
Dreaming the Beatles

Lou Reed, 1970: “In his mansion Brian Epstein kept Spanish servants, none of whom could speak English. Let that be a lesson to us all in discretion.”
Rob Sheffield • Dreaming the Beatles
Everybody used to assume the Beatle myth was driving the music—it turned out to be the other way around.
Rob Sheffield • Dreaming the Beatles
They’ve gone from being the world’s biggest group to the act that’s bigger than all the rest of pop music combined. At this point, rock and roll is famous mostly because it’s what the Beatles did, just as the theater is famous because plays are what Shakespeare happened to write.
Rob Sheffield • Dreaming the Beatles
And without helping himself to a slice of the songwriting credits, which would have been standard practice. The failure of George Martin to rip them off remains one of the most bizarre elements of their story.
Rob Sheffield • Dreaming the Beatles
But if you listen to outtakes from the sessions, you can hear the Beatles worked out harmonies for “Eight Days a Week”—beautiful harmonies, in fact. Yet they cut the harmonies and sang in unison, to make the song sound like it took less work than it did. They spent seven hours in the studio tinkering with “Eight Days a Week,” adding and subtracting
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And just as Aftermath was the Stones racing to catch up with Rubber Soul, Revolver was the Beatles racing to catch up with Aftermath.
Rob Sheffield • Dreaming the Beatles
This tale is extremely famous, but much less well-known is the fact that Paul plays drums on it. And the reason: Ringo just quit the band.
Rob Sheffield • Dreaming the Beatles
session, saving nothing for later, knowing their first chance to get out of Liverpool could be their last.
Rob Sheffield • Dreaming the Beatles
Yet for all their changes between 1962 and 1970, one constant is that they did not hold back. They bashed out their first album in a mammoth all-day