Những kiểu người bạn gặp ở tuổi 20

Kiểu vừa bắt đầu lại năm nhất vì chểnh mảng nên cố chú tâm vào học hành nên không thể đi cafe với bạn

Kiểu người lúc nào cũng đi cafe và lúc nào cũng rảnh và lúc nào cũng rủ bạn đi cùng để bạn trả hộ tiền

Kiểu người mua cuốn 1 vạn mẫu người rồi tự hào vì nghĩ rằng mình không thuộc bất cứ nhóm nào trong số đó.

Kiểu người luôn bận làm đồ án trường và chỉ hang out với bạn bè đại học (+ điểm nếu để avatar logo trường. Cộng thêm điểm nếu nghe Mr Siro).

Kiểu người không gặp bạn từ thời cấp 3, xong lúc gặp thì rủ bạn đầu tư vào NFT/Bitcoin/Chứng khoán

Kiểu người muốn trở thành rapper và gửi bạn demo liên tục và mong là một ngày họ sẽ trở nên nổi tiếng và bạn luôn động viên họ vì bạn là một người bạn tốt

Kiểu người nhận ra bạn vì học chung cấp 3 nhưng bạn thực sự không nhớ hắn là đứa bỏ mẹ nào

Kiểu đi cafe xong đọc sách của Nguyễn Nhật Ánh và đăng quote Bắt Trẻ Đồng Xanh và gửi gắm ánh mắt kỳ thị mỗi khi có ai bật nhạc rap

Những tình huống cụ thể (mà ta đều biết) và những emotion cho nó

Những tình huống dưới đây khi được trải nghiệm sẽ cho thấy bạn là ai thực sự.

Tình huống bạn phải đi toilet nhưng lại bị kẹt ở trường đầy bọn bắt nạt 😦

Tình huống đây-là-1-buổi-chiều-chủ-nhật-và-bạn-được-nghỉ-tại-nhà-một-mình (preferably trong một căn phòng có cửa sổ và hơi nắng nhưng vẫn mát) 🙂

Tình huống lỡ nói một câu làm phật ý người khác và giờ bạn sẽ trả giá bằng cảm giác cắn rứt suốt phần ngày còn lại :/

Tình huống hai giờ sáng uống bia/rượu cùng bạn bè và trên đường ra Low G (Circle K) mua đồ ăn vặt (Phê) :))

Tình huống bạn vừa vào chăn nhưng quên mất cái gì đó quan trọng ở phòng khác: 😐

Tình huống binging Youtube videos đến 4h sáng và đi lạc vào những hang cùng ngõ hẻm của Youtube ;;)

Tình huống vẫn đang học cấp 2 và ngày mai bạn chuẩn bị đi tham quan đến một chỗ bạn háo hức vl để được đến và cả đêm bạn không thể ngủ được nhưng 5h sáng xe chạy nên bạn quyết định thức tới lúc đó luôn đồng thời check đi check lạ balo xem có thiếu gì ko hmmm vẫn còn thiếu 1 ít snack và tất nhiên 1 cái túi nôn xong lúc lên xe (gần 6h xe mới chạy vì tất nhiên lúc nào cũng có những thằng tới trễ, thậm chí lâu lâu là giáo viên và có thể là bạn lắm chứ) có ông anh hướng dẫn viên cực kỳ tận tâm với nghề và muốn cả xe được vui nhưng mọi người đều buồn ngủ vãi lồn và bạn không muốn ổng đau lòng nhưng cơn buồn ngủ quá cám dỗ xong lúc tới nơi thì tách nhóm đi riêng mỗi nơi với những vật phẩm lưu niệm đồ ăn thức uống overpriced vcl nhưng ko sao miễn vui là được (dù lòng đau nhói) rồi có lúc mưa vl có lúc nắng vl, cũng là một trải nghiệm đáng nhớ, rồi lúc về chỉ muốn ngủ thật là lâu nhưng rất tiếc ngày hôm sau lại là thứ hai nên bạn xin cáo ốm để nghỉ ở nhà nhưng mà mai lại thi giữa kỳ nên bạn không thể nghỉ thế là bạn hận cuộc đời và thêm trầm cảm hàng ngày…:)()()()

