crazy.
I was 13 when Sgt Pepper's was released and they were magical times. Walking home from choir practice with Sgt Pepper's on my transistor radio every night. pure magic. But now I'm 70 SEVENTY! and I cannot believe it but they still turn me on, I have a few more guitars and guilt washes over me every time I don't pick up one of them and play which is a difficult feeling.
A Day In The Life... One of the greatest songs ever composed and produced in Rock era. The grand finale at the end after what seems like an endless climb leaves you completely exhausted and breathless. When I first heard it, I was utterly shocked in awe.
The late guitar 🎸 wizard ✨️ Jeff Beck loved that song and did an instrumental version for years live. You should check it out if you haven't. He does a really great job with the beautiful melody John Lennon wrote. 💙 🎶 Peace ✌️ ☮️ 🕊
Pepper, Rubber Soul, Revolver, The White Album and Abbey Road are all among the greatest albums ever made. That PENNY Lane and STRAWBERRY FIELDS were not included was a great mistake indeed. On the other hand, it turned even MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR (which includes both) into a classic and one of my all time favourites together with the already mentioned LP's..
Penny Lane and Strawberry field should have both been released separably with "throw away" (are really any such Beatle songs...even covers were exceptional) as the B side...once the decision was made to remove them from the potential concept LP.
This album was so powerful in my life I'm not sure how to put it into words. I was 8 years old when SGT Peppers came out. I was beaten into the ground physically, mentally and emotionally. This album was my escape into a whimsical, magical world filled with peace, love and hope. It got me through that dark time in my life... How could I ever thank you enough Beatles... God Bless you all.
I was 16 in 1967, drove from Cleveland to San Francisco, smoked pot and ingested LSD for the first time and listened to Sgt. Pepper's all summer long. This album had an overwhelming effect on the direction my life would take. YTM tells me I am in the top 1/10th of 1% of Beatles listeners. I truly believe people will still be listening to Sgt. Pepper's in 1,000 years.
In my mind undoubtedly the greatest album of all times. I remember when it came out (I was 13 years old) how deeply it effected me. Listening to Within You and Without You, for example, was my first exposure to Eastern spirituality, and set in motion a lifelong quest for inner peace and enlightenment that continues to this day. Bravo to the Beatles for this magnificent contribution to art and humanity.
I wasn't born at the time. But I grew up in a house full of music in the 70's. This album hold a very special place in me heart. On days when it was raining. My mother would put this record on for me, and It would wash away the rainy day blues. As a child I did not yet understand just how much this album really meant.
The Beatles were so influential in my life growing up. I was 8 in 1963. They may have saved my life. Certainly, they helped to shape it. I am very grateful for the Beatles. They were what no other band ever could hope to be -- unmatched in their contribution. They helped to shape the world.
Created in 1967 when very few bands were working outside the domain of the three minute song. It lighted the way forward towards experimentation. Also, for me, it had a visual quality not experienced before. It was three years ahead of its time. The greatest album ever recordedm
Brilliant album... one of the greatest records produced. SGT. Pepper, Dark side of the Moon, Abbey Road , Animals by pink Floyd are my favourite records and the best.👍🏻
In my opinion it's a mistake for people to think of Sgt Pepper as a rock album and make comparisons on that basis. The Beatles became a genre in their own right - a mix of classical, rock, country, vaudeville and many other genres. This album was astounding in its time on almost all levels.
@@mikeymutual5489 Yep - The Beatles lead the way and many bands tried to follow. Until Sgt Pepper, no-one had recorded that way. They were ground breaking and it gave permission for other bands to have a go.
@@paulbessell6154 That's all fine and good, but that's not what you said. You said, "it's a mistake for people to think of Sgt Pepper as a rock album" and "the Beatles became a genre in their own right." Both are ridiculous statements, so try not to post any more silly things that pop into your head, please.
absolutely true. but I still like Abbey Road better. Peppers was about so much more than music... bout changing culture, counter culture, art, artistic concepts, time & space. I agree with George Martin in as much as I have always dreamed of what Peppers would have been with Penny Lane & Strawberry Fields on it. Dream on!
My dad was 17 when this came out and he still to this day has it he bought new.. He still has Disraeli Gears, Strange Days and the Doors first album, Piper at the Gates of Dawn and Are You Experienced among other various albums and singles.. 1967 seemed like an awesome year
@user-otzlixr i dont understand why you're calling me a pretender. what am i pretending? everything you said means nothing because brian wilson was fine till he had to try and compete with the beatles and failed with smile.
This is a well made documentary. Fantastic that there is endless puzzles by these esteemed boys and thier teammates. Maybe for us Trekies the music is even more important when we hear it. ❤
I was born in 1957 and I grew up listening to the Beatles. I remember buying this album for $3.67. I also remember my older (by 4 years) sister telling me not to buy it because some of her friends said it wasn't very good. 🤨 That same sister bought Revolver and ended up selling it to my older brother for $1 because she didn't like it. 😮 Seems like there's just no accounting for taste. 😃
Thank you for this Video. This is one of my fav Albums...many Songs, from fab four, are helpfull, in many Situations,,in my life,, Lg Ellen from Germany ✌ ♥️
Martin was right in regarding it a mistake not to include the 45 rpm songs on the album. I would have placed " Penny Lane " where " Fixing a Hole " was and SFF replacing " Benefit of Mr. Kite. " Oh, well. It was still the most remarkable album of the sixties. You didn't have to be stoned to appreciate the diversity and innovation of the songs. An astonishing feat of recording on 4 tracks! Released just four years after their first album in 1963, " Please Please Me. "
I love your work! One thing though, Tara Browne ( day in the life) was a young man who was an heir to the Guinness fortune and a friend of the Beatles...
@@Weshopwizard I see your point but Queens Of The Stone Age are still making music. There’s still good stuff out there but you have to look hard. I love knowing that housewives were cleaning their houses with “I Am The Walrus” being played on top 40 radio. Those days are gone and in that respect rock is dead.
