THE BEATLES: REVOLVER (1966)
1) Taxman; 2) Eleanor Rigby;
3) I'm Only Sleeping; 4) Love You To; 5) Here, There And Everywhere; 6) Yellow
Submarine; 7) She Said She Said; 8) Good Day Sunshine; 9) And Your Bird Can
Sing; 10) For No One; 11) Dr. Robert; 12) I Want To Tell You; 13) Got To Get
You Into My Life; 14) Tomorrow Never Knows.
In 1966, the Beatles were cool. Of course, in certain ways, they were cool ever since the
world learned enough of them to treat them as such, and in still other ways,
they remain cool even today. But I am not just talking about the usual «cool»
here; I'm talking about «cool cool», that
particular kind of it that sows respect even in the hardened hearts of young
cynical intellectuals. For the Beatles, 1966 was that very brief period where
they were, like, one of the coolest things ever — so much so that, despite
their pop orientation, they could be competing with the likes of Ornette
Coleman. After Rubber Soul, nobody could
properly predict where they would go next, and, although in retrospect their
creative development seems quite logical and consistent, back in those days
each new record was seen as a revelation.
They even looked
cool — still wearing the suits, but exchanging the cutesy ties for rougher looking
sweaters, adopting «continental intellectual» sunglasses, letting their hair
down to barely acceptable length, but still quite a long distance away from
the Frisco hippie look (and still untainted by the Maharishi aura). Still very
much in the public eye, too, keeping touring activities on a limited, but active
scale: the band's last concert, in Candlestick Park, San Francisco, would be
held twenty four days after the release of Revolver
(without featuring even a single one of the new tracks). This was the year of
John's «more popular than Jesus» scandal — adding as much to the «coolness»
image as could be sucked up by the world's growing share of cultural rebels.
The Beatles, though, were no rebels. They were just cool. Nothing else.
Consequently, Revolver may not be the Beatles' «best ever» album (what is?), or
their most «revolutionary» album (one could write a thesis on that issue and
still be left standing in the middle of the road), but the way it seems to me,
it is their «coolest» album — in mid-'66, all of the conditions for that were
met, no difficulties encountered. The reason why so many «hip» people prefer it
to Sgt. Pepper are crystal clear — Sgt. Pepper is saturated with
idealistic ambition, a genuine desire (at least, on McCartney's part) to make a
«grand» statement from a «rock guru» standpoint, which can easily piss off some
people, especially if they feel that
the actual music is not quite up to the task (and that feeling is not that
difficult to feel for an album that has ʽWhen I'm 64ʼ on it). On Revolver, however, the idea of a
«conceptual» approach had not yet burgeoned — the songs are perfectly free to
flow, without having to work for any common noble purpose. And yet, at the same
time, Revolver washes away the last
traces of «simplistic teen pop» that could still be evident on bits of Rubber Soul (ʽWaitʼ, ʽRun For Your
Lifeʼ, etc.).
It is also a «transitional» album, in the best
sense of the word that there is: Lennon, McCartney, and Harrison are now fully
established as individual creative forces with separate, coherent creative
ideologies (George gets a grand total of three songs to celebrate that, his
largest share ratio per one vinyl disc on a Beatles album ever), and yet the
group spirit is still completely intact — as evidenced not only by the jointly
written ʽYellow Submarineʼ, which works primarily as a charming buddy anthem,
sealed off by having Ringo sing on it, but simply by the fact that everything
is perfectly coherent, with no visible attempts to pull the blanket in opposite
directions, and plenty of emotionally involved and fruitful collaboration, too,
on each other's songs.
And, above all else, perhaps, it's a LOUD
album! Revolver is often proclaimed
as the record on which the Beatles
finally embrace the psychedelic vibe without reservations — but, truth be told,
there is relatively little «hardcore psychedelia» out there, apart from Klaus
Voormann's sleeve painting and ʽTomorrow Never Knowsʼ. On the other hand, there
is a lot of loud, thick, bulging electric guitar-driven rock music, usually
provided by John (ʽShe Said She Saidʼ, ʽAnd Your Bird Can Singʼ, ʽDoctor
Robertʼ), but also by George (ʽTaxmanʼ, ʽI Want To Tell Youʼ), whereas Paul,
assisted by the «rock saboteur» George Martin, is channelling the loudness into
the realm of art songs (ʽEleanor Rigbyʼ) or brass band stylistics (ʽGot To Get
You Into My Lifeʼ) — adding heap big lot of aural diversity without disrupting
the overall flow.