Tình huống đây là một bài viết bạn đang đọc vào lúc 2h sáng và bạn thấy nó thú vị và bạn không thể nào đợi để đọc thêm các bài viết nữa của MInh Tu Le hoặc đây là một bài viết dở tệ nhất bạn từng đọc trên đời: Cảm ơn đã đọc bài :3

Movie Review: The Accidental Tourist (1988)

We watch movies for numerous reasons; some people just want a good hard laugh to prevent themselves from doing irrational stuff after a rough day at work, getting yelled at by the boss for the millionth time. Some want films to take them to places that can’t exist in here now, where we call real life. Some want a Delorean time machine. Others see themselves as Luke Skywalkler, as James Bond, as a misunderstood mad scientist. Some just want a perfect portrayal of reality, such as The Accidental Tourist. Macon Leary (William Hurt), a travel guides writer that happens to hate traveling, troubled by his son’s death, now has to deal with a divorce with his wife Sarah (Kathleen Turner) whom he’s lived with for nearly twenty-years. On the other hand, Muriel Pritchett (Geena Davis), a dog trainer, as cliché as it sounds, makes Macon re-think about his marriage.

Có thể là hình ảnh về một hoặc nhiều người, mọi người đang đứng và ngoài trời

It does sound like your typical middle-class love story, but the movie seems to get everything engaging for even the most impatient audience with its mesmerizingly beautiful cinematography. That, you just can’t help but feel like you should lie down on your favorite chair next to the fire sipping a mug of coffee that was made the way grandma used to, and once in a while staring out the window to see rain drops and listening to a favorite Woody Allen soundtrack while watching The Accidental Tourist under your childhood blanket. Some parts drag on a little bit, but can be redeemed by John Williams’ incredible OST that was, ironically, totally in a different way compared to his work in sci-fi films from Star Wars, Indian Jones or Jaws. The dialogues in The Accidental Tourist are also worth-noting; as closest to Anne Tyler’s original words, the film contains almost no curse words like we usually take for granted that almost seems too unusual considering how realistic everything else in the film and this, I think, is the best aspect of it. William Hurt’s acting is subtly superb in capturing a man dealing with his confusion. In fact, everyone in this movie is great and believable.

To conclude this, as you could have guessed it yourself, I’ll say that The Accidental Tourist is a film that is worth watching. But I won’t do that. I will recommend that you should read the book before you watch the movie, as they’re completely different takes on the same concept.

Overall score: 4.5/5

Image gallery for The Accidental Tourist - FilmAffinity

Movie Review: Being There (1979)

Có thể là hình ảnh về một hoặc nhiều người và mọi người đang đứng

My 2016’s Letterboxd write up on Hal Ashby’s classic.

Philosophical Theme (+)
Great soundtrack (+)
Beautifully shot (+)
Peter Sellers’ superb acting (+)
Overall score: 4.5/5

Many subjects have been depicted by cinema that we the audience have come to enjoy throughout the years since the early 20th century. From a young kid who gets accidentally sent back thirty years in the past to an escape story of a wrongly accused prisoner. From twelve men arguing about a convict’s life, to underground fight clubs. Filmmakers, like magicians, can make something that’s not possible to exist in the real world, exist. Such as a man who is raised by television and never ever leaves his comfort home until his father’s passing in Hal Ashby’s Being There. Chance, The Gardener (Peter Sellers) or as people in Being There mishear as Chauncey Gardiner, is a truly great example of “dumb luck” if such thing exists at all. 

As for the first time Chance leaves his house in years, we follow his footstep through a rather unbelievable journey for us normal folks to grasp. A presumably foolish man who, that you have to finish the film to understand, ends up considered to be The President by pure coincidences. Or maybe it isn’t all coincidences; maybe, we are the foolish ones tricked by make-believes, by arts, literature, cinema and television. The film itself is beautifully shot, especially at the end where Chance, Spoiler Alert, walks on water. I myself don’t know the philosophy behind the scene, but I do know for a fact that it makes me perceive Chance as an omnipotent, despite a car can easily crush his legs. Maybe I am wrong. Maybe he’s just an ordinary man who happens to see the world differently from us since he does not even know what real life differs from television shows. SPOILER ENDS HERE. 

