Поздравляем с днем рождения! |
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Mind_Game (34), Кукумалу (35), Beatle-Walrus (36), matrikat (43), Alek (46), Heinrich Ptiza (48), Кастян (48), valdai (49), Витя Кипербаум (54), Alex (64), buzun (66), Vakeshy (69), Andr McCull (72), PhotoGraf (72) |
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Поздравляем с годовщиной регистрации! |
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megapro17 (3), Yaroslav007 (7), Aaron Sheiman (7), tskans (11), Litox (12), badboyboogie (14), Arina S. (14), BeatleDolly (16), Jet - 1 (16), Fam (17), AnotherGirl (18), ausong (18), Леди Дождь (18), Витя Кипербаум (18), happy84 (18), Alyona (20), Spike (21), Lenok (21), Juliaz (21), Art (21), Romeo Whisky (21), oskarash (21), Wendl (22) |
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John Lennon Knows Your Name
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Было бы здорово расшифровать кто есть кто... есть несколько очевидных имен, но остальные известны только как участники групп и поэтому не совсем понятно неамериканцу кто они
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Посмотрел с большим опозданием Love documentary и окончательно понял, откуда появились эти разведенные треки и почему они появились именно тогда... для подготовки к изданию Love младший Martin попросил оцифровать все треки битлзов с пленок еще раз... и конечно же они просочились в бутлеги...
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Довольно стильно сделано, но пересматривать не хочется...Одно просмотра вполне достаточно... Впрочем, я думаю, что Леннон был бы доволен широким мазком в стиле Марке или Матисса... |
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Все-таки Free as a Bird была лучше...в ней больше было динамизма и оптимизма, восходящих музыкальных движений... Новая песня сделана (и качественно сделана) в том же духе, что и предыдущяя, но она очень очень грустная...doom and gloom
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Ну вот видишь, у каждого свое представление о красоте
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Он не виноват, он сниматься не планировал... и за ретуш фотографии не платил... так что с него взятки гладки... старость уродлива... ну что тут можно поделать
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Один из моих любимых альбомов Пола...он сильно недооценен, но это меня ничуть не смущает... пусть |
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Для меня каждый день - это день Битлз... не вижу причину отмечать особенно 16 января
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Да, ledzep, sic transit gloria mundi,действительно, они выглядят довольно общипанными, несмотря на все свое более чем обеспеченное положение, это признак смены эпохи, я помню, в начале 90-х так же выглядела Марлен Дитрих, время проходит для всех, очень мало кто остается в веках, да и то, это бывает скорее возращение, нежели пребывание в благодати... будущие поколения вычленяют что-то из прошлого, что им созвучно и заставляют его звучать по новому... пример, вечнозеленого, даже не знаю, может быть Моцарт, может быть Бах, Бетховен, Чайковский, но все они прошли через период забвения... прежде чем вновь стать актуальными... |
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Действительно, мы не всегда помним о том, что именно Харрисон ввел моду на индийскую музыку, без него не было был большого пласта нью-эйжда, не было бы общего помешательства на Индии в нашем поколении
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Возвращаюсь к теме: Of George Harrison’s second incarnation on Revolver, Melody Maker said it best, crediting the Beatles on “Love You To” with “going the whole Indian hog.” From its first cascading arabesque of shimmery, bejeweled notes, the track unfolds like a musicological expedition East of Suez, as the first in a series of quixotic attempts to translate the formal elements of Indian raga into the format of Western pop. Though Paul adds a spot of harmony and Ringo a tambourine, the track is a one-Beatle show, spotlighting George alone, singing and playing the sitar to the rather shaky accompaniment of a tabla drummer, recruited from the Asia Music Circle, by the name of Anil Bhagwat. The track begins with an unaccompanied sitar prelude that corresponds to the ruminative, introductory movement of a raga known by the term alap. Filled with croaking drones, pregnant pauses, and softly elasticized notes, the effect is both a stereotypic evocation of the Mysterious East and a total surprise (in its very presence on a pop album). Eventually the sitar settles on a ceremonious eight-note riff that serves the song as a hook, the tabla come bounding in, and the song itself begins. Lyrically, “Love You To” is the pop equivalent of a carpe diem poem. It means to counterpoise an ecstatic and presumably Eastern sensibility (“Make love all day long! Make love singing songs!”) against a repressive and presumably Western one (the second verse refers darkly to “people standing round, who’ll screw you in the ground”). But the tone of George’s vocal is so priggish and judgmental that it’s hard to know which side he’s on. “Love You To” plays at metaphysics the way that other bad pop lyrics play at romance; it trades in puppy wisdom in place of puppy love.