@@Superluckyhappytime I understand what you mean and I love QOTSA (especially Songs For The Deaf) but their songs all kinda sound alike. Everything is digital and run through Pro Tools. Sgt Peppers has a huge variety of stuff on it and it was created on a 4 track system. That blows my mind.
Hey Cassie! I was 10 years old when the Cuban Missile Crisis happened! I remember bits of it from the television and I remember Kennedy coming on and being very adamant about our position! Seeing the movie brought a lot of it back for me! Thanks for watching it! I really enjoyed it!
My fave two Sgt Pepper tracks have always been 'Being For The Benefit of Mr. Kite" and "Lovely Rita". However, I have always had an affinity though with Joe Cocker's cover of 'With A Little Help From My friends' from his debut album of the same name.
Please listen to RINGO. For Ringo's first solo LP all of his friends wrote songs for him. In the very first track (written by John) there is the wonderful phrase: "yes, my name is Billy Shears; it has been for so many years".🙌
"Ringo" is quite a listenable album. I bought it on 8 track in 1973 when it was current. It was not Ringo's first solo project, though. "Sentimental Journey" was released in March 1970, and "Beaucoups Of Blues" came out in September that same year.
I was13 when Sgt Pepper came out. I had not yet taken psychedelics. This album was like taking psychedelics. After hearing it I put thin multi-colored paper over my bedroom windows, got a black light and posters and a revolving multi-colored christmas tree lamp for my room. Then I went and bought some incense. Three years later I discovered marijuana and LSD. All three of these changed my life to this day. I turned 69 yesterday! Peace, Love & Music!
A Landmark Album - The Beatles Sgt Pepper - a beautiful mind engaging surreal musical landscape. Please Please Me when The Beatles recreated Rock n’ Roll excitement, previously created by Chuck Berry’s “Johnny B. Goode”, also a Rock n’ Roll Landmark. Abbey Road, another Landmark album, The Beatles again stretch the Rock n’ Roll musical horizons. All Beatles albums are Landmark albums for their musical achievements and their ability to recreate what Rock n’ Roll can be. Only a few other musicians have created Landmark Albums: Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon The Beach Boys Pet Sounds Marvin Gay’s What’s Going On Curtis Mayfield Super Fly Stevie Wonder’s 1970’s albums Music of My Mind Songs in the Key of Life Inner Vissions Talking Book
There from the beginning and in the Fan Club. Pepper first played in England on radio by John Peel and recorded on my reel to reel in the kitchen! Like many I'm for Revolver.
Such an informative video. I'm 41 and am not really into music that much. I am only now educating myself about the impact Beatles had on western world. Gonna have to purchase their albums now.
A Day In The Life is the greatest track ever and Strawberry Field's Forever is a brilliant groundbreaking single but i believe Revolver is the better of the 2 albums. Revolver is much more of a band album with each member being involved a lot more than on Pepper. McCartney wrote more than half of the tracks. George was only mostly involved on his own Within You Without You. Ringo said he learned to play chess while making the album. Lennon had to be coerced from his acid daze. Revolver has every member making great contributions and writing incredible songs. McCartney is writing some of his greatest songs like Eleanor Rigby, Here, There And Everywhere, For No One, Got To Get You Into My Life. Lennon bringing some brilliant Psychedelic songs, I'm Only Sleeping, She Said She Said and the awesome Tomorrow Never Knows, aswell as And Your Bird Can Sing and Doctor Robert. George opens the album with Taxman, introduces Indian music Love You To on the most well known band in the world albums, and there's I Want To Tell You with McCartney playing those 'out of tune' piano bits. Then there's Yellow Submarine. One of the most famous children's song. Revolver is better than the great Pepper.
I think all these decades later Revolver perhaps stands up better, it is as you say a solid group album, but I remember buying Sgt Pepper when it was released and I was astonished at the shear sonic brilliance of the album. Which is the better album ? - I gave up trying to decide a long time ago, they're both brilliant.
I agree that A Day in the Life is the greatest track ever, but would argue, on the strength of The Long One and George's two breakthrough songs, that Abbey Road is their greatest album.
If there at the time, Sgt Pepper was the most astoundingly LP ever released! That said, one can argue that Sgt P., Revolver, Abbey Road, or even The White LP are best. It’s a personal choice. For me the historical impact will always say Sgt P is my favorite but Revolver and Abbey are close behind.
In England? No they didn't. The only exception is Please Please Me which featured two singles and two B-sides. All the way up until Abbey Road which had Come Together and Something, they had no singles on albums.
@@TheJayson8899 You have no clue what you're talking about. 'Can't Buy Me Love' and 'A Hard Day's Night' were both released as UK singles in 1964. Both were on 'A Hard Day's Night' album. 'Ticket To Ride' and 'Help!' From 'Help!' album were released as singles in the UK in 1965 'Eleanor Rigby' and 'Yellow Submarine' from 'Revolver' album were released in the UK in 1966
@@wolfebeardsnarl5691 lol. Oh,, I'm being very careful. It's very easy to find out which songs the Beatles released as UK singles, and determine whether those songs were on their UK albums. You should try Google instead of being confused.
Just popping in with a minor correction - the sound that plays at the end of a day in the life is not exclusively heard by dogs and animals. Rather, it depends, firstly on the playback device, which must be able to play 15kHz sounds. And second, on the listener: as we get older, our hearing starts to deteriorate and we can't hear certain frequencies.
Can you imagine Sergeant Pepper, with Strawberry Fields and Penny Lane on it? And those songs would just fit marvelously on that record. It would be the unquestioned record of all time instead of merely a contender.
@@handle-schmandlestill, plus hey jude and revolution would've benefit better if they were on the white album, likewise with paperback writer and rain for revolver and day tripper for rubber soul
Nothing against, let’s say, “Lovely Rita” / “When I’m 64”, but the hypothetical replacement of “Strawberry Fields Forever” / “Penny Lane” is insane to imagine. I’m 32, grew up with this crazy Beatles CD that only worked in computers and had every album, I was in 9-10 years old sitting at the computer almost every day exploring all the albums.. Changed my life in a way, and I’m still listening today.