As usual, the main character is a perfect choice; Peter Sellers’ work in this film is very much superb and sadly underappreciated as the movie came out circa the time of Sellers’ lowest moments after the success of The Pink Panther franchise. There isn’t much to say about the cinematography; the film is a beauty from the very beginning to the very end. Being There is a quintessential satire of the 1970s, as how Network, or George Orwell’s 1984 are, on the absurdity of how modern people perceive things with modern technology.

Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967) – Review

“We were fed up with being the Beatles. We really hated that fucking four little mop-top approach. We were not boys, we were men … and thought of ourselves as artists rather than just performers.”

“The closest Western Civilization has come to unity since the Congress of Vienna in 1815 was the week the Sgt. Pepper album was released. In every city in Europe and America the radio stations played [it] … and everyone listened … it was the most amazing thing I’ve ever heard. For a brief while the irreparable fragmented consciousness of the West was unified, at least in the minds of the young.”

When “Revolver” came out in 1966, it was a musical statement of theirs that they had abandoned completely their early sounds with any kind of traces of Elvis, Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly.  As per usual, contemporaries started taking notes as soon as “Revolver” hit the shelves. The Beatles were back at the studio having quitted touring completely and for the first time since forever enjoyed the days of their lives. No more tours, meant Ringo could spend more time with his family, George with Hinduism, Paul with his girlfriend Asher, and it was during this time that John met Yoko Ono for the first time during an art gallery he had been indulging in.

There’s this guy called Jimi Hendrix who could do stuff with the guitar that none of the Beatles could do. And then there’s Cream, and a whole lot of psychedelic bands than there had been before.

They were the biggest soundtrack to a changing world and knew well that they also had to, in order to stay ahead of the game and lead the pack as they had been doing for most of the decade, spend more times at the studio tinkering and coming up with the most edge-cutting, far out, exotic and ground-breaking tunes as far as the technology at the Abbey Road Studios allowed them to go.

Paul had a concept in his mind, taking cues from Brian Wilson’s self-contained Pet Sounds and his own childhood. There would be this fictional band that would be the running theme throughout the record. A musical, colorful theme park in the form of an album, with every song being related to and complementing each other.

So John wrote “Strawberry Fields Forever” and Paul wrote “Penny Lane”, which together made the best selling single the Beatles ever made. The double A-sides stayed on the track for weeks and managed to be a breath of fresh air in the psychedelic world dominated by guitar-driven overlong tracks. The yin to John’s yang, “Penny Lane” is a rich, detailed, too personal of a song that tells us all what there is to be seen through the eyes of a young Paul McCartney. Close your eyes and for a moment you’re there on Penny Lane. Paul kept no secret that the place had special place in his heart in “Penny Lane” filled with joy of a child during summer times and the trumpet solo makes it all valid that the guitars weren’t a driving force of a song, and that they didn’t need to.

“On the corner is a banker with a motorcar,

And little children laugh at him behind his back

And the banker never wears a mac

In the pouring rain, very strange”

 “Strawberry Fields Forever”, on the other hand, tells minimal as the song is meant to be, as a journey into some fever longing dream John had about his childhood experiences, or the one that he never actually had.

“Let me take you down

Cause I’m going to

Strawberry fields

Nothing is real

And nothing to get hung about

Strawberry fields forever”

It could take a while for the lyrics to be interpreted, and some could regard it as no more than intentionally nonsensical of-its-time material, much like “I Am The Walrus”. Clear was that John had never been as sincerely as he is in Strawberry Fields Forever, the song that could never be called “dated” which remains of the greatest, most groundbreaking songs the Beatles ever released.

The anticipation for the Beatles’ next album, at the time as comparable to the release of the iPhone today, was getting bigger and bigger when the critics had asked the question whether the Beatles were still relevant. The youth was ready for something new, something they had never heard before, something that would make even “Revolver” sound like oldies music and certainly something that would shock their parents to the core.

 Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band comes out at the very beginning of June, also the tail beginning of the Summer of Love and before long took over the world.

Everything from the sleeve that is designed to be a self-contained colorful artwork of flowers and roses of some of the greatest people of the 20th century. Bob Dylan, Marilyn Monroe, Frank Sinatra, Marlon Brando, Shirley Temple,…are all there and tributed rightfully. Even the Beatles themselves in their early poppy days in suits, an image which they had ditched standing on the side to make room for their personas as true musicians: The Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. It’s not just an album cover. It’s a work of art, more so a statement. Statement by and of the youth, of the counterculture movement, of everything that the 1960s and the Beatles stand for, that at the very moment the album was released everything was changed from then on.

The opening title track comes on. There’s the guitar riffs. And the drums that are hard-hitting much like how a live concert goes. A stadium concert, to be precise, where there’s French horns and laughing audience followed by the introduction to the alter ego band “Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band”.

“We’re Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band

We hope you will enjoy the show!”

And it goes on just like that until Ringo’s character Billy Shears’ voice comes on “With A Little Help From My Friends” and suddenly comes the realization that there’s no gap between the first two tracks; it’s all one unified musical show we’re experiencing, where there’s only love, jolliness and fun drugs to be found. The album has established itself to the listener that it’s meant to be sung along.

“I get by with a little help from my friends
I get high with a little help from my friends”

Ringo Starr really sings his heart with this song, the best we’ll ever see of him on Sgt Pepper’s. At least up until his drumming on “A Day In The Life”.

The song stops. Silence arises. The sounds of organs are heard, which is the opening to “Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds”, the dreamiest tribute to LSD of a song in Lennon’s catalogue. There’s not a single hint of realism in “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds”. It’s for all the people who have become the veteran experimenters of LSD and other psychedelic drugs.It’s surrealistic and utterly psychedelic, with the infamous song title being a reference to LSD (Lucy. Sky. Diamonds).  There’s lots of imageries logic-defying moments. There’s a girl with kaleidoscope eyes, tangerine trees and marmalade skies, cellophane flowers blooming next to which a pouring fountain leads the girl to where rocking horse people eat their marshmallow pies.

The chorus goes on and on until we get to next song, which is a 50-50 Lennon-McCartney collaboration effort. “Getting Better” has a riff-driven intro, a mid-section where each of the songwriting partner has a write-in. Overall is one of the better songs of the album with a bit of contribution from, as usual, cheerfulness of Paul and cynicism of John. The genius internal conflict structure drives the song that is sarcastic in nature and of all places contains explicitly the remorsal apology in John’s own words of the abuse he had made his women endure all his life.

“I”ve got to admit it’s getting better (Better)
A little better all the time (It can’t get no worse)”

Next song on the album is “Fixing A Hole”. The song has a minimalistic structure to go along with it and could be regarded as a clever, even nihilistic approach to life. The guitar use on the song which is a nonsensical (yet metaphorical to the listeners in a certain state of mind) tribute to marijuana is unique of George, the mid-section captures perfectly the mundane which was earlier on represented in “I’m Only Sleeping”.

 “And it really doesn’t matter if

I’m wrong I’m right

Where I belong”

There’s an “Eleanor Rigby” on Sgt Pepper’s, and it’s called “She’s Leaving Home”. Probably the most heart-aching song on the album, “She’s Leaving Home” tells a story in a baroque pop manner about a typical household that for years couldn’t manage to relate to their daughter despite giving her everything money can buy. The quaint string orchestra that the number harbors only adds salt to the wound to the topic about a foolish teenager and her decision to leave home at a ripe age.

Such pain have the parents got to deal with as they find out that their precious little girl has left. The mother breaks down at the top of stairs when she gets to read the girl’s note.

“She breaks down and cries to her husband

Daddy our baby’s gone

Why would she treat us so thoughtlessly?

How could she do this to me?”