And still, despite its shortcomings, the presence of this little outpost of internationalism on Revolver was a signal pop event. By inspiring other musicians to take up Indian instruments, or to simulate Indian tonality using electric guitars, it loosed upon the music scene a torrent of “raga-rock.” And as one of the most brazenly exotic acts of stylistic experimentation ever heard on a popular LP, the track represented a bold declaration of artistic autonomy on the Beatles’ part. It showed the extent to which recording stars who could afford to do so would henceforth do as they liked on their records, regardless of whether the results had any redeeming commercial value, or conformed in the least to the current stylistic parameters of pop. And for George Harrison himself, the track was the first overt manifestation of the Orientalist bent that would provide him with the sharply defined identity, as a musician and as a public personality, that had eluded him thus far. |
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2Макс Жолобов: Простите, Макс... я понимаю, что не надо растекаться мыслию по древу
>Желательно, конечно, про Револвер, да. Это сейчас >актуально прям очень-очень. |
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2ledzep: Я очень любил фильм Oh, Lucky Man! Для меня он был настоящей Библией того времени... Когда я приехал в Англию в середине 80-х я с большим трудом достал VHS этого фильма и смотрел его несколько раз дома (до сих пор хранится как реликвия)... потом я помнится купил переиздание в начале нулевых на DVD из двух дисков
>2еж ушастый: >>"hanging on in quiet desperation is the English way" >вот ведь интересно, этот текст был мной переведён >в детстве третьим после ComeTogether и Oh!Lucky Man >и фраза, мне четырнадцатилетнему, не показалась >ни сложной ни заумной - понятной и естественной >, так же как catch up with the Sun... |
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Впрочем, я совершенно отвлекся от темы Револьвера... это оффтопик
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In the blink of an eye, the musical setting has shifted from the orchestral uplift of strings and brass to the rawest variety of rock ’n’ roll. Instead of a grand symphonic ending, McCartney had chosen—at the last possible moment—to bring the Beatles and their listeners back to the place where it all began: before the marathon recording sessions, before the stadium concerts and provincial package tours, before the grueling one-nighters in dance halls and cellar dives—to the simple setting of John, Paul, and George, sawing away on their three guitars, as they had done in hotel rooms, dressing rooms, and before that in bedrooms, from the time George joined the Quarry Men eleven years before. The one concession to the whole incredible saga that had elapsed between then and now was the presence of Ringo Starr, the steady, solid drummer the Beatles had always lacked during their years of musical apprenticeship in Liverpool and Hamburg. In recognition of this, the next eight bars are given over to Ringo for his only drum solo on record, a barrage of brawny tom-tom figures (each of them followed by a moment in which he seems to pause for the approval of the others) underlain by the time-keeping pulse of his bass drum. Then a crescendo of steady eighth-notes orchestrates the reentry of the bass and rhythm guitar, vamping in flatted-seventh chords on an elementary tonic-subdominant cadence in A major. “Love you” the Beatles chant, until the bare alternation of A7 and D7 chords is joined by the four-note pickup of a searing lead guitar and the start of an instrumental round-robin composed of nine two-bar solo breaks in which Paul, George, and John (in that order) trade licks, with each guitarist playing off or building on his predecessor’s effort. Recorded live in the studio, these rotating two-bar solos are like little musical character sketches, in which each of the Beatles assumes his customary role: Paul the initiator, George the embellisher, John holding out for the last word. (At the same time, the solos are uncredited, and between the speed of the transitions and the similarities in the timbre and content of the different parts, it is by no means clear how many guitarists are playing, much less the identity of the player at any given point.) Paul opens with a characteristically fluid and melodically balanced line that sounds a high A before snaking an octave down the scale; George responds by soaring to an even higher D and sustaining it for half a bar before descending in syncopated pairs of sixteenth notes; John then picks up on the pattern of George’s sixteenths with a series of choppy thirds that hammer relentlessly on the second and flatted seventh degrees of the scale. The second time through, Paul answers John’s bluesy flatted sevenths with bluesy minor thirds and then proceeds to echo George’s earlier line, spiraling up to that same high D; George responds with some minor thirds of his own, while mimicking the choppy rhythm of John’s part; John then drops down two octaves to unleash a growling single-note line. On his final two-bar solo, Paul plays almost nothing but minor thirds and flatted sevenths in a herky-jerky rhythm that ends with a sudden plunge to a low A; George then reaches for the stars with a steeply ascending line that is pitched an octave above any notes heard so far; and John finishes with a string of insistent and heavily distorted fourths, phrased in triplets, that drag behind the beat and grate against the background harmony.
