A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - Episode 171: “Hey Jude” by the Beatles
Episode Date: December 17, 2023Episode 171 looks at “Hey Jude”, the White Album, and the career of the Beatles from August 1967 through November 1968. Click the full post to read liner notes, links to more information,... and a transcript of the episode. Patreon backers also have a fifty-seven-minute bonus episode available, on “I Love You” by People!. Tilt Araiza has assisted invaluably by doing a first-pass edit, and will hopefully be doing so from now on. Check out Tilt’s irregular podcasts at http://www.podnose.com/jaffa-cakes-for-proust and http://sitcomclub.com/ (more…)
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A History of Rock Music in 500 songs
By Andrew Hic
Episode 171
Hey Jude
By the Beatles
Before I start a quick note
This episode deals
Among other topics
With child abandonment,
Spousal Neglect, Suicide Attempts
Miscarriage, Rape Accusations
and Heroin Addiction
If any of those topics are likely to upset you, you might want to check the transcript
rather than listening to this episode.
It also, for once, contains a short excerpt of an expletive, but given that that expletive in
that context has been regularly played on daytime radio without complaint for over 50 years,
I suspect it can be excused.
The use of mantra meditation is something that exists across religions, and which appears to
have been independently invented multiple times in multiple cultures.
In the Western culture to which most of my listeners belong,
it is now best known as an aspect of what is known as mindfulness,
a secularised version of Buddhism,
which aims to provide adherence with the benefits of the teachings of the Buddha,
but without the cosmology to which they are attached.
But it turns up in almost every religious tradition I know of,
in one form or another.
The idea of mantra meditation is a very simple one,
and one that even has some basis in science.
There is a mathematical principle in neurology and information science
called the free energy principle,
which says our brains are wired to try to minimize how surprised we are.
Our brain is constantly making predictions about the world
and then looking at the results from our sensors to see if they match.
If they do, that's great.
And the brain will happily move on to its next prediction.
If they don't, the brain has to update its model of the world
to match the new information, make new predictions,
and see if those new predictions are a better match.
Every person has a different mental model of the world
and none of them match reality,
but every brain tries to get as close as possible.
This updating of the model to match the new information is called
Thinking, and it uses up energy,
and our bodies and brains have evolved to conserve energy as much as possible.
This means that for many people, most of the time,
thinking is unpleasant,
and indeed much of the time that people have spent thinking,
they've been thinking about how to stop themselves having to do it at all,
and when they have managed to stop thinking, however briefly,
they've experienced great bliss.
Many more or less effective technologies have been created
to bring about a more minimal energy state,
including alcohol, heroin, and barbiturates.
But many of these have unwanted side effects, such as death,
which people also tend to want to avoid,
and so people have often turned to another technology.
It turns out that for many people,
they can avoid thinking by simply thinking about something that is utterly predictable.
If they minimize the amount of sensory input
and concentrate on something they can predict exactly,
eventually they can turn off their mind, relax and float downstream,
without dying.
One easy way to do this is to close your eyes, so you can't see anything,
make your breath as regular as possible,
and then concentrate on a sound that repeats over and over.
If you repeat a single phrase or word a few hundred times,
that regular repetition eventually causes your mind to stop having to keep track of the world
and experience a piece that is, by all accounts, unlike any other experience.
What word or phrase that is can depend very much on the tradition?
In transcendental meditation, each person has their own individual phrase.
In the Catholicism in which George Harrison and Paul McCartney were raised,
popular phrases for this are,
Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me a sinner, or
Hail Mary full of grace the Lord is with you,
Blessed are you among women and blessed is the fruit of your womb, Jesus.
Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners now and at the hour of our death, amen.
In some branches of Buddhism, a popular mantra is
Nam Yoho Renge Kyo, in the Hinduism to which George Harrison later converted,
you can use Hari Krishna, Harry Krishna, Krishna, Hary-Hari-Rama,
harry Rama, Rama harry harry,
Om namobagavate Vasudevaia,
or Om gam Ganapachi na maha.
Those last two start with the syllable om,
and indeed some people prefer to just use that syllable,
repeating a single syllable over and over again,
until they reach a state of transcendence.
We don't know much about how the Beatles first discovered Maharashi Mahesh Yogi,
except that it was thanks to Patti Boyd,
George Harrison's then-wife.
Unfortunately, her memory of how she first became involved
in the Maharishi's Spiritual Regeneration Movement,
as described in her autobiography,
doesn't fully line up with other known facts.
She talks about reading about the Maharishi in the paper
with her friend Mary Lisa
while George was away on tour,
but she also places the date that this happened
in February 1967,
several months after the Beatles had stopped touring forever.
We'll be seeing a lot more of these timing discrepanion
as this story progresses, and people's memories increasingly don't match the events that
happened to them. Either way, it's clear that Patty became involved in the spiritual regeneration
movement, a good length of time before her husband did. She got him to go along with her to one of the
Maharishi's lectures, after she had already been converted to the practice of Transcendental Meditation,
and they brought along John Paul and their partners. Ringo's wife Maureen had just given birth,
so they didn't come. As we heard back in episode one,
150. That lecture was impressive enough that the group, plus their wives and girlfriends,
with the exception of Maureen Starkey, and Mick Jagger and Marianne Faithful,
all went on a meditation retreat with the Maharishi at a holiday camp in Bangor,
and it was there that they learned that Brian Epstein had been found dead.
The death of the man who had guided the group's career could not have come at a worse time
for the band's stability. The group had only recorded one song in the preceding two months,
Paul's Your Mother should know,
and had basically been running on fumes
since completing recording of Sergeant Pepper
many months earlier.
John's drug intake had increased to the point
that he was barely functional,
although with the enthusiasm of the newly converted,
he had decided to swear off LSD
at the Maharishi's urging,
and his marriage was falling apart.
Similarly, Paul McCartney's relationship
with Jane Asher was in a bad state,
though both men were trying to repair their damaged relationships,
while both George and Ringo were having doubts
about the band that had made them famous.
In George's case, he was feeling marginalised by John and Paul,
his songs ignored or paid cursory attention,
and there was less for him to do on the records
as the group moved away from making guitar-based rock and roll music
into the stranger areas of psychedelia.
And Ringo, whose main memory of the recording of Sergeant Pepper
was of learning to play chess while the others went through the extensive overdubs
that characterised that album,
was starting to feel like his playing was deteriorating,
and that as the only non-writer in the band, he was on the outside to an extent.
On top of that, the group were in the middle of a major plan to restructure their business.
As part of their contract renegotiations with the MI at the beginning of 1967,
it had been agreed that they would receive two million pounds,
roughly 15 million pounds in today's money,
in unpaid royalties as a lump sum.
If that had been paid to them as individuals,
or through the company they owned, the Beatles Limited,
they would have had to pay the full top rate of tax on it,
which, as George had complained the previous year, was over 95%.
In fact, he'd been slightly exaggerating the generosity of the UK tax system to the rich,
as at that point the top rate of income tax was somewhere around 97.5%.
But happily for them, a couple of years earlier,
the UK had restructured its tax laws and introduced a corporation tax,
which meant that the profits of corporations were no longer taxed at the same high rate as England.
So a new company had been set up, the Beatles and co, and all the group's non-songwriting income
was paid into the company. Each beetle owned 5% of the company, and the other 80% was owned by
a new partnership, a corporation that was soon renamed Applecore, a name inspired by a painting
that McCartney had liked by the artist Rename McGreet. In the early stages of Apple, it was very entangled
with NEMS, the company that was owned by Brian and Clive Epstein, and which was in the process
of being sold to Robert Stigwood,
though that sale fell through after Brian's death.
The first part of Apple, Apple Publishing,
had been set up in the summer of 1967
and was run by Terry Doran,
a friend of Epstein's who ran a motor dealership.
Most of the Apple divisions would be run by friends of the group
rather than by people with experience in the industries in question.
As Apple was set up during the point that Stigwood was getting involved with NEMS,
Apple Publishing's initial officers were in the same building with,
and shared staff with, two publishing companies that Stigwood owned,
draught leaf music, who published Dream Songs, and Abigail Music, the Bee Gees Publishers.
And indeed, the first two songs published by Apple were copyrights that were gifted to the company by Stigwood.
Listen to the Sky, a B-side by an obscure band called Sands.
and outside woman blues, an arrangement by Eric Clapton of an old blues song by Blind Joe Reynolds,
which Cream had copyrighted separately and released on Disraeli Gears.
But Apple soon started signing outside songwriters.
Once Mike Berry, a member of Apple publishing staff, had sat McCarty down and explained him what music
publishing actually was, something he had never actually understood, even though he'd been a songwriter
for five years.
Those songwriters, given that this was 1967, were often also performers,
and as Apple records had not yet been set up, Apple would try to arrange recording contracts for them with other labels.
They started with a group called Focal Point, who got signed by badgering Paul McCarney to listen to their songs
until he gave them Doran's phone number to shut them up.
But the big early hope for Apple publishing was a songwriter called George Alexander.
Alexander's birth name had been Alexander Young
and he was the brother of George Young
who was a member of the Australian Beat Group
the Easy Beat, who had had a hit with Friday on my mind.
His younger brothers Malcolm and Angus would go on to have a few hits themselves
but ACDC wouldn't be formed for another five years.
Terry Doran thought that Alexander should be a member of her band
because bands were more popular than solo artists at the time
and so he was placed with three former members of Tony Rivers and the castaways
a Beach Boys' Sandalike group that had had some minor success.
John Lennon suggested that the group be named Grapefruit,
after a book he was reading by a conceptual artist of his acquaintance named Yoko Ono,
and as Doran was making arrangements with Terry Melcher for a reciprocal publishing deal,
by which Melchers' American Company would publish Apple songs in the US,
while Apple published songs from Melcher's company in the UK.
It made sense for Melcher to also produce Grapefruit's first single, Dear Delilah.
That made Number 21.
in the UK when it came out in early 1968,
on the back of publicity about grapefruit's connection with the Beatles,
but future singles by the band were much less successful.
Unlike several other acts involved with Apple,
they found that they were more hampered by the Beatles' connection than helped.
A few other people were signed to Apple publishing early on,
of whom the most notable was Jackie Lomax.
Lomax had been a member of a minor Merseybee group, The Undertakers,
and after they had split up,
he'd been signed by Brian Epstein with a new group,
the Lomax Alliance,
who had released one single, Try as You May.
After Epstein's death,
Lomax had plans to join another band
being formed by another Merseybeat musician, Chris Curtis,
the former drummer of The Searchers,
but after going to the Beatles to talk with them
about them helping the new group financially,
Lomax was persuaded by John Lennon to go solo instead.
He may later have regretted that decision,
as by early 1968, the people that Curtis had recruited for his new band had ditched him
and were making a name for themselves as Deep Purple.
Lomax recorded one solo single with funding from Stigwood,
a cover version of a song by an obscure singer-songwriter, Jake Holmes, genuine imitation life.
Feelings changing colors while a crocodile cry.
People rubbing elbow, but never touching eyes.
But he was also signed to Apple Publishing
Still another guy
But he was also signed to Apple Publishing as a songwriter.
The Beatles had only just started laying out plans for Apple
when Epstein died.
And other than the publishing company,
one of the few things they'd agreed on
was that they were going to have a film company,
which was to be run by Dennis O'Dell,
who had been an associate producer on a hard day's night
and on how I won the war.
the Richard Lester film Lennon had recently starred in.
A few days after Epstein's death,
they had a meeting in which they agreed that the band needed to move forward quickly
if they were going to recover from Epstein's death.
They had originally been planning on going to India with the Maharishi to study meditation,
but they decided to put that off until the new year,
and to press forward with the film project Paul had been talking about,
to be titled Magical Mystery Tour.
And so, on the 5th of September 1967,
they went back into the recording studio
and started work on a song of Johns
that was earmarked for the film
I Am the Walrus.
Magical Mystery Tour,
the film, has a mixed reputation
which we will talk about shortly.
But one defence that Paul McCartney
has always made of it
is that it's the only place
where you can see the Beatles performing
I Am the Walrus.
While the song was eventually relegated to a B-side,
it's possibly the finest B-side
of the Beatles' career
and one of the best tracks the group's ever made.
As with many of Lenin's songs from this period, the song was a collage of many different elements
pulled from his environment and surroundings, and turned into something that was rather
more than the sum of its parts. For its musical inspiration, Lenin pulled from,
of all things, a police siren going past his house. For those who were unfamiliar with
what old British police simons sounded like, as opposed to the ones in use for most of my lifetime
or in other countries. Here's a recording of one. That inspired Lenin to write a snatch of lyric
to go with the sound of the siren, starting
Mr City Policeman Sitting Pretty.
He had two other song fragments,
one about sitting in the garden,
and one about sitting on a corn flake.
And he told Hunter Davis,
who was doing interviews
for his authorised biography of the group,
I don't know how it will all end up.
Perhaps they'll turn out to be different parts
of the same song.
But the final element that made these three
disparate sections into a song
was a letter that came from Stephen Bailey,
a pupil at Lennon's old school Quarry Bank,
who told him that the teachers at the school,
who Lennon always thought of as having suppressed his creativity,
we're now analysing Beatles' lyrics in their lessons.
Lennon decided to come up with some nonsense that they couldn't analyse.
Though, as nonsensical as the Finnish song is,
there's an underlying anger to a lot of it
that possibly comes from Lennon thinking of his school experiences.
And so Lennon asked his old school friend Pete Shotton
to remind him of a disgusting playground chant
that kids used to sing in schools in the northwest of England.
and which they still sang with very minor variations at my own school decades later.
Childhood folklore has a remarkably long life.
That rhyme went,
"'Yel the matto custard, green snot pie,
"'all mixed up with a dead dog's eye,
"'slapp it on a butsy, nice and thick,
"'and drink it down with a cup of cold sick.'
Lennon combined some parts of this
"'with half-remembered fragments of Lewis Carroll's The Walrus and the Carpenter,
"'and with some punning references to things that were going on in his own life
and those of his friends,
though it's difficult to know exactly which of the stories
attached to some of the more incomprehensible bits of the lyrics are accurate.
The story that the line,
I am the Eggman, is about a sexual proclivity of Eric burden of the animals,
seems plausible,
while the contention by some that the phrase Samolina Pilchard
is a reference to Sergeant Pilcher,
the corrupt policeman who had arrested three of the Rolling Stones
and would later arrest Lenin on drug charges,
seems less likely.
The track is a masterpiece of production,
but the release of the basic take on Anthology 2 in 1996
showed that the underlying performance,
before George Martin worked his magic with the overdubs,
is still a remarkable piece of work.
But Martin's arrangement and production
turned the track from a merely very good track into a masterpiece.
The string arrangement, very much in the same mould as that for strawberry fields forever,
but giving a very different effect with its harsh cello-glissandy,
is the kind of thing one expects from Martin,
but there's also the chanting of the Mike Sam singers,
who are more normally booked for sessions like Engelbert Humperdinks the last waltz.
But here we're instead asked to imitate the sound of the strings,
make grunting noises,
and generally go very far out of their normal comfort zone.
For the most fascinating piece of production in the entire track
is an idea that seems to have been inspired by people like John Cage.
A live feed of a radio being tuned was played into the monomix
from about the halfway point
and whatever was on the radio at the time was captured.
This is also why, for many decades, it was impossible to have a true stereo mix of the track.
The radio part was mixed directly into the monomix,
and it wasn't until the 1990s that someone thought to track down a copy of the original radio broadcasts and recreate the process.
In one of those bits of synchronicity that happen more often than you would think when you're creating alliatory art,
and which are why that kind of process can be so appealing,
one bit of dialogue from the broadcast of King Lear
that was on the radio as the mixing was happening,
was perfectly timed.
After completing work on the basic track for I Am the Walrus,
the group worked on two more songs for the film,
George's Blue J. Way,
and a group composed 12-bar blues instrumental called Flying,
before starting production.
Magical Mystery Tour, as an idea, was inspired in equal parts by Ken Keesey's merry pranksters,
the collective of people we talked about in the episode on the Grateful Dead,
who travelled across the US extolling the virtues of psychedelic drugs,
and by mystery tours, a British working-class tradition that has rather fallen out of fashion in the intervening decades.
A mystery tour would generally be put on by a coach-hire company,
and would be a day trip to an unannounced location, though the location would in fact be very predictable.
and would be a seaside town within a couple of hours drive of its starting point.
In the case of the ones the Beatles remembered from their own childhoods,
this would be a coastal town in Lancashire or Wales,
like Blackpool, Will or Prestatim.
A coachload of people would pay to be driven to this random location,
get very drunk and have a sing-song on the bus,
and spend a day wherever they were taken.
