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Revolver album - Songs

Revolver album - Songs: Encyclopedia II - Revolver album - Songs

Lennon contributed five songs on the album. "And Your Bird Can Sing" and "She Said, She Said" are two guitar-laden tracks with swirling melodies. Lennon later explained that "She Said, She Said" had been inspired by remarks he recalled from an LSD trip he had taken in Los Angeles with other musician friends and young film star Peter Fonda. According to Lennon, under the influence of the drug, Fonda had been repeating over and over "I know what it's like to be dead," to which Lennon acerbically replied, "Who put all that shit in your head?" This exchange, with min ...

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Revolver album, Revolver album - American release, Revolver album - Songs, Revolver album - Drug culture, Revolver album - Cover, Revolver album - Track listing, Revolver album - Side one, Revolver album - Side two, Revolver album - Clips, Revolver album - Release history

Revolver album, Revolver album - American release, Revolver album - Clips, Revolver album - Cover, Revolver album - Drug culture, Revolver album - Release history, Revolver album - Side one, Revolver album - Side two, Revolver album - Songs, Revolver album - Track listing

Revolver album: Encyclopedia II - Revolver album - Songs



Revolver album - Songs

Lennon contributed five songs on the album. "And Your Bird Can Sing" and "She Said, She Said" are two guitar-laden tracks with swirling melodies. Lennon later explained that "She Said, She Said" had been inspired by remarks he recalled from an LSD trip he had taken in Los Angeles with other musician friends and young film star Peter Fonda. According to Lennon, under the influence of the drug, Fonda had been repeating over and over "I know what it's like to be dead," to which Lennon acerbically replied, "Who put all that shit in your head?" This exchange, with minor changes, formed the core of the song.

On "I'm Only Sleeping," Harrison played the notes for the lead guitar (and for the second guitar in the solo) in reverse order, then reversed the tape and mixed it in. The backwards guitar sound builds the sleepy, ominous, and weeping tone of the song. This, along with backwards vocals used on the Beatles song "Rain" (recorded at the sessions and released separately, as a single) was the first recorded instance of backmasking, which Lennon discovered after mistakenly loading a reel-to-reel tape backwards while high on marijuana.

However, the experimentation in these songs appears eclipsed by Lennon's "Tomorrow Never Knows," which was one of the first songs of psychedelia, and included such groundbreaking techniques as reverse guitar, processed vocals and looped tape effects. Musically, it is based almost exclusively on a drum beat, and the lyrics are inspired by the Tibetan Book of the Dead, although the title came from a phrase Ringo was fond of repeating.

Much of the backing track consists of a series of prepared tape loops, stemming from Lennon and McCartney's interest in and experiments with magnetic tape and musique concrète techniques at that time. According to Beatles session chronicler Mark Lewisohn, Lennon and McCartney prepared a series of loops at home, and these then were added to the pre-recorded backing track. This was reportedly done live in a single take, with multiple tape recorders running simultaneously, and some of the longer loops extended out of the control room and down the corridor.

Lennon's processed lead vocal was another innovation. Always in search of ways of enhancing his voice, he gave a directive to EMI engineer Ken Townshend that he wanted to sound like he was singing from the top of a high mountain. Townshend solved the problem by splicing a line from the recording console into the studio's Leslie speaker, giving Lennon's vocal its ethereal filtered quality, although he was subsequently reprimanded by the studio management for doing so.

Another key production technique used for the first time on this album was Automatic double tracking (ADT), invented by Townshend on 6 April 1966. This technique used two linked tape recorders to automatically create a doubled vocal track, replacing the standard method, which was to double the vocal by singing the same piece twice onto a multitrack tape, a task Lennon particularly disliked. The Beatles were reportedly delighted with the invention and used it extensively on Revolver. ADT quickly became a standard pop production technique and led to related developments including phasing, flanging and chorus.

One of McCartney's more notable songs from this album is "Eleanor Rigby," which was released as a single (as a double A-side with "Yellow Submarine") concurrently with the album. This song contains McCartney's lyrical imagery and an intense and sometimes frightening string arrangement (scored by George Martin under McCartney's direction), which was inspired by the Bernard Herrmann score for François Truffaut's film Fahrenheit 451. Ringo has confirmed that he contributed the line Father McKenzie, writing the words of a sermon that no one will hear."' However it was orginally written as 'Father McCartney', however this was removed as it was thought that listeners would think they were talking about Paul's dad!

"Got to Get You Into My Life" was a Memphis Soul tribute inspired by Stax Records that used brass instrumentation extensively; although cast in the form of a love song, McCartney has since revealed that the song was actually an ode to marijuana. It was released as a single in 1976, ten years after the release of the album.

McCartney also contributed "For No One" (written for his then girlfriend Jane Asher), a melancholy song featuring a horn solo played by Alan Civil; "Good Day Sunshine," a cheery mockery of The Lovin' Spoonful, which was quickly covered as a single by The Tremeloes; and the epic "Here, There, and Everywhere," written in the style of The Beach Boys, and a hit in 1976 for Emmylou Harris.

George Harrison contributed three songs on Revolver, including the opening track "Taxman" (to which Lennon also contributed, albeit reluctantly). The "Mr. Wilson" and "Mr. Heath" in the lyrics refer to Harold Wilson and Edward Heath, who were respectively the British Labour Prime Minister and Conservative opposition leader of the time. The song refers to the rates of income tax paid by high earners like The Beatles, which were sometimes as high as 95% of their income. This would lead to many top musicians becoming tax exiles in later years.

Harrison also wrote "I Want to Tell You" about his difficulty expressing himself through lyrics, and "Love You To," a continuation of his experimentation with Indian music and the sitar, which started with "Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)" on 1965's Rubber Soul.

Other related archives

"Yesterday" ... and Today, 1966, 1976, 1997, 1998, 2001, 6 April, Q magazine, Alan Civil, All Music Guide, And Your Bird Can Sing, August 5, Automatic double tracking, Bernard Herrmann, Brian Jones, British, Channel 4, Classic FM, Conservative, Doctor Robert, Donovan, Edward Heath, Eleanor Rigby, Emmylou Harris, Fahrenheit 451, For No One, François Truffaut, George Martin, Good Day Sunshine, Got to Get You Into My Life, HMV, Hamburg, Harold Wilson, Harrison, Here, There and Everywhere, Here, There, and Everywhere, I Want to Tell You, I'm Only Sleeping, Indian music, Jane Asher, Klaus Voormann, LSD, Labour, Lennon-McCartney, Leslie speaker, Love You To, Mal Evans, Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown), Ozzy Osbourne, Peter Fonda, PopMatters, Robert Fraser, Rolling Stones, Rubber Soul, She Said She Said, She Said, She Said, Stax Records, TV network, Taxman, The Beach Boys, The Beatles, The Goons, The Guardian, The Lovin' Spoonful, The Tremeloes, Tibetan Book of the Dead, Tomorrow Never Knows, VH1, Yellow Submarine, Yesterday . . . and Today, backmasking, brass instrumentation, chorus, collage, flanging, greatest albums, marijuana, min, musique concrète, phasing, psychedelia, rEVOLVEr, s, sitar, tax exiles



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Songs", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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