Finally, as abruptly as this old-fashioned rave-up began, it ends, with the band stopping short, leaving only the faint eighth-note pulse of a piano sounding tinny A major chords. “And in the end…” Paul sings, his voice rising. A pair of lightning-quick guitar licks sound a sixteenth note apart, as John and George join in a three-part harmony on the shallow arc of melody with which the Beatles deliver the line that would serve as their epitaph: “The love you take…is equal to the love you make.” The inverted chords behind their voices enact a slow chromatic descent across four bars of 3/8 meter to arrive in the key of C major on the phrase “the love you make.” This long-awaited resolution (which was prefigured by the opening of the medley in the key of A minor) is first softened by the reentry of George Martin’s strings, then deepened by the return of the drums. As George Harrison’s lead guitar plays an extended arpeggio that rises two octaves up the scale, the singers add a final curtain of “Ahhs” as the harmony lifts from C to D to E flat to F. Ringo’s tom-toms provide a final nudging emphasis, and with a gentle plagal cadence, the song, the medley, and the album come to rest on a common C major chord. |
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George Martin had hoped to enlist the Beatles in making an album that would go beyond Sgt. Pepper in its thematic structure and unified form. But Martin was a musician in the traditional sense, and he conceived of surpassing the Beatles’ acknowledged masterpiece as an essentially musical challenge. As a group of popular artists par excellence, however, the Beatles understood intuitively—and in the case of John Lennon, gratefully—that surpassing Sgt. Pepper was no longer within the realm of possibility for them, because Sgt. Pepper, like Revolver, Rubber Soul, and the seven other Beatles albums that preceded it, was the work of a group of collaborative singers and songwriters that had subsequently ceased to exist. No one understood this better than Paul McCartney, whose earnest, energetic, and at times overbearing efforts to cajole his bandmates into soldiering on after the triumph of Sgt. Pepper and the tragedy of Brian Epstein’s death were based on his conviction that nothing the Beatles might ever achieve as individuals could possibly compare with what they had accomplished—and might still accomplish—as a group. The enthusiasm with which McCartney embraced Martin’s suggestion that they try to surpass Sgt. Pepper was not based on his belief that they would succeed; rather it was based on his stubborn hope that by trying once again to outdo themselves, the Beatles might rekindle the musical camaraderie and collaborative genius that had placed them in a league of their own. To that end, Paul reserved all of his best material for the concluding medley (unlike John, who contributed nothing but odds and ends). And he used all of his considerable powers of persuasion and organization to enlist the other Beatles’ participation in this project as well.
