All The Songs: The Story Behind Every Beatles Release
All The Songs: The Story Behind Every Beatles Release
All The Songs: The Story Behind Every Beatles Release
Patti Smith
table of contents
ease se Me bea tles for sale ber soul
I Saw Her Standing There Misery Anna (Go To Him) Chains Boys Ask Me Why Please Please Me Love Me Do P.S. I Love You Baby Its You Do You Want To Know A Secret A Taste Of Honey Theres A Place Twist and Shout
4 6 8
1963
1963
ALBUM
date de parution
n1 pendant 30 semaines
1962 1963
16
58
64
No Reply Im A Loser Babys In Black Rock And Roll Music Ill Follow The Sun Mr. Moonlight Kansas City / Hey Hey Hey Hey Eight Days A Week Words Of Love Honey Dont Every Little Thing I Dont Want To Spoil The Party What Youre Doing Everybodys Trying To Be My Baby
1964 1964
ALBUM
1964
date de parution
n 1 pendant 11 semaines
de Beatles 65 / n 1 pendant 9 semaines ; le 14 juin 1965 sous le nom de Beatles VI / n 1 pendant 6 semaines
Grande-Bretagne : 27 novembre 1964 / n 1 le 10 dcembre 1964 tats-Unis : 23 novembre 1964 / n 1 le 26 dcembre 1964
158
198
204
Drive My Car Norwegian Wood You Wont See Me Nowhere Man Think For Yourself The Word Michelle What Goes On Girl Im Looking Through You In My Life Wait If I Needed Someone Run For Your Life
1965
(Double face A)
ALBUM
Revo lver
1966
ALBUM
date de parution Grande-Bretagne : 5 aot 1966 / n 1 pendant 7 semaines tats-Unis : le 6 dcembre 1966 / n 1 pendant 6 semaines ; le 20 juin 1966 ( Yesterday And Today ) / n 1 pendant 5 semaines
Taxman Eleanor Rigby Im Only Sleeping Love You To Here, There And Everywhere Yellow Submarine She Said She Said Good Day Sunshine And Your Bird Can Sing For No One Doctor Robert I Want To Tell You Got To Get You Into My Life Tomorrow Never Knows
1965
date de parution Grande-Bretagne : 3 dcembre 1965 / n 1 pendant 8 semaines tats-Unis : le 6 dcembre 1965 / n 1 pendant 6 semaines ; le 20 juin 1966 ( Yesterday And Today ) / n 1 pendant 5 semaines
Grande-Bretagne : 3 dcembre 1965 / n 1 le 16 dcembre 1965 tats-Unis : 6 dcembre 1965 / n 5 le 25 dcembre 1965
268
310
316
1967
1967
Grande-Bretagne : 7 juillet 1967 / n 1 le 19 juillet 1967 pendant 3 semaines tats-Unis : 17 juillet 1967 / n 1 le 19 aot 1967 pendant 1 semaine
1967
Hello, Goodbye
(Face A de I Am The Walrus)
ALBUM
SINGLE
date de parution
date de parution Grande-Bretagne : (EP) 8 dcembre 1967 / n 1 le 13 janvier 1968 pendant 2 semaines tats-Unis : (album) 27 novembre 1967 / n 1 le 1er janvier 1968 pendant 8 semaines
Hello, Goodbye/I Am The Walrus Grande-Bretagne : 24 novembre 1967 / n 1 le 6 dcembre 1967 pendant 7 semaines tats-Unis : 27 novembre 1967 / n 1 le 30 dcembre 1967 pendant 3 semaines
408
418
1969
438
ow subrine
FACE A Yellow Submarine Only A Northern Song All Together Now Hey Bulldog Its All Too Much All You Need Is Love FACE B (musiques de George Martin) Pepperland Sea Of Time Sea Of Holes Sea Of Monsters March Of The Meanies Pepperland Laid Waste Yellow Submarine In Pepperland
1969
bey Road
Come Together Something Maxwells Silver Hammer Oh ! Darling Octopuss Garden I Want You (Shes So Heavy) Here Comes The Sun Because You Never Give Me Your Money Sun King Mean Mr. Mustard Polythene Pam She Came In Through The Bathroom Window Golden Slumbers Carry That Weight The End Her Majesty
1969
SINGLE
date de parution
ALBUM
date de parution
Grande-Bretagne : 26 septembre 1969 /
ALBUM
date de parution
Grande-Bretagne : 30 mai 1969 / n 1 pendant 3 semaines partir du 11 juin 1969 tats-Unis : 4 juin 1969 / n 8 le 14 juin 1969
n 1 le 23 mai 1970 pendant 3 semaines tats-Unis : 1er octobre 1969 / n 1 pendant 11 semaines
526
540
548
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INDEX