And finally — it is the first Beatles album
where not even a single song can be said to «owe a heavier-than-it-should-be
debt» to anybody else in particular. I have scrutinized every piece in my mind
several times, and not a single one qualifies as «okay, here they are being a
bit too much somebody else (Chuck Berry, Carl Perkins, Bob Dylan, Burt
Bacharach, the Byrds, etc.) and not quite enough themselves». Like everybody
else, I have my favorite tracks here and ones that I could, more or less, live
without (ʽDoctor Robertʼ, even after all these years, strikes me as a rather
minor novelty number, notable for its drug-related lyrics rather than much of
anything else; melodically, it seems like a miscalculated attempt on John's
part to upstage Paul with ʽPaperback Writerʼ), but all of them exclusively
represent the vision of the Beatles and no one else.
A possible
exception is ʽLove You Toʼ — the band's (more precisely, George's, since the only
other band member to be involved here is Ringo on tambourine) first serious
attempt to incorporate real Indian motives in its music, rather than just
plunk out a simple (but effective) folk melody on the sitar in ʽNorwegian
Woodʼ. It is still a point of debate whether he is responsible for all the
sitar playing on the track himself or there are uncredited Indian musicians
supporting him at least on the soloing parts — most musicologists are inclined
to believe the latter, claiming that it would have hardly been possible for
George to master the necessary skills in less than one year of training, not to
mention that, for some reason, those «magic skills» would somehow never re-appear
on subsequent tracks (and by the time they got around to recording ʽThe Inner
Lightʼ in 1968, the Indian session musicians were already given proper credit,
even as George was taking extra lessons from Ravi Shankar himself).
But this should not detract from the fact that
ʽLove You Toʼ is not only the first full-fledged merger of Indian and Western
motives in pop music, as opposed to tiny flourishes in the past, but also one
of the best such mergers — unlike future, expectedly more meditative, ventures,
this one actually rocks, and combines the «spirit of the drone» with the
memorability of a pop hook in a way that somehow seems completely inoffensive
for both cultural approaches. Nine times out of ten, the whole «East meets
West» thing in pop, be it Western-produced or Eastern-produced, is either dead
boring or hideously laughable. With ʽLove You Toʼ, I used to be a little bored,
for sure, but now I am convinced that its basic melody is no worse than the
average melody of a George Harrison song, and that the sitar carries it in a
natural and unforced manner. Indian music aficionados will cringe at its lack
of «authenticity», of course, but for those who actually look forward to getting
into Indian music from a completely Western background, ʽLove You Toʼ and the
likes of it would be a respectable initial compromise. At least it was good
enough for Shankar.
Besides, ʽLove You Toʼ is as true to George's
ego as anything else he'd written. On Revolver,
ʽTaxmanʼ introduces us to his mundane side — never a proper hermit, George
liked his money just as everyone else does — and on ʽI Want To Tell Youʼ, he
plays that kid in The Who's ʽI Can't Explainʼ who finally grew up and learned
to articulate more properly: now at least he realizes that it's no big deal to
be confused, because "I could wait forever, I've got time". Funny
buddy thing: both of the songs owe a huge part of their effect to Paul — first
contributing the exquisite angry guitar solo on ʽTaxmanʼ (raga-style! mind the
irony!), then enhancing the somber mood of ʽI Want To Tell Youʼ with the
finger-tapping piano bits.
