Revolver

by admin on July 1, 2010 · 2 comments

in Rock

Revolver [UK]

essential recording

Revolver wouldn’t remain the Beatles’ most ambitious LP for long, but many fans–including this one–remember it as their best. An object lesson in fitting great songwriting into experimental production and genre play, this is also a record whose influence extends far beyond mere they-was-the-greatest cheerleading. Putting McCartney’s more traditionally melodic “Here, There and Everywhere” and “For No One” alongside Lennon’s direct-hit sneering (”Dr. Robert”) [Read More...]

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Vice July 1, 2010 at 12:06 pm
This review is from: Revolver [UK] (Audio CD)

The Beatles’ overall achievement is rivaled by no one. In a course of only seven years, they produced 12 and ½ albums (I don’t count YELLOW SUBMARINE as a full album), one of which was a double album, and enough independent singles to make up two other albums. Very prolific, and the single most important band ever to grace the rock’n'roll scene. There is countless debates on what is their most important, but to me every one of those albums from Rubber Soul on (excepting YELLOW SUBMARINE) is a self-contained masterpiece.

That being said, REVOLVER gives us the most balanced view of The Beatles that we ever get. Everything that made The Beatles great is here in the right proportions. We have the three tracks of Harrison, including an Indian song of his, we have the ultimate Ringo song (everyone should know what song I’m talking about here), we have Paul’s melodious love songs that would overwhelm his solo career, and we have the standard Lennon experimentation. On no other record do we get such a clear picture of what each Beatle brought into the equation. Everyone of them shine for their individual talents. The direct opposite of this is THE WHITE ALBUM, when The Beatles were in the process of breaking up.

In terms of artistic growth (remember, this was released almost a year after Help!, which was released August 6, 1965 and this August 5, 1965) we knew The Beatles were onto something. It foreshadows everything that will happen on SGT PEPPER, and is as important as its successor. And in terms of what made The Beatles great, this is the record to go too, because it gives you the most balanced view of the most important band in rock’n'roll history.

Page July 1, 2010 at 12:10 pm
This review is from: Revolver [UK] (Audio CD)

Quite simply the greatest album by the greatest band of all-time. A mind boggling collage of perfect songcraft and sheer sonic joy, Revolver, like its predecessor Rubber Soul, stunned the pop world when released in 1966.

In terms of Beatle evolution, Revolver catches the Fabs in the midst of their most perfect phase — more sophisticated than the Mop-Top years of 1963-64, yet more restrained than the experimental Later Years. Lush psychedelic tones flourish throughout, enhancing, yet never overwhelming the colorful song textures. Witness George’s painstaking backward guitar solo on “I’m Only Sleeping” for a textbook example of innovation with restraint. Mesmerizing rhythmic structures, which pop-up all over, may well be the most inventive of the band’s career. Ringo’s percussive tom rolls transform John’s single-chord mind-bender “Tomorrow Never Knows” into the most hypnotic three-minutes of acid-drenched pleasure ever recorded. Never have Beatle guitars sounded so bright, trebly and as bitingly distorted as they do on “And Your Bird Can Sing” and “She Said, She Said”. On the gentle flipside are the baroque sophistication of “For No One” and the epic neo-classicism of “Eleanor Rigby”. Gently washed in the mournful hues of George Martin’s perfectly scored string arrangement, “Eleanor” emerges as Paul’s most mature and, quite possibly, most beautiful song. Sing-a-long classics “Good Day Sunshine” and “Yellow Submarine” prove that fun was indeed still fashionable in the Swingin’ Summer of ‘66.

Every aspect of Revolver–from the biting social commentary of “Taxman” to the childish joyride of “Yellow Submarine”– clicks so perfectly. A 1996 Mojo Reader’s Poll ranked Revolver as the greatest album ever recorded. But Revolver, like the Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds, is more than merely a great rock album– it is unquestionably one of the 20th Century’s greatest works of art.

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