McCartney's plan was simple.
They would gather a group of passengers
and replicate this experience over the course of several days
in film whatever went on,
but interspers that with more planned-out sketches and musical numbers.
For this reason, along with the Beatles and their associates,
the cast included some actors found through spotlight
and some of the group's favourite performers,
like the comedian Nat Jackley,
whose comedy sequence directed by John was cut from the final film,
and the surrealist poet-singer comedian Iva Cutler.
The film also featured an appearance by a new band
who would go on to have great success over the next year,
the Bonzo Dog Dudar band.
They had recorded their first single in Abbey Road
at the same time as the Beatles were recording Revolver,
but rather than being progressive psychedelic rock,
it had been a remake of a 1920s novelty song.
My brother makes the noises for the talk is,
there's not a single noise that he can't do.
You know exactly what the following walk is.
Well, Rodman Popper, a pretty hog for you.
He'll imitate him.
their setter, a vest and door a grouse, but what is even better is his noise for me to
keep him house, their brother makes the noises for the talk is. There's not a single noise that he can't do.
Their performance in Magical Mystery Tour was very different though. They played a 50s rock
pastige written by bandleaders Vivian Stanchol in Neil Innis, while a stripper took off her clothes.
while several other musical sequences were recorded for the film
including one by the band traffic and one by Cutler
other than the Beatles tracks only the Bonzo's song made it into the finished film
that night cutie called her cap her
she left her east side drum so drab
he went out on the town
no they will make her love from
That song, 30 years later, would give its name to a prominent American alternative rock band.
Incidentally, the same night that Magical Mystery Tour was first broadcast,
was also the night that the Bonzo Dog Dudar band first appeared on a TV show,
Do Not Adjust Your Set, which featured three future members of the Monty Python troupe,
Eric Heidel, Michael Palin, and Terry Jones.
Over the years, the careers of the Bonzos, the Pythons and the Beatles were becoming
increasingly intertwined, with George Harrison in particular striking up strong friendships
and working relationships with Bonzo's Neil Innes and Legs Larry Smith. The filming of magical
mystery tour went about as well as one might expect from a film made by four directors,
none of whom had any previous filmmaking experience and none of whom had any business knowledge.
The Beatles were used to just turning up and having things magically done for them by other people
and had no real idea of the infrastructure challenges that making a film,
even a low-budget one, actually presents,
and ended up causing a great deal of stress to almost everyone involved.
The completed film was shown on TV on Boxing Day 1967
to general confusion and bemusement.
It didn't help that it was originally broadcast in black and white,
and so, for example, the scenes showing shifting landscapes,
outtake footage from Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove,
tinted various psychedelic colours, over the flying music,
just looked like grey fuzz.
But also it just wasn't what people were expecting from a Beatles film.
This was a ramshackled plotless thing,
more inspired by Andy Warhol's underground films
than by the kind of thing the group had previously appeared in.
And it was being presented as Christmas entertainment for all the family.
And to be honest, it's not even a particularly good example of underground filmmaking,
though it looks like a masterpiece when placed next to something like the Bee Gees' similar
effort to Cucumber Castle.
But there are enough interesting.
sequences in there for the project not to be a complete failure, and the deleted scenes
on the DVD release, including the performances by Cutler and Traffic, and the fact that the film
was edited down from 10 hours to 52 minutes, makes one wonder if there's a better film that could
be constructed from the original footage. Either way, the reaction to the film was so bad that
McCartney actually appeared on David Frost's TV show the next day, to defend it and,
essentially, apologise. While they were editing the film,
The group were also continuing to work in the studio, including on two new McCartney songs,
The Fool on the Hill, which was included in Magical Mystery Tour, and Hello Goodbye,
which wasn't included on the film's soundtrack but was released as the next single,
with I Am the Wall vs the B-Side.
Incidentally, in the UK, the soundtrack to Magical Mystery Tour was released as a double EP
rather than as an album.
In the US, the group's recent singles and B-sides were added to turn it into a full-length album,
which is how it's now generally available.
I Am the Walrus was on the double EP,
as well as being on the singles B-side,
and the double-ep got to number two on the singles charts,
meaning I Am the Walvis was on the records at number one and number two at the same time.
Before it became obvious that the film, if not the soundtrack, was a disaster.
The group held a launch party on the 21st of December 1967.
The band members went along in fancy dress, as did many of the cast and crew.
The Bonzo Dog Dudar band performed at the party.
Mike Love and Bruce Johnston of the Beach Boys also turned up at the party,
and apparently at one point jammed with the bonzos.
And according to some, but not all, reports,
a couple of the Beatles joined in as well.
Love and Johnston had both just met the Maharishi for the first time a couple of days earlier,
and Love had been as impressed as the Beatles were,
and it may have been at this party that the group mentioned to Love
that they would soon be going on a retreat in India with the Guru,
a retreat that was normally meant for training TM instructors,
but this time seemed to be more about getting celebrities involved.
Love would also end up going with them.
That party was also the first time that Cynthia Lennon had an inkling
that John might not be as faithful to her as she previously supposed.
John had always joked about being attracted to George Harrison's wife, Patty,
but this time he got a little more blatant about his attraction than he ever had previously,
to the point that he made Cynthia cry,
and Cynthia's friend, the pop star Lulu,
decided to give Lennon a very public dressing down for his cruelty to his wife,
a dressing down that must have been a sight to behold,
as Lennon was dressed as a teddy boy while Lulu was in a Shirley Temple costume.
It's a sign of how bad the Lennon's marriage was at this point,
that this was the second time in a two-month period,
where Cynthia had ended up crying because of John at a film launch party
and been comforted by a female pop star.
In October, Silla Black had held a part,
to celebrate the belated release of John's film How I Won the War.
And during the party, Georgie Fame had come up to Black and said,
Confused,
Cynthia Lennon is hiding in your wardrobe.
Black went and had a look, and Cynthia explained to her,
I'm waiting to see how long it is before John misses me and comes looking for me.
Black's response had been,
You'd better face it, kid, he's never going to come.
Also at the Magical Mystery Tour party was Lennon's father,
now known as Freddy Lennon,
and his new 19-year-old fiancé.
While Hunter Davis had been researching the Beatles' biography,
he'd come across some evidence that the version of Freddie's attitude towards John
that his mother's side of the family had always told him.
That Freddy had been a cruel and uncaring husband
who had not actually wanted to be around his son
might not be the whole of the truth,
and that the mother who he had thought of as saintly
might also have had some part to play in their marriage breaking down
and Freddie not seeing his son for 20 years.
The two had made some tentative attempts at reconciliation,
and indeed Freddie would even come and live with John for a while,
though within a couple of years the younger Lennon's heart would fully harden against his father again.
Of course, the things that John always resented his father for
were pretty much exactly the kind of things that Lennon himself was about to do.
It was around this time as well that Derek Taylor gave the Beatles copies of the debut album
by a young singer-songwriter named Harry Nilsson.
Nilsson will be getting his own episode down the line,
but not for a couple of years at my current rates,
so it's worth bringing that up here,
because that album became a favourite of all the Beatles
and would have a huge influence on their songwriting
for the next couple of years.
And because one song on the album, 1941,
must have resonated particularly deeply with Lenin right at this moment.
An autobiographical song by Nelson
about how his father had left him and his mother
when he was a small boy,
and about his own fear that, as his first marriage broke down,
he was repeating the pattern with his stepson Scott.
the kind of girl had wanted all his life.
She was soft and kind and good to him,
so he took her for his wife.
And they got a house,
and they're far from town,
and in a little while,
the girl had seen the doctor,
and she came home with a smile.
Now in 19601, a happy father had a son.
And by 9064, the father walked right out the door,
and his 65, the mom and son were still around.
The other major event of December 1967,
rather overshadowed by the magical mystery tour disaster the next day,
was that on Christmas Day, Paul McCarney and Jane Asher announced their engagement.
A few days later, George Harrison flew to India.
After John and Paul had had their outside film projects,
John starring in How I Won the War and Paul doing the soundtrack for the Family Way,
the other two Beatles more or less simultaneously did their own side project films,
and again one acted while the other did a soundtrack.
Both of these projects were in the rather odd sub-genre of psychedelic shambolic comedy film
that sprang up in the mid-60s, a sub-genre that produced a lot of fascinating films,
though rather fewer good ones.
Indeed, both of them were in the sub-sub-genre of shambolic psychedelic sex comedies.
In Ringo's case, he had a small role in the film Cannes,
which was based on the novel we mentioned in the last episode co-written by Terry Southern,
which was in itself a loose modern rewriting of Voltaire's Candide.
Unfortunately, like such other classics of this subgenre as Anthony Newley's
Can Hieronymus Merkin Ever Forget Mercy, Hump and Find True Happiness,
Candy has dated extremely badly,
and unless you find repeated scenes of sexual assault and rape,
ethnic stereotypes, and jokes about deformity and disfigurement to be an absolute laugh riot,
it's not a film that's worth seeking out,
and stars part in it is not a major one.
Harrison's film was of the same basic genre,
a film called Wonderwall,
about a mad scientist who discovers a way to see through the walls of his apartment,
and gets to see a photographer taking sexy photographs
of a young woman named Penny Lane, played by Jane Birkin.
What do you think I am doing?
I don't know, sir.
You don't know?
Well, I am working, that's what?
I'm carrying out experiments of the greatest importance.
to mankind.
What are you looking at?
Me? Nothing, sir.
There are times Perkins when I must admit I find your behaviour very strange.
Very strange indeed.
It's only your health I'm worried about, sir.
Oh, well, in that case I've got news for you, Perkins.
I've got the measles. You can't come in here.
I've already had measles, sir.
Oh, no, you haven't. Not this kind.
This is a new microbe, highly contagious.
You are not even allowed to talk to me.
Perkins?
Don't forget to wash your hands at alcohol.
And don't go to you.
near the water. Wonderwall would of course later inspire the title of a song by Oasis,
and that's what the film is now best known for, but it's a less unwatchable film than Candy,
and while still problematic it's less so, which is something. Harrison had been the Beatle with the
least involvement in magical mystery tour. McCartney had been the de facto director,
Star had been the lead character and the only one with much in the way of any acting to do,
and Lennon had written the film's standout scene and its best song, and had done a little voiceover
narration. Harrison, by contrast, barely has anything to do in the film, apart from the one song
he contributed, Blue Jay Way, and he said of the project, I had no idea what was happening,
and maybe I didn't pay enough attention because my problem basically was that I was in another
world. I didn't really belong, I was just an appendage. He'd expressed his discomfort to his friend
Joe Massot, who was about to make his first feature film. Massot had got to know Harrison
during the making of his previous film, Reflections on Love,
a mostly silent short which had starred Harrison's sister-in-law,
Jenny Boyd, and which had been photographed by Robert Freeman,
who had been the photographer for the Beatles' album covers
from With the Beatles Through Rubber Soul,
and who had taken most of the photos that Klaus Vorman incorporated into the cover of Revolver,
and whose professional association with the Beatles
seemed to come to an end around the same time he discovered
that Lennon had been having an affair with his wife.
Masat asked Harrison to write the music for the film
and told Harrison he would have complete free reign
to make whatever music he wanted
so long as it fit the timing of the film
and so Harrison decided to create a mixture
of Western rock music and the Indian music he loved.
Harrison started recording the music at the tail end of 1967
with sessions with several London-based Indian musicians
and John Barham,
an orchestrator who had worked with Ravi Shankar
and Shankar's collaborations with Western musicians,
including the Alice Inesian,
Wonderland soundtrack we talked about in the All You Need is Love episode.
For the western music, he used the Remo 4, a Mersey Beat group who had been on the scene
even before the Beatles, and which contained a couple of classmates of Paul McCartney,
but which had mostly acted as backing musicians for other artists.
They'd backed Johnny Sandon, the former singer with The Searchers, on a couple of singles,
before becoming the backing band for Tommy Quickly,
an M's artist who was unsuccessful
despite starting his career with the Lennon McCartney's song
Tip of My Tongue
The Rheemot-to-you-speak to you
The Remo 4 would later, after a line-up change
become Ashton, Gardner and Dyke,
who had become one-hit wonders in the 70s,
and during the Wonderwall sessions,
they recorded a song that went unreleased at the time,
and which would later go on to be re-recorded by Ashton Gardner and Dyke.
In the first time,
also features Harrison on backing vocals and possibly guitar,
and was not submitted for the film
because Harrison didn't believe that Masset wanted any vocal tracks,
but the recording was later discovered
and used in a revised director's cut of the film in the 90s.
But for the most part,
the Rimo 4 were performing instrumentals written by Harrison.
They weren't the only Western musicians performing on the sessions though.
Peter Talk of the Monkeys dropped by these sessions and recorded several short banjo
solos, which were used in the film's soundtrack but not in the soundtrack album,
presumably because Talk was contracted to another label.
Another musician who was under contract to another label was Eric Clapton,
who at the time was playing with The Cream, and who vaguely knew Harrison,
and so joined him for the track skiing.
playing league guitar under the cunning impenetrable pseudonym Eddie Clayton,
with Harrison on sitar, star on drums,
and session guitarist Big Jim Sullivan on bass.
But the bulk of the album was recorded in EMI Studios
in the city that is now known as Mumbai,
but at the time was called Bombay.
The studio facilities in India had, up to that point,
only had a monotape recorder,
and Baskar Menon,
one of the top executives at EMI's Indian division,
and later the head of EMI music worldwide,
personally brought the first stereotype recorder to the studio
to aid in Harrison's recording.
The music was all composed by Harrison
and performed by the Indian musicians,
and while Harrison was composing in an Indian mode,
the musicians were apparently fascinated by how Western it sounded to them.
While he was there, Harrison also got the instrumentalists
to record another instrumental track,
which wasn't to be used for the film.
That track would instead become part of what was to be Harrison's first composition to make a side of a Beatles single.
After John and George had appeared on the David Frost Show talking about the Maharishi in September 1967,
George had met a lecturer in Sanskrit named Juan Mascaro,
who wrote to Harrison in closing a book he compiled of translations of religious texts,
telling him he'd admired within you without you
and thought it would be interesting if Harrison set something from the touting.
ching to music. He suggested a text that, in his translation, read,
Without going out of my door, I can know all things on earth. Without looking out of my window,
I can know the ways of heaven, for the farther one travels, the less one knows. The sage,
therefore, arrives without travelling, sees all without looking, does all without doing.
Harrison took that text almost verbatim, though he created a second verse by repeating the first
few lines with you replacing I, concerned that listeners might think that he was just talking
about himself and wouldn't realise it was a more general statement. And he removed the
sage, therefore, and turned the last few lines into imperative commands rather than declarative
statements. The song has come in for some criticism over the years as being a little
orientalist, because in critic's eyes it combines Chinese philosophy with Indian music, as if all
these things are equally Eastern, and so all the same, really. On the other hand, there's a good
argument that an English songwriter taking a piece of writing written in Chinese, and translated into
English by a Spanish man, and setting it to music inspired by Indian musical modes, is a wonderful
example of cultural cross-pollination. As someone who's neither Chinese nor Indian, I wouldn't
want to take a stance on it, but clearly the other Beatles were impressed by it. They put it out as
the B-side to their next single, even though the only Beatles on it are Harrison and McCartney,
with the latter adding a small amount of harmony vocal. And it wasn't because the group were out of
material. They were planning on going to Ishikesh to study with the Maharishi and wanted to get a
single out for a release while they were away, and so in one week they completed the vocal overdubs
on the inner light and recorded three other songs, two by John and one by Paul. All three of the group
songwriters brought in songs that were among their best. John's first contribution was a song
whose lyrics he later described as possibly the best he ever wrote, across the universe. He said the
lyrics were purely inspirational and were given to me as boom. I don't own it, you know. It came
through like that. Such an extraordinary metre and I can never repeat it. It's not a matter of craftsmanship,
it wrote itself. It drove me out of bed. I didn't want to write it. It's like being possessed,
like a psychic or a medium. But while Lennon
like the song. He was never happy
with the recording of it. They tried all
sorts of things to get the sound he heard in his
head, including bringing in some
fans who were hanging around outside to sing
backing vocals. He said
of the track, I was singing out of
tune and instead of getting a decent choir, we got
fans from outside, Apple scruffs or whatever you call them.
They came in and was singing all off key.
Nobody was interested in doing the tune
originally.
The Jigur wildly as they slip away across the universe
of joy are drifting through my opened mind, possessing and caressing me.
The Jiguru Deva chorus there is the first reference to the teachings of the Maharishi
in one of the Beatles' records.