Ultimately, however, Paul’s loyalty to the Beatles was stronger than his loyalty to George Martin or anyone else, and so, rather than end the album with the sort of grand “symphonic” gesture that Martin had in mind, he came up with the last of the Beatles’ great surprises, a final, brilliant twist that was, in its own way, closer to the inspired spirit of Sgt. Pepper than anything else on Abbey Road. Just as the booming chorus and ringing arpeggios of “Carry That Weight” combine to create the expectation that the album is coming to a close, the music seems to jump right out of its skin: the tempo surging, the orchestra fleeing, the harmony changing direction in a series of wrenching guitar chords that leap first from A to D, then from B to E, in both cases landing hard on the beat, and then again from A to D, this time in a pair of jarringly syncopated accents that bring the band up short. Ringo leaps into the breach with a rackety two-bar fill and the sequence of chords repeats over a brisk, Sgt. Pepper–style backbeat. “Oh yeah!” Paul shrieks. “All right! …Are you going to be in my dreams…tonight?” |
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“She Came in Through the Bathroom Window” eventually comes to a full stop on an A major chord, which reverts to a somber A minor for the opening of “Golden Slumbers.” This exceedingly tender, melancholy number was based on a lullaby by the Elizabethan playwright Thomas Dekker that Paul found in a piano songbook and set to a tune of his own. It was recorded during John Lennon’s absence from the Abbey Road sessions in July, when it was combined with another McCartney fragment called “Carry That Weight” and a thematic reprise of “You Never Give Me Your Money”—thereby enabling McCartney and George Martin to present the “symphonic” concept of the medley as a fait accompli to Lennon upon his return. “Once there was a way to get back homeward,” Paul muses quietly in the opening bars, his voice supported by a gently rocking figure on piano and Martin’s swelling arrangement for strings. “Sleep pretty darling, do not cry,” he offers, “And I will sing a lullaby.” His promise is answered by a stop-start drum fill that propels the song with unexpected force into the text of Dekker’s poem—“Golden slumbers fill your eyes / Smiles awake you when you rise”—set to a melody in C major whose stentorian delivery and straining harmony (an F9 chord sounds behind the words “slumbers” and “awake”) defy all expectations of what is meant by the term “lullaby.” Then the music subsides and Paul repeats the homeward-looking verse, which is followed again by Ringo’s fill. Only this time, instead of the promised lullaby, Paul, George, and Ringo join in a rousing chant of “Boy, you’re gonna carry that weight / Carry that weight a long time!” Singing in unison (with Ringo’s voice predominating) and sounding less like the harmonized angels of “Because” and “Sun King” than like the crowd at a soccer match, they repeat this dour prophecy until a chorus of horns lets loose with the opening strains (in A minor) of “You Never Give Me Your Money.” The melodic allusion is followed by a new verse of the song itself, which Paul concludes with the line “And in the middle of the celebrations, I break down.” A downbeat of truly symphonic proportions from the brass (on a pivotal G7 chord) then plunges the music back into the chorus of “Carry That Weight,” which is played and sung with immense power, accompanied this time by arpeggiated chords on guitar. While the bass descends the scale from C to B to A, the broken chords ascend from C to G to A, their accented tonic notes subdividing the stately 4/4 rhythm into groups of three, as the musical motifs of the medley seem to be sounding together in preparation for a grand finale that feels as if it is just moments away.
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The sequence opens with Paul’s most ambitious and affecting song on the entire album, “You Never Give Me Your Money,” which is itself a kind of mini-suite that encapsulates and foreshadows many of the motifs that are played out in the medley as a whole. The song’s four musically distinct sections, set in different keys, are organized by a kind of dream logic and linked by a series of pivot points in the music and lyrics. (The only previous Beatles song to employ this sort of nonrepeating, episodic structure was John’s “Happiness Is a Warm Gun.”) The track begins quietly with Paul singing alone at the piano, the wistful insistence of his A minor melody ably matched to a lyric whose allusions to “funny papers” and “negotiations” are an epitaph for his clashes with the rest of the group regarding Apple and Allen Klein. Over the course of the first verse, the other Beatles seem to drift into the music—John’s guitar here, Ringo’s cymbals there—until a thumping drum fill rouses the whole band into an eight-bar passage based on a classic boogie-woogie piano riff (backed by half-time drumming reminiscent of “Lady Madonna”), with words and music that seem to be coming from another time and place—a memory, from the sound of it, whose references to “out of college, money spent” and “see no future, pay no rent” are evocative of the Beatles’ lives in Liverpool at the start of their musical careers. In the following section, these dead-end vistas are transformed, as the boogie beat drops out and the phrase “nowhere to go” is recast as a “magic feeling” of freedom and possibility in a chorus of wordless “Ahhhs” that float over another round of the ringing arpeggios on guitar that recur in song after song on Abbey Road. By now Paul’s piano has disappeared from the accompaniment, and it is George’s guitar that steers the band into a driving, Chuck Berry–style riff in A major that forms the stirring finale of the song. “Soon we’ll be away from here,” Paul promises, recounting a scenario of escape-by-limousine whose relevance to the frenzied days of Beatlemania is reinforced by his acknowledgment that “One sweet dream came true today.”The track then fades with a chorus of Beatles repeating the familiar playground “choosing” rhyme, “One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, all good children go to heaven”—a variation of “eeeny meany miney mo” that ends this shadowy recapitulation of the Beatles’ saga on a note of childishness that obscures the rhyme’s traditional function as a way of determining who is in and who is out. The long fade of “You Never Give Me Your Money” ends in a hush of tape-looped night sounds, peepers, and wind chimes that set the stage for the burbling guitar, muffled cymbals, and thumping rhythm of “Sun King,” which rises like the mist on a lake. As the first of the three contiguous song fragments John Lennon contributed to the medley, “Sun King” is almost a parody of “Because.” It applies the same dreamy tempo, gentle chordal melody, and rapt vocal harmonies to a lyric describing the arrival of an Apollonian figure whose mere presence leaves “everybody” glowing with laughter and happiness. Since the effect of this Apollonian figure is precisely the same as that of the Beatles on their fans, the song, while merely a fragment, revives the theme of the charismatic trickster that John expressed so mordantly in “I Am the Walrus.” For when the Sun King finally begins to speak, he does so in a language that no one can understand: a blend of pidgin Italian and Spanish in which random words like “paparazzi,” “mi amore,” and “corazon” are strung together in a stream of mellifluous yet utterly meaningless nonsense.