Speaking of Paul, Revolver marks that particular point in the race where he fully
catches up with John, the both of them speeding ahead neck-to-neck (another
good point to hold up the reputation of the album). Five out of fourteen songs
constitute his private domain (as opposed to the average four or even less on
preceding albums), and even though all of them are expectedly «wimpy» and
sentimental next to John's «grittier» material, at least two out of five
transcend generic sentimentalism by delving deep into human tragedy — ʽEleanor
Rigbyʼ is often seen as the ultimate heart-breaking anthem to loneliness, but
ʽFor No Oneʼ, written and arranged on a slightly less epic / anthemic scale,
is actually its more reclusive, but not any less beautiful cousin. (Quite
closely matched in spirit by Paul's solo classic ʽAnother Dayʼ four years
later — although ʽAnother Dayʼ was quite «upbeat» in comparison, not as much of
a straightahead downer; not to mention lacking the exquisite extra flourish of
Alan Civil's French horn solo).
Come to think of it, the emotional depth of
these two — Paul's suddenly emerging ability to invent two fictitious, but
realistic characters and then get so deeply under their skins — pretty much
transcends the depth of anything even John had written up to that point. I
cannot even exclude the thought that this is the starting point from which we
have to unwind the story of the Beatles' breakup (which, in my opinion, has
always been the story of John Winston Lennon being pissed off at one James Paul
McCartney stealing his, John Winston
Lennon's, band from under John Winston Lennon's nose — and not being able to do
anything about it, because all the stealing happened through fair competition.
But that's putting it too roughly, of course). In any case, Revolver sees Paul firmly and finally
taming his «sappy» instincts and taking them in the only right direction that
can turn one's genius sentimentalism into lyrical tragism.
On the other hand, you could argue that
sometimes genius sentimentalism can place a truly great song on a top spot without adding huge psychological depth,
and that such feats are arguably harder to achieve. That is what's being done
on ʽHere, There And Everywhereʼ, though, a «sappy», «sugary» song if there ever
was one, but you would have to be a hardcore balloon-shooting Puritan to
remain unmoved by it. Suffice it to say that I have always felt that the line
about "running my hands through her hair", regardless of the quality
of the lyric itself, actually sounds
like the vocal equivalent of «running one's hands through her hair»: this is
truly one of the most magical double-tracked vocal recordings ever made (and
this is also why the song never
produced the same effect in concert, whenever Paul would sing it live later on
— heck, there actually was a real
reason why the Beatles quit live performing, and it goes much deeper than «how
the heck are we supposed to play our backward-recorded guitars onstage!»).
So what about John? At this point, he does not
yet fully realize that Paul is tugging on the rug, and Revolver is the last Beatles album to feature him in a completely
coherent, workmanlike state, rather than thrown off balance by a miriad extra
things. We learn that he is quite preoccupied with the LSD issue — but, funny
enough, on both of the tracks that deal with it directly his is the view of a
curious outsider: it's either "She said I know what it's like to be
dead" or "My friend works for the national health, Dr. Robert".
ʽShe Said She Saidʼ went on to become a classic drug culture anthem, but even
though its lead guitar line is a little reminiscent of the San Francisco /
Grateful Dead jamming style, it is still firmly rooted in the Beatles' usual
brand of pop rock; and apart from the thinly veiled lyrics, there is nothing
particularly psychedelic about ʽDr. Robertʼ, either. Still, both songs were
quite daring for their time, what with The Beatles having the disadvantage of
falling under far more closer public scrutiny than, say, The 13th Floor Elevators.
«More popular than Jesus» + «Take a drink from his special cup, Dr. Robert» =
did I hear somebody calling for trouble? On the other hand, ʽShe Said She Saidʼ
could only be interpreted as a vow of abstinence ("I know that I'm ready
to leave"), so it's not all that
bad.
In reality, there are only two genuine bits of
psychedelia on the entire record. The one that people rarely talk about is ʽI'm Only Sleepingʼ, which, formally, is just a
semi-autobiographical sketch of a lazy guy who sees no reason to get out of bed,
and has nothing to do with drugs — on a lyrical basis: the general aura of the
song is, of course, extremely trippy, and it would still remain trippy even without the backward guitar solo. Then
again, dreaming, or even «waiting for a sleepy feeling» can sometimes be quite
a psychedelic experience without any drugs — and there was nobody who could
transmit that yawny, sleepy, fuzzy-conscience atmosphere like John could. I
used to picture him actually installing a bed in the Abbey Road Studios and
recording directly from under the sheets, and it looked very realistic in my
mind. (A similar, but slightly different experience would be captured on that
same imaginary bed two years later with ʽI'm So Tiredʼ). Listen to how all the instruments are made to sound as
if the person playing them had not had any sleep for at least 48 hours — even
Ringo's drums seem to be «dragging their feet». And, to boot, a great muffled
yawn at 2:01, during Paul's quiet bass break before the second bridge.