A Newsweek reviewer said A Day in the Life was an epochal moment in Western civilization. May seem a bit hyperbolic, but it really isn't. Listen to the track again and marvel at its sheer, unalloyed brilliance. Ground-breaking, innovative, unprecedented -- and utterly stupendous. The crashing piano chord alone ...
I recently bought a copy dated 1967. It had the cut-outs still in great condition. The cover was worn a little at the corners. But the record was scratchless and in perfect shape. It's not my favorite Beatles record. But the significance of it makes it an important piece of history. It has a smell to it that makes me nostalgic for a time I wasn't even alive.
The fact that Strawberry Fields and Penny Lane didn´t make it to number 1 on the charts showcase how popularity doesn´t always reward the best pieces of art. Typically the masses prefer simple and generic songs, basically the fast food of music. The fact that the Beatles had such success with great pieces of art is more of an exception to the rule. It bothers me when we put too much weight on how well a song does on the charts, when we should focus on how good piece of an art a song is instead. Is it creative, intricate, sophisticated, poetic, emotional, authentic etc. That´s how you judge a piece of art, not by popularity.
No as an artist you judge it by the charts just like the Beatles did coz after all they wanted to be rich and seen as the best or there's no point in doing it. Even Kurt Cobain wanted to be rich
@@drewwalker59 To each their own. I chose 63 because I quite enjoy those first 2 records, They released She Loves and I Want To Hold Your Hand that year, Great singles! 65 because of Help! And Rubber Soul nearly back to back with Day Tripper and We Can Work It Out, Need I say more? The song writing evolved greatly and just kept getting better. Finally, I chose 67 because I really dig that psychedelic period. Pepper, Magical Mystery Tour, Man that must've been a trip. Odd, Maybe haha but what the hell! This is the best band.
Jimi Hendrix played Stg. Pepper 🌶 🫑 live many times. And Sunshine ☀️ of Your Love 💖 by Cream. Jeff Beck 🎸 loved "A Day In a Life" and played it for years live. A really beautiful instrumental version of John's melody.
Had SSF/PL been included, it would not have changed the Album's historic place, however, it would have made it hands down the most saturated, iconic, hit filled, Album in history.
How Paul wrote a dozen songs and came up with this idea right after REVOLVER is crazy. It’s like he was printing up all his creativity for this one project for his whole career then WHAM
Correct me if I'm wrong... the name for the album came from the Beatles playing in Toronto '64 or '65. The Police officer in charge of their protection or whatever his duties were was Sgt. Pepper and was introduced to the Beatles and received an autograph from the band for his young daughter. In return he gave them the OPP patch that Paul is wearing on his uniform. That's the way I heard it and it makes more sense than seeing a sign that said " Salt & Pepper ".....
i feel like you should have mentioned in the facts that paul actually met melanie coe twice (the girl that inspired shes leaving home) once in 1964 (i believe she won a lip syncing battle thing and the prize was to meet paul) and sometime after the release, dont remember the date
Once the studio years began, they never had to write for later live performances on world tours. This seems to have affected Ringo first - who loved live gigs - and George, who had a slew of songs ready for an album of his own by the time Abbey Road was almost done. It breaks my heart to see John and George on camera in Get Back, discussing what could have been solo careers for all while coming back to be Beatles to make albums if and when it felt right. Echoes of watching the 3, and then 2, working on new releases based on John's demos. I saw Sir Paul in concert in November and can only imagine how much he would have embraced the insanity of a Beatles/Wings/Plastic Ono reunion tour were it possible.
Nice work FYI - Regents sounds was not in Tottenham, it’ was on Denmark Street in London’s West End; the nearest tube station is Tottenham Court Road which is probably the cause of the confusion
I'm actually quite surprised that, other than a passing mention of one of the Beach Boys, that you never once mentioned the Beach Boys album "Pet Sounds" as a DIRECT inspiration for this album to even be existing. Even McCartney will tell you that.
To even be existing? How? The concept was original. The cover was original. The music was original. Pepper's is the natural evolution of Revolver. Pet Sounds inspired it in terms of wanting to create a lush, grandiose piece of work, yes, but that's about it. It's still quintessentially Beatles. Certainly songs like Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!, Good Morning Good Morning, Within You Without You and A Day in the Life sound totally unlike anything The Beach Boys ever recorded.
The beach boys are massively overrated god only knows is good and wouldn't it be nice is sweet but it's just Chuck berry mixed with Phil Spector and there's a reason it wasn't successful at the time and that's coz it's not good. Just coz Brian lost his mind doesn't make it genius! All there songs sounds the same and they didn't even play own instruments. I think American magazines were embarrassed by all the great bands being British so started saying we had a genius to and it's Brian Wilson when in reality Mike love done there best songs,they are no better then Herman's hermits or Gerry and the pacemakers, a twee little band that wrote some little ditties
@MrThedonhead Wow I can't even unpack how wrong you are. You have clearly never listened and really digested Pet Sounds, much less the Smile Sessions and Love You.
A Day In The Life has to be the greatest song ever. Just has something disturbing, beautiful, magical and whimsical about it! Its like it couldn't of come from humans, its almost as good as moonlight mile
Wow. They released Rubber Soul in December of 65 and then Revolver in Aug of 66 and their record company thought they were losing popularity and might be replaced? It’s hard to imagine.
Don't know your age; but from the time they exploded onto the scene, it seemed like they came out with a single every week. Even by the time Rubber Soul and Revolver came out, it seemed like there was a slow down in production by their standards. By the time Penny Lane and Strawberry Fields Forever came out, it seemed like an eternity. Keep in mind I scarfed their records up like an addiction. The proverbial "British Invasion" was still in effect, so LOTS of great music at that time for competition. I can't speak to the rest of the planet, but The Monkees were arriving on the scene; AND they were on weekly television - and were quite popular at the time in the U. S. As for how record companies and their executives thought... pop music groups were just commodities.
