Gary
Pig
Gold:
February, 2004
Gary Pig Gold
presents
A Fab Forty
Has it really been four decades
already since televisions greatest-ever talent scout
took a chance on a brash young musical novelty act from far-off
Britain? Yes, even to those who werent extremely tuned
into the 2 / 9 / 64 Ed Sullivan Show, the look,
spunk, and above all sound of J, P, G & R continues
to ring within eyes and ears this whole world over. But nobody
needs me to tell them that.
So instead, I thought Id
pick a mere forty of my favorite Beatle tunes of the moment,
and tell you all why I think theyre so, well, Fab. Of
course, your mileage not to mention choices
will differ, but thats half the fun of listening and
listing, isnt it?
Allow me then to kick straight
off with the Beatlesong I still find myself humming, playing,
and yes, writing about most often than not
..
1) Please Please Me
and, with the supreme Beatle ballad Ask Me Why
on its original flipside, perhaps the greatest one-two career
launcher in poppy-rock history.
2) It Wont Be Long
As youll soon realize, John is my unapologetically favorite
Beatle, and he was positively on fire throughout my fave Fab
album, With The Beatles. Elsewhere upon same, Not
A Second Time and All Ive Got To Do
were pure Smokey Robinson-worthy young Lennon gems, while
Pauls All My Loving not to mention
Georges first-ever (!!) ditty Dont Bother
Me also helped make the bands second album
an end-to-end unbeatable beat group classic.
3) Strawberry Fields Forever
Arguably the very pinnacle of the bands studio concoctions
before they started getting altogether too magically
mysterious for their own good, that is. And still the greatest
fade-out(s) ever committed to vinyl to boot.
4) I Dont Want To
Spoil The Party
Both Everlys notwithstanding, The Beatles hear-by invent alt.
country and, coupled with Eight Days A Week, produce
in the process their first of many 1965 North American chart-toppers.
5) Tomorrow Never Knows
If you hadnt already realized during its previous thirteen
songs, Revolver had just forever re-written musical
history right before your very ears.
6) A Hard Days Night
The undeniable State of the Art, 1964-model. Listen closely
for the driving bed of bongos, not to mention that stellar
George M. vs George H. piano-guitar solo (
and not a
bad lil movie they stuck after it either!)
7) Happiness Is A Warm Gun
Lennon truly was pops Picasso, compositionally-speaking,
and only The Beatles couldve made it successfully thru
this dizzying mini-History of Rock n Roll with
the help of only three or four tape splices.
8) Good Morning Good Morning
Stripped of all its Pepper down to the rhythm track alone,
as the Anthology 2 version demonstrates, we realize
how great a tight little band The Beatles really were
even
after a whole year off the road!
9) Everybodys Got
Something To Hide Except Me And My Monkey
and this totally Pepper-free hum-ringer mustve
been even more fun to record than Birthday, Hey
Bulldog, or maybe Lennons Ninth (Revolution).
10) Ill Be On My Way
Along with Hello Little Girl, the nascent Lennon
and McCartneys keenest Buddy Holly re-write ever
though
you must admit Billy J. Kramer, as opposed to them Beatles,
recorded the definitive rendering.
11) I Feel Fine
The first feedback on record, as John once claimed? Link Wray
might just have something to say about that. But there certainly
was nothing finer to be heard over Christmastime 1964
and
thats the truth.
12) I Saw Her Standing There
The album-opener to start all album openers ...or, as producer-extraordinaire
Sir Big George Martin would so aptly characterize it, a
potboiler. Why, even the other Georges wholly-Hamburg-drenched
guitar solo lives up to Pauls proto-Dee Dee count-in!
13) Ill Be Back
Add the lads always-shimmering three-part barbershop
chorale atop Johns loving tribute to the late, very
great Del Shannons trademark major/minor way with a
song structure, and you have the album-closer to end all albums.
At least.
14) Im Down
Meanwhile, Paul gamely wrestles Little Richard to the studio
floor
whilst telling Jerry Lee the news.
15) Thank You Girl
This raw diamond, which along with Misery Squeeze
particularly built a whole vocal career after, truthfully
deserves much more notice after four decades spent languishing
upon the underside of that original From Me To You
single.
