Beatles Songs Information
Beatles Songs Facts
As an avid Beatles fan, I love everything about them. I think that there were three main ingredients, which led to their amazing success: the
quality of the songwriting, the strong vocals and the musical experimentation. Their development was fascinating to observe. Beatles songs began
as catchy tunes with a few soulful ballads. It was almost unheard of in the early 1960s for pop groups to write their own compositions. Lennon
and McCartney were unusual in that regard and wrote songs for other people too, such as the Rolling Stones.
The lyrics started to go beyond the conventional boy meets girl scenario. The group were fans of Bob Dylan and were influenced by his lyrics
that were full of imagery and metaphor. John Lennon said later that he thought that pop songs and poetry had to be two separate things until
Dylan showed that they could be combined. Hallucinogenic drugs also became an influence in Beatlessongs, although some words were cited as drug
references when that wasn't the case. Equally, some drug references got through unnoticed. In the heady days of 1967, Lucy in the Sky with
Diamonds from Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band was said to be about a drug experience. In fact, the title was taken from a school
painting that John's young son had done and the lyrics were inspired by Alice in Wonderland, which John re-read every year.
Beatles Songs Tips
The Beatles evolved musically too and this was aided by the creative partnership with their record producer, George Martin. Martin was a
classically trained musician and he was able to interpret the ideas that the group had and the sounds that they wanted. Beatlessongs were the
first mainstream songs to use tape loops, backward tapes and alternating the speed of tapes. They recorded in the Abbey Road studios belonging to
EMI, where many orchestras made their records. This was significant as there would be instruments lying around that weren't usually used for pop
music. The Beatles and Martin made clever use of them.
Striving for an unusual sound was always important to the Beatles. The haunting opening bars of Strawberry Fields Forever is played on a
theramin. The invention of the moog synthesizer also made a contribution, able to electronically simulate virtually any sound e.g. the barrel
organ on For the Benefit of Mr. Kite. George Harrison introduced pop music to the wonderful Indian sitar on Norwegian Wood and Within You,
Without You. Beatles songs led the way and proved that critical and commercial success could be combined.
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