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Revolver (Beatles album)

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Revolver
Album cover
LP by The Beatles
Released August 5 1966 (UK)
August 8 1966 (US)
Recorded Abbey Road 1966
Genre Rock
Length 35 min 1 s
Label Parlophone (UK) PCS 7009
Capitol (US) S(T) 2576
Producer George Martin
Professional reviews
Q 5/5 Nov '00
Ink Blot Positive [1]
Pop Matters Positive Mar 29, '04
AMG 5/5 link
The Beatles Chronology
Rubber Soul
(1965)
Revolver
(1966)
A Collection of Beatles' Oldies
(1966)
The Beatles American Chronology
"Yesterday" ... and Today
(1966)
Revolver
(1966)
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
(1967)

Revolver was The Beatles' seventh album in three years, released on August 5, 1966. The album showcased a number of new stylistic developments which would become more pronounced on later albums.

Revolver is critically acclaimed as one of the best albums of the era, and of all time. In 2003 the TV channel VH1 named it the number 1 greatest album of all time. Revolver was also voted the best album of all time in the Virgin All Time Top 1,000 Albums [2]. A Pop Matters review described the album as "the individual members of the greatest band in the history of pop music peaking at the exact same time" [3], while Ink Blot magazine claims it "stands at the summit of western pop music" [4].

American release

As a sidenote, the original US LP release of Revolver marked the last time Capitol would alter an "established" UK Beatles album for the US market. As three of its tracks: "I'm Only Sleeping", "And Your Bird Can Sing" and "Doctor Robert" had been used for the earlier "Yesterday" ... and Today compilation, they were simply deleted here, yielding an 11 track album instead of the UK's 14. The CD era standardizes this album to the original UK configuration.

Songs

George Harrison contributed three songs on Revolver including the opening track "Taxman" (which Lennon also contributed to). 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 90% of their income. This would lead to many top musicians becoming tax exiles in later years.

Harrison also wrote "I Want to Tell You", a standard rock song about the disarray of being unable to confess a longing for someone, and "Love You To", his first experimentation with Indian music and the sitar.

On "I'm Only Sleeping", Harrison played the notes in reverse order, then reversed the tape and mixed it in. This song is Lennon's, and it is his comment on the futility of hastiness in the modern world.

"Yellow Submarine", by McCartney and "Doctor Robert" also reflect the growing drug culture of the 1960s. The character Doctor Robert is thought to be a conflation of several people, including the Beatles' dentist (who first supplied them with LSD) and London art dealer Robert Fraser, who was a close friend of the group and who occasionally provided the group with drugs. The latter was Lennon's, along with "And Your Bird Can Sing" and "She Said, She Said", 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 acerbicly replied, "Who put all that shit in your head?". This exchange, with minor changes, formed the core of the song.

Compared to Lennon's hard rock experimentation, McCartney composed six diverse songs, all considered popular music standards. The most famous is "Eleanor Rigby" which was released as a single (backed by "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 Francois Truffaut's film Fahrenheit 451.

"Got to Get You Into My Life" was a Motown experiment and tribute that usesd brass instrumentation xtensively; 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 Lovin' Spoonful mockery and the epic "Here, There, and Everywhere", written in the style of The Beach Boys.

The lightest track on the album is "Yellow Submarine", which was deliberately written as a psychedelic children's song; it includes uncredited songwriting and vocal contributions by Donovan, who had become a close friend of the group. Faithful Beatles roadie Mal Evans also sang on the track, which made use of a number of stock sound effects the group found in the Abbey Road taped sound effects library, many of which had been collected by George Martin for his production of comedy recordings by The Goons.

Tomorrow Never Knows

Lennon's "Tomorrow Never Knows" was one of the first songs of psychedelia, and included such groundbreaking techniques as reverse guitar, processed vocals and looped tape effects.

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 music concrete 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.

Cover

The cover illustration was created by German-born bassist and artist Klaus Voorman, who was one of the Beatles' oldest friends from their days at the Star Club in Hamburg. Voorman's illustration, part line drawing and part collage, included photographs by Robert Whitaker, who also took the back cover photographs and many other famous images of the group between 1964 and 1966, including the infamous "Butcher Sleeve".

Track listing

  1. "Taxman" (Harrison) SAMPLE (184k)
  2. "Eleanor Rigby" (Lennon-McCartney) SAMPLE (134k)
  3. "I'm Only Sleeping" (Lennon-McCartney) SAMPLE (158k)
  4. "Love You To" (Harrison)
  5. "Here, There, and Everywhere" (Lennon-McCartney)
  6. "Yellow Submarine" (Lennon-McCartney)
  7. "She Said She Said" (Lennon-McCartney)
  8. "Good Day Sunshine" (Lennon-McCartney)
  9. "And Your Bird Can Sing" (Lennon-McCartney)
  10. "For No One" (Lennon-McCartney)
  11. "Doctor Robert" (Lennon-McCartney)
  12. "I Want to Tell You" (Harrison)
  13. "Got to Get You Into My Life" (Lennon-McCartney) SAMPLE (149k)
  14. "Tomorrow Never Knows"(Lennon-McCartney)

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