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Revolver (album)




  Type studio
  Artist The Beatles
  Cover Revolverjpg
  Caption Cover of the original 1966 UK LP
  Released August 5 1966 <small>(UK)</small><br> 8 August 1966 <small>(US)</small>
  Recorded Abbey Road Studios <br /> 6 April 196621 June 1966
  Genre Psychedelic Rock , Rock And Roll , Rock , Pop
  Length 35:01 <small>(UK)</small><br />28:20 <small>(US)</small>
  Label Parlophone , Capitol , EMI
  Producer George Martin
  Chronology The Beatles UK
  Last Album '' Rubber Soul ''<br />(1965)
  This Album '''''Revolver'''''<br />(1966)
  Next Album '' Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band ''<br/>(1967)
  Misc {{Extra chronology 2
  Artist The Beatles US
  Type studio
  Last Album '' Yesterday And Today ''<br />(1966)
  This Album '''''Revolver'''''<br />(1966)
  Next Album '' Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band ''<br/>(1967)


  Upper Caption Alternate cover
  Type studio
  Cover Revolver_USjpg
  Lower Caption Cover of the original 1966 US LP


  Upper Caption Back cover
  Type studio
  Cover Revolverbackjpg
  Lower Caption Back cover of the original 1966 UK LP The main photo was edited in separate parts for the booklet of the 1988 Compact Disc release




''Revolver'' is The Beatles ' seventh album, released on August 5 , 1966 . The album showcased a number of new stylistic developments which would become more pronounced on later albums. Many of the tracks on ''Revolver'' are marked by an electric guitar-rock sound, in contrast with their previous, folk-rock inspired '' Rubber Soul ''. It reached #1 in the UK chart for 7 weeks and #1 on the U.S. chart for 6 weeks.

''Revolver'' is often cited as one of the greatest albums in rock music history. In 1997 it was named the 3rd greatest album of all time in a 'Music of the Millennium' poll conducted by '' ranked the album the greatest of all time. It placed behind only '' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band '' and '' Pet Sounds ''.

''Revolver'' was released before the Beatles stopped touring, and some people were disappointed that, during that touring, the Beatles did not perform songs from that album. At least one reason is that the music was getting more complicated, thus getting more difficult to play live. The newest song the Beatles performed on their 1966 tours was "Paperback Writer", released on a single and recorded at the same time as the ''Revolver'' album.


SONGS


Melodic diversity and innovation in the studio


" Eleanor Rigby ", one of Paul McCartney 's more notable songs on the album, was released as a single (in a double A-side with " Yellow Submarine ") concurrently with the album. The song contains McCartney's lyrical imagery and a string Arrangement (scored by George Martin under McCartney's direction), which was inspired by the Bernard Herrmann score for François Truffaut 's film '' Fahrenheit 451 ''. The Strings were recorded rather Dry and Compressed , giving a stark, urgent sound. Ringo Starr has confirmed that he contributed the line "Father McKenzie, writing the words of a sermon that no one will hear." It was originally written as "Father McCartney" but was changed as it was thought that listeners would assume that it referred to Paul's father. So, after looking through a local phone book, he found the name McKenzie. The song had a great effect upon release for its stark imagery and Elegiac tone, which contrasted with The Beatles' prior output.

Lennon was the main writer of " I'm Only Sleeping ". George Harrison and John Lennon played the notes for the Lead Guitar (and for the second guitar in the solo) in reverse order, then reversed the tape and Mixed it in. The backwards guitar sound builds the sleepy, ominous, and weeping tone of the song. This, along with backwards vocals used on the Beatles song " Rain " (recorded at the sessions and released separately, as the B-side to the " Paperback Writer " single), was the first recorded instance of Backmasking in popular music, which Lennon stated that he discovered after mistakenly loading a Reel-to-reel tape backwards under the influence of Marijuana .

Another key production technique used for the first time on this album was Automatic Double Tracking (ADT), invented by EMI engineer Ken Townsend on 6 April 1966 . This technique used two linked Tape Recorder s to create automatically a doubled vocal track. The standard method 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 .