Almost satirical, almost ironic but not quite tragedy on the subject that’s old as the earth itself,  the heartbreaking nature of “She’s Leaving Home” leaves a distinctive mark on an overall joyful album that on a closer look is diverse and haunting at times.

The next track is an undeniable backup on this statement.

“Being For The Benefit of Mr Kite” is a balls-to-the-walls ride into the wonderful colorful druggy circus of Mr Kite. It’s hard to make out what the song really means because it’s not supposed to mean anything in particular. Much like Lucy in the Sky, it’s all imageries after imageries all and all to create an atmosphere that’s difficult to be replicated about such peculiar subjects that once you get the hang of and “accept” (much like accepting your own death during an acid trip) then it’s clear as day. You just have to sing along, to the song leading up to George’s very best India-influenced composition.

“Within You Without You” takes on the road that has been laid down before with “Norwegian Wood” and “Love You To”, again, to have been influenced by Ravi Shankar. George’s expression of his interest in Hinduism, meditation and philosophies doesn’t seem to show any barrier here as it takes up to five minutes worth of sitar musical immersion that could be attributed to be the very influence on the philosophies of the Summer of Love and to an extent, the peace movement. “Within You Without You” is a journey in itself, where we’re taken in and forced to be introspective about the nature of our lives.

“With our love, we could save the world” is a line, a utopian and too-good-to-be-true idea that in retrospect appears rather naive and of cheese during such cynical times as today. It’s actually the general, most simple yet achingly critical view about life from George, is the thing with “Within You Without You” that makes it stand out from every song that’s ever released in rock music. The song exposes what we really are underneath the facades we ourselves rarely ever take off in a world that thrives on materialism, illusionary non-important egoistic activities and possessions that long gone have replaced what actually matters: Love, companionship, sharing.  Are we ever ourselves anymore or have we turned into our own sick parodies?We only give if it benefits us, as sadly as it has turned out. Things we own do eventually end up  owning us. We gain the world and lose our souls.

Written in the same sessions that gave birth to “Penny Lane”, “When I’m Sixty-Four” also thrives on the early concepts that Paul had in mind during the making of Sgt Pepper’s. “When I’m Sixty-Four” is a fun and silly “granny music” (John’s terms referring to what Paul’s trying to get across in songs like “When I’m Sixty-Four”) that doesn’t seem to take itself too seriously considering the previous tracks (respectively, of John and George) were quite sonically adventurous and serious in comparison to what this cutesy, track brings to the table. It tackles topics regarding old age, whereby quaint and nostalgic fantasies are what mainly drive the song, the cutest Paul ever was in the psychedelic era.

“You can knit a sweater by the fireside

Sunday mornings go for a ride

Doing the garden, digging the weeds”

The LP’s at times blatant diversity doesn’t stop as the next song also by Paul greets us with a meter maid by a name of Rita whom the singer has a secret crush on presumably every bit as lovely as he sings praise of on “Lovely Rita”. Paul McCartney’s genius use of detailed narrative (which had been used earlier on his pioneering “Penny Lane) to create an atmosphere that leaves the listeners ourselves in awe of the stunning Lovely Rita and everything that makes her such a treat to look at shouldn’t be overlooked.

When I caught a glimpse of Rita

Filling in a ticket in her little white book

In a cap she looked much older

It’s relatable to the introvert in all of us boys who has stood before the girl he has a thing for. The accomplishment feeling when we finally ask the girl out is captured perfectly in this little segment:

“Lovely Rita, meter maid
May I inquire discreetly
When are you free to take some tea with me?”

Cock-a-doodle-doo, “Good Morning Good Morning”, a Lennon song that shows his rare occasion of silliness, unfortunately later went on to be called by its own composer something less than great, which leaves the fact that it is a fun, fascinating dreamy number standing still. The Pet Sounds comparison could be drawn here as there’s undeniable footprints of Brian Wilson on the track: The animal noises are heard throughout the song and pick up at the very end. A little variety is what drives the album forward, leading up to the encore. Doesn’t hurt as the song only adds to the album that is already loaded with similar-themed Paul tracks.

“Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band Reprise” is just as what its name indicates: a much more rockier, energic reprise of the title track that’s supposedly the “final” farewell track to the album or at least to the idea of the Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. Once the song ends, the band by the name of the Beatles finally reveal themselves as the first notes to the true finale “A Day In The Life” come on.

Almost dreamy, surrealistic is the narrative echoing voice of John Lennon that guides us through the almost six-minute long track. The subject is clear and concise. It’s about an accident in the newspaper in which the singer reads in the morning, of a “lucky” chap who blew his mind out in a car. People from all over the places had witnessed it and they just have to turn away due to the sheer horror of it all. The vocals and the drumming compliment each other to turn such tragedy into something so beautiful and delicate.

Everything that the song has stood for makes an abrupt 180 degree turn. Something is going on as it’s realized the Beatles are long gone from their “yeah, yeah, yeah” days.

“I’d love to turn you on…”

He’d love to turn you on. By drugs and by any other means. Our minds go blank as the song picks up with an orchestra that just goes louder and louder and louder and louder and louder and louder until it couldn’t go any further.

The alarm clock rings. Paul McCartney’s upbeat tone switches the mood.

“Woke up, fell out of bed…”

And we are back to reality, base one. Or so we think. In a hurried monotone and yet at the same time catchy voice, we see a day in the life of Paul as he gets up, gets dressed, catches a bus and lights up a smoke.

And he goes into a dream again.

A…ah…..ahh…ahhhh…ahhh…ahhhhh…

Echoes from the future, the past and the present reunite in this intersection of ecstasy, tragedy and randomness. It all matters not once the music picks up. The Beatles’ entire discography peaks right then and there, during the 15 seconds of John, or is that Paul, singing the most beautifully constructed song ever made. It’s not the same ahh that appears on “Twist and Shout”. It’s the void staring at us in form of music, of good vibrations comforting us with pure bliss. Not a single word could describe what “A Day In The Life” for how could you describe something not of this world? Not of today, not of tomorrow nor the past. That is eternity.

That is the Beatles’ answer to the music world and they’d love to hear from you. No. Wait. Somebody’s got to sneak in a witty joke once we get to the  inner groove.

“Never could see any other way”?

Your guess is as good as mine.

Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band is the peak of their psychedelic and studio era which demonstrates the four-headed monsters at their finest and most consistent, occasionally and stylishly disjointed, Paul-orientated right before the death of their manager Brian Epstein thus the initial of their downfall later to be showcased by their messiest double LP “The Beatles”, and the infamous Let It Be sessions. On a larger scale, Sgt Pepper’s is considered deservedly by many to be the Beatles’ magnum opus and the very best album that came out of the 1960s rock scene, or at least the most important culture-wise. It is the one of the most groundbreaking, most spectacular achievements in music which perfectly emcompasses everything the youth stands for: humor, sentiment, philosophy and progressive standpoints about love and any other subject through the use of studio techniques, prolific songwriting and arrangements influencing contemporary artists years to come, as well as to create a cultural phenomenon and more so an idea, with which an entire generation identifies and collectively enjoys that has yet to and most likely never going to be surpassed.

A Day In The Life

Within You Without You

With A Little Help From My Friends

She’s Leaving Home

Being For The Benefit of Mr Kite

Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds

Fixing A Hole

Sgt Pepper’s + Reprise

When I’m Sixty-Four

Lovely Rita

Getting Better

Good Morning Good Morning

10/10

(pic by Leland Castro)

Revolver (1966) Review

1966 was a rough years for the boys.

“Christianity will go. It will vanish and shrink. I needn’t argue about that; I’m right and I’ll be proved right. We’re more popular than Jesus now; I don’t know which will go first – rock ‘n’ roll or Christianity”

As the Beatles arrived in Japan (along with many death threats), they were caught off guard by how polite and quiet the fans were. They didn’t scream as much as the fans overseas did. It was also then did they realize how terrible their live performances had become, and God forbid all they cared about was making great music.

They had been recording their latest LP “Revolver”, their seventh album. In short, the gap between “Rubber Soul” and “Revolver” is like the jump from black-and-white films to Technicolor.