Guru Dave was the Maharishi's teacher, and the phrase J-Guru Dave is a Sanskrit one,
which have seen variously translated as Victory to the Great
teacher and, hail to the greatness within you. Lennon would say, shortly before his death,
the Beatles didn't make a good record out of it, I think subconsciously sometimes we,
I say we, though I think Paul did it more than the rest of us. Paul would sort of subconsciously
try and destroy a great song. Usually we'd spend hours doing little detailed cleaning ups
of Paul's songs when it came to mine, especially if it was a great song like strawberry fields
or across the universe, somehow this atmosphere of looseness and casualness and experimentation would
creep in. It was a lousy track of a great song, and I was so disappointed by it. The guitars are
out of tune and I'm singing out of tune because I'm psychologically destroyed and nobody's
supporting me or helping me with it, and the song was never done properly. Of course, this is only
Lennon's perception, and it's one that the other participants would disagree with. George Martin, in
particular, was always rather hurt by the implication that Lennon's songs had less attention paid to
them, and he would always say that the problem was that Lennon in the studio would always say,
yes, that's great, and only later complained that it hadn't been what he wanted. No doubt McCartney
did put in more effort on his own songs than on Lennon's. Everyone has a bias towards their own
work and McCartney's only human, but personally, I suspect that a lot of the problem comes down to
the two men having very different personalities. McCartney has a bit of the problem. McCartney has a lot of the problem.
had very strong ideas about his own work,
and would drive the others insane with his nitpicky attention to detail.
Lennon had similarly strong ideas,
but didn't have the attention span to put the time and effort in to force his vision on others,
and didn't have the technical knowledge to express his ideas in words they'd understand.
He expected Martin and the other Beatles to work miracles, and they did,
but not the miracles he would have worked.
That track was, rather than being chosen for the next single,
given to Spike Milligan, who happened to be visiting the studio
and was putting together an album for the environmental charity The World Wildlife Fund.
The album was titled, No One's Gonna Change Our World.
That track is historic in another way.
It would be the last time that George Harrison would play sitar on a Beatles record,
and it effectively marks the end of the period of psychedelia and Indian influence
that had started with Norwegian Wood three years earlier,
and which many fans consider their most creative period.
Indeed, shortly after the recording, Harrison would give up the sitar altogether and stop playing it.
He loved sitar music as much as he ever had, and he still thought that Indian classical music
spoke to him in ways he couldn't express, and he continued to be friends with Ravi Shankar for
the rest of his life, and would only become more interested in Indian religious thought.
But as he spent time with Shankar, he realised he would never be as good on the sitar as he hoped.
He said later, I thought, well, maybe I'm better off being a pop singer again.
guitar player, songwriter, whatever I'm supposed to be, because I've seen a thousand sitar
players in India, who are twice as better as I'll ever be, and only one of them, Ravi thought was
going to be a good player. We don't have a precise date for when it happened. I suspect it was in June
1968, so a few months after the across-the-universe recording, but Shankar told Harrison that rather
than tried to become a master of a music that he hadn't encountered until his 20s, perhaps he
should be making the music that was his own background.
And as Harrison put it,
I realized that was riding my bike down the street in Liverpool
and hearing Heartbreak Hotel coming out of someone's house.
For a new place to dwell,
I'm so lonely,
I'll be so lonely I could die.
Although it's always crowded,
you still can find some room
for broken-hearted lovers to cry there in it glue.
In early 1968, a lot of people seemed to be thinking along the same lines,
as if Christmas 1967 had been the flick of a switch,
and instead of whimsy and ornamentation,
the thing to do was to make music that was influenced by early rock and roll.
In the US, the band and Bob Dylan were making music
that was consciously shorn of all studio experimentation,
while in the UK there was a revival of 50s rock and mole.
In April 1968, both Peggy Sue and Rock Around the Clock re-entered
the top 40 in the UK, and the Who were regularly including summertime blues in their sets.
50s nostalgia, which would make occasional comebacks for at least the next 40 years,
was in its first height, and so it's not surprising that Paul McCartney's song Lady Madonna,
which became the A-side of the next single, has more than a little of the 50s about it.
Of course, the track isn't completely 50s in its origins. One of the inspirations for the track
seems to have been the Rolling Stones' then recent hit
Let's Spend the Night Together.
But the main source for the song's music
and for the sound of the finished record
seems to have been Johnny Parker's piano part
on Humphrey Littleton's Bad Penny Blues,
a hit single engineered by Joe Meek in the 50s.
That song seems to have been on the group's mind for a while,
as a working title for With a Little Help from My Friends
had at one point been Bad Finger Blues,
a title that would later give the name to a band on Apple.
McCartney took Parker's piano part as his inspiration, and, as he later put it,
Lady Madonna was me sitting down at the piano trying to write a bluesy boogie-woogie thing.
I got my left hand doing an arpeggio thing with the chord, an ascending boogie-woogie left hand,
then a descending right hand.
I always like that, the juxtaposition of a line going down meeting a line going up.
That idea, incidentally, is an interesting reversal of what McCartney had done on Hello Goodbye,
where the bass line goes down while the guitar moves up.
The two lines moving away from each other.
Though that isn't to say there's no descending bass in Lady Madonna,
the bridge has a wonderful sequence where the bass just keeps descending.
Lyrically, McCarny was inspired by a photo in National Geographic
of a woman in Malaysia, captioned,
Mountain Madonna, with one child at her breast and another laughing into her face,
sees her quality of life threatened.
but as he put it
the people who as brought up amongst
were often Catholic
there are lots of Catholics in Liverpool
because of the Irish connection
and they're often religious
when they have a baby I think they see
a big connection between themselves
and the Virgin Mary with her baby
so the original concept was the Virgin Mary
but it quickly became symbolic of every
woman. The Madonna image
but as applied to ordinary working class woman
it's really a tribute to the mother figure
it's a tribute to women
musically though the song was more
a tribute to the 50s. While the inspiration had been a skiffle hit by Humphy Littleton,
as soon as McCartney started playing it, he thought of Fats Domino, and the lyric reflects that
to an extent. Just as Domino's Blue Monday details the days of the week for a weary working man,
who only gets to enjoy himself on Saturday night, Lady Madonna's lyrics similarly look at the
work a mother has to do every day, though as McCartney later noted, I was writing the words out
to learn it for an American TV show, and I realised they missed out Saturday.
so I figured it must have been a real night out.
The vocal was very much McCarty doing a domino impression,
something that wasn't lost on fat,
who cut his own version of the track later that year.
The group was so productive at this point,
right before the journey to India,
that they actually cut another song,
they were making a video for Lady Madonna. They were booked into Abbey Road to film themselves
performing the song so it could be played on top of the pops while they were away, but instead
they decided to use the time to cut a new song. John had a partially written song, Hey Bullfrog, which was
roughly the same tempo as Lady Madonna, so they could finish that up and then re-edit the footage
to match the record. The song was quickly finished and became Hey Bulldog. One of Lennon's best
songs from this period, Hey Bulldog was oddly chosen only to go on the soundtrack.
of yellow submarine. Either the band didn't think much of it because it had come so easily,
or it was just assigned to the film because they were planning on being away for several months
and didn't have any other projects they were working on. The extent of the group's contribution
to the film was minimal. They were not very hands-on, and the film, which was mostly done as an
attempt to provide a third feature film for the United Artists contract, without them having
to do any work, was made by the team that had done the Beatles cartoon on American TV. There's some evidence
that they had a small amount of input in the early story stages,
but in general they saw the cartoon as an irrelevance to them.
The only things they contributed were the four songs,
All Together Now, It's All Too Much,
Hay Bulldog, and Only a Northern Song,
and a brief filmed appearance for the very end of the film,
recorded in January.
Can't you tune that?
Can't seem to get it out of my head.
It's shaky.
That's what we've been doing all night.
Yeah, it was a great party.
We brought back lots of lots of little.
lovely souvenirs. Here is the motor. And I've got a little, love, and I've got a hole in my pocket.
A hole? Well, half a hole anyway. I gave the rest to Jeremy. What can he do with half a hole?
I fix it to keep his mind from wandering. Hey, look at John, will you? What's the matter, John, love? Blue Amini's?
Newer and Blue Aminis have been sighted within the vicinity at this theatre. There's only one way to go out.
How's that? Singing. One, two. Three.
McCartney also took part in yet another session in early February 1968,
one produced by Peter Asher, his fiancée's brother and former singer with Peter and Gordon.
Asher had given up on being a pop star and was trying to get into the business side of music,
and he was starting out as a producer, producing a single by Paul Jones,
the former lead singer of Manfred Mann.
The A side of the single, and The Sun Will Shine,
was written by the Bee Gees, the band that Robert Stigwood was managing.
While the B-side was an original by Jones, the dog presides.
Those tracks featured two former members of the art birds,
Jeff Beck and Paul Samuel Smith, on guitar and bass,
and Nikki Hopkins on piano.
Asher asked McCartney to play drums on both sides of the single,
saying later,
I always thought he was a great underrated drummer.
McCartney was impressed by Asher's production
and asked him to get involved with the new Apple Records label
that would be set up when the group returned from India.
Asher eventually became head of A&R for the label,
and even before Lady Madonna was mixed,
the Beatles were off to India.
Mal Evans, their roadie,
went ahead with all their luggage on the 14th of February,
so he could sort out transport for them on the other end.
And then John and George followed on the 15th,
with their wives, Patty and Cynthia,
and Patty's sister Jenny.
John and Cynthia's son, Julian,
had been left with his grandmother while they went.
Normally Cynthia wouldn't abandon Julian for an extended period of time,
but she saw the trip as a way to repair their strained marriage.
Paul and Ringo followed four days later,
with Ringo's wife Maureen and Paul's fiancé Jane Asher.
The retreat in Mishikesh was to become something of a celebrity affair.
Along with the Beatles came their friend the singer-songwriter Donovan,
and Donovan's friend and songwriting partner,
whose name I'm not going to say here,
because it's a slur for Romani people,
but will be known to any Donovan fans.
Donovan at this point was also going through changes,
Like the Beatles, he was largely turning away from drug use and towards meditation,
and had recently written his hit single, There Is a Mountain, based around a saying from Zen Buddhism.
That was from his double album,
A Gift from a Flower to a Garden,
which had come out in December 1967.
But also like John and Paul,
he was in the middle of the breakdown of a long-term relationship,
and while he would remain with his then-partner until 1970,
and even have another child with her,
he was secretly in love with another woman.
In fact, he was secretly in love with two other women.
One of them, Brian Jones' ex-girlfriend Linda,
had moved to L.A., become the partner of the singer Grand Parsons,
and had appeared in the documentary You Are What You Eat,
with the band and Tiny Tim.
She had fallen out of touch with Donovan,
though she would later become his wife.
Incidentally, she had a son to Brian Jones,
who had been abandoned by his rock star father.
The son's name is Julian.
The other woman with whom Donovan was in love was Jenny Boyd,
the sister of George Harrison's wife, Patty.
Jenny at the time was in a relationship,
with Alexis Mardas, a TV repairman and hoaxter who presented himself as an electronics genius to the Beatles,
who nicknamed him Magic Alex, and so she was unavailable, but Donovan had written a song about her,
released as a single, just before they all went to Ishikesh.
Donovan considered himself and George Harrison to be on similar spiritual paths,
and called Harrison his spirit brother, though Donovan was more interested in Buddhism, which Harrison
considered a corruption of the more ancient Hinduism.
And Harrison encouraged Donovan to read
Autography of a Yogi. It's perhaps
worth noting that Donovan's father had a different take on the subject
though, saying, you're not going to study meditation
in India, son, you're following that wee lassie Jenny.
Donovan and his friend weren't the only other celebrities
to come to Ishikesh. The actor Mia Farrow, who had just been through a
painful divorce from Frank Sinatra, and had just made Rosemary's
a horror film directed by Roman Polansky, with exteriors shot at the Dakota building in New York,
arrived with her sister Prudence.
Also on the trip was Paul Horn, a jazz saxophonist who had played with many of the greats of jazz,
not least of them Duke Allington, whose sweet Thursday Horn had played alto saxon.
Horn was another musician who had been inspired to investigate Indian spirituality and music simultaneously,
and the previous year he had recorded an album in India
of adaptations of Raghaz,
with Ravishankar and Al-Auddin Khan.
Horne would go on to become one of the pioneers
of what would later be turned New Age music,
combining jazz with music from various non-Western traditions.
Horn had also worked as a session musician,
and one of the tracks he played on was,
I know there's an answer from the Beach Boys Pet Sounds album.
Mike Love, who co-wrote that track,
and is one of the lead singers on it,
was also in Mishikesh.
While, as we'll see,
not all of the celebrities on the trip
would remain practitioners of transcendental meditation,
love would be profoundly affected by the trip,
and remains a vocal proponent of TM to this day.
Indeed, his whole band at the time were heavily into TM.
While Love was in India,
the other Beach Boys were working on the Friends album without him.
Love only appears on four tracks on that album,
and one of the tracks they recorded in his absence was
titled Transcendental Meditation.
But the trip would affect love's songwriting, as it would affect all the musicians there.
One of the few songs on the Friends album on which Love appears is Annalie the Healer,
a song which is lyrically inspired by the trip in the most literal sense,
as it's about a masseuse love met in Mishikesh.
the beach house face and towards a sea
goes a gal who got her fame by going round a healing folks
The musicians in the group all influenced and inspired each other
as is likely to happen in such circumstances
Sometimes it would be a matter of trivial joking
As when the Beatles decided to perform an off-the-cuff song about Guru Dave
And did it in the Beach Boys style
And that turned partway through into a celebration
of love for his birthday.
Decades later, love would return the favour,
writing a song about Harrison and their time together in Mishikesh.
Like Donovan, Love seems to have considered Harrison his spiritual brother,
and he titled the song Paisi's Brothers.
The musicians on the trip were also often making suggestions to each other
songs that would become famous for them.
The musicians had all brought acoustic guitars,
apart obviously from Ringo,
who got a set of tabler drums
when George ordered some Indian instruments to be delivered.
George got a sitar,
as at this point he hadn't quite given up on the instrument,
and he gave Donovan a tambourer.
Donovan started playing a melody on the tambourer,
which is normally a drone instrument,
inspired by the Scottish folk music he had grown up with,
and that became his hurdy-gurdy-man.
my vast leap I opened my eyes to take a peep
to find that I was by the sea gazing with tranquility
Just then when the hurdy-gurdy man came singing songs of love
Then when the hurdy-gurdy man came singing songs of love
Harrison actually helped him with the song,
writing a final verse inspired by the Maharishi's teachings.
But in the studio, Donovan's producer Mickey Most
told him to cut the verse because the song was over long,
which apparently annoyed Harrison.
Donovan includes that verse in his live performances of the song though,
usually while doing a fairly terrible impersonation of Harrison.
George he wrote, I love George.
He said this,
When truth gets buried deep
Beneath a thousand years asleep
Time demands a turn around
And once again
The truth is found
Yeah, joy
Awakening the hurdy-gurdy man
Who comes singing the songs of life
And similarly, while McCartney was working on a song
Pastiishing Chuck Berry and the Beach Boys
But singing about the USSR
rather than the USA. Love suggested to him that for a middle-eight,
he might want to sing about the girls in the various Soviet regions.
As all the guitarists on the retreat only had acoustic instruments,
they were very keen to improve their acoustic playing,
and they turned to Donovan, who, unlike the rest of them,
was primarily an acoustic player and one from a folk background.
Donovan taught them the rudiments of Travis picking,
the guitar style we talked about way back in the episodes on the Everly brothers,
as well as some of the tunings that have been introduced to British folk folk music by Davy Graham,
giving them a basic grounding in the principles of English folk-brot guitar,
a style that he developed over the previous few years.
Donovan has said in his autobiography that Lennon picked the technique up quickly,
and that Harrison had already learned Travis picking from Chet Atkins' records,
but that McCartney didn't have the application to learn the style, though he picked up bits.
That seems very unlike anything else I've read anywhere about Lennon and McCartney.
No one has ever accused Lennon of having a surrogative application.
And reading Donovan's book, he seems to dislike McCartney and like Lennon and Harrison,
so possibly that enters into it.
But also it may just be that Lennon was more receptive to Donovan's style at the time.
According to McCartney, even before going to Rishikesh,
Lennon had been in a vaguely folk music and country mode.
And the small number of tapes he brought with him to Rishikes included Buddy Holly,
Dylan and the progressive folk band
The Incredible String Band
whose music would be a big influence on both
Lennon and McCartney for the next year.