After the phrase “cake and eat it carousel,” the pretense of “Sun King” is punctured by a funky little drum fill that sets up the rigorous soul groove of a second Lennon fragment about a storybook miser (“sleeps in the park, shaves in the dark”) named “Mean Mr. Mustard,” whose chief form of recreation consists of accompanying his shop-girl sister Pam to public appearances by the Queen, where he “always shouts out something obscene.” “Such a dirty old man,” John repeats as the band careens into a 3/4 passage that carries a distant echo of the dance of Henry the Horse, only to be brought up short by the intrusion (in stop time) of a trio of spiky guitar chords and the onset of a pounding double-time rhythm from the drums that shifts the focus back onto sister Pam, whose sobriquet “Polythene” suggests some unusual recreational interests of her own. “Well you should see Polythene Pam,” John sings in a cackling Scouse accent, “She’s so good-looking but she looks like a man.” He goes on to describe a jackbooted girl with a passion for plastic who’s a real killer when she’s dressed to the hilt. Though the song was written in India as part of the same fictional litter that yielded Bungalow Bill and Sexy Sadie, “Polythene Pam” sounds like something the Beatles might have written during their days on Hamburg’s Reeperbahn. John finishes off his sketch of this fetishistic temptress with a string of sardonic “yeah, yeah, yeahs” that make Paul’s quotation of “She Loves You” at the end of “All You Need Is Love” sound heartfelt by comparison, whereupon Ringo and George take off on an exhilarating instrumental jag whose pistonlike tom-toms and graceful, arching guitar lines segue via a smooth descent from the key of E to A major (and a shout of “Look out!” from John) into Paul’s contribution to the trio of dubious character sketches that form the up-tempo midsection of the medley, “She Came in Through the Bathroom Window,” which derives some of its churning half-time feel and narrative flavor from the Rolling Stones’ recent B-side, “You Can’t Always Get What You Want.” Various autobiographical explanations have been offered for the song’s haphazardly obscure lyric, but the first verse, in which Paul introduces an unnamed female housebreaker who “sucks her thumb and wonders by the banks of her own lagoon,” sounds in the context of the Beatles like an undisguised jab at Yoko Ono, who had recently commissioned the construction of a man-made lake at her home in Tittenhurst Park. “Didn’t anybody tell her?” Paul asks in the bridge, against the ringing phrases of George’s guitar. “Didn’t anybody see?” |
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Дочитал сегодня книгу... много ждал от анализа последнего моего любимого альбома Abbey Road... THE FIFTEEN-MINUTE SEQUENCE of eight songs (and song fragments) that concludes the second side of Abbey Road was not identified as a medley or a suite on the album cover or the record label. The titles are listed individually, and in the early going, the transition from one song to the next feels no different from that of the preceding tracks. Nor are the themes or the lyrics of the songs that constitute the medley interrelated in any obvious way. As a result, the entire second side of Abbey Road is best heard as a sequence of loosely related songs whose emotional intensity and overall pacing gradually build to a climax as the album nears its end.