16) Baby Youre A Rich
Man
And on the subject of Great Lost Beatle B-sides, this big-bass
and Clavioline-driven sing-along has aged ** so ** much better
than its Summer of Love topside, All You Need Is
now what was that word again??
17) Come Together
Wherein Lennon caps his Fab career with a slyly-subtle slice
of Liverpool funk. And, as always, Ringo positively shines.
So much for the rest of Abbey Road
18) Love Me Do
So frequently poo-poohed coz Brian Epstein could only buy
its way up to Number 17 on the hit parade. Yet as no less
an authority as Raymond Douglas Davies has always attested,
The Beatles vinyl debut nevertheless pricked up all
the right ears all over Britain during that otherwise uneventful
winter of 62.
19) Its All Too Much
and I guess it is , clocking in as the not-so-quiet
Beatles long long longest Northern Song ever. Still,
I can so much more easily hear it closing
Sgt. Pepper rather than that other epic production
A Day In The Life, cant you? No?? oh, well
20) Theres A Place
Somehow telepathically (though monophonically) linked since
63 with Brian Wilsons In My Room as
two of the most deeply touching agoraphobic studies of all
time.
21) Should Have Known Better
Here our heroes, lead again by John, toss off one of the greatest
deceptively-arcane musical throwaways of the era with one
harmonica holder tied behind their backs. Plus George says
it all with the last twelve-strung note of his guitar solo,
as usual.
22) I Want To Hold Your Hand
The crowning jewel which, rightfully so, took Beatlemania
global
and opened B. Dylans ears especially to
a certain misheard phrase in the bridge, just as importantly
it turns out.
23) Martha My Dear
The most beloved song ever written to a sheep dog? Irregardless,
it is that most rare instance of a McCartney composition which
is perfectly, regally understated in both arrangement and
execution. Hence its rare, pure, and
simple (got that, Paul?) charm.
24) Day Tripper
The boys gamely take on the twin late-65 titans of the
Stones and Stax
and, wouldnt you know it, cross
the line with flying colours.
25) Across The Universe (Spector
version, btw!!)
So maybe its words do flow out endlessly, but what a tune!
(no doubt inspired by Georges most-melodious Inner
Light being completed that very same week).
26) Nowhere Man
The Beatles meet The Byrds.
27) Dear Prudence
What happens when you take your guitar, and Donovan, to India
with you. And then one of your playmates wont come outside.
Superb drumming as well
by Paul this time though!
28) No Reply
Hey! A Beatle samba, with an actually complete lyrical narrative
along the way. Before John fell off Dylans deep-end
altogether with Youve Got To Hide Your Love Away,
mind you.
29) Think For Yourself
Can you think of any other song, Fab or otherwise, that can
employ a word like opaque not to mention
a fuzz-toned bass and get away with it?
30) Getting Better
Pauls ever-cute cleverness pretty near capsized the
Peppery proceedings in all too many places, but for these
two-minutes-forty-seven hes kept keenly in check (
cant
get much worse).
31) Ticket To Ride
|
The first heavy metal song, as John once claimed? Oh, boy
32) You Know My Name (Look
Up The Number)
Until Apple Inc. gets around to compiling all of the bands
great goonish Christmas recordings on one shiny disc, theres
always this inspired chunk of Brian Jones-saxed lunacy readily
available on a compilation and/or file-sharing trough near
you.
33) And Your Bird Can Sing
The Beatles beat The Byrds!
34) Cry For A Shadow
George was only
how old, when he helped create this
delightfully mock-Marvin (as in Hank of the Shadows) Hamburg
set-stretcher?!!
35) Things We Said Today
Finally! The first McCartney effort to hold its own against
a Johnsong.
36) Yes It Is
Barely-in-tune British doo-wop
and the greatest Beatle backside since its first cousin
This Boy.
37) Hold Me Tight
Similarly suspect in the vocal pitch dept., but its
about as close to, yes, heavy metal as these four comparative
short-hairs ever got during the once-swinging Sixties.
38) She Said She Said
Metal doesnt even begin to describe the veritable wall
of Epiphones which took less than three minutes to raise even
Peter Fonda from the near-dead.
39) Help!
Sure, the movies a clinker, but the song is as harrowingly
autobiographical as anything on Pet Sounds
and
you can frug to it!
40) You Cant Do That
When all is said and sung, however: Gotta have cowbell...
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