Lennon's other contributions included " And Your Bird Can Sing " and " She Said, She Said ", both of which are guitar-laden tracks with swirling Melodies .

McCartney's " Got To Get You Into My Life " was a Memphis Soul tribute, inspired by Stax Records , which used Brass Instrument ation extensively. Although cast in the form of a Love Song , McCartney has since revealed that the song was actually an Ode to Marijuana , though Lennon is quoted in The Beatles Anthology as claiming that the song is about LSD . It was released as a single in 1976, ten years after the album.

McCartney also contributed " For No One " a melancholy song featuring him playing Clavichord and a Horn solo played by Alan Civil ; " Good Day Sunshine ", a cheery Pastiche of The Lovin' Spoonful , which was quickly covered as a single by The Tremeloes ; and " Here, There, And Everywhere ", written in the style of The Beach Boys , which was covered by The Lettermen and in 1976 was a hit for Emmylou Harris .


Harrison's emergence as songwriter

''Revolver'' was also a breakthrough album for Harrison as a Songwriter , and he contributed three songs on ''Revolver,'' including the opening track, " Taxman ". The Guitar Solo is actually played by McCartney, making " Taxman " one of relatively few Beatles songs on which Harrison did not play Lead Guitar . The "Mr. Wilson" and "Mr. Heath" referred to in the lyrics (right after the word "taxman") are Harold Wilson and Edward Heath , who were, respectively, the British Labour Prime Minister , and Conservative Leader Of The Opposition at the time. This marked the first time that Public Figure s were directly named in a Beatles song. In the Anthology 2 version, "Mr. Wilson and Mr Heath" were replaced with "Anybody got a little money." The song was a protest against the high Marginal Rates of Income Tax paid by high earners like the Beatles, which were sometimes as much as 95 percent of their income. (This would lead to many top musicians becoming Tax Exile s in later years.)

Harrison also wrote " I Want To Tell You ", about his difficulty expressing himself in words. " Love You To " marked a significant expansion of his burgeoning interest in Indian Music and the Sitar , which started with " Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown) " on 1965's '' Rubber Soul ''. Beatles fans also point out that it was the intro to "Love You To" that was playing in the background when the Harrison character first appears in '' Yellow Submarine '', the Animated Beatles movie released in 1968 .


HERALDING THE PSYCHEDELIC ERA

The most light-hearted track on ''Revolver'' is the childlike " Yellow Submarine ." The song's inspiration can be traced back to one of Lennon's school drawing books from the early 1950s . McCartney himself has said that he wrote "Yellow Submarine" as a children's song for Starr to sing.

Although not credited on the album, the Scottish Singer-songwriter Donovan , who had become a close friend of the Beatles, assisted with vocals and with the writing of the song itself. Donovan came up with the line "Sky of blue, sea of green, in our yellow submarine." Rolling Stones guitarist Brian Jones can be heard clinking glasses in the background, and Beatles road manager Mal Evans also sang on the track. With the help of their EMI production team, the Beatles Overdubbed stock Sound Effect s they found in the Abbey Road studio Tape Library . (George Martin had collected these for his production of recordings of the British radio comedy programme '' The Goon Show ''.)

According to Lennon, some of the trippy lyrics of " She Said, She Said " were taken almost verbatim from an exchange he had with actor Peter Fonda in August 1965, while he (Lennon), Harrison and Starr were under the influence of LSD at their rented house in Benedict Canyon (in Beverly Hills , California). Fonda had stopped by to see his friends (members of the Byrds ) — and to meet the Beatles. During the ensuing conversation, Fonda said to Harrison, "I know what it's like to be dead," because as a boy he had almost died from a self-inflicted Gunshot Wound . Hearing this, Lennon bluntly replied: "Who put all that shit in your head?"

In 1972, Lennon offered some context for the influence of drugs on the Beatles' creativity (quoted in The Beatles Anthology ):

:"It's like saying, 'Did Dylan Thomas write '' Under Milk Wood '' on beer?' What does that have to do with it? The beer is to prevent the rest of the world from crowding in on you. The drugs are to prevent the rest of the world from crowding in on you. They don't make you write any better. I never wrote any better stuff because I was on Acid or not on acid."