The side begins with a second astonishment from George Harrison, the impact of which is only enhanced by the ponderous nature of the track that precedes it at the end of side one. “Here Comes the Sun” is a study in lightness and brightness—two qualities that had rarely been associated with Harrison’s music in the past. (The closest precedent is “If I Needed Someone” on Rubber Soul.) Introduced by a chiming I-IV-V progression on an acoustic guitar, the body of this simple, folk-like tune is embellished with an understated arrangement for synthesizer, wood-winds, and strings that delicately shadows the melody. The three well-written verses, all beginning with the tender phrase “Little darling,” evoke the siege of winter, the thaw of spring, and the warmth of “smiles returning to the faces.” Each resolves in a refrain in which the title line is sung three times in three-part harmony, rounded off by George’s interjection, “And I say…It’s all right,” the phrasing of which sets up an accented pattern of three against four that is echoed over the next two bars by arpeggiated triads on guitar. This pattern is then extended and elaborated further in the song’s release, where cascading lines of “Sun! sun! sun! here it comes!” are sung in triplet rhythm over arpeggiated triads while the meter of the music shifts seamlessly between bars in 2/4, 3/8, 5/8, and 4/4 time. Anchored by Ringo’s somersaulting fills, this compound meter serves as a metaphor for the lyric, with the tripletted accents in 3/8 and 5/8 cutting across the underlying quarter-note pulse of the music like the rays of the sun cutting across the melting ice of winter, generating a tension that builds and then yields on the phrase “here it comes” to the comforting symmetry of 4/4 time. The cumulative effect is one of true release: of coming through a long and arduous experience and emerging whole at the end.
AS THE CHILD of a wealthy, westernized Japanese family, Yoko Ono had been taught the piano in childhood, and she retained the ability to play a number of classical set pieces as an adult. One of these was the Moonlight Sonata (by the noted con artist Ludwig van Beethoven), whose first movement, according to John Lennon, inspired the arpeggiated chords of the ballad “Because.” Because the influence of Yoko’s sensibility on John is apparent in the lyrics as well, this iridescently beautiful song, which was the last complete track the Beatles recorded for Abbey Road, can be heard as her parting gift to the group of “in-laws” with whom she clashed in so many ways.
Whether or not the Beatles were aware at the time they recorded “Because” that it was truly their swan song, their singing on the track, skillfully arranged in three-part harmony by George Martin, represents the most intricate and rhapsodic blend of their voices on record. Set, like the Beethoven sonata, in the key of C-sharp minor, the entire production of words and music, singing and accompaniment, has a classical elegance that verges on formal perfection. So as to focus all of the listeners’ attention on the complex blend and grain of the vocal harmonies, the other aspects of the song are rendered as simply as possible. The arpeggiated lines of the electric harpsichord and electric guitar that voice the chords remain rhythmically static throughout; they are bolstered in the song’s brief release by George Martin’s brass, and later, in the coda, by the recorder-like sound of the Moog. Each of the three verses is introduced by melismatic “Ahhhs” that form a D major triad (sounding a distinctive flatted II chord that figures prominently in the Moonlight Sonata as well) before reverting to the C-sharp-minor tonic. In a format that could serve as the basis of a children’s book, the lyric to each verse consists of a single line, beginning with the word “Because,” in which an aspect of nature (“the world…the wind…the sky”) is converted by means of its description (“is round…is high…is blue”) into an emotion (“it turns me on…blows my mind…makes me cry”). The result is some of the gentlest, most poetically accessible wordplay John Lennon ever wrote. As the first instance of shared lead singing on Abbey Road, “Because” comes as a reminder that, far more than the playing or songwriting on their early records, it was the utterly distinctive blend of the Beatles’ voices that set them apart from the start.
“Because” ends on its flatted II chord, which leaves the harmony hanging and sets up the opening of Paul’s “You Never Give Me Your Money,” the first of the eight songs and song fragments that comprise the concluding, fifteen-minute medley that marked the end of the Beatles’ eight-year career as a recording band. These eight songs were arranged and recorded in five segments—or, to apply the symphonic metaphor, movements—the basic instrumental accompaniment of which was rehearsed and performed live by the Beatles in the studio. The segments were then linked to one another—in some cases by edits at predetermined points of musical transition, in other cases by means of mixing-board “crossfades” in which the end of one track was blended with the start of the next. |
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Я тоже всегда считал A Day in Life вместе с The End самым выдающимся и амбициозным в хорошем смысл произведением группы
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