A Hard Days Night I Should Have Known Better If I Fell Im Happy Just To Dance With You And I Love Her Tell Me Why Cant Buy Me Love Any Time At All Ill Cry Instead Things We Said Today When I Get Home You Cant Do That Ill Be Back
1963
Grande-Bretagne : 29 novembre 1963 / n 1 le 12 dcembre 1963 tats-Unis : 26 dcembre 1963 / n 1 le 1er fvrier 1964
ALBUM
ALBUM
n 1 pendant 21 semaines
72
1963
de Meet The Beatles / n 1 pendant 11 semaines ; le 10 avril 1964 sous le nom de The Beatles Second Album
80
1964
date de parution
date de parution Grande-Bretagne : 10 juillet 1964 / n 1 pendant 21 semaines partir du 25 juillet tats-Unis : le 26 juin 1964 / n 1 pendant 14 semaines partir du 20 juillet 1964 sous le nom de Something New
120
elp!
Help ! The Night Before Youve Got To Hide Your Love Away I Need You Another Girl Youre Going To Lose That Girl Ticket To Ride Act Naturally Its Only Love You Like Me Too Much Tell Me What You See Ive Just Seen A Face Yesterday Dizzy Miss Lizzy
1965
1965
Yes It Is
(face B de Ticket To Ride)
Im Down
(face B de Help !)
1965
ALBUM
date de parution
Grande-Bretagne : 6 aot 1965 /
SINGLE
date de parution
SINGLE
date de parution
n 1 pendant 9 semaines
tats-Unis : le 14 juin 1965 Beatles VI /
n 1 pendant 6 semaines ; le 20 juin 1966 Yesterday And Today / n 1 pendant 5 semaines ; le 13 aot 1965 Help ! / n 1 pendant 9 semaines ; le 6 dcembre 1965 Rubber Soul / n 1 pendant 6 semaines
Ticket To Ride / Yes It Is Grande-Bretagne : 9 avril 1965 / n 1 pendant 3 semaines partir du 24 avril 1965 tats-Unis : 19 avril 1965 / n 1 pendant 1 semaine partir du 22 mai 1965
Help ! / Im Down Grande-Bretagne : 23 juillet 1965 / n 1 pendant 3 semaines partir du 7 aot 1965 tats-Unis : 19 juillet 1965 / n 1 pendant 3 semaines partir du 4 septembre 1965
214
260
264
(Double face A)
1967
1966
1967
Grande-Bretagne : 10 juin 1966 / n 1 le 23 juin 1966 tats-Unis : 30 mai 1966 / n 1 le 25 juin 1966
Grande-Bretagne : 17 fvrier 1967 / n 2 tats-Unis : 13 fvrier 1967 / n 1 pendant 1 semaine le 18 mars (pour Penny Lane)
ALBUM
date de parution
358
364
374
1968
Grande-Bretagne : 15 mars 1968 / n 1 le 27 mars 1968 pendant 3 semaines tats-Unis : 18 mars 1968 / n 4 le 23 mars 1968
1968
1968
SINGLE
date de parution
Grande-Bretagne : 30 aot 1968 / n 1 le 11 septembre 1968 pendant 2 semaines tats-Unis : 26 aot 1968 / n 1 le 28 septembre 1968 pendant 9 semaines
album
date de parution 22 novembre 1968 / n1 pendant 30 semaines
ALBUM
442
1970
448
516
1969
SINGLE
date de parution
Get Back/Dont Let Me Down Grande-Bretagne : 11 avril 1969 / n 1 le 23 avril 1969 pendant 6 semaines tats-Unis : 5 mai 1969 / n 1 le 24 mai 1969 pendant 5 semaines
let it be
Two Of Us Dig A Pony Across The Universe I Me Mine Dig It Let It Be Maggie Mae Ive Got A Feeling One After 909 The Long And Winding Road For You Blue Get Back
1970
ALBUM
SINGLE
date de parution
date de parution Grande-Bretagne : 8 mai 1970 / n 1 le 23 mai 1970 pendant 3 semaines tats-Unis : 18 mai 1970 n 1
Let It Be/ You Know My Name (Look Up The Number) Grande-Bretagne : 6 mars 1970 tats-Unis : 6 mars 1970 / n 1 le 11 avril 1970 pendant 2 semaines
604
608
644
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PREFACE