Tomorrow Never Knows

See Also: Tomorrow Never Knows


The Beatles' unfolding Innovation in the Recording Studio reaches its Apex with the album's final track. Lennon's "Tomorrow Never Knows" was one of the first songs in the emerging genre of Psychedelic Music , and included such groundbreaking techniques as reverse guitar, processed vocals and looped tape effects. Musically, it is Drone -like, with a strongly Syncopated , repetitive drum-beat, and is considered to be among the earliest precursors of Electronica music. The lyrics were inspired by the Tibetan Book Of The Dead , although the title itself came from one of Starr's inadvertently amusing turns of phrase, playfully called "Ringoisms" (another being " A Hard Day's Night ").

Much of the Backing Track consists of a series of prepared Tape Loop s, stemming from Lennon's and McCartney's interest in and experiments with Magnetic Tape and '' Musique Concrète '' 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, some of the longer loops extending out of the Control Room and down the corridor.

Lennon's processed lead vocal was another innovation. Always in search of ways to enhance or alter the sound of his voice, he gave a directive to EMI Engineer Geoff Emerick that he wanted to sound like he was singing from the top of a high mountain. Emerick 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 (he was later reprimanded by the studio's management for doing that).

The stereo and mono mixes of "Tomorrow Never Knows" have at least one noticeable difference. The opening note fades in gradually in the stereo version. The fade-in is more sudden in the mono version.


COVER ART

The cover illustration was created by German-born bassist and artist Klaus Voormann , who was one of the Beatles' oldest friends from their days at the Star Club in Hamburg . At the time of the album's release, Voormann was the bassist for Manfred Mann .

Voormann'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, such as the infamous "butcher cover" for '' Yesterday And Today ''.

Voormann's own photo as well as his name (Klaus O. W. Voormann) is worked into Harrison's hair on the right-hand side of the cover. In the ''Revolver'' cover appearing in his artwork for ''Anthology 3'', he replaced this image with a more recent photo.

Harrison's ''Revolver'' image was seen again on his single release of " When We Was Fab " along with an updated version of the same image.


TITLE

The title ''Revolver'', like '' Rubber Soul '' before it, is a pun, referring both to A Kind Of Handgun as well as the "revolving" motion of the record as it is played on a Turntable .


TRACK LISTING

All tracks are credited to Lennon/McCartney , except where noted.


UK release


Side one

# " Taxman " ( George Harrison ) – 2:39
# " Eleanor Rigby " – 2:07
# " I'm Only Sleeping " – 3:01
# " Love You To " (Harrison) – 3:01
# " Here, There And Everywhere " – 2:25
# " Yellow Submarine " – 2:40
# " She Said She Said " – 2:37


Side two

# " Good Day Sunshine " – 2:09
# " And Your Bird Can Sing " – 2:01
# " For No One " – 2:01
# " Doctor Robert " – 2:15
# " I Want To Tell You " (Harrison) – 2:29
# " Got To Get You Into My Life " – 2:30
# " Tomorrow Never Knows " – 2:57


U.S. release


Side one

# " Taxman " (Harrison) – 2:39
# " Eleanor Rigby " – 2:07
# " Love You To " (Harrison) – 3:01
# " Here, There And Everywhere " – 2:25
# " Yellow Submarine " – 2:40
# " She Said She Said " – 2:37


Side two

# " Good Day Sunshine " – 2:09
# " For No One " – 2:01
# " I Want To Tell You " (Harrison) – 2:29
# " Got To Get You Into My Life " – 2:30
# " Tomorrow Never Knows " – 2:57


RELEASE HISTORY



U.S. release

The original U.S. LP release of ''Revolver'' marked the last time Capitol would alter an "established" UK Beatles album for the U.S. market. As three of its tracks—"I'm Only Sleeping", "And Your Bird Can Sing" and "Doctor Robert" (all primarily John Lennon compositions)—had been used for the earlier '' Yesterday And Today '' Capitol compilation, they were simply deleted in the U.S. version, yielding an 11 track album instead of the UK version's 14 and shortening the time to 28:20. The CD era standardises this album to the original UK configuration.


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