|
|
||||||
|
|
|
|
The White AlbumThe self-titled double album The Beatles, released by The Beatles in 1968 at the height of their popularity, is often hailed as one of the major accomplishments in popular music. It is usually refered to as The White Album. The follow-up to Magical Mystery Tour, "The White Album" marked a turning point for the group, interpreted by some fans to be the beginning of the end for the band.
With this album, each of the four band members began to showcase the range and depth of their own individual songwriting talents, styles that would be carried over to their eventual solo careers. Along with such standard rockers as the opening "Back in the USSR" (widely interpreted as a parody/tribute to The Beach Boys and more specifically "California Girls"), it contains classic ballads like "I Will" and "Julia" (the latter written by John--one of his few ballads, dedicated to his mother who was killed by an off-duty police officer when he was just 16), whimsical tunes like Paul's "Rocky Raccoon" and "Ob-La-Di", social commentary such as George's "Piggies" and John's "Happiness Is A Warm Gun", "Don't Pass Me By" (Ringo's first composition on his own), and a mix of other tunes, many of which became popular as singles. A major highlight of Side Three of the LP (Disc Two of the CD) is Paul's outright heavy metal "Helter Skelter". A Helter-Skelter is a type of British funfair ride and the lyrics make that clear, but Charles Manson took it to mean some kind of apocalypse. Perhaps as a reaction to the trend of dramatic album covers and extras they themselves helped foster, this album had a plain white cover with only "The BEATLES" in small lettering; (hence the nickname). Included in the interior of the album is a set of photographs taken by John Kelley in autumn of 1968 that have themselves become classic. Many of the songs here are personal and self-referencing; for example "Dear Prudence" is about actress Mia Farrow's sister Prudence who attended Transcendental Meditation classes in Rishikesh, India at the same time as the group. In fact, many songs on the "White Album" were originally conceived during the group's ill-fated visit to India. "Sexy Sadie" is about the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi who led those classes. "Glass Onion" is John's song for those fans who spent their time trying to find hidden meanings in the group's lyrics; it references several other Beatles songs in its lyric. Yoko Ono makes her first appearance, as backing vocals in "Birthday" (along with Patti Harrison), singing a single line of "Bungalow Bill" and as a strong influence to John's bizarre "Revolution 9" (the centerpiece track of the "White Album") which is a very early precursor to the concept of sampling. Eric Clapton, at Harrison's invitation, provides an extra lead guitar for Harrison's "While My Guitar Gently Weeps"--the tension in the group was quite high at this point and Harrison did not feel the other members were taking his song seriously, so he invited an outsider to the session so they would have to act professionally. (Clapton himself needed the same favor later, bringing Harrison to record "Badge" for Cream under the pseudonym "L'Angelo Misterioso".) Several songs were recorded during the "White Album" sessions but were not part of the final album, such as the group's biggest hit, "Hey Jude" (released originally as a stand-alone single and ultimately released as part of their album of the same name), and two songs that would later surface on bootlegs as well as on The Beatles Anthology, Harrison's "Not Guilty" and Lennon's "What's The New Mary Jane?". The album was produced and orchestrated by George Martin, and was the first album released by Apple Records, and the only original double album released by The Beatles. Martin was personally dissatisfied with the double album and advised the group to reduce the number of songs in order to feature their stronger work on a single disc. However, the group overruled him. The "White Album"'s album cover has often been imitated. In the 1990s, both Prince and Metallica released self-titled albums with their names printed against plain black covers (hence their "black album" monikers). In 2004, Brian Burton (aka DJ Danger Mouse) released The Grey Album, an unauthorized remix album distributed on the Internet using samples from the White Album against the a capella version of Jay-Z's The Black Album. Rolling Stone called the record "...an ingenious hip-hop record that sounds oddly ahead of its time". EMI and Apple sent Brian Burton cease-and-desist letters stopping distribution of the "Grey Album". Also see:
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Beatles (album)" and from http://www.white-on.com
|
|
|
|
|
|
page 1 of 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
page 1 of 2 1 2
|
|||||
|
|
|
|