THE BEATLES: ANTHOLOGY 3 (1968-1969; 1995)
CD I:
1) A Beginning; 2) Happiness Is A Warm Gun; 3) Helter
Skelter; 4) Mean Mr Mustard; 5) Polythene Pam; 6) Glass Onion; 7) Junk; 8)
Piggies; 9) Honey Pie; 10) Don't Pass Me By; 11) Ob-La-Di Ob-La-Da; 12) Good
Night; 13) Cry Baby Cry; 14) Blackbird; 15) Sexy Sadie; 16) While My Guitar
Gently Weeps; 17) Hey Jude; 18) Not Guilty; 19) Mother Nature's Son; 20) Glass
Onion; 21) Rocky Raccoon; 22) What's The New Mary-Jane; 23) Step Inside
Love/Los Paranoias; 24) I'm So Tired; 25) I Will; 26) Why Don't We Do It In The
Road; 27) Julia.
CD
II: 1) I've Got A Feeling; 2) She Came In Through The Bathroom Window; 3) Dig A
Pony; 4) Two Of Us; 5) For You Blue; 6) Teddy Boy; 7) Rip It Up/Shake Rattle
And Roll/Blue Suede Shoes; 8) The Long And Winding Road; 9) Oh Darling; 10) All
Things Must Pass; 11) Mailman Bring Me No More Blues; 12) Get Back; 13) Old
Brown Shoe; 14) Octopus's Garden; 15) Maxwell's Silver Hammer; 16) Something;
17) Come Together; 18) Come And Get It; 19) Ain't She Sweet (Rehearsal); 20)
Because; 21) Let It Be; 22) I Me Mine; 23) The End.
The journey ends here, much the same way as it
started. No matter if we are dealing with the tense, but cooperative sessions
for the White Album, or with the
angry madhouse at Twickenham in early 1969, or with the final solemn ritual of
completing the circle with Abbey Road,
what we have here are nearly always bad — relatively
bad, of course — work-in-progress versions of what would, in the end, become
timeless masterpieces, regardless of the emotional states of their creators at
the time. Be it 1963 or 1969, the Beatles always chose the best take for the
official record; no exceptions that I could be aware of.
However, one of the major bonuses of Anthology 3 is that it offers much more
«new» stuff to the casual listener than the second volume — apparently, the
1968-69 sessions resulted in a larger number of canned outtakes than sessions
for the previous years. Quite possibly, this had to do with the band members
now working much more on their individual own than before — and consequently
running far stronger risks of having their contributions vetoed by other
members because of not being «Beatlesworthy» enough.
So it is up to us to decide now whether John's
ʽWhat's The New Mary Janeʼ, George's ʽNot Guiltyʼ, or Paul's ʽStep Inside Love
/ Los Paranoiasʼ were rightly excluded from the official canon or cruelly
wronged by being shelved for almost thirty long years. I would say that, all
things considered, the wait time should have been shorter, but also that I
mostly agree with the vetoes.
ʽNot Guiltyʼ is often highlighted as a
first-rate Harrison song that was abandoned much too easily, and should not
have waited until 1979, when George finally decided to rework and release it on
his eponymous album. But the vocal melody of the song is so seriously
underwritten that «first-rate», as far as I can tell, is out of the question —
it is hardly a coincidence that, when it came to emptying George's stunning
backlog on All Things Must Pass, ʽNot
Guiltyʼ was not seen fit for inclusion even without the vetoing block of his
former colleagues. It's got a fine riff, some terrific guitar pyrotechnics in
the largely instrumental coda, and primetime Harrison lyrics, but it definitely
lacks that certain «something» — be it the transcendence of ʽWhile My Guitarʼ,
the catchy humor of ʽPigsʼ, the subtle minimalism of ʽLong Long Longʼ, or even
the outright whackiness of ʽSavoy Truffleʼ. Good song, but if they gave all 5
to me and told me to exclude one, I'd have made the same choice as John and
Paul. Did Ringo have a vote at all?..
Another «lost classic» is John's ʽWhat's The
New Mary Janeʼ, one of
his «nutty» numbers that indulges in the pleasure of going from simple
absurdist piano-led music hall ditty (almost like a parody on something Paul
could have done) to an alien world of spooky sound collages, like a blueprint
for much of Amon Düül II's work on Tanz
Der Lemminge three years later (or maybe not, but somehow that association
did spring into my mind). When the final version of The Beatles was being assembled, the track was pulled in favor of
ʽRevolution #9ʼ — a much longer piece that did not have any musical basis at all. Should ʽMary Janeʼ had taken its place?