Well, I want you to know
I just had to go
want you to know
we just had to grow
So it's goodbye
First love
And I hope you are fine
Well, I have a sweet woman
Maybe someday to have babies by me
She is pretty
According to McCartney
Lennon also brought
A tape the singer Jake Thackeray had done for him
He was one of the people we bumped into at Happy Road
John liked this stuff which he'd heard on television
Lots of wordplay and very suggestive
So very much up John's alley
I was fascinated by his unusual guitar style
John did happiness as a warm gun
As a Jake Thackeray thing at one point
As I recall
Thackeray was a British
his chansonnier, who sang sweetly poignant but also often filthy songs about Yorkshire life,
and his humour in particular will have appealed to Lennon. There's a story of Lennon meeting Thackeray
and singing the whole of Thackeray's songs The Statues about two drunk men fighting a male statue
to defend the honour of a female statue to him.
He began to tremble and to sway. We were drunk as penguins but we saw him clear as day,
clumping to the water's edge
Sir Robert Wallpole
And we know that what we heard we heard
Lady is the water cold tonight
Is it the milky moonlight
Warms my heart to you
Well let the devil take the park attendant first
My heart may burst
So I'm not waiting any longer
Lady me
And my uncle Sam
Inspector well then we
Given this was the music that Lenny
was listening to. It's unsurprising that he was more receptive to Donovan's lessons,
and the new guitar style he learned allowed him to expand his songwriting,
at precisely the same time he was largely clean of drugs for the first time in several years,
and he started writing some of the best songs he would ever write, often using these new styles.
That song is about Lenin's dead mother.
the first time he ever addressed her directly in a song,
though it would be far from the last,
but it's also about someone else.
That phrase, Ocean Child,
is a direct translation of the Japanese name, Yoko.
We've talked about Yoko and Urbett in recent episodes,
and even briefly in a previous Beatles episode,
but it's here that she really enters the story of the Beatles.
Unfortunately, exactly how her relationship with John Lennon,
which was to become one of the great legendary love stories in rock and roll history
actually started is the subject of some debate.
Both of them were married when they first got together,
and there have also been suggestions that O'Ne was more interested in McCartney than in Lenin at first,
suggestions which everyone involved has denied,
and those denials have the ring of truth about them,
but if that was the case, it would also explain some of Lenin's more perplexing behaviour over the next year.
By all accounts, there was a certain amount of finessing of the story they told over time,
to sand away a few of the rougher edges, to make themselves look better, and to avoid hurting others.
So what I'm going to tell here is the official story, or something close to it,
but be aware there are other competing narratives out there.
Indeed, the retreat to Ishikash seems to be a break in the Beatles' story in many ways.
Up to that point, everything about the group fits a clean, simple narrative.
Sometimes later investigations have proved that narrative wrong,
as when Mark Lewison finally showed how the Beatles really got signed to Parlophone.
But even there, that was just filling in some missing details
that explained curious omissions in the record.
After this point, while we know the dates and times of recording sessions and so forth,
the grand narrative of the group fragments.
Every event takes on a different complexion depending on who is telling the story,
what their memory of it was,
and what their agenda is when telling the story.
story. Sessions that McCartney described as the tension album were described by Starr as
full of love, even though, as we will see, Star, not McCartney, was the one to quit the band
during them. That would continue throughout the rest of the group's career together, and Lennon and
Dono's relationship is a big part of this. From this point on, every anecdote reads differently
depending on who you're most sympathetic to, whose view of their relationship you believe to be more
accurate, and whose memory of a difficult, stressful time you find more reliable.
And in order to form any kind of opinion at all about that, you need to understand at least
some basic facts about Yoko Ono, the most controversial figure by a long way in the Beatles story,
maybe in the whole of rock history.
Yoko Ono came from precisely the kind of background that would make her fascinating to John Lennon,
a background of extreme material wealth but emotional neglect, from a family in which.
which the strong impulse to create and rebel was always stifled by an equally strong impulse to
conform to rigid societal codes. Her father, Yesuke Ono, was a Christian, a minority religion
in Japan, from an Uvo-Riche background. His father had worked his way up from being a branch-manager
at a bank to being president of the Japan Industrial Bank. Yesuke had originally wanted
to be a musician, and he had a strong grounding in classical traditions, and was
also fascinated both by jazz music and by the new experimental western composers of the 1930s,
like Schernberg and Henry Cowell. But as the mere son of the president of a bank,
Ono was still the social inferior of his wife. Isoko Ono was from a family that were part of Japan's
hereditary Samurai Ability, and Isoko's grandfather had owned a Zybatsu, one of a handful of
huge conglomerates and monopolized industries and owned their own banks. Yoko Ono's
maternal family have been described as the Japanese equivalent to the Rockefellas or the Gettys,
and it's been suggested that Yesuke was literally the first commoner that Isoko had ever interacted with.
Their marriage was not at first approved of by Asoko's family.
Not only was Yesuke a commoner, he was also a Christian rather than a Buddhist, and under pressure
from both families to conform, Yesuke gave up on his ambition of being a musician and became a bank executive.
He was transferred to work in San Francisco before Yoko's birth
while his wife and child remained in Japan
and he didn't see his daughter until she was two years old
when they moved to the US to join him.
Even then he only saw his daughter by prior appointment
and they were never close
to the extent that while Yaisuke had been an admirer of avant-garde music in the 30s
Yoko didn't discover the same composer as he was listening to
until her time at university in the 50s.
Yoko was trained in the piano from an early age
but as she later said
I was too shy to play in front of my father
I would go and play in the next room just to let him know I was working
Yesuke would scrutinize her fingers on a regular basis
to see if she could possibly become a concert pianist as he had tried to be
but soon decided she couldn't
the family shuttled between Japan and the US through the 1930s
and Yoko was brought up bilingual
as well as being brought up in a multi-religious household.
That shuttling obviously came to an end when Japan and the US went to war at the end of 1941,
when Yoko was eight years old,
and for her crucial preteen years she actually did suffer from some deprivation,
and even went hungry at times,
as bombing of Japan's major cities disrupted the lives of even the most privileged people in Japan.
During the war, her father spent some time in both Vichy France
and in the Southeast Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere,
what the Japanese government called
what had previously been French Indochina
before the Japanese invasion,
and which later became better known as Vietnam,
as part of his work,
and he seems to have spent some time in a prisoner of war camp.
According to Isoko Ono, Ine,
Yesuke was a Class B war criminal,
though if he was, there seems to be no other evidence of the fact.
For most of that time,
his family continued their life of extraordinary privilege,
But there was a short period when they went hungry,
and Isoko had to trade the family's luxury goods for basic food staples.
But this was a very short period,
and once the war ended, Yoko was back living in extreme luxury.
She went to the Gaku Shuin, or Pears School,
a school that had been established solely for the children of the nobility,
and one of her classmates was Prince Akehito,
who would later become the Emperor of Japan.
Indeed, according to one of her cousins,
one of her teenage boyfriends
was the then-Prince Yoshi,
now Prince Hitachi,
the future emperor's younger brother.
But she was dealing with emotional neglect.
She has always described her mother
as cold, distant and unloving,
much more concerned with following
the proper rules of society than with her children's happiness,
and her father as having wanted her son.
When she told her father she wanted to be a composer,
he told her that composition was too difficult for wearing.
Her mother, on the other hand, told her to avoid marriage
in children as long as possible, because Isoko had wanted to be a painter before her marriage.
Indeed, when the family moved back to the US after the war, moving to Scarsdale, New York,
they left Yoko in Japan to finish her schooling, but eventually she followed them to the US and enrolled
at Sarah Lawrence, an expensive private liberal arts college, which at the time was women only.
Yoko was equally interested in the visual arts and in music, and she particularly loved the work of
composers like Vavar. It was that interest that led her to and then passed the music that her father
had enjoyed in his own youth. As she said later, my heroes were the 12-tone composers,
Berg, Weber, those people, and I was just fascinated by what they could do. I wrote some 12-tone songs,
but then my music went off into an area that my teacher felt was really a bit off the track,
and he said, well look, there are some people who are doing things like what you do, and they're
called avant-garde. She started creating compositions like Secret Piece, a work she created in
1953 when she was 19 that's very much in the same style as those of Cage or Lamont Young,
consisting of a single F-note held in the bass and the instruction with the accompaniment of the
birds singing at dawn. Later she would revise that piece, making it fully an instructional
piece in the mould of Cage. She removed the stave with the F-note and instead changed the piece
the instruction, decide on one note that you want to play. Play it with the following accompaniment,
the woods from 5am to 8 a.m. in summer. Her work quickly started to blur the lines between
paintings, music and theatre, and encompass what we would now call performance art and conceptual
art. By the early 60s she was creating what she called instructional paintings, or
paintings to be constructed in your head, and the essential theme of her art for most of these early years
was an attempt to reveal the participatory nature of art
and make the audience aware that there's no such thing as a passive observer,
but that a work is created as much by the audience as by the artist.
While she was at Sarah Lawrence, she was introduced to Toshi Ichianagi,
who had later become one of the most acclaimed Japanese composers of the latter half of the 20th century,
and the two soon married and decided to take up life as bohemian artists.
They started hosting concerts in their loft, co-curated,
with Lamont Young, the composer we talked about in the episode on the Velvet Underground.
We talked in that episode about Young's involvement in the fluxus artistic movement,
and Ono was a big part of that as well, and was, at least according to many,
the primary driving force behind the concerts, which became the start of the loft culture
that would be the breeding ground for much of New York's bohemian art scene over the next couple of decades.
As Ono later said, everybody advised me not to do this. They said nobody's going to come
all the way downtown to look at or listen to this, and indeed only 25 people turned up to the
initial concert. But among those people were John Cage, the art collector Peggy Guggenheim,
and Marcel Duchamp. Ono and Ichianagi split up in the early 1960s, and Itchy andagi
moved back to Japan, though they did have an attempt at reconciliation in 1962, after Ono was
invited by John Cage to come with him on a tour of Japan. It was during that time that, as we heard in
the episode on Pop has got a brand new bag,
Cage dedicated his piece
Zero Minutes Zero Seconds,
a sequel to Four Minutes 33,
to Ono and Ichie and Agi.
This was Yoko's first return to Japan
since she'd left as a teenager,
and she spent a couple of years in the country,
and became part of the new Japanese avant-garde circle
in the same way she had previously been involved
in the New York art scene.
It was in this period that she premiered works like Cut Piece,
one of her most famous and influential pieces of work.
She later said of Cut Piece that it was
a frightening experience and a bit embarrassing.
It was something that I insisted on
in the Zen tradition of doing the thing
which is the most embarrassing for you to do
and seeing what you come up with and how you deal with it.
Cut Piece is a powerful and disturbing work about the male gaze
and also about the selfish nature of most artists.
It involved oh no sitting in a spotlight with a large pair of scissors
and then inviting audience members to come up and use the scissors to cut off a piece of her clothing,
while she remained impassive and unmoving, until she became naked.
But her marriage to Ichianagi was well and truly over by this point,
even as Ichi and Agi was becoming a massive success, and she had other problems.
She was questioning her place in the world and the value of her work,
and said later,
The whole avant-garde world seemed bourgeois to me,
Who was I beyond Toshi's wife and John Cage's friend?
An accusation of plagiarism by one reviewer seems to have pushed her over the edge, and she attempted suicide.
This had apparently been something she'd done before. According to her, as a teenager,
I was always trying to cut my wrists or take pills. And later, even though my husbands were terribly
supportive of my work, I was always feeling frustrated as an artist. I felt I was not being
accepted by society work-wise. She ended up in a psychiatric,
hospital, one which had a reputation for over-medicating patients, but was eventually released
through the efforts of one of her husband's friends, a minor American artist named Anthony Cox,
who Ichie and Aggie had asked to help her out. She and Cox eventually married, indeed they
married twice, as the first time had to be annulled when they realised Yoko's divorce hadn't yet
been finalised. Yoko soon found herself pregnant, and Kyoko Ono Cox was born on August 8, 1963.
Kiyoko would later become the inspiration for one of Yoko's most famous songs.
Cox largely took a back seat to his wife's work,
becoming a house husband and Kiko's primary caregiver while Yoko continued creating,
first in Japan and soon back in New York,
where she reconnected with her Fluxus associates.
With Cox's help, while she was still in Japan,
she had set up her own small press,
Winterdown Press, and published a book of her event scores,
grapefruit, which consisted of instructions you could follow
to do your own performances of her works,
like a 1964 piece, Tunafish Sandwich Piece.
Imagine 1,000 suns in the sky at the same time,
let them shine for one hour,
then let them gradually melt into the sky,
make one Tuna Fish sandwich and eat.
In 1965, she also made a film version of Cut Piece,
with Albert and David Maisels,
two documentary filmmakers who had also recently made the film
What's Happening, The Beatles in the USA,
and would later go on to make the documentary.
Gimmie Shelter, about the Rolling Stones' ill-fated 1969 tour of the US, as well as the classic
documentary Grey Gardens. O'Nos started making her own films, avant-garde conceptual works in much
the same vein as those made by Andy Warhol around the same time. The most famous of her works
from this period is probably a film originally titled Number Four, but now better known as
Bottoms, which consists of footage of various people's bottoms while they walk on a treadmill.
The purpose of the film, as with many of Ono's works, was apparently to help bring about world peace.
But Yoko and Cox's relationship was falling apart, and she accepted an invitation to perform in London
partly as a way of getting away from him, but he insisted on following her and bringing their daughter with them.
At first, Yoko's work was not especially well received in London, but then she was asked to put on a show by John Dunbar,
the owner of the Indyka Gallery and Bookshop, who was also the husband of the pop star.
Marianne Faithful.
Dunbar was part of the same artist social circle as Paul McCartney, and the Beatles were
regular visitors to the bookshop. As we heard in the episode on Tomorrow Never Knows,
it was where John Lennon picked up his copy of The Psychedelic Experience, and so Lennon was
invited to a private showing of Ono's work before it opened to the public.
We've already covered Lennon's reaction to Ono's show in the episode on All You Need is Love,
and so there's no real need to recap it here, but Lennon was fascinated by Ono,
at first purely as an artist,
though he rapidly developed rather stronger feelings for her.
According to Cynthia,
Yoko kept visiting Lennon's house
and showering him with postcards and letters
and trying to seduce him.
Ono desires this,
and to be fair to both parties,
it's easy to see how a relatively small
and infrequent number of visits or letters
could blow up in one's memory given what happened.
But Ono kept herself busy,
and the two didn't see each other all that often.
One time they were definitely in the same room
was the 14-hour technical edream,
the big freak-out event we looked at in passing
in various of our episodes on 1967 British Records,
which featured bands like Soft Machine,
The Move, the Pink Floyd,
and a band named John's Children,
who had just released their flop single,
Desdemona, written by the guitarist Mark Boland.
Lenin was in the audience for their technical adream,
which also featured conceptual and performance artists
and underground films on a second.
stage. Owner was one of the artists on this stage, performing cut piece, though according to one
biography I've read of her, she didn't actually perform it herself on this occasion. She was overwhelmed
by the massive crowd of hippies, very different from the small audiences of avant-garde art appreciators
she normally performed to, and she ended up getting someone else to perform the piece while she
was stood at the side watching. Possibly one of the reasons that Cynthia thought that Yoko was
flooding linen with postcards was another of her conceptual pieces. The 13 Days Do It Yourself Dance
festival, in which for 13 days she would send instructions on postcards to a mailing list of
people who had signed up, cryptic instructions like, measure the horizon, or send something you can't
count. One can see how getting one of these in the post every day for nearly two weeks would
seem like something different to Cynthia than it did to Yoko. At one point, John invited Yoko to the
studio to watch the Beatles as they recorded Paul's song for Magical Mystery Tour, The Fool on the Hill.
Afterwards, Yoko discovered what his real motivation was,
as he brought her back to a flat with a sofa bed that he'd clearly used many times before.
She was offended, not by the idea of them having a sexual relationship,
as she'd already started to fall for him,
but by the way in which he assumed her interest,
and the way he was seemingly treating her as just another groupie.
Later, she would forgive this behaviour,
reasoning that he could hardly take her out in public,
given that he was one of the most famous man in the world at the time,
and was still married.
But for the moment, she decided that she was going to get some distance from Lenin,
who she found herself falling for.
She left Britain for France,
and didn't even realise at first that Lenin had also left the country to go to India.
She associated London with Lenin,
and didn't actually return to London,
until she was invited by Ornette Coleman,
the great free jazz saxophonist,
to perform with him at the Royal Albert Hall,
a recording that was later included on the Yoko Ono Plastic Ono band album.
When she got back to London, she found a pile of letters at her flat, from Lennon.
She would later ask him,
When you wrote me all those letters, weren't you worried I'd run to a newspaper or something?
You're a married man.