@@jeffphakenewz8556what’s really wild is that they released all of their music in like less than eight years, and before a single member of the band was even 28 years old. Their output was unreal. That stuff alone is more than enough to disprove the “Paul is dead” theory to me. So you’re saying the real Paul died in 1966 and that the rest of them were able to find not only a total lookalike, but a total soundalike, AND this random lookalike and soundalike also had it in him to go on to write some of the absolute best music ever written? Really? Just a random lookalike guy also turned out to be the best songwriter ever? It’s laughable when you really think about it that way. I will definitely admit that it is a fun conspiracy to look into for sure, but easily disproven.
@@STSGuitar16 : I don't have any idea how to respond, considering I didn't mention any of them individually - let alone the "Paul is dead" BS. WTF?
And don't forget Yesterday and Today in the U.S. before Revolver.
@@jeffphakenewz8556 yeah man, no need to get testy, I just got off on a tangent there lol. I was typing all of that and then they mentioned the Paul is dead stuff in the video so I just incorporated that into my comment. Not trying to insinuate that you believe in that stuff or anything like that. And you don’t have to respond, I was basically just thinking out loud there lol 🤙🏻
A music nerd friend had Sgt. Pepper on pre order and got it on release day. Him, me, and a small bunch of friends sat and listened to the whole album in silence. At the end we all sat open mouthed, knowing we'd just heard something massively important but not knowing what it was. Fact is, our world had just changed.
It was ok rubber soul is way better
@@AlexRodriguez-hl1vu rubber soul is indeed amazing, and i actually prefer listening to it over sgt peppers, but i think sgt peppers is much more advanced in arrangements, production, and melodies. definitely unfolds a new perspective in music
@@jo7537 i guess it’s just not one I listen to that much I only like some of the songs
@@AlexRodriguez-hl1vu ah reasonable
more like "changed again"...Brian Wilson took note!
I'll be 73 years old in July and I have been a fan of the Beatles since late 1963. Younger people don't understand the HUGE impact Sgt. Pepper had in the music world and how things changed for most every music artist after that. It was like an EXPLOSION that got everyone's attention. For this reason alone it is the greatest album of all time.
The British REVOLVER album may have had the same effect in August 1966 but Captitol Records gave America a diluted Revolver.
You had to be there, right? Like me.💪 (Working towards my seventies..)
24 year old here. What did Capitol records do to “dilute” Revolver? Never heard about that before.
@@STSGuitar16 The Capitol album for America had only eleven songs. Capitol left off THREE John Lennon songs:
"I'm Only Sleeping"
"Dr. Robert"
"And Your Bird Can Sing"
Capitol had these three songs on the "Yesterday...And Today" album they released in June 1966 and that album was nice in that it gathered together singles that the Beatles wouldn't put on an album (like "Day Tripper", "We Can Work It Out", and "Yesterday".
@@JimDeferio oh wow. Glad I first listened to it on Spotify lol those are literally three of my absolute favorite Beatles songs
@@STSGuitar16 Because The Beatles were such prolific song writers and partly because they often excluded their singles from albums, Capitol, to make more money would sometimes rearrange the British albums and also round up singles and stick the on American albums. I liked that because listening habits were shifting from singles to albums.
Apple did the same with "HEY JUDE" in February 1970 by rounding up ten singles to make an album.
It was nice but they left off SIX singles that were unavailable to Americans on albums by Capitol Records:
"I'M DOWN"
"MISERY"
"THERE'S A PLACE"
"THE INNER LIGHT"
"FROM ME TO YOU"
"YOU KNOW MY NAME, LOOK UP THE NUMBER"
These eventually made their way on future compilation albums but it was a couple of years after their breakup and Beatlemania had died down.
Greatest album ever made. To think what it could have been with Strawberry Fields and Penny Lane.
I wonder where they would have been put on the album, one of them on side one and the other on side two?
Why is it the greatest album ever made?
@@drewcampbell8555 well, there’s a lot of reasons why people say it’s the greatest ever made, but mainly it’s because of its Legacy. Whether legacy contributes to it being the greatest album ever, I’ll let you decide
I prefer Revolver which i think has aged better, although i think A Day In The Life is their greatest track and also Strawberry Field's Forever, although it wasn't on the album i think it's a groundbreaking single.
Revolver was a much more band album with each member more involved than they were on Pepper. McCartney Wrote over half of the tracks. He played more lead guitar solo's than George. George was only mainly involved with his track Within You Without You. On Revolver they worked together better. George had 3 tracks and opened the album and Lennon brought more songs to the table. McCartney wrote some of his finest songs on Revolver. Lennon brought I'm Only Sleeping, She Said She Said and the awesome Tomorrow Never Knows, all great Psychedelic songs. Pepper was my favourite album when i was a lot younger but Revolver has just grown on me over the years. That's just my opinion. Also, i often wonder what Revolver would be like with Paperback Writer and Rain which were recorded during the Revolver session's. Just like Strawberry Field's and Penny Lane being on Pepper or Day Tripper and We Can Work It Out on Rubber Soul.
put Strawberry Fields between Fixing a Hole and She’s Leaving Home, and put Penny Lane between Lovely Rita and Good Morning Good Morning
I'm 70 and putting inaccuracies and mispronounciations aside this was a welcome trip down memory lane for the best album ever.
Like Tara Browne being fererred to as "her?" Lots of inaccuracies is correct.
You mean down Penny Lane😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂.
Yes, certainly a few made up stuff... Aw, av just crapped meself. I've only just had a shower! Clean underpants on too.
Most of this masterpiece was Paul’s doing. Bloody genius.❤️
Epic album, The greatest album ever made. Thanks for posting this video.
It was - and I hate this phrase with a passion - a game changer.
@@jeffphakenewz8556 Yes. It really changed everything. The music, the cover photo, their outfits ... everything.
that would be Pet Sounds.
I never get tired of learning new stuff about the Beatles. It's does not get old. Love the excitement of most all of the comments everyone makes, young and old. When life gets so busy and hectic, I turn to the fascinating world of the Beatles. Never disappointed.
Me too ,it’s always a joy and inspirational
Yes.
🎵🎶🎹🎼
Same here. It still blows my mind how much they did in a short time and with very, very limited technology compared to what soon came after, and what we have today...omg, it's crazy.