On the eve of June 1, 1967, my friend Janet Hamill and I were camped in the family laundry room with a transistor radio, feverishly awaiting midnight. At that moment the Beatles new album, Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band, was to be premiered across America over local FM radio stations. It was a unifying moment for our generation, and joining the collective mind, we listened transfixed. The moods swung madly from cut to cutRingos inclusive With A Little Help from My Friends, Pauls look into the future with When Im 64, Georges trance-like Within You Without You, the calliope of Johns Mr. Kite. By the time A Day In The Life unfolded and the final chord stretched out into forever, we were ecstatic. For two aspiring young poets, that midnight journey offered possibilities that spun off in all directions. I had come late to the Beatles. In the great divide of the new groups from England, I preferred the darker, more visceral Animals and Rolling Stones. But as the Beatles grew musically and conceptually, I was drawn in. By Rubber Soul I felt myself along for their ride, and with Revolver I was sold, acknowledging their influence and their enduring effect on our cultural voice. I joined the legions seduced by the words of their worldall four worlds, that is. The mystic paths lit by the lantern of George. The human and melancholic joy of Ringo. The cinematic visions of Paul. Johns heightened, Joycean wordplay. They were so different from one another, like the four points on a compass, and yet contributed so much as a band. They combined the spiritual and the romantic, the absurd and political, and as they evolved, we evolved with them. They aspired to literacy, which makes this book all the more revelatory. Even their earliest work, She Loves You or I Want To Hold Your Hand, has the simplicity of a Hank Williams song, poetry reduced to its essential phrase. By the time they reach the emotionally surreal landscape of Strawberry Fields Forever, which heralded the coming of Sgt. Pepper in that sacred spring, their abstract imagery had become dreamlike, hallucinatory. Somehow it all made sense. Their songs got into your head, heard from passing cars, storefronts and jukeboxes. We sang along wholeheartedly. We sang lyrics knowing and yet not knowing their multi-leveled meanings. These songs offered a sometimes-undecipherable and poetic language made familiar with melodies and harmonies that fit hand-in-glove. We did not need to break them down. We felt them. They embraced the small in the humble and exquisite Blackbird and expanded humankind with the universal phrase All you need is love. In between lies an arc only few are gifted-to embody the generational shift from adolescence into maturity. To grow and serve within ones words, ones music, ones art. Patti Smith
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foreword
Between June 6, 1962, the date of the first audition of the Beatles at Abbey Road Studios, and May 8, 1970, the date of the release of their last album, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr wrote an exceptional page in the history of popular music and changed the musical panorama of the sixties. However, the four young men from Liverpool, the future Fab Four, could not have predicted anything so phenomenal in their early days. No one could imagine that a group of guitarists (three guitarists and a drummer) would become a strong influence on their contemporaries and future generations. When they landed on the tarmac at JFK Airport in 1964, Elvis did not even feel threatened. How could have we guessed that the Beatles would open the doors to the New World to other British music groups such as the Stones, the Kinks, and the Who, and would attain such worldwide popularity? Those who love and are interested in the Beatles are probably wondering why we would dedicate another book to the group. However, today, fifty years after the release of their first album, we have new and relevant documentation that allows us to understand more fully the creation of their songs. In the following pages, we focus on words from the Beatles themselves and their immediate entourage to get closer to the truth and, above all, to keep us away from