And he replied that he used to send letters just like them to his friend Stuart Sutcliffe,
one of several things which led Ono to the conclusion she has expressed later,
that Lennon was bisexual, at least by orientation, if not behaviourally,
something he apparently told her in later years.
She decided that if he propositioned her again, she wouldn't say no the next time.
Yoko started up their correspondence again, and her postcards started arriving in Rishikesh.
These letters would be sent to Tony Bramwell, an apple staffer, in Delhi,
and Bramwell would forward them onto Rishikes in brown wrappers,
so that Lennon could hide them from Cynthia.
Even so, Lennon decided that he and Cynthia were going to sleep in separate cabins,
on the pretext that he was going to spend more time meditating.
He still had in his mind at least the partial desire to fix their marriage,
but that was becoming less and less of a priority for him
as he realised his affection for Ono might be reciprocated.
While the purpose of the retreat was to meditate
and to learn the Maharishi's teachings,
the three songwriting Beatles also produced a lot of music while they were there,
and a lot of the songs on their forthcoming album
were inspired directly by events that took place in Mishikesh.
Prudence Farrow, for example, got so heavily into meditation
that she stayed in her cabin for days at a time meditating without coming outside,
and some of the other people there became concerned for her mental health.
And Lennon wrote the song Dear Prudence about her.
Both Lennon and McCartney were inspired by a lecture by the Maharishi
to write songs on the same theme.
Lennon's child of nature would remain just a demo for several years.
Before being re-wrote into his solo track,
yes, the dream I had was true.
Before being reworked into his solo track, Jealous Guy.
While McCartney wrote Mother Nature's Son, which did make the album,
Harrison wrote many songs on the trip, so many that given his smaller quota of songs on the albums,
some ended up getting used by other artists, saved for solo albums many years down the line,
or in some cases left out altogether, like his song Derradoon.
It was also while they were in Mishikesh that the group first heard Bob Dylan's new music,
the album John Wesley Harding, which we'll talk about a bit more in some upcoming episodes.
That album was a stripped down Back to Basics album,
in much the same way that their own recent Lady Madonna single was,
but it contained a lot of Western narratives, like the title track.
And while the Beatles enjoyed the songs, they couldn't help but parody them,
with McCarty writing the Ridiculous Cowboy song, Rocky Raccoon.
Many, many songs were written by the group during their stay in Mishikesh,
about the characters they encountered, or sayings of the Maharishi,
or insights they had on the trip,
but at least one song within shortly after the trip's end
had a less salubrious inspiration.
That song, Seity, Sexie Sadie,
was originally titled Maharishi,
before Harrison persuaded Lenin to water it down.
Almost as soon as they arrived, the Beatles started to leave.
Star was the first to go.
He was always the one who was the least keen on meditating anyway,
and the food was upsetting his stomach,
which was still delicate from childhood illnesses.
He was basically living on cans of hines baked beans,
and only stayed around for a fortnight.
McCartney held on for longer,
but left around a month after he arrived.
He would remain a practitioner of meditation,
and would only rarely say negative things about the Maharishi in the future.
But he felt he'd learned all he could,
he'd had his little holiday,
now he wanted to get back to London,
and back to his artistic friends and celebrity lifestyle.
He could meditate just as well in London as in Mishikesh, after all.
But Harrison and Lennon both stayed behind,
both intending to stick things out for the full three months the course was supposed to last.
In the end, they managed two.
They both had very different reasons for staying, though.
In Harrison's case, he was not only a believer in transcendental meditation,
but he was increasingly becoming a believer in Hinduism,
and for the rest of his life he would remain a very religious man,
devoted to his newfound faith,
and he would continue to admire the Maharishi.
Lennon, though, was someone who throughout his life would, by his own account,
looked for substitute father figures to fill the void he felt from what he perceived as
his abandonment by his biological father, and the early death of the uncle who had helped
raise him.
He would turn to some guru or political figure or business advisor or psychiatrist, see them
as possessing the answer to all his problems, and then as soon as they were revealed to be
flawed human beings, he would viciously denounce them for not being the perfect God figure
he'd built up in his own imagination.
This is one of Lennon's less attractive character traits,
as many of the traits we talk about in this episode are,
although one thing at least can be said of him,
that he later became self-aware enough
to know that this was a pattern in his behaviour,
correctly identify it,
and take steps to try and fix it.
But just as Lennon started to realise
that this particular guru might not give him the answer,
another one turned up.
I'm Alexis from Apple Electronics.
I would like to say hello to all my brothers around the world,
and to all the girls around the world,
and to all the electronic people around the world.
And that is Apple Electronics.
Alexis Mardas was someone else, like Yoko Ono,
that Lennon had met through John Dumbar and the Indica Gallery.
Mardas, who became known as Magic Alex,
was a Greek student who worked part-time as a television repairman.
Mardas had had an exhibition at the Indica Gallery of kinetic light sculptures
and through that he had first met Brian Jones
and produced a rather underwhelming psychedelic light show
for the Rolling Stones' live show.
Through Jones he had been introduced to the Beatles
and he had impressed Lennon with a box with randomly blinking lights.
On the basis of this, Lennon had decided he was an electronics genius
and he had been put in charge of the electronics division
of the Beatles' new company, Apple.
Mardas kept making the odd little toy
along the lines of his box of blinking lights
while promising the Beatles new innovations
that mysteriously never quite materialised,
like an artificial sun as bright as the real one
that could be used for the opening of the Apple boutique,
an x-ray camera,
paint that could turn things invisible,
and a working flying saucer.
We'll be hearing more about Mardas
in a future Beatles episode,
but at this point he was still very much
the Beatles' exciting new discovery,
and regarded at least by Lennon,
as a genius. He arrived at the ashram around the same time that McCartney left,
supposedly to work on setting up a worldwide satellite TV transmitter,
so that the Maharishi's message could be be deemed all over the world.
Mardas immediately took against the Maharishi and his influence over Lennon and Harrison.
Whether you think that's one con man recognising another,
or so on scared that his meal tickets might come to their senses with some positive influence,
is, like much that happened at this time, subject to interpretation.
But either way, Mardas started to chip away at Lennon's belief in the Maharishi,
pointing out that for a man of the spirit, the Maharishi seemed very comfortable with material success,
which was actually one of the things that had attracted so many celebrities to him.
When given a choice between, take all you have and give it to the poor,
and the famous quote from the Maharishi,
you don't have to give up your rolls royce.
Someone who has just gone to the trouble to have their roles painted in psychedelic colours
with a new stereo system would be more receptive to the last.
Indeed, in a lot of ways, the Maharishi's teachings resembled not traditional ascetic monastic
monasticism, but the very American ideas of the prosperity gospel and the new thought.
The idea underlying almost all of the American religions and movements that rose up in the late
19th and early 20th centuries, like Christian science, Scientology and spiritualism, that the
physical world is a manifestation of your mental attitude, and that if you pull yourself up by your
own bootstraps hard enough, you too can be a yogic flyer. Kurt Vonnegut would describe his feelings
about the Maharishi in a piece for Esquire later that year, saying, Maharishi replied that any
oppressed person could rise by practising transcendental meditation. He would automatically do his job
better, and the economy would pay him more, and then he could buy anything he wanted. He wouldn't
be oppressed anymore. In other words, he should quit bitching, begin to meditate, grasp his garters,
and float into a commanding position in the marketplace where transactions are always fair.
And I opened my eyes and I took a hard look at Maharishi. He hadn't wafted me to India.
He had sent me back to Schenectady, New York, where I used to be a public relations man,
years and years ago. That was where I had heard other euphoric men talk of the human condition
in terms of switches and radios and the fairness of the marketplace. They too thought it was
ridiculous for people to be unhappy, when there were so many simple things they could do to improve
their lot. They too had Bachelor of Science degrees. Maharishi had come all the way from India to speak
to the American people like a general electric engineer. This was what had appealed to the Beatles at
first. After all, they had more claim than most to consider themselves self-made millionaires,
and indeed McCartney, at the press conference when he returned from India, had talked up the
Maharishi's capitalist bootstrap version of the world, saying of Indian poverty,
You see, if we just give handouts to people, it'll stop the problems for a day or a week, you know.
But in India there's so many people you really need all of America's money to pour into India to solve it, you know.
So you've got to get to the cause of it and persuade all the Indians to start working and, you know, start doing things.
Their religions, it's very fatalistic and they just sit down and think,
God said this is it, so it's too bad to do anything about it.
the Maharishi's trying to persuade them that they can do something about it.
But this was also enough unlike the conventional idea of holiness
that it became easy for Mardas to plant seeds of doubt in Lennon, especially.
Soon there were other accusations,
depending on which sources you read,
that he had groped an unnamed student,
or that he had attempted to rape mere Pharaoh.
Regarding the latter,
Pharaoh has later said that the Maharishi hugged her when they were together in private,
that at the time she had believed it was a sexual assault,
but that later she had decided that it was a non-sexual embrace,
but she left the ashram almost immediately.
There may have been multiple sets of accusations,
because the various accounts of what he was accused of seemed to differ,
but there was a general belief promulgated by Mardas
that he had done something sexually improper.
Later, most of those who were there have said that they no longer believed
that the Maharishi had done anything wrong,
and thought that the accusations were all the result of Mardas's stirring,
but of course we know very well that people have attended
to rationalise away powerful men's sexual assaults.
I have no idea what, if anything, actually happened,
and given that the Maharishi, Lennon, Harrison, Cynthia Lennon, and Mardas
are all now dead, it's unlikely that anyone will get to the bottom of what was actually
accused and whether it was true or not.
Even the Maharishi didn't know why they were leaving,
and kept asking them why as they told him.
Lennon told him, well, if you're so cosmic, you should know why.
According to Patty Harrison, Paul was on to the next thing which was Apple,
Yoko was calling to John from a cloud,
but George was dreading going back to London,
facing all the stuff connected with their business
and trying to find a new manager to replace Brian.
So while John and Cynthia Lennon went straight back to London,
George and Patty Harrison went off to visit Ravi Shankar,
as George was intending to appear in a documentary about him
and wanted to catch up with his friend while he was in India.
While they were there, Patty took a photo.
of George lying on a mattress, which she later called,
the last image I have of him looking completely happy and at peace.
On the journey back from India,
John finally confessed to Cynthia for the first time that he'd been unfaithful.
Perhaps he felt hypocritical having reacted so badly to the Maharishi's apparent sexual immorality.
Perhaps he was actually trying to fix his marriage.
At any rate, Cynthia was horrified,
but also felt that that might be the first step towards mending things.
After all, he was finally being honest now.
when they got back he also seemed happy to see Julian, something that was very rare.
A short while later, after visiting Derek Taylor,
who had come back to Britain from L.A. to be Apple's new press officer,
and seeing Taylor's children,
John even suggested to Cynthia that they should have another child to keep Julian company.
By this point, Cynthia was so confused and distressed that she broke down in tears,
and told him that he should be with someone more suited to him like Yoko Ono, not her.
That was nonsense, John said.
It was her that he loved.
Now, the timeline gets thoroughly confusing here.
According to the conventional narrative,
Cynthia went on two separate holidays,
one to Greece and one to Italy,
in quick succession,
and major events happened during or after both.
If you're to take all the standard accounts and timelines at face value,
Cynthia came back unexpectedly early
from her first two-week holiday on the 22nd of May,
three weeks after she left,
then went on another holiday a couple of days after she arrived back,
to coincide with John's trip to New York on the 11th of May,
and so most of what follows somehow happened in a time of minus 11 days.
Either some of the most pivotal events in the lives of John and Cynthia Lennon and Yoko Ono
happened in negative 11 days, perhaps the 11 days that were lost in the switch from the Julian to the Gregorian calendar,
or everyone involved had differently faulty memories and confused their stories later.
I suspect Mark Lewison will eventually clear this up,
but until he does, I'll have to be vague about what happened when and allied some details.
Anyway, two events definitely happened in May 1968,
which would have major ramifications for the Beatles' future.
The first of these, and the one whose date we can pin down exactly,
is that Lennon and McCarney took a trip to New York,
where they held a series of interviews and press conferences
announcing the formation of Apple, and explaining the new company's mission.
But like all the profits won't go into our pockets.
they'll go to help people, but not like a charity.
Somebody wants to make a film, and they go to a company,
and they get shown into the waste paper bin,
and nothing ever happens.
So they go around, they make an underground one,
and he goes round and round underground,
and a lot of people never see it.
So if they come to us, they won't stand a chance.
But we hope to make a thing that's free
where people can just come and do and record,
and not have to ask, could we have another microphone?
in the studio because we haven't had a hit yet.
I see. How expansive? How large will this be here?
How large will it be in America?
We don't know yet, you know, it'll be big, I think.
We're just blowing up the balloon.
There's lots of things, you know, we just got a friend of our...
During that trip, Paul McCartney reconnected with an American photographer he'd had a brief
flirtation with the previous year, Linda Eastman, the daughter of the lawyer we've heard
mentioned a few times, Lee Eastman. His relationship with Jane Asher was by this point over.
She would announce that their engagement was off two months later,
but it had been falling apart for a long time,
and he asked for Linda's phone number.
The two would get together again the next month
when McCartney visited LA to address a Capital Records conference,
and would remain inseparable for almost 30 years.
The other event was also the end of one long-term relationship
and the beginning of another.
While Cynthia was away on one of her holidays,
John Lennon invited Yoko Ono to come to his house,
mindful of her resolution that if he asked again she'd say yes, she came round.
The two spent hours playing with Lennon's tape recorder,
making avant-garde experimental music of a kind that Ono had been making for years,
but which was new to Lennon, although McCartney had done similar experiments already.
That music would later get released on the album Two Virgins.
The timeline gets confused here,
but the narrative as it is generally told,
is that Cynthia got back early from our holiday in Greece to find Yoko in the house,
and John and Yoko in matching dressing gowns.
Yoko has always said that they were properly dressed.
Cynthia fled the house and went off to stay with her mother,
but came back a couple of days later,
and John told her that she was still the one he loved
and that he wanted to fix the marriage.
But then shortly after that,
he encouraged her to go on holiday again,
this time to Italy and taking Julian with her.
As soon as she'd gone,
Yoko left Tony Cox and her daughter Kyoko
and moved into Kenwood, the Lennon's marital home.
She started making public appearances with Lennon almost straight away,
and the first Cynthia found out about her marriage being over
was a visit from Magic Alex in Italy, telling her,
I've come with a message from John.
He's going to divorce you, take Julian away from you,
and send you back to Hoy Lake.
Originally, Lennon was going to sue Cynthia for divorce,
claiming she had committed adultery with a man she was spending time within Italy,
who would later become her second husband.
No fault divorce was only finally brought in in the UK in 2022.
But as he had no evidence of that, the tables were soon turned,
and the eventual divorce was on the more reasonable grounds of Lennon's adultery.
There was also a game of musical houses,
with Cynthia and Julian first moving into a London flat owned by Ringo,
where Cynthia's mother was already living,
before it being decided that Kenwood was the better place to bring up a small child,
while John and Yoko would prefer living the life of artists in London.
They swapped residences, with John and Yoko moving into the flat-owned by Ringo.
But for a while as well, John and Yoko lived briefly with Paul McCartney.
McCartney had been the first person that Lennon had told about his new relationship.
Partly this was because McCartney was still his closest friend.
But also it has been suggested by Ono that there was some jealousy there,
that Lennon worried that McCarty was in pursuit of Ono.
It seems unlikely that he was,
but it's also often been suggested that at one point O'no was briefly interested in
McCartney. Either way, while there's no actual evidence of romantic or sexual interest on either
side, Lenin became paranoid that someone would steal his new love away from him. There have been
many explanations given for Lenin's behaviour with Ono over the next year or two. The two would
never part from each other's company, Ono even following Lenin into the men's toilets at the
recording studio. The explanation that Ono has given is the one that rings truest to me,
that far from this being her weird imposition
into the Beatles' lives and working relationships,
which is how Lennon's bandmate seemed to have seen it,
it was actually a decision Lennon made
because he was profoundly insecure and jealous
and was literally terrified
that if they were apart for even a few minutes
she'd go off with another man.
And in the middle of all this turmoil,
the Beatles were starting work on a new album.
Work on what became
He was such a stupid gay
Work on what became known as the White album
started with a session at George Harrison's house
in which the three songwriting Beatles
ran through the material he'd written in India.
At that session, the group ran through 27 songs acoustically,
of which 19 would end up making the album.
One thing jumps out when looking at these demos
and that is just how dominant John was at this point
Lennon would, in later years, talk about how from his perspective,
the problems in the group over the next few months stemmed from McCartney feeling insecure.
Everyone has agreed that McCartney had been the dominant force in the group
from early in the recording of Revolver through Sergeant Pepper a magical mystery tour.