I was 13 when Sgt Pepper's was released and they were magical times. Walking home from choir practice with Sgt Pepper's on my transistor radio every night. pure magic. But now I'm 70 SEVENTY! and I cannot believe it but they still turn me on, I have a few more guitars and guilt washes over me every time I don't pick up one of them and play which is a difficult feeling.
A Day In The Life...
One of the greatest songs ever composed and produced in Rock era.
The grand finale at the end after what seems like an endless climb leaves you completely exhausted and breathless.
When I first heard it, I was utterly shocked in awe.
The late guitar 🎸 wizard ✨️ Jeff Beck loved that song and did an instrumental version for years live.
You should check it out if you haven't. He does a really great job with the beautiful melody John Lennon wrote. 💙 🎶
Peace ✌️ ☮️ 🕊
Pepper, Rubber Soul, Revolver, The White Album and Abbey Road are all among the greatest albums ever made. That PENNY Lane and STRAWBERRY FIELDS were not included was a great mistake indeed. On the other hand, it turned even MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR (which includes both) into a classic and one of my all time favourites together with the already mentioned LP's..
Penny Lane and Strawberry field should have both been released separably with "throw away" (are really any such Beatle songs...even covers were exceptional) as the B side...once the decision was made to remove them from the potential concept LP.
This album was so powerful in my life I'm not sure how to put it into words. I was 8 years old when SGT Peppers came out. I was beaten into the ground physically, mentally and emotionally. This album was my escape into a whimsical, magical world filled with peace, love and hope. It got me through that dark time in my life... How could I ever thank you enough Beatles... God Bless you all.
Thank you so much for sharing. Yourself a poet.
Peace ✌️ ☮️ 🕊
Love ❤️ 💖 🌟
& Music 🎶 🎸 🎹 🥁
I was 16 in 1967, drove from Cleveland to San Francisco, smoked pot and ingested LSD for the first time and listened to Sgt. Pepper's all summer long. This album had an overwhelming effect on the direction my life would take. YTM tells me I am in the top 1/10th of 1% of Beatles listeners. I truly believe people will still be listening to Sgt. Pepper's in 1,000 years.
In my mind undoubtedly the greatest album of all times. I remember when it came out (I was 13 years old) how deeply it effected me. Listening to Within You and Without You, for example, was my first exposure to Eastern spirituality, and set in motion a lifelong quest for inner peace and enlightenment that continues to this day. Bravo to the Beatles for this magnificent contribution to art and humanity.
Same gen
I wasn't born at the time. But I grew up in a house full of music in the 70's. This album hold a very special place in me heart. On days when it was raining. My mother would put this record on for me, and It would wash away the rainy day blues. As a child I did not yet understand just how much this album really meant.
Agree A day in the life was the Beatles masterpiece and changed popular music forever. It was years ahead of anything in 67 18:24
Cream was cool, but not like Peppers
The Beatles were so influential in my life growing up. I was 8 in 1963. They may have saved my life. Certainly, they helped to shape it. I am very grateful for the Beatles. They were what no other band ever could hope to be -- unmatched in their contribution. They helped to shape the world.
we are blessed being born (this time) in a world where everything being before the Beatles, and after.
Most definitely a masterpiece.
Created in 1967 when very few bands were working outside the domain of the three minute song. It lighted the way forward towards experimentation. Also, for me, it had a visual quality not experienced before. It was three years ahead of its time. The greatest album ever recordedm
Brilliant album... one of the greatest records produced. SGT. Pepper, Dark side of the Moon, Abbey Road , Animals by pink Floyd are my favourite records and the best.👍🏻
In my opinion it's a mistake for people to think of Sgt Pepper as a rock album and make comparisons on that basis. The Beatles became a genre in their own right - a mix of classical, rock, country, vaudeville and many other genres. This album was astounding in its time on almost all levels.
You could say that about a lot of bands starting in 1967. So *no.*
@@mikeymutual5489 Yep - The Beatles lead the way and many bands tried to follow. Until Sgt Pepper, no-one had recorded that way. They were ground breaking and it gave permission for other bands to have a go.
@@paulbessell6154 That's all fine and good, but that's not what you said. You said, "it's a mistake for people to think of Sgt Pepper as a rock album" and "the Beatles became a genre in their own right." Both are ridiculous statements, so try not to post any more silly things that pop into your head, please.
@@mikeymutual5489 Have a nice day :-)
i agree
I loved the Beatles as a kid and I love them today.
Great hearing the history of all of these great songs!
Their evolution is the best thing about The Beatles. They were breaking new ground album after album.
Sgt pepper is the greatest album ever made this album won a Grammy in 1968 there is no more influential and important than Sgt pepper.
I agree
@@manny4552 I agree as well. :)
I have two picture discs ... Three or four CDs and six or seven regular vinyl lps.. all different pressings of this stunning masterpiece
absolutely true. but I still like Abbey Road better. Peppers was about so much more than music... bout changing culture, counter culture, art, artistic concepts, time & space. I agree with George Martin in as much as I have always dreamed of what Peppers would have been with Penny Lane & Strawberry Fields on it. Dream on!
It's my favorite LP ever.. I must have listened to it about 100 times over the years
My dad was 17 when this came out and he still to this day has it he bought new.. He still has Disraeli Gears, Strange Days and the Doors first album, Piper at the Gates of Dawn and Are You Experienced among other various albums and singles.. 1967 seemed like an awesome year
I am an utterly devoted fan of Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys, but THE greatest album belongs to the Beatles.
brian wilson had a nervous breakdown trying to keep up with the beatles.
@user-otzlixr yes he did. are you in denial or something?haha
@user-otzlixr oh yes it was.he couldnt keep up either., smile was a disaster
@user-otzlixr watch the beach boys documentary, they go into detail about brian wilsons breakdown. you are very ignorant haha
@user-otzlixr i dont understand why you're calling me a pretender. what am i pretending? everything you said means nothing because brian wilson was fine till he had to try and compete with the beatles and failed with smile.