legends and myth. Our approach is based on verifiable content. To this end, we have crosschecked most of the existing sources and provided a footnote. In this book, we analyze only the singles and the original English albums (omitting anthologies and collections of all kinds) planned and released by the Beatles themselves, in order to respect and have a better understanding of their artistic process. The content in the book is arranged by release date. However, without doing a comprehensive study on the Beatles discography, it seemed necessary to mention American single and album releases and their rankings (different from the British ones due to a track listing often at variance from the original) because the United States played a crucial role in their careers. Finally, we attach an importance to technique, addressing methods, instruments, and studio practices at the time. Specialist readers will find useful information; a broader public will discover an exciting world that the Beatles themselves helped to develop, notably starting in 1966 when the Beatles decided to stop touring and focus on recording. For readers of this book, some keys are needed. First of all, when some information is still unverifiable and when the Beatles and their immediate entourage contradict each other, directly or indirectly, we mention the lack of certainty with a question mark (?), especially in the credits. In these same credits, when we speak of one musicians singing, that means he takes all the vocal parts (chorus and harmony).
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The Indra is the club in Hamburg where The Beatles first played as early as August 17, 1960.
My Bonnie
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MUSICIANS Tony Sheridan: vocal, lead guitar John: rhythm guitar Paul: bass, backing vocals George: intro guitar, 2nd lead guitar, backing vocals Pete Best: drums RECORDED Friedrich-Ebert-Halle (Hamburg), June 22, 1961 TECHNICAL TEAM Producer: Bert Kaempfert Sound Engineer: Karl Hinze
Released as a Single
My Bonnie / The Saints Germany: August 1961 Great Britain: January 5, 1962
10
My Bonnie
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Tony Sheridan, right, who disappeared somewhat from the limelight after the Beatles collaboration, benefited nevertheless from their fame, since one of the Sheridan/Beatles albums became a golden record, selling over a million copies!
Uncertainty still The date of June 22 is nflicting debated to this day. Co ity into documents call its valid question.
11
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The Beatles visited Hamburg four times between August 1960 and December 1962. After appearing around fifty times at the Indra, the four young musicians were moved to the Kaiserkeller, another club in that city, where they alternated with a group that also came from Liverpool, Rory Storm & the Hurricanes. Every evening, they gave concerts lasting six straight hours, which was physically very draining, and during which they played like madmen (Mach Schau!) John later said about this period, with some nostalgia, We were performers in Liverpool, Hamburg, and other dance halls. What we generated was fantastic, when we played straight rock, and there was nobody to touch us in Britain.
12
My Bonnie
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The early days of the Liverpool group: at first, they were called the Silver Beatles. From left: Pete Best, George Harrison, Paul McCartney, and John Lennon.
14
JUne 6
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Before signing their recording contract with Parlophone, the Beatles performed in Liverpool clubs. Leather was then in style.