Lennon had contributed some of the high points during that period,
and the quality of what he produced was so high it had massed to an extent
how small the quantity of songs he'd written was.
but for much of that time he'd been suffering from depression, utterly lethargic,
and by his own account taking acid almost every single day,
which is not a state in which one can really be productive.
One of the great things about the Lennon-McCartney partnership
was that both men's peaks of productivity seemed to happen at different times.
So in 1964, at the height of Beatlemania,
McCartney had contributed a small handful of excellent songs,
while Lennon wrote the vast bulk of the material,
but McCartney had become the main productive partner
as Lennon's mental health declined.
Now the roles had been reversed again,
whether it was temporarily coming off drugs
under the influence of Maharishi,
the effect of the meditation,
or stimulation from his new relationship with Ono,
Lenin was at a creative peak,
and that's shown by the Isha demos.
And at the same time, McCartney was in a comparative slump.
Lenin wrote 15 of the 27 songs demoed in that session,
which included some of the strongest material he ever wrote.
McCartney, on the other hand, wrote only seven,
with Harrison contributing five.
Of course, quality matters as well,
and some of the songs McCartney did bring in
are among the greatest songs he ever wrote,
but at the same time it's clear that Lenin was,
however temporarily, becoming the dominant partner again.
But of course, all that talk about dominance between Lennon and McCartney
leaves out George Harrison.
while 11 of Lennon's 15 songs Demo Ditia
would end up used for the album
with two more being revived for Abbey Road a year later
and six of McCartney's 7 would be used on the album
only two of Harrison's 5 would be used
and for example it would take 14 years
for his song circles to be heard outside this demo session
when he included it in his 1982 album
Gone Tropo
Love someone change your mind
inside he was a swine
And circle does not speak, he who speaks does not know.
And similarly, while the group would work intensely on his not guilty,
the group's version would be left on the shelf until 1996,
and the song would first see a release on a solo album in 1979.
Nonetheless, it was McCartney who,
according to Lennon, was feeling marginalised as Lennon re-asserted himself as the group's main songwriter,
though McCartney would also contribute a number of other songs as the sessions for the album itself progressed.
A few days after that demo session, the group went into the studio to start work on the first song to be cut for the new album,
a track by Lennon titled Revolution, which he had earmarked as a potential single.
That session was the first one he brought Ono to as his partner,
rather than as someone he was bringing along for a visit
as he had to the Fool on the Hill session.
Beatles sessions had always been a boys' club up to that point,
with no women involved in the sessions
except as occasional orchestral session performers,
or in happenings like the televised all you need as love session.
Lennon actually lied to the other Beatles at first,
saying owner had been dealing with some mental health issues
and he needed to look after her,
which led to Harrison in particular being very concerned for her,
much to her bemusement as she had no idea Lenin had said this.
That concern would soon turn to annoyance.
Of all the Beatles, Harrison seems to have been the least supportive of Ono at first,
saying he'd heard bad things about her from other people in the New York art scene she had been part of.
According to Ono, Lenin had very different eventual plans.
At this stage, according to her,
he was thinking that he could persuade the group to have Ono joined as a fifth member,
on the grounds that she was a major artistic talent of her own.
own. While the idea of John, Paul, George, Ringo and Yoko being the Fab Five does sound a little
preposterous, we'll see in this episode and the next one on the group that they did start bringing
an outsiders to be part of the group's process in a way they hadn't previously, so maybe it
wasn't quite as daft as it sounds. But there was of course no chance the other Beatles would
agree to that, even if he suggested the idea to them outright at any point. At this initial
session, Ono actually kept an audio diary of her feelings while the group were recording,
which reveals her as almost as insecure as Lenin.
But I still feel that I have to hold back, quite sure if you...
Well, that's like a kind of strange calculation, maybe.
You know, that's the kind of calculation bit, that, the cleverness bit, you know, like holding
back, because you don't know that.
The track they were working on, Revolution, was Lennon's response to the confusing political state
he discovered the world to be in when he got back from India.
The attitude of the counterculture had changed dramatically in the early months of 1968,
from being primarily about expanding one's own mind through drugs and eastern mysticism,
with a side order of calling for peace in Vietnam,
something that was nowhere near as relevant in the UK as in the US anyway,
to being focused on hard left revolutionaries who wanted to overthrow the entire capital,
system and replace it with, well, there were differences of opinion on that, and factions of
anarchists, Stalinists, Trotskyists and so on, having very heated internal battles about matters
which to those on the outside of the left seem like angels on pinheads, but were of urgent
relevance to those on the inside. Lennon's own attitudes towards revolution would change radically
multiple times over the course of a relatively short period. Lennon was never a particularly
systematic thinker and had a tendency to agree with the last person he'd spoken to,
unless he was in a bad mood, at which point he would violently disagree with the last person
he'd spoken to. But his instincts were of the left, and so he would go through periods of
supporting anyone who could be thought of as radical, no matter how ridiculous or dangerous,
and periods of moderation. This ambivalence was borne out in the song, which in this initial
version contains an equivocation about whether he can be counted out or in to destruction.
The version of the song that was included on the eventual album, Take 18, lasted 10.5 minutes in the original recording, most of which was an extended jam over which Lennon would scream and moan.
Lennon hived off much of that material for another project. As he explained later, the slow version of Revolution on the album went on and on and on, and I took the fade-out part, which is what they summed,
sometimes do with disco records now, and just layered all this stuff over it.
It was the basic rhythm of the original revolution going on, with some 20 loops we put on,
things from the archives of EMI.
That experimental tape loop project, which was largely done by Lennon, Ono and George Harrison,
without the involvement of the other Beatles or of George Martin, became Revolution No. 9,
the oddest thing ever to be put on a Beatles album, a tape collage in the same style as composers
like Stockhausen.
The track divides opinion like no other track the Beatles ever recorded, with many listeners finding it intolerable,
but with others thinking it an impressive piece of avant-garde music.
My own view, for what it's worth, is that it justifies its place on the White album precisely because so many people found it unlistenable.
The White Album is one of the biggest selling albums of all time,
and even if only 1% of the people who heard the track found it enjoyable or interesting,
that 1% of people amount to hundreds of thousands of listeners.
listeners, many of whom will have been shown for the first time the potentials of avant-garde art.
Oddly, after starting work on the album with Revolution, as it was then called, though the track
was later retitled Revolution One, for reasons we'll get to. On the 30th of May, the group would spend
almost a whole of June working on side projects. Between the 1st and 26th of June, only two new Beatles
tracks were started. The first of these was Ringo's Don't Pass Me By, his first solo composition,
and one he'd been working on for several years at that point.
The other was McCartney's Blackbird,
a song that was partly inspired by his step-grandmother
talking about being comforted by the sound of a blackbird outside her window,
and which was musically inspired by the bouret from Bach's Sweet for Lute in E minor.
McCartney has also talked about the song being inspired by the civil rights movement in the US,
bird being slang for woman, he was thinking of black women rising up and demanding civil liberties,
though to be honest it would be impossible to tell that from the song itself,
which reads very literally without the knowledge of its composer's intent,
though whatever meaning you take from it, it's one of McCartney's best pieces.
The Blackbird singing in the dead of night
Take these broken wings
And learn to fly
All your life
Only waiting for this moment to arise
Blackbird singing in the dead of night
The track as released only features McCartney
On guitar, vocals and foot taps
Along with some bird song sound effects
And those sound effects were nearly the wrong ones
apparently the assistant engineer John Smith, when mixing the track,
was putting the bird song on when Ken Townsend walked in and asked why,
if the song was called Blackbird, the bird he could hear was a thrush.
Townsend was a country person while everyone else involved had grown up in cities,
and nobody had noticed that they were using the wrong recording,
but the bird on the record is the correct one.
During the recording, Lenin suggested to McCartney that he should use a brass band on the track,
inspired by Harry Nelson's use of one and his cover version of She's Leaving Home.
A dressing gown, picks up the letter that's lying there.
Top of the stairs she breaks down and cries to her husband, daddy, our baby's gone.
It was a suggestion that made a lot of sense.
Blackbird, like a lot of McCartney's material at this time,
has a lot of Nilsson's style about it,
and Nilsson would later cut his own version of the song.
McCartney decided not to use a brass band on Blackbird,
but he did later use the idea for another similar sounding white album song,
Mother Nature's Son, which Nilsson would also later cover.
But other than these two tracks,
one had them only featuring one beetle, the other are minor trifle,
most of June was spent on other things.
Harrison and Starr, with their wives and Mal Evans, flew off to California for Harrison to appear in some scenes in a documentary on Ravishankar, and straight after they flew back home, McCartney flew to the US to address Capitol Records staff about Apple. Lenin, meanwhile, was promoting a play, an adaptation of his books in his own right and a Spaniard in the works, which he had adapted with the actor Victor Spanetti and playwright Adrienne Kennedy, and was also doing conceptual arts stunts with Ono, like Planting Age.
to promote world peace. They were also moving forward with plans for Apple records.
The very first Apple record of all was not ever released to the public. The record labelled
Apple One was, in fact, by, of all people, Frank Sinatra. As a birthday present for his wife
Maureen, Ringo had had Frank Sinatra record a version of The Lady as a Tramp, retitled The Lady
as a Champ, and with new lyrics by Sammy Kahn, a classic songwriter who had written many of
Sinatra's hit, but who in later decades mostly stuck to writing new parody lyrics to old standards
for corporate events and the like. Only a handful of copies were ever pressed up, but it was given
the catalogue number, Apple One. There's no one like her, but no one at all. And as for charm,
hers is like wall to war. She married Ringo.
That's why the lady is at champ.
Maureen's birthday was in August, but before then the tracks that would make up Apple's first
real releases had already been recorded. When Apple finally launched, it would be with the
intention of putting out four simultaneous single releases, though as it happened, logistical
issues meant that in the UK they carry out in two batches of two a week apart. One of these
would be the next Beatles single,
but the other three would be tracks Paul and George
produced for other artists.
The first of these, and the most successful,
was Mary Hopkins.
Hopkins was a Welsh folk singer
who had appeared on the TV talent show,
Opportunity Knox.
She had been seen on the show
by the model Twiggy,
who had pointed McCartney in her direction.
McCartney had, for two years,
been trying to persuade someone
to record a song he'd heard
by an obscure American folk singer,
Jean Raskin.
That song was based on a song
from the 1920s,
Dorogoy Delanoiou, by the Russian composer Boris Fomyn
and lyricist Konstantin Podrevsky.
Raskin had written a new lyric for that melody, in English,
and copyrighted the whole thing in his own name.
McCarty had been unsuccessful in persuading anyone
that it was likely to be a hit.
He'd tried the moody blues, among others,
but he thought it was perfect for Hopkin,
and he produced her version of the song.
Harrison, meanwhile, was producing Jackie Lomax,
the former member of The Undertaker
we heard about earlier, who had signed to
Apple Publishing as a songwriter.
For Lomax's debut Apple single,
Harrison brought in a song he'd written
during the group's trip to India.
He'd demoed Siremalkseh during the Eisha demo sessions.
But the version recorded with Lomax
was very different.
Lomax's track featured three quarters of the Beatles,
Harrison on rhythm guitar, McCartney on bass, and Starland Rums,
plus session pianist Nicky Hopkins,
Britain's most prominent session keyboard player,
and on the lead guitar, Eric Clapton,
with whom Harrison had become very close friends in the preceding months,
both of them in particular,
bonding over their love of the band's music from Big Pink.
This supergroup created what was probably the hardest rocking sound
any of the Beatles had been involved in up to that point.
McCartley's other side project at that time
was very far from being a hard rocker.
At the end of June, he recorded the Black Dike Mills band
performing an instrumental he wrote as a TV theme,
thinking me, Bob.
But on the other hand,
the Beatles soon replicated a very similar hard rock sound
on John's Everybody's Got Something to Hide
except for me and my monkey,
recording for which started a couple of days before, thinking me, Bob.
That was a song that had been largely written in Mishikesh,
made up of lines from lectures given by the Maharishi,
apart from the reference to the monkey,
which initially was just inspired by the wild monkeys around Mishikash,
who had also inspired McCartney's trifle,
Why Don't We Do It in the Road,
after he had seen them copulating in public.
But the monkey reference by this point had taken on a different aspect.
Oh no, who had for most of her life been completely clean, living,
and T-Total, had been introduced to heroin use while she was performing with Ornette Coleman at the
beginning of the year. At this point, heroin was largely a drug used by jazz musicians rather
than rockers, so that was about to change. Oh no had introduced Lennon to the drug, and the two were
casual users at this point, but were both rapidly heading down the road to addiction, or to having
a monkey on their back to use the vernacular. This hard rock style was only just starting to become
popular in 1968, and the Beatles were clearly fascinated throughout the recording of what became
the White album by the possibilities of loud amplification. But that wasn't the only style of music
they were making. Also recorded during June was Good Night, one of the sweetest things Lennon ever
wrote, which he'd written as a lullaby for his son Julian. That was one of the few signs of outward
affection for his son that Lennon showed during the 60s, though the message is possibly undercut
by the fact that Julian apparently never knew the song was written for him until the 1980s.
The next song to be started by the group was one of McCartney's,
and it was a song that caused more tension than any other song in these sessions.
Obla di Obladar is an attempt at reggae, sung in a cod Jamaican accent,
though the phrase Obla di Obladar itself is apparently from a Nigerian dialect,
and was taken by McCartney from the Nigerian conga player Jimmy Scott,
going back to what was said about the Orientalism of The Inner Light,
the way that this song conflates Nigeria and Jamaica is rather problematic.
The group made multiple attempts at the song over the course of several days,
leading to intense frustration from Lennon in particular at McCartney's perfectionism
over what Lennon thought of as a terrible song,
though it was Lennon who came up with the idea that salvaged the record,
as he came up with the distinctive piano intro,
and took it at a much faster pace than the group had previously been playing
the song. As Jeff Emerick tells the story, after about four or five nights doing Oblady Oblodar,
John Lennon came to the session really stoned, totally out of it on something other, and he said,
All right, we're going to do Obeladie Oblodar! He went straight to the piano and smashed the keys
with an almighty amount of volume, twice the speed of how they'd done it before, and said,
this is it, come on! He was really aggravated. That was the version they ended up using.
Despite that, the group then did another full ground-up remake a couple of days later,
which they decided against using.
One can perhaps see Lennon's point about how much time was spent on McCartney's songs,
even though the song is a relative trifle,
and the initial version of the song, which made it onto Anthology 3,
is not noticeably worse than the released version,
and has a nice Nilsson-esque feel to it.
It was during the sessions for Obla-D-Obladar
that the first departure from the team that had been working together
for years happened. He would not be the last. Jeff Amaric had been working with George Martin
as long as the Beatles had. Indeed, depending on which of the conflicting accounts you believe,
their first session might have been Amarix, and he'd been the primary engineer since the start
of the revolver sessions, but he had had enough of the tension between the band members,
which had ramped up enormously during the 1968 sessions, especially between John and Paul.
He had also had enough of the unprofessional noodling, constant remade, and he had made,
and general time wasting. Indeed, everyone was tense, and eventually, when McCartney was
still messing around with changes to his lead vocal, trying to make tiny changes,
George Martin made a suggestion about his phrasing. McCartney, in a bad mood, said to Martin,
if you think you can do it better, why don't you come down and do it yourself? That was unlike McCartney,
but not totally unheard of. But Martin had had enough, and shouted at McCartney,
the only time I'm Rick recalled ever hearing and raise his voice in a sense.
session, yelling,
Then bloody sing it again, I give up.
I just don't know any better how to help you.
Emerit quit working Beatles sessions that day,
and refused to even consider going back to them.
His place was taken by Ken Scott,
and recording went on.
At the same session as the remake of the remake of Obla Dee,
the group also did a remake of Lenin's Revolution.
The version they'd recorded at the beginning of the sessions
would still get released.
It made it onto the album as Revolution One.
but Lennon wanted the song to be a single,
and McCartney and Harrison thought the track they'd recorded
was not commercially enough for a single.
It was too slow and laid back.
That was something Lennon could fix.
To fix it, he reworked the track,
taking inspiration from a 1954 R&B single,
Due Unto Others by Pee Creighton.
Like Blue Monday, the Fats Domino's song
which had provided some inspiration
for McCartney's Lady Madonna,
Due Unto Others was written and produced by Dave Bartholomew,
and it had a very distinctive guitar intro
played by Creighton.
That became the intro to the new recording of Revolution,
which would simply be called Revolution, with no number.
While Lennon had been ambivalent about destruction
on the acoustic version of the song,
at the time he recorded this electric version,
he had no ambivalence at all.