This is a well made documentary. Fantastic that there is endless puzzles by these esteemed boys and thier teammates. Maybe for us Trekies the music is even more important when we hear it. ❤
I was born in 1957 and I grew up listening to the Beatles. I remember buying this album for $3.67. I also remember my older (by 4 years) sister telling me not to buy it because some of her friends said it wasn't very good. 🤨 That same sister bought Revolver and ended up selling it to my older brother for $1 because she didn't like it. 😮 Seems like there's just no accounting for taste. 😃
Sounds like Sis wasn't really a Beatles fan....
It is rediculous knowing the fact that one of the best albums ever was missing two incredible songs
I love this album. Thanks for making this video!
I love The Beatles. For me, it will always be…. a) The Beatles and b) Everybody else.
I can't see it any other way.
Exactly. Bingo, amen and touche. And that's not to slag all of the other great bands out there. They would agree with this sentiment.
Someone listened to Tom Petty.
I’ll always remember the first time I listened to Sgt Pepper’s. The last track blew me away.
Imagine if The Beatles had continued to 1976. Wow...what a thought
Thank you for this Video. This is one of my fav Albums...many Songs, from fab four, are helpfull, in many Situations,,in my life,,
Lg Ellen from Germany ✌ ♥️
Correction: He - Tara Browne - "was a young Irish Socialite, friend of The Beatles, and heir to the Guinness fortune." Great video, though!
sorry 😭😭😭
IM SO EXCITED TO WATCH THIS, THANK U!!!! I LOVE PEPPER'S SO MUCH!
Here for this absolutely fantastic video that I know will be amazing
My all time favorite album❤
Martin was right in regarding it a mistake not to include the 45 rpm songs on the album. I would have placed " Penny Lane " where " Fixing a Hole " was and SFF replacing " Benefit of Mr. Kite. " Oh, well. It was still the most remarkable album of the sixties. You didn't have to be stoned to appreciate the diversity and innovation of the songs. An astonishing feat of recording on 4 tracks! Released just four years after their first album in 1963, " Please Please Me. "
This is there greatest record I just love the creativity on the entire record.
I love your work! One thing though, Tara Browne ( day in the life) was a young man who was an heir to the Guinness fortune and a friend of the Beatles...
ya a few mistakes in here I noticed, but hey, story's still ok
Not their best album but definitely the most groundbreaking record ever made. What was left to do that hadn’t been done here? Amazing.
The greatest rock album of all time. Since Rock is now dead, Sgt Peppers will always hold that title.
You know what we want to ask...
@@davidc5820 The word is "Abby road"
@@Weshopwizard I see your point but Queens Of The Stone Age are still making music. There’s still good stuff out there but you have to look hard. I love knowing that housewives were cleaning their houses with “I Am The Walrus” being played on top 40 radio. Those days are gone and in that respect rock is dead.
@@Superluckyhappytime I understand what you mean and I love QOTSA (especially Songs For The Deaf) but their songs all kinda sound alike. Everything is digital and run through Pro Tools. Sgt Peppers has a huge variety of stuff on it and it was created on a 4 track system. That blows my mind.
They will never be forgotten as long as humanity exist.
Hey Cassie! I was 10 years old when the Cuban Missile Crisis happened! I remember bits of it from the television and I remember Kennedy coming on and being very adamant about our position! Seeing the movie brought a lot of it back for me! Thanks for watching it! I really enjoyed it!
Thank you for a concise understanding of the goings on of this masterpiece. ❤
My fave two Sgt Pepper tracks have always been 'Being For The Benefit of Mr. Kite" and "Lovely Rita". However, I have always had an affinity though with Joe Cocker's cover of 'With A Little Help From My friends' from his debut album of the same name.
Please listen to RINGO. For Ringo's first solo LP all of his friends wrote songs for him. In the very first track (written by John) there is the wonderful phrase: "yes, my name is Billy Shears; it has been for so many years".🙌
"Ringo" is quite a listenable album. I bought it on 8 track in 1973 when it was current. It was not Ringo's first solo project, though. "Sentimental Journey" was released in March 1970, and "Beaucoups Of Blues" came out in September that same year.
I was13 when Sgt Pepper came out. I had not yet taken psychedelics. This album was like taking psychedelics. After hearing it I put thin multi-colored paper over my bedroom windows, got a black light and posters and a revolving multi-colored christmas tree lamp for my room. Then I went and bought some incense. Three years later I discovered marijuana and LSD. All three of these changed my life to this day. I turned 69 yesterday! Peace, Love & Music!
A Landmark Album - The Beatles Sgt Pepper - a beautiful mind engaging surreal musical landscape.
Please Please Me when The Beatles recreated Rock n’ Roll excitement, previously created by Chuck Berry’s “Johnny B. Goode”, also a Rock n’ Roll Landmark.
Abbey Road, another Landmark album, The Beatles again stretch the Rock n’ Roll musical horizons.
All Beatles albums are Landmark albums for their musical achievements and their ability to recreate what Rock n’ Roll can be.
Only a few other musicians have created Landmark Albums:
Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon
The Beach Boys Pet Sounds
Marvin Gay’s What’s Going On
Curtis Mayfield Super Fly
Stevie Wonder’s 1970’s albums
Music of My Mind
Songs in the Key of Life
Inner Vissions
Talking Book
There from the beginning and in the Fan Club. Pepper first played in England on radio by John Peel and recorded on my reel to reel in the kitchen! Like many I'm for Revolver.
Such an informative video. I'm 41 and am not really into music that much. I am only now educating myself about the impact Beatles had on western world. Gonna have to purchase their albums now.
GREAT!! thank you
A Day In The Life is the greatest track ever and Strawberry Field's Forever is a brilliant groundbreaking single but i believe Revolver is the better of the 2 albums.
Revolver is much more of a band album with each member being involved a lot more than on Pepper. McCartney wrote more than half of the tracks. George was only mostly involved on his own Within You Without You. Ringo said he learned to play chess while making the album. Lennon had to be coerced from his acid daze.
Revolver has every member making great contributions and writing incredible songs.