15
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1962 1963
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ease se Me
I Saw Her Standing There Misery Anna (Go to Him) Chains Boys Ask Me Why Please Please Me Love Me Do P.S. I Love You Baby Its You Do You Want to Know a Secret A Taste of Honey Theres a Place Twist and Shout
ALBUM
released
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A Live Album
Given the success of the first two singles, Martin decided to follow with an album as soon as possible. At first, he thought of recording in the Cavern Club in Liverpool, where the Beatles often performed, in order to capture their power onstage. But he realized that the technical conditions of the club were not good, so he tried to think of other ways of re-creating the sound of a live recording. Norman Smith came up with the solution. Smith was the groups first sound engineer, whom John later nicknamed Normal Smith, and he worked alongside the Beatles from the first audition up to Rubber Soul in 1965. To re-create the live atmosphere that characterized the group in the studio, Smith did not try to isolate each of the instruments. Instead, he positioned the microphones away from the groups instruments to capture the general ambience of the performance. This method, which simulated the sound of a live performance, was contrary to the typical recording methods of the day. On February 11, 1963, between 10:00 a.m. and 10:45 p.m., the Beatles achieved the incredible feat of recording eleven songs in barely more than twelve hours. However, when they entered Studio Two of Abbey Road on that Monday morning, they were not in top shape. Fatigued by the many concerts they had been playing for months, they were all ill, especially John, who had a sore throat. Norman Smith remembered the big glass jar of Zubes throat sweets on top of the piano, rather like the ones you see in a sweet shop. Paradoxically, by the side of that, was a big carton of Peter Stuyvesant cigarettes, which they smoked incessantly.2 Around 10:45 p.m., the eleven songs were recorded.
1. Martin and Hornsby, All You Need Is Ears. 2. Mark Lewisohn, The Complete Beatles Recording Sessions (London: The Hamlyn Publishing Group/EMI, 1988).
18
pLeASe pLeASe Me
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19
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On August 22, 1962: The Fab Four were featured at the Cavern Club in Liverpool, on Mathew Street.
A single song, Hold Me Tight, would not be finalized and would be found on their second album, With the Beatles. Five of the songs are original tunes composed by McCartney-Lennon. Their names were reversed on writing credits after their fourth single, She Loves You (with Ill Get You on side B), which came out on August 23, 1963. The total cost of the album was around 400 (or roughly $600 US). For the entire days work on February 11, 1963, the Beatles each earned 14.10 ($21.25 US) as session musicians. Please Please Me came out in Great Britain on March 22, 1963. As early as May 11, the album reached the top of the British charts. It stayed there for thirty weeks, which held the record for the entire sixties: it was bumped out of first place on December 7 by the groups second album, With the Beatles. In the United States, Brian Epstein had only found Vee Jay (a rather secondrate label specializing in blues) to sign the Beatles, since Capital Records (EMIs American affiliate) did not yet believe in their success. The album came out under the title Introducing . . . The Beatles on July 22, 1963 (but it was not marketed) and was rereleased first on January 6 and then on January 27, 1964, each time with different track listing than the British version. genuine quality of the recordings. He also preferred to tone down the voices in order to highlight the rhythm section. They reached a compromise: fewer vocals for the first album and less rhythm section for the second. This was exactly what gave such a particular character to the Beatles sound, which was imitated by other groups. In a 1963 interview, John stated that they were all ready to record it a second time if it did not meet their expectations: We are perfectionists but ultimately, we were more than happy with the resultsalthough in 1975, he qualified his opinion, believing that the record did not succeed in transmitting the excitement of their Hamburg and Liverpool performances. He admitted, That record tried to capture us live, and was the nearest thing to what we might have sounded like in Hamburg and Liverpool. Its the nearest you can get to knowing what we sounded like before we became the clever Beatles.3 The album was almost called Off the Beatles Track, an idea of George Martins. For the cover, he recruited Angus McBean, a photographer with whom he worked regularly, who took the photo in which the four Beatles posed in the stairway of the Manchester Square Building, the headquarters of EMI (since then demolished). McBean would re-create the pose for the abandoned Get Back project. The two photos would appear on the covers of the Red and Blue albums, respectively.
3. Kevin Ryan and Brian Kehew, Recording the Beatles (Houston: Curvebender Publishing, 2006).
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pLeASe pLeASe Me
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