Although that state two was only temporary,
when the single finally came out,
the Beatles went on the David Frost Show to promote it
and performed both sides of the single.
For that performance, which used the original backing tracks
but live vocals,
the group incorporated the bombs Juby Doop backing vocals
they'd done for Revolution One,
for which hadn't made the single version,
and Lennon once again equivocated about his feelings on destruction.
The song caused some controversy within the counterculture,
especially in the US where the politics of the time were rather more pointed.
Britain, in 1968, had a government which, by historical standards,
was about as left-wing as it ever got,
and which had made a series of liberal reforms which activists had been demanding for decades,
like legalising some gay sex acts between consenting men over 21,
abolishing the death penalty for murder and legalising abortion.
That did open up the space for even more radical demands,
but at the same time there seemed to be no pressing need for them.
For most people, the Wilson government was more than left-wing enough,
and the Trotskyists calling for revolution in the UK were posturing fools.
The UK had its problems, but for most on the left,
it looked for the moment like progress was being made towards fixing them.
In the US though, the situation was rather more pressing.
Every young man was in danger of being drafted,
if he wasn't already in the military,
to fight in an unpopular, unwinnable war,
and there had been constant riots,
labelled as race riots,
usually provoked by police brutality against black people,
and a right-wing backlash against the civil rights movement
was already coming into prominence.
While the Democrats, once Robert Kennedy was murdered,
had nothing to offer other than continuation of the Vietnam War,
under Hubert Humphrey. Under those circumstances, it was perhaps more understandable that people
wanted more radical change than electoral politics offered, and those people were bitterly disappointed
to hear Lenin, with his image as the most radical beetle, arguing for moderation and equivocation
rather than revolution. Most notably, Nina Simone recorded her own answer record to revolution.
As we've seen, Lenin himself wasn't entirely sure about his own.
message in the song. And he was rather welcoming of Simone's attack, saying,
I thought it was interesting that Nina Simone did a sort of answer to Revolution.
That was very good. It was sort of like Revolution, but not quite. That I sort of enjoyed,
somebody who reacted immediately to what I had said. But while Lennon had definitely made
revolution commercially enough to go on a single, as it turned out it would only be the
B-side of what would become one of the group's most important recordings, and one that Lennon himself
would sometimes cite as his favourite McCartney song,
though what it says about Lenin
and about his relationship with McCartney,
is complex at best.
The story of how Paul McCartney wrote Hey Jude
is one of those anecdotes that's been told so often
that all the edges are worn off,
and the truth might as well be a myth,
because almost everyone with even the slightest interest in the band
can recite it along with McCartney.
But of course, part of what we do in this podcast
is to tell those stories again.
So, as we've seen, Lennon had left his wife Cynthia,
and in doing so he more or less abandoned his son Julian as well.
The two would always have a complicated, strained relationship,
and while Lennon would always be ambivalent about his treatment of Cynthia,
he would publicly acknowledge that he'd been a terrible father to Julian.
At this point, Lennon had decided he simply wanted nothing more to do with Cynthia,
and he cut a totally out of his life.
What hurt Cynthia, almost more than that,
was that the other Beatles' wives also cut her out of theirs.
She had considered Patty and Maureen friends,
but neither of them would speak to her after the split.
She always said that she believed that Lenin had put pressure on them through their husbands.
But McCartney felt sorry for her.
Perhaps regretful for his own rather callous treatment of Jane Asher,
who finally announced publicly her own split from McCartney in the middle of July,
he showed one of the best sides of his own character.
Unlike the other Beatles, who cut Cynthia out of their lives,
he decided to drive up to Kenwood to visit her and Julian.
By all accounts McCarney had spent more time
actually interacting with Julian than Lennon himself had.
He brought Cynthia a single red rose
and joke with her that he should marry her
now she and John had split.
But he also wanted to reassure Julian.
He said later that he always feels sorriest
for the children when divorces happen.
On the way down he started singing to himself.
Hey Jules, don't make it bad,
take a sad song and make it better.
McCartney changed Jules to Jude because the latter sounded better to him,
and the song he'd been singing to himself slowly became a romantic one.
With occasional exceptions, McCartney has never been one who thinks too closely about his lyrics,
and he tends to fall back into writing romantic lyrics with placeholder words.
Those lyrics, while they were initially inspired by Julian,
soon took on a more universal resonance,
and one which was probably inspired by McCartney having finally started his own.
his relationship with Linda Eastman, who he would soon marry, and from whom he would remain
inseparable until her death in 1998. Though at this point, while Linda was still living in America,
he was also seeing another woman, Francie Schwartz. The lyrics with lines like,
You have found her now go and get her, and You were made to go out and get her, along with the
general theme of making the best of a bad situation, could very easily apply to McCartney and his
new love, and something good coming out of the increasingly tense situation in the group.
But they could also apply to Lennon, who had also found a new love. And in Lennon's eyes, the message of
the song was obvious. To him, it was the better angel of McCartney's nature, recognising that
because he'd found Ono, he would no longer be as interested in being a beetle, and granting him
permission to move on and be with her. It was a song that he would always love for that reason.
And of course, there may be elements of both of these things in the finished song.
and it may well be that McCartney started out thinking reproachfully of his partner,
but then also ending up wishing him well.
People are complicated, relationships are complicated, love is complicated,
and McCartney has said, often, that when he performs the song live in recent decades,
he's always thought of Lennon, especially on one line.
Lennon and McCartney didn't often collaborate fully on songs by this point,
but they did often suggest ideas to each other and help finish songs up.
and there were always the other's first audience, both for songs and for matters in their personal life.
And so McCartney played Hey Jude for Lennon before the song had been finished,
or at least before he thought he'd finished the song.
He didn't like the line, the movement you need is on your shoulder.
He's later said that it sounded to him like he was talking about a parrot.
And also, the line broke the rhyme scheme.
Most of the rest of the song is one of McCartney's best crafted lyrics in terms of formal properties,
with a lot of clever internal rhymes that don't draw attention to themselves too much,
and the closest to a bad rhyme being the rhyme of shoulders, plural, with colder.
But in the second middle eight, he was rhyming shoulder with,
possibly the single worst attempt at rhyming in any of McCartney's songs.
So when he was playing the song for Lennon, he said when he got to that line,
don't worry, I'll change that.
And in McCartney's telling of the story, Lenin said,
You won't, you know.
Lennon went on to say that it was the best line in the song.
and when McCartney protested that he didn't know what the line meant,
Lennon said it didn't matter.
He knew what it meant.
The initial sessions for Haydude were at Abbey Road,
as almost all Beatles sessions were,
and they were some of the tensest to date,
in part because of the presence of a documentary film crew
who were getting in the way.
At one point, George Harrison took himself off to the control room
rather than stay in the studio with the other Beatles,
after a row with McCartney.
McCartney had increasingly been taking control
of the arrangements of his own songs, particularly after they'd shifted to overdubbing the bass
later, so he could play a lead instrument like piano or guitar in the basic tracking session.
In this case, McCartney was on piano, with Star on drums, Lenin on acoustic rhythm guitar,
and Harrison on electric guitar. As most electric guitarists would,
Harrison started adding fills answering the lead vocals in the gaps between lines.
You can very faintly hear this on the version released as Take One on the White Album box set.
but not clearly enough that I can isolate a part and show you what he was doing.
But it was something like what Dwayne Allman played on Wilson Pickett's cover version of the song.
But McCartney wanted the arrangement to be much sparser,
and asked Harrison not to play the part,
and by all accounts did so in a not especially tactful manner.
Harrison would later say,
personally I'd found that for the last couple of albums,
the freedom to be able to play as a musician was being curtailed,
mainly by Paul, and that,
Paul had fixed an idea in his brain as to how to record one of his songs.
He wasn't open to anybody else's suggestions.
One can, of course, understand both sides of this disagreement.
McCartney was the songwriter and knew how he wanted his song to go,
and that's a perfectly reasonable position to take.
If you've written a song of the quality of Hey Jude, you want it to sound its best.
But Harrison, equally, considered himself an equal member of the band.
And up to early in 1963, when the group had started to concentrate on Lenin,
McCartney songs, he had been equally featured in lead vocals, and he was the lead guitarist.
He hadn't signed up to be a backing musician for a singer-songwriter, and he wanted to have
some creative say in what he played. Both men's points were reasonable, and in a band where
people were communicating better, they would have come to some reasonable agreement, but as it was,
it became a festering wound between the two. The initial recordings at Abbey Road was scrapped,
and the group moved on to Trident Studios, the only studio in the UK with a working
eight-track machine at the time. The Beatles would later discover that there was an eight-track at Abbey Road
that hadn't yet been installed, and which they liberated and set up themselves, but for now they
were off to Trident, partly because Abbey Road was booked up on the days they wanted to use. That meant that
the engineer on the track was Barry Sheffield, rather than any of the engineers the Beatles were
used to working with, all of whom were EMI employees and not allowed to moonlight at other studios.
The mix they got of the track apparently sounded great in Trident, but sounded terrible.
on EMI's equipment when played back,
and took a lot of work for both Ken Scott
and Jeff Emerick, who popped in to help out,
though he refused to work any more of actual Beatles sessions,
to get it sounding okay.
Though Emmerick said the track,
still didn't have the kind of in-your-face presence
that characterises most Beatles recordings done at Abbey Road.
One anecdote that is often told about the track's final recording
is that Ringo Starr was apparently in the toilet
when the take started,
and had to creep through the other musicians to get to his drum kit,
but still came in perfectly in time.
The other most notable thing about the track is its sheer length.
I have seen various claims about the length of the track
and don't have a vinyl copy of the original single to time with a stopwatch.
For the length of the single mix, as released on the Monomaster's CD in 2009,
is 7 minutes and 19 seconds.
Before this point, the longest the Beatles single had been
was Strawberry Fields Forever at 4 minutes and 10 seconds.
George Martin was hesitant about the song's length,
saying no radio station would play a track that length,
to which Lenin's reply was as simple,
They Will If It's Us.
The group also pointed to Richard Harris's MacArthur Park,
a recent hit which had itself topped seven minutes.
The darkest park is melting in the dark,
all the sweet green icing flowing down.
Someone left the cake out in the rain.
I don't feel.
I've seen that I can take it, because it took so long to bake it, and I'll never have that recipe again.
Oh no!
I've seen several sources say that Hay Jude was deliberately mixed to be one second longer than that track,
though my CD copy of MacArthur Park is 11 seconds longer than Hay Jude.
I suppose it's possible that the original single mixes were slightly different.
You often get discrepancies of a few seconds between different releases of tracks in different
formats, but it's more likely to me that someone has made a mistake which other books have then copied.
Much of the length of the track is taken up by the mantra-like end section of the song.
George Martin said of that. In the case of Hey Jude, when we were recording the track, I thought
that we had made it too long. It was very much a Paul song and I couldn't understand what he
was on about by just going round around the same thing. And of course it does become hypnotic.
But Martin also said, I realised that by putting an orchestra on, you could add
lots of weight to the riff by countercords on the bottom end and bringing in trombones and strings
and so on, until it became a really big tumultuous thing. As so often with the Beatles,
Martin's orchestration work took an idea which on paper shouldn't have worked, and gave it enough
of a dynamic shape that the track worked brilliantly. The orchestral musicians playing on the track
also got double the normal session rate, because after playing their rather simple parts
over the na-na-na-na-na-reframe, they were asked to sing along and clap their hand.
to add to the masked vocals.
All of them did,
apart from one musician
who apparently walked out
saying he wasn't going to sing along
to Paul McCartney's bloody song.
There's one other interesting point
about Hey Jude
that should probably be pointed out.
And that is that it is almost certainly
the first track to get to number one
in the UK and US
to have the F word included
and to have that word played
unexpigated on the radio
for more than 50 years.
It's buried in the mix,
but it's one of those things
that once you've heard it,
you can't unhear.
It comes at all.
almost exactly three minutes into the track, and it's not clear exactly who says it.
According to most sources, it's McCartney swearing after he hit a bum note on the piano.
According to Malcolm Toft, one of the engineers at Trident, it's Lennon.
There's been a sudden volume spike in his headphones while recording his backing vocals,
and he swore and pulled them off.
Either way it was left in, with Lennon apparently telling people that most people won't notice it,
but we'll know it's there.
Have a listen and see what you think.
unless your ears are more delicate than Lennon's
and you don't want them exposed to the kind of utter filth
that still gets played on daytime radio too.
Despite George Martin's worry about the song,
Hey Jude became one of the biggest hits of the group's career,
reaching number one in 17 different countries,
staying at number one in the US for nine weeks,
at the time the joint longest ever time at that position,
was the biggest selling single of 1968
in the US, UK, Canada and Australia,
and is currently the fourth most streamed Beatles track.
One suspects that part of its popularity was actually down to the very thing that Martin thought might hinder it.
While DJs were discouraged from playing long songs in general,
they had the excuse that it was the Beatles,
and so could safely put it on and have enough time for a bathroom break or similar.
A song of that length is always good to have available for those little emergencies
that come up when broadcasting live.
In the UK, the song's time at the top of the charts was shorter, only two weeks.
But the Beatles couldn't have been too unhappy, because the record that replaced it at number one
was the other Apple record released at the same time, and produced by McCartney.
Those were the days.
There was, though, one unfortunate aspect of the promotion of the single.
The Beatles had briefly owned a shop, the Apple boutique, which had been a massive failure
enclosed down and was stood empty.
McCartney and his then-girlfriend Francie Schwartz went to the shop, which was on the corner of two major London streets,
and whitewashed the windows and then wrote,
Hey Jude and Revolution in the paint with their fingers.
What they hadn't realised is that Jude is German for Jew,
and had been painted on the windows of many Jewish-owned businesses
at the beginning of the Nazi regime.
According to some sources, one old Jewish man actually smashed the window
he was so upset at this reminder of what he had been through.
McCartney was, of course, mortified.
Between the recording of Hey Jude and its release as a single,
Ringo Starr had quit the Beatles.
Star had been stressed for a while
and as he would later explain
I left because I felt two things
I felt I wasn't playing great
and I also felt that the other three were really happy
and I was an outsider
I went to see John who had been living in my apartment
in Montague Square with Yoko since he moved out of Kenwood
I said I'm leaving the group because I'm not playing well
and I feel unloved and out of it and you three are really close
and John said
I thought it was you three
So then I went over to Paul's and knocked on his door.
I said the same thing.
I'm leaving the band.
I feel you three guys are really close and I'm out of it.
And Paul said,
I thought it was you three.
I didn't even bother going to George then.
I said, I'm going on holiday.
I took the kids and we went to Sardinia.
The final straw seems to have been another argument about one of Paul's songs.
In this case, the Beach Boys Pasti she'd written in Mishikes,
back in the USSR.
We don't have many details.
about exactly what happened. But apparently, as with Harrison and Hay Jude, McCartney was trying
to tell Starr exactly how to play the track, and Starr got sick of his playing being micromanaged.
So Starr went off to Sardinia and had a holiday on Peter Sellers' yacht, during which time he learned
that octopusers create little gardens for themselves out of shiny rocks and discarded tin cans,
information he would later put to good use. At first, the group continued without him,
almost as if nothing had happened.
They'd recorded a bit when other members had been gone,
and George had even had a brief holiday earlier that month
while the others had carried on without him,
but that had been different.
He'd just been on holiday.
Ringo had quit.
The date that Ringo quit the Beatles,
the 22nd of August,
was also the date that Cynthia filed for divorce from John Lennon.
That date was not, of course, the end of the Beatles,
but it serves as good a marker as any for the beginning of the end,
the point at which everyone had to acknowledge
once and for all that nothing would be the same.
The group recorded back in the USSR without Ringo.
McCartney was, as we established when he played on the Paul Jones session,
an underrated drummer, and he became the group's de facto drummer for a couple of weeks,
though the finished version of Back in the USSR seems to have Lennon, McCartney and Harrison,
all playing guitar, bass and drums.
The basic track was cut with Harrison on guitar,
Lenin playing bass for the first time on a record, and McCartney on drums.
Then it was overdubbed with Paul and George both playing basses,
one four-string and one-sixth string,
while Lennon added additional snare drums to beef up the sound.
Then a further overdub with McCartney on piano,
and Lennon and Harrison on guitar and bass.
And at some point Harrison seems to have added some additional drum overdubs too,
though if he did it's the only time we know of he ever played the instrument.
McCartney also played drums on Lennon's Dear Prudence,
which again was completed with no input from Starr at all.
Starr's departure from the group was kept quiet
and the group soon realised that they needed to show their drummer some more appreciation.