McCartney is writing some of his greatest songs like Eleanor Rigby, Here, There And Everywhere, For No One, Got To Get You Into My Life. Lennon bringing some brilliant Psychedelic songs, I'm Only Sleeping, She Said She Said and the awesome Tomorrow Never Knows, aswell as And Your Bird Can Sing and Doctor Robert. George opens the album with Taxman, introduces Indian music Love You To on the most well known band in the world albums, and there's I Want To Tell You with McCartney playing those 'out of tune' piano bits. Then there's Yellow Submarine. One of the most famous children's song.
Revolver is better than the great Pepper.
I think all these decades later Revolver perhaps stands up better, it is as you say a solid group album, but I remember buying Sgt Pepper when it was released and I was astonished at the shear sonic brilliance of the album. Which is the better album ? - I gave up trying to decide a long time ago, they're both brilliant.
@@thewalrus6833 They are both brilliant. ✌️
I agree that A Day in the Life is the greatest track ever, but would argue, on the strength of The Long One and George's two breakthrough songs, that Abbey Road is their greatest album.
If there at the time, Sgt Pepper was the most astoundingly LP ever released! That said, one can argue that Sgt P., Revolver, Abbey Road, or even The White LP are best. It’s a personal choice. For me the historical impact will always say Sgt P is my favorite but Revolver and Abbey are close behind.
@@thewalrus6833 Yes. Both brilliant -- along with Rubber Soul and Abbey Road. Along with everything else these geniuses did.
wow thisc an amazing takr on Sergant Peeper ,, thanks 🙂
The Beatles had several singles included on albums. They could have included Strawberry Fields Forever and Penny Lane on Sgt Pepper.
Sometimes they did. Other times, they didn't.
Careful not to confuse UK EMI , and North American Capital releases🤔
In England? No they didn't. The only exception is Please Please Me which featured two singles and two B-sides. All the way up until Abbey Road which had Come Together and Something, they had no singles on albums.
@@TheJayson8899 You have no clue what you're talking about.
'Can't Buy Me Love' and 'A Hard Day's Night' were both released as UK singles in 1964. Both were on 'A Hard Day's Night' album.
'Ticket To Ride' and 'Help!' From 'Help!' album were released as singles in the UK in 1965
'Eleanor Rigby' and 'Yellow Submarine' from 'Revolver' album were released in the UK in 1966
@@wolfebeardsnarl5691 lol. Oh,, I'm being very careful. It's very easy to find out which songs the Beatles released as UK singles, and determine whether those songs were on their UK albums. You should try Google instead of being confused.
Wow! I expected fluff, and instead got facts and fierce photographic finesse!
WELL DONE, my fantastic friends!
- Namaste,
Glenn
Just popping in with a minor correction - the sound that plays at the end of a day in the life is not exclusively heard by dogs and animals. Rather, it depends, firstly on the playback device, which must be able to play 15kHz sounds. And second, on the listener: as we get older, our hearing starts to deteriorate and we can't hear certain frequencies.
Lots of love ❤️ thanks 😅😊
I was born on the day the Beatles recorded , " With a little help from my friends."!!!!! 😁👍
i was born on ringo's 14th birthday. woohoo!
Can you imagine Sergeant Pepper, with Strawberry Fields and Penny Lane on it? And those songs would just fit marvelously on that record. It would be the unquestioned record of all time instead of merely a contender.
But that’s not the way the Beatles intended it.
@@handle-schmandlestill, plus hey jude and revolution would've benefit better if they were on the white album, likewise with paperback writer and rain for revolver and day tripper for rubber soul
@@crowkid5553 It also would have been great if they made another ten albums. But it didn’t happen that way.
Agreed. Would have been even better albums.
Good video and wonderful photos!
Nothing against, let’s say, “Lovely Rita” / “When I’m 64”, but the hypothetical replacement of “Strawberry Fields Forever” / “Penny Lane” is insane to imagine. I’m 32, grew up with this crazy Beatles CD that only worked in computers and had every album, I was in 9-10 years old sitting at the computer almost every day exploring all the albums.. Changed my life in a way, and I’m still listening today.
Lovely Rita is contrived nonsense ...when I'm 64 is fluff but never the less quite charming
The high water mark of Western music
A Newsweek reviewer said A Day in the Life was an epochal moment in Western civilization. May seem a bit hyperbolic, but it really isn't. Listen to the track again and marvel at its sheer, unalloyed brilliance. Ground-breaking, innovative, unprecedented -- and utterly stupendous. The crashing piano chord alone ...
I recently bought a copy dated 1967. It had the cut-outs still in great condition. The cover was worn a little at the corners. But the record was scratchless and in perfect shape. It's not my favorite Beatles record. But the significance of it makes it an important piece of history. It has a smell to it that makes me nostalgic for a time I wasn't even alive.
The fact that Strawberry Fields and Penny Lane didn´t make it to number 1 on the charts showcase how popularity doesn´t always reward the best pieces of art. Typically the masses prefer simple and generic songs, basically the fast food of music. The fact that the Beatles had such success with great pieces of art is more of an exception to the rule. It bothers me when we put too much weight on how well a song does on the charts, when we should focus on how good piece of an art a song is instead. Is it creative, intricate, sophisticated, poetic, emotional, authentic etc. That´s how you judge a piece of art, not by popularity.
No as an artist you judge it by the charts just like the Beatles did coz after all they wanted to be rich and seen as the best or there's no point in doing it. Even Kurt Cobain wanted to be rich
Penny Lane was number one for at least a week in the U.S.
Thanks enjoyed that very much
Revolver is the Beatles best album. All of the tracks are absolutely brilliant.
I watched all your vids. Im depressed now I NEED MOREEEEE ! 🙃
That holiday was just a few months. First break in years. That year, they came up with...
Lennon's vocals are absolutely other worldly on Pepper. 67 was definitely my favorite era of the Beatles next to either 65 or 63.