Years earlier, I would definitely have said yes; now I am not at all sure — no matter
how absurdist and silly some of John's stuff might sound, ʽMary Janeʼ lacks
«killer guts» where even ʽCry Baby Cryʼ has some. It's more of a musical joke
fit for something like the second LP of John's own Sometime In New York City, where he was fooling around with the
«Elephant Memory Band». A darn fine musical joke, though, and it's good to know
that it has not been lost.
1968 and, most prominently, 1969 introduced
plenty of tunes that later surfaced on the Beatles' solo albums — here, in
particular, we have an attempt to record ʽTeddy Boyʼ (later included on McCartney) and George's ʽAll Things
Must Passʼ (later included on, naturally, All
Things Must Pass). The former was and remains kinda fluffy, if cute — and
no, that's not «Paul in a nutshell», if
you want to know — and the latter's potential remained half-hidden until Phil
Spector came and laid a wall of ten million instruments on it. But the 1969
sessions also yielded lots of uninspired waste — there is no better way to
understand the futility of the band's attempt at «getting back to its roots»
than to listen to their perfunctory run through a medley of old rock'n'roll
hits, performed with none of the enthusiasm or motivation that they had in the
early Cavern days. And ʽMailman, Bring Me No More Blues?ʼ Really, that could
have been done by anyone. The only
small piece of true joy on Disc 2 is Paul's original demo of ʽCome And Get Itʼ
— a nice song, generously donated to Badfinger... who actually improved on it,
since Badfinger were one of the very few bands to carry on the «original
spirit» of the Beatles, whatever it was.
Elsewhere, it's the same old story. Vocal
harmonies for ʽBecauseʼ without the instrumental track. Nice, but they were
fairly well discernible with the
instruments already. A raw take on ʽOctopus' Gardenʼ with George still fumbling
and fussing around with the guitar solo, quite far from perfection. ʽThe Long
And Winding Roadʼ with Paul trying out a spoken
rather than sung version of the
bridge — what is this, Elvis time? An ʽOh! Darlingʼ tried out in an all-out comic mode — here, the bridge is crooned
in a hilarious falsetto rather than screamed out at the top of one's lungs.
Wind your way back to The White Album
and everything stays mostly the same...
...probably
with the exception of the original acoustic demo for ʽWhile My Guitar Gently
Weepsʼ, which sounds like an entirely different song from what it eventually
became — a meditative confessional, rather than a grand lament for the fate of
mankind. Although its evolution was a blessing, it is still very pleasing to
have the starting point as well: the
major highlight of Anthology 3, with
ʽMary Janeʼ, ʽNot Guiltyʼ, and ʽCome And Get Itʼ all coming in for the second
spot in a tier that lags significantly behind.
It goes without saying that the historical value of all this stuff, as
usual, is priceless. It is useful to
know, after all, that the original line in ʽPiggiesʼ went "...clutching
forks and knives to cut their pork chops"
rather than the final "eat their bacon" — "bacon" fits the
verbal flow better than "pork chops", even if it may make less sense
(people do tend to eat pork chops rather than bacon for dinner, I guess). Or
that the original version of ʽHappiness Is A Warm Gunʼ contained a direct lyrical
reference to Yoko — who, as it seems, provided some inspiration for the song, a
fact all Yoko-haters should keep in mind. Or a million or so similar
observations that each of us can make by thoroughly studying these documents.
One thing surely cannot be denied — studying
the development of Beatles songs can actually be far more enjoyable than enjoying the final takes of thousands of other bands. Think of the Anthology project from that angle, and
it might take its proper respectable place in the band's regular discography
some day.
Wow, 'Not Guilty' is incredible, and I think that with just a bit of work it could have replaced a few of the songs on The White Album.
ReplyDeleteOh and there's an even longer version on youtube.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bM72ozezNsg&feature=related
The lyrics of Not Guilty are awful. Lines like "I'm not here to steal your vest" (what?) and especially "But like you heard me said" are just cringeworthy, lazy song writing. Sometimes odd phrasing appeals but not in this case. It just seems like he was rhyming words without much thought to the meaning. Plus I find George's whiny, poor-me songs to get very old very fast.
ReplyDeleteI love all 3 anthologies, though, purely for the information they provide on how the Beatles worked through a song.
-- Drew
I do agree on While My Guitar. I often play that song accoustically at pubs and festivals, and what I do owes much more the Anthology 3 version than the White Album one — necessarily, since I don't have a band. The gift of the extra verse is valuable when filling out the acoustic version of the song (and it's rather brilliant, I think). Definitely the highlight of this collection.
ReplyDelete