They sent him a telegram telling him he was the best rock and roll drummer in the world
and when he finally deigned to return they had his drum kick covered with flowers.
The fact that Ringo, generally seen as the easiest going of the group,
had actually quit, seemed to get the group on their best behaviour at least for a while.
Star remembers the rest of the sessions as being full of love for each other
and certainly after Star's return at the beginning of September,
they seem to have become vastly more productive in the studio,
and that studio time seems to have been far more devoted to full group performances,
where for a lot of the previous few months there have been sessions with only one or two of the band,
usually McCartney but sometimes others,
showing up to just record their own songs without the other's participation.
The first track they completed after their reunion was one of George's best-loved songs.
Like many of Harrison's other songs,
That song had been inspired by Easton Philosophy, in this case by opening a copy of the E. Ching,
and seeing the phrase, gently weeps.
The song had gone through several iterations, starting out as a gentle acoustic ballad,
and slowly moving towards the new heavy rock idiom.
For a song about a guitar, obviously it needed a powerful guitar solo,
and Harrison had tried a few things with little success.
The group had cut an earlier take of the track,
and he had recorded an overdub backwards guitar solo the day that Ringo came back,
but he hadn't been happy with anything he'd done.
He was also still worried about the stress between the band members,
and happily he could kill two birds with one stone.
He had become increasingly friendly with Eric Clapton
since Clapton had guested on the Wonderwall soundtrack,
and the two of them would remain the closest to friends for the rest of Harrison's life.
Clapton was particularly important to Harrison at this point,
because Harrison was starting to think of himself as primarily a guitarist once more,
and Clapton was encouraging him and falling back in love with his men.
main instrument. Clapton was the most highly regarded British guitarist of the time, and Harrison
thought that if he brought Clapton in for a session, the other Beatles were beyond their best
behaviour, and Clapton could record a better solo than Harrison. That track was notable for a couple
of other reasons as well. The Beatles had finally discovered the eight-track machines that had been
hidden in Abbey Road and got them set up, and were recording an eight-track on their home turf for the
first time, and it was recorded without a producer. George Martin had got as sick as anyone of the
toxic attitude in the sessions, and was unaware of the change that was about to happen. The sessions
had also stretched far, far longer than any previous Beatles album, and a lot of the time had been
spent on material he felt was substandard. He was sick of endless time wasting in arguments,
and some have suggested he was also trying for a bit of a power play to show the Beatles how much
they needed him, as they were increasingly being disrespectful to him.
He decided that he was just going to go on holiday and leave them to get on with it,
with their engineers, and with his assistant, Chris Thomas.
Thomas arrived back from his own holiday a few days after Martin left for his,
to find a note reading, according to Thomas's memory,
Dear Chris, hope you had a nice holiday, I'm off on mine now.
Make yourself available to the Beatles, Neil and Mal know you're coming down.
Luckily for everyone involved, Martin had chosen his assistant very well.
Chris Thomas had never produced anything on his own before, and was very much thrown into the deep end,
becoming the Beatles de facto producer for most of the month of September,
producing and playing on several of the key tracks on what became the White album.
But while Thomas would obviously never again produce anyone as big as the Beatles,
he would go on to have a hugely important career in his own right,
and will be turning up many times over future episodes.
He mixed Dark Side of the Moon for Pink Floyd, played Moog on Bowie's first one,
couple of albums, produced most of Roxy Music's records,
co-produced Nevermind the Bollocks for the Sex Pistols,
produced several of Elton John's biggest hits, and some of the most
successful records by In Excess, The Pretenders, Pulp and more.
During the time that Thomas was in charge before Martin returned,
the group largely completed six tracks,
some of which would later get some overdubs with Martin's supervision,
but the basic tracks of Helter Skelter, Glass Onion, I Will,
birthday, piggies, and happiness is a warm gun,
were all recorded while Martin was away.
Of these, both Happiness is a Warm Gun and Glass Onion
would deserve extended attention with this not already
a ludicrously long episode.
But all I can really say here is that they're interesting tracks,
and that a few of those tracks are going to come up in an episode
on another band in a short while,
and I'll try to discuss them then.
It's possibly unfortunate for Martin that he chose that period
to leave the group alone,
because when he came back in October,
much of the work still to be done
was on less substantial songs than those,
though Martin will have had a lot of fun
with two of McCartney's trifles,
Martha, my dear,
which featured an interesting score from Martin,
and Honey Pie,
a 20s pastiche which required some effects
to make it sound period appropriate,
and which seems clearly inspired in part
by Tiny Tim,
the singer who had had a novelty hit earlier in the year
would tiptoe through the tulips with me.
McCartney seems at one point to be doing an infathing
of Tim. Tim would make a guest appearance on the Beatles' Christmas record that year, after Harrison asked him to do a recording.
Oh, I like to sing this a little song?
Oh, I love this.
Here's a song I did in 1966 in front of Miss Jill for the first time, and I did this in Albert Hall, and what a thrill it was, to do this then, and now, exactly I did it then.
But for the most part, the last few songs to be recorded were things like Harrison's Savoy Druffle,
a perfectly enjoyable but frivolous song about how his friend Derek Clapton was going to have a toothache from eating too much chocolate.
That line about What You Eat You Are, was inspired by the film You Are What You Eat,
which we've mentioned several times previously in connection with the band and Tiny Tim.
Derek Taylor, who was friends with the film's makers, suggested the line.
Rather oddly, Savoy Truffle would be one of two Beatles tracks,
along with Got to Get You Into My Life,
covered by Ella Fitzgerald on her bizarre but rather wonderful 1969 album, Ella,
produced by Richard Perry, Tiny Tim's producer,
and future producer of both Harry Nilsson and Ringo Starr,
on which she also covered tracks by The Temptations,
Nilsson and Randy Newman.
The final song to be recorded,
for the album was Lennon's Julia,
the lovely ode to his mother and Yoko he wrote in Mishikesh.
While there were a handful of Beatles tracks
in which McCartney was the only Beatle performing,
Julia is the only solo Lenin performance on a Beatles album.
And with that, the album was done.
The album had had the working title, Adal's House, after Ibsen,
and that title would actually have fit the music rather well.
There are a lot of songs about childhood in the collection,
and songs that a child like,
like Lennon's The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill,
and McCartney's Rocky Raccoon.
But the band family put out their own album,
music from a doll's house,
during the recording,
and the group had to change their plans.
Instead, the record was called simply The Beatles,
and was put out in a plain white sleeve
with no markings on the front
except the band's name embossed in slightly raised lettering,
although it came packaged with photos of the group,
a collage by Richard Hamilton,
and the lyric sheet,
the austere surface concealing as much complexity
in the presentation as Sergeant Pepper had.
While the album was titled The Beatles,
everyone just called it the White album.
As soon as recording had ended,
Harrison was off to America,
where he was going to produce a series of sessions
by Jackie Lomax in L.A. with the wrecking crew,
for what became Lomax's Apple album,
Is This What You Want?
Moher suits and cowboy boots
Plastic troops with sons that shoot a lady with whom you know you can't take roots.
Is this what you want?
And does it make you happy?
Does it make a view?
Is this what you want?
Is this what you want?
Is this what you want?
During that trip to the US, Harrison took some time out to visit Bob Dylan and the band
Woodstock. While there, he also collaborated with Dylan on a song that would later turn up on one of his
solo albums. The time spent with the band was to prove pivotal to Harrison and to the Beatles' career.
Harrison saw the way the band worked, with everyone an equally respected contributor,
with everyone trusted to come up with their own parts and revise them together as a group
in an informal setting where people played for the joy of playing, and compared it mentally to being
told what to play by Paul and having his own songs dismissed, and the tension that had
characterised the White Album sessions, and he started to think seriously about whether he wanted
to be in the Beatles at all. He also recorded half of another solo album while he was in the US,
one which has led to serious accusations of plagiarism. Electronic Sound is Harrison's second solo
album, released in 1968, and features Moog music, except that only half of that Moog music
was anything to do with Harrison. It consists of two examples.
extended tracks, Under the Mersey Wall and No Time or Space.
Under the Mersey Wall was music that Harrison created when he got his own Moog in 1969.
But as for No Time or Space, Paul Beaver and Bernie Krause were two of the first people in
the US to own a Moog, and they were the only Moog session players at the time.
Of a list of the first ten recordings to feature a Moog, listed on the Moog Foundation website,
eight featured Beaver programming the machine he and Kraus owned and operated together.
One, The Monkeys, Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn and Jones Limited, featured Beaver and Mickey Dolans,
who also owned one of the first Moogs, both playing, and only one, by Jean-Jacques Perry and Gersh and Kingsley,
didn't feature Beaver.
As Beaver and Krause were the Moog players everyone on the West Coast turned to,
ever since their demonstration of the instrument at Monterey, when Harrison wanted Moog on the
Jackie Lomax album, he called them in.
Then, according to Krause, we did the session, it was very normal, and we finished in the
wee hours of the next morning. Harrison asked me to stick around and show him some more things on
the synthesizer. Paul and I were just preparing some new material for our second Warner Brothers album,
and I was showing Harrison some of the patches and ways in which we were thinking of doing our work.
What I didn't realize, because it was late and I was tired and I wasn't paying attention,
was that he had asked the engineer to record the session that I was demonstrating.
I didn't think anything of it at the time. When Harrison got his own Moog a few months later,
Krauss flew over to help him install it.
And as he said later,
the vegetarian then took me into the living room
where there was this long leather couch.
I thought that was interesting.
Across from that was the Moog synthesizer set up on a table.
Understand, he had just got it delivered that afternoon.
It had just arrived.
He said,
I want to play you something.
After supplying the requisite amount of smoke,
he put on this tape.
Now one thing I have is a really good memory for sound,
and I remembered what we had done back in California in November.
and here it was on that tape.
Harrison says to me,
well I'm putting it out as an album.
If it makes a couple of quid, I'll send it to you.
I said,
Not without my permission, you're not,
that's Paul and I's stuff.
And then he said,
trust me, I'm a beetle.
Trust me, I'm a beetle.
I said, yeah, call me a cab,
I'm going home and don't use my stuff.
He said,
When Ravi Shankar comes to my house,
he's humble.
And something else about Jimmy Hendricks.
Then he asked me to patch him a bagpipe sound.
Perhaps he was more conscientious about his behaviour
at other times, maybe it depended on how much you genuflected.
Krause and Beaver's work came out as half of Harrison's album.
While Harrison was in the US, work started on sequencing the White album.
The album became the Beatles' only double album,
and even its admirers, of whom I am one,
would say that not all of the material on the album is the Beatles' best work.
George Martin wanted the group to put out an album of their normal length,
14 songs or so, including just the very best of the material.
and there's an argument for that.
You could indeed create a 14-song album from the White album
there would be nothing but material of the same quality
as the best of their other work,
though every listener would put together a different list.
And there's some material on there
that everyone would agree is trivial or filler,
though many listeners, myself included,
find much of the filler delightful,
and there's a difference between profound and worthwhile.
In the end, though, the album came out as 30 tracks.
12 songs by Paul,
who had had a writing spurt as recorded,
had progressed. Four by George, one by Ringo, 12 songs by Lennon, and Revolution
Number Nine, a Lenin work which is really in a category of its own. Only two songs that had
had serious time spent on them were left off. George's not guilty, and John's What's the New Mary
Jane? Everything else was included. Martin later stated that he thought the reason they wanted to put
out some material he considered substandard was contractual. Their contractual, their contract with
EMI said that they owed a certain number of tracks, and they wanted to get as many of them
out the way in one go as possible. But even if that is the case, the White album works in part
because of the sheer mass of material on it. Even the tracks that one listener or another
finds unlistable add to the total effect. It's an album that overwhelms you with the variety
of styles and modes, while still somehow feeling coherent. And that coherence is because of the
effort that Lennon McCartney, Martin and Ken Scott put in, in a sequencing and mixing session,
which included cross-fading all the songs on each side
so that each would be a continuous side of music.
That session took 24 hours straight,
the longest session the Beatles ever did,
and it included things like putting three of the four songs with animal names
in the title in a row,
putting all the hard rock songs on one side,
and making sure there was one George song on each side
and one Ringo vocal on each disc.
In the end, I think McCartney gets the last word
on whether they should have cut some of the tracks.
You know, I'm not a great one for that, you know,
Maybe it was too many of that.
Look what you mean?
It was great, it's sold, it's the bloody Beatles.
Why's the album shut up?
There's no answer to that, is there?
While the album was finished,
Mingo went on holiday to Sardinia again,
while Paul went on holiday to New York to meet up with Linda.
The rest of the Beatles team had an eventful month
between the album's completion and its release.
George Martin was working on the score to the other submarine film
and preparing mixes of the tracks that were being given to the film.
George Harrison spent much of the month producing Lomax's album,
meeting the band and stealing beaver and Krauss's work for his own album.
He also, while still in LA, added extra guitar under the pseudonym
Langelo Mysteriozzo to a songy a co-wrote with Clapton
and with a single line about swans in the park supplied by Ringo,
creams hit Badge.
And John and Yoko had the most intense five weeks imaginable.
They arranged the release of their album Two Virgins,
which was eventually released a week after the first.
White Album, and which featured photos of the two of them totally nude, both front and
Mia, on the cover. EMI refused to distribute it, and it was eventually released through another
distributor, and sold with a plain brown wrapper around the cover. The cover also included a quote
from McCartney. When two great saints meet, it is a humbling experience, the long battles to prove
he was a saint. Two days after the White Album sequencing, Lennon and Ono were arrested for drugs
possession by Sergeant Pilcher, who was notorious for going after pop stars and planting evidence.
We'll be talking about Pilcher Moore in a future episode, but for now all we need to say is that
Lenin and Dono usually claimed that there were no drugs on the premises. Apparently they'd been
warned in advance and they'd thoroughly cleared the place because Jimmy Hendricks had lived there
before them, but on at least one occasion Lenin also said that some of what they found was
probably his. Whether it was or not though, Lenin chose to plead guilty and take the full blame
so that Ono could go free.
She was an immigrant and under risk of deportation
if she was convicted of anything.
This meant that unlike other cases involving Pilcher,
Lennon didn't fight, and so he ended up with a criminal record.
This would come back to about Lennon.
Another reason he didn't want Ono to have to deal with anything
was that she was pregnant,
and he hoped to save her from the stress that would come from a trial.
But the stress was still too much,
and Ono ended up hospitalized.
Lennon insisted on being by her side throughout her time in hospital.
Lennon's divorce from Cynthia came through while the two were in the hospital.
According to Cynthia, walking into court beside my lawyer was terrifying.
The place was packed with the press and I had to swear in front of them under oath that my marriage had broken down irretrievably,
that my husband had publicly admitted adultery and that Yoko was pregnant by him.
Throughout this awful surreal experience, I felt humiliated and painfully aware that I was alone.
Afterwards I fled home and collapsed, sick with apprehension about the future.
I had no idea how I would cope
and still found it hard to believe that after
ten years together, I had been severed
from John's life with a few brief words from a judge
in a public court. I should have hated John for what he had put me through.
I was certainly angry with him and bitterly hurt,
but I couldn't hate him. Despite everything, I loved him still.
Two weeks after that, the day before the White album was released,
Yoko miscarried. Lennon and Ono were by this point
committed to publicly documenting their life as art,
and there is actually a recording on their follow-up to two virgins entitled Baby's Heartbeat,
which is a recording of the heartbeat of the fetus as the miscarriage was happening,
and which is followed on the album by a two-minute silence,
both as mourning for the baby and as a tribute to John Cage.
I thought seriously, literally until typing this very sentence,
about ending this episode on that track,
because if they considered it important enough to include
and wanted people to hear it,
It would seem almost dishonest to talk about that miscarriage and not mention it.
But I eventually decided that that would be too distressing and might traumatise some listeners.
It's out there if you want to hear it.
Instead, I'm going to play you a brief snatch of a track Yoko would record about the event a couple of years later,
with John on guitar, Ringo on drums, and George on Sitar.
Greenfield Morning I pushed an empty baby carriage all over the city.
By the time the White album came out on November the 25th, 1968,
the Beatles had been pushed to their limits.
Since the start of the year, they'd had a member quit and come back,
a divorce, a broken engagement, a partner having a miscarriage,
a drug arrest, two new relationships,
had several house moves, found and in some cases lost a new religion,
started a new business, one member developing a heroin habit,
and between them made two and a half solo albums,
two non-album singles with B-sides,
a handful of songs for other projects,
and produced a couple of albums for other people, as well as their own double album.
What they needed more than anything if the Beatles were to continue was a break,
and they got one, for just over a month.
On the 2nd of January 1969 they were to start work on their next album,
but that's a story for another time.
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