Your choice of favorite years is certainly ODD?!? lol
@@drewwalker59 To each their own. I chose 63 because I quite enjoy those first 2 records, They released She Loves and I Want To Hold Your Hand that year, Great singles! 65 because of Help! And Rubber Soul nearly back to back with Day Tripper and We Can Work It Out, Need I say more? The song writing evolved greatly and just kept getting better. Finally, I chose 67 because I really dig that psychedelic period. Pepper, Magical Mystery Tour, Man that must've been a trip. Odd, Maybe haha but what the hell! This is the best band.
@@overjoyousi think they were just making a joke about the years being odd numbers
@@alexslingluff I figured so lol, I just wanted to explain either way brotha.
66 revolver was in top of the list
"Paul would call himself the new leader of the Beatles. After all, it was what he always wanted." Sorry that's not true. What's your source?
Jimi Hendrix played Stg. Pepper 🌶 🫑 live many times. And Sunshine ☀️ of Your Love 💖 by Cream.
Jeff Beck 🎸 loved "A Day In a Life" and played it for years live.
A really beautiful instrumental version of John's melody.
That's what sucks about modern automatic turntables, it doesn't keep repeating the run out groove loop.
Penny Lane and Strawberry Fields are part of Peppers and are included on Giles Martin's Delux Version..
I enjoyed your review and just to let you know in Australia we didn't seem to get that little bit of audio nonsense at the end ! 🤡
Had SSF/PL been included, it would not have changed the Album's historic place, however, it would have made it hands down the most saturated, iconic, hit filled, Album in history.
Replace when I’m 64 and Good Morning Good Morning with Penny Lane and Strawberry fields would have made it the greatest
I it is May 2023 and I’m finally getting o😅 with that we’re working on since then hallelujah🎉!!!!!!
It was mid-1966 when the Beatles hadn't released their Revolver album yet and were still touring that this story hadn't started yet.
...and a HUGE "thank-you" goes out to Brian Wilson and Pet Sounds. 😁
Why? Admit it you think pet sounds is rubbish
How Paul wrote a dozen songs and came up with this idea right after REVOLVER is crazy. It’s like he was printing up all his creativity for this one project for his whole career then WHAM
Correct me if I'm wrong... the name for the album came from the Beatles playing in Toronto '64 or '65. The Police officer in charge of their protection or whatever his duties were was Sgt. Pepper and was introduced to the Beatles and received an autograph from the band for his young daughter. In return he gave them the OPP patch that Paul is wearing on his uniform. That's the way I heard it and it makes more sense than seeing a sign that said " Salt & Pepper ".....
My mom played the crap out of this album. I was 5 trying to figure it all out and what the meanings are. No wonder I am a little warped today lol
John's contributions on Peppers were abstract genius period ! 10:14
bold to leave strawberry and lane off pepper but then they added them to magical mystery months later that year.
i feel like you should have mentioned in the facts that paul actually met melanie coe twice (the girl that inspired shes leaving home) once in 1964 (i believe she won a lip syncing battle thing and the prize was to meet paul) and sometime after the release, dont remember the date
Hmpf … no mention of Jimi Hendrix playing Sgt Pepper live when he first came to England. That was iconic in itself and deserves a shout out.
Exactly my thoughts too.
You forgot the dog whistle on the inner groove of the A-side... 'something for all the family, including the pets'.
Once the studio years began, they never had to write for later live performances on world tours. This seems to have affected Ringo first - who loved live gigs - and George, who had a slew of songs ready for an album of his own by the time Abbey Road was almost done. It breaks my heart to see John and George on camera in Get Back, discussing what could have been solo careers for all while coming back to be Beatles to make albums if and when it felt right. Echoes of watching the 3, and then 2, working on new releases based on John's demos. I saw Sir Paul in concert in November and can only imagine how much he would have embraced the insanity of a Beatles/Wings/Plastic Ono reunion tour were it possible.
Nice work
FYI - Regents sounds was not in Tottenham, it’ was on Denmark Street in London’s West End; the nearest tube station is Tottenham Court Road which is probably the cause of the confusion
Hard to think that SPLHCB was , for some, just a kind of mark on a bench in Witthenall.
This is such an iconic and classic album 👍💯🥁😩🥁
Love this series, as an old rocker I enjoy the nostalgia. How about some Rolling Stones NEXT? “Beatles or Stones, man?!?”
I'm actually quite surprised that, other than a passing mention of one of the Beach Boys, that you never once mentioned the Beach Boys album "Pet Sounds" as a DIRECT inspiration for this album to even be existing. Even McCartney will tell you that.
The Beach Boys are perpetually underrated, sadly.
To even be existing? How? The concept was original. The cover was original. The music was original.
Pepper's is the natural evolution of Revolver. Pet Sounds inspired it in terms of wanting to create a lush, grandiose piece of work, yes, but that's about it. It's still quintessentially Beatles. Certainly songs like Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!, Good Morning Good Morning, Within You Without You and A Day in the Life sound totally unlike anything The Beach Boys ever recorded.
The beach boys are massively overrated god only knows is good and wouldn't it be nice is sweet but it's just Chuck berry mixed with Phil Spector and there's a reason it wasn't successful at the time and that's coz it's not good. Just coz Brian lost his mind doesn't make it genius! All there songs sounds the same and they didn't even play own instruments. I think American magazines were embarrassed by all the great bands being British so started saying we had a genius to and it's Brian Wilson when in reality Mike love done there best songs,they are no better then Herman's hermits or Gerry and the pacemakers, a twee little band that wrote some little ditties
@MrThedonhead Wow I can't even unpack how wrong you are. You have clearly never listened and really digested Pet Sounds, much less the Smile Sessions and Love You.
My favourite Beatles album but then again everything from Revolver to Abbey Road was great
🔵IT WOULD HAVE BEEN A MASTERPIECE IF THEY WOULD'VE KEPT AND NOT REMOVED STRAWBERRY FIELDS FOREVER AND PENNY LANE.🔴
THe album were rock music begin to be looked at as art.
A Day In The Life has to be the greatest song ever. Just has something disturbing, beautiful, magical and whimsical about it! Its like it couldn't of come from humans, its almost as good as moonlight mile