Though it seemed, all the people cared about was John’s statement, and “Revolver”’s greatness has been overlooked and overshadowed by Sgt Pepper’s for as long as any Baby Boomer could recall. The Beatles quit touring a month after “Revolver” came out. The biggest band on the world decided to stop doing tours, not because they could, but because they couldn’t: They couldn’t hear themselves anymore during concerts. All they cared about was their music being heard and things had gone way out of hand. John Lennon’s statement about the apparent popularity of the band didn’t help, nor did the infamous butcher cover of their “Yesterday and Today” album that reached the American and Canadian shelves two months before “Revolver”. Radical Christians from all the places decided that the Beatles were satanists and burnt all of their books, merchandises, and LP’s.

“Revolver” kept what had made “Rubber Soul” so acclaimed and also added much more studio technique and songwriting-wise. Automatic double-tracking, for one, was invented out of John Lennon’s laziness.

Most of the songs are non-love songs. They are songs about politics, death, laziness, and psychedelic experiences. That is a complete left turn considering that “Rubber Soul” only had “Nowhere Man”. “Revolver” just reeks of drug references and trippy and somewhat electronic sounding noises.

“1, 2, 3, 4…” so starts the first track off the Beatles’ very first album.

The same means of beginning a track is used again on “Taxman”, this time with more playful and sarcastic manners much like the conveyed ideas of the rocker (very first non-love song by George) by the catchy and no less edgy hook. No more does Harrison flirt with political ideas the way he does on “Think For Yourself”, “Taxman” is bluntly a giant angry fuck you the the new laws regarding taxes in 1966, and overall, to the capitalist pigs of all times whenever there’s corruption and greed involved.

“There’s one for you, nineteen for me”

Is almost literal, for at the time the Beatles were liable to the super-tax which required them to pay up to 95% of what they were earning.

The use of the sitar is further demonstrated on “Love You To”. This time not used as a guitar-sounding instrument anymore. Rather, a full-blown Indian sound with Hinduistic lyrics about the love for Pattie Boyd. George’s “Love You To” is about making love, and his “I Want To Tell You” is about the desire of a schoolboy to a girl who the singer isn’t even sure if she cares about him at all.

“I’m Only Sleeping” could be interpreted as a song about John’s sleepiness, or alternatively about a hangover from substances. Still it’s one of Lennon’s best featuring the backward guitar and John’s vocals with the aid of reverb are emphasized for the first time the most dramatically here.

Paul’s tracks on “Revolver” are the best he’s ever had to offer: “Here, There And Everywhere” and “For No One” are candidates of some of the best sentimental love songs of all time.

The chord changes on these ballads could easily be considered classical. “For No One” could be regarded as the perfect heartbreak song, which tells a heart-wrenching less-of-a-man story in less than three minutes. It’s Yesterday 2.0, basically, and features French horns just as well as the next-to-final track “Got To Get You Into My Life”.

  “Here, There and Everywhere”, influenced directly by Beach Boys’ “God Only Knows” is a wholesome, honest love letter from Paul to his then girlfriend at the time. It’s Paul at his purest and sweetest, sans the naivety that are present on say, “Ob-La-Di Ob-La-Da” or earlier Paul’s works. The chord changes are exotic yet the song still manages to be as every bit as sentimental and resonant as “For No One”.

Surprisingly as one digs further into their bootlegs, alternative takes and the like, “She Said She Said” was originally a folky song in vein of Bob Dylan. The song, asides from “Tomorrow Never Knows”, is probably the most psychedelic song off the album. The lyrics are almost nonsense, perhaps written when John Lennon was coming down off acid. It goes,

“She said, ‘I know what it’s like to be dead’”

There is no “she”. That’s Peter Fonda’s words as he came in one day and said, “I know what it’s like to be dead”.

To which Lennon replied, “Who put all that shit in your head?”

Thus the basis to “She Said She Said” came about, alongside with “Tomorrow Never Knows and “Doctor Robert”, songs with the most blatant and cheeky drug references.

The catchiest song on the album is “Yellow Submarine”, now has become a staple in popular culture. It’s the ultimate song for