The one that people always talk about is ʽTibetan Book Of The Dead In C Majorʼ, a.k.a.
ʽIf You Have No Idea On How To Name Your Song, Ask Ringoʼ. Now this one, of
course, would be impossible to dismiss as «non-psychedelic»: there is hardly a
more flamboyant way of giving yourself away than "turn off your mind,
relax and float downstream". Serious adepts like to point out that the
tune is a mere trifle compared to «hardcore» London psychedelia of the time,
such as Syd Barrett's Pink Floyd. Yet even on an objective basis, there is
really far more complexity and audacity involved in the meticulous
construction of ʽTomorrow Never Knowsʼ from its multiple tape loops than in any
of Floyd's astral jamming. And on a subjective basis, well... don't you just
love that unnerving Ringo beat?
Seriously, what I love most about ʽTomorrow
Never Knowsʼ is how well it ties in with the album cover. (That link alone
would suffice to earn the overall non-psychedelic Revolver its overall very-much-psychedelic reputation). The song
places you, the listener, in a capsule, sends you «floating downstream», and
has all sorts of impressions flash by in ragged, broken, mysterious tape
segments. There has to be an active sender, of course, responsible for the
capsule-making and the button-pushing — and there he is, four of them, to be
precise, on the album cover, with everyone and everything wedged in between the
four Mount-Rushmorian faces. Somebody feeling a bit too God-like, perhaps?
Well, the Beatles had been humble enough for too long for their own good; by
late 1966, they thought they were entitled to a little more than usual.
Besides, feeling God-like is an obligatory ingredient of «coolness» — at least,
it used to be like that in the
mid-Sixties, when idealistic hopes for the breeding of a new, super-progressive
kind of conscience were at their peak, and «coolness» was not yet thought of as
incompatible with «mass popularity».
Then again, as great as ʽTomorrow Never Knowsʼ
is in its album-closing role, there are some days on which I think that ʽYellow
Submarineʼ might have worked even more
effectively — as a simpler, friendlier, homelier gesture to say goodbye with.
One for the kids — in fact, it is ironic that it took the Beatles most «adult»
album up-to-date to contain the first song targeted primarily at their
pre-teen audiences. (Unless you, too, believe that the whole thing is a
metaphor for an acid trip, and that John and Paul were taking it out on their
simpleton drummer by constantly supplying him with drug innuendos: ʽYellow
Submarineʼ, ʽWith A Little Help From My Friendsʼ... throw in the line about
"what goes on in your mind", and the picture's complete). For some
reason, it never satisfied me in its silly position as track No. 6 on Side 1 —
couldn't they have at least switched it places with ʽShe Said She Saidʼ? It's a
side-closer if there ever was one! Or, at least, a side-opener, for which
function it had to wait until the movie soundtrack.
As far as I am concerned, though, that little
mix-up with the sequencing is just about the only flaw I can see about the
whole record. Almost fifty years later, it continues to sound just as fresh and
relevant as it was back in its time, without losing a single drop of its «coolness»,
despite not even having an overall conceptual backbone (or, perhaps, because of that?), and yet, still being
somewhat larger than the sum of its individual parts. Just like Rubber Soul, it pushes its nose in a
dozen different stylistic, emotional, and thematic directions — only this time,
nobody does the pushing but the Beatles themselves. If Rubber Soul is the album on which they successfully attempt to
turn into the greatest band in the world, then Revolver is the album on which they know of their superpowers as the greatest band in the world, and not
afraid to use them. Ambitiousness? Vanity? Pretense? A double helping for me,
please, with some meaning of within on top.
Check "Revolver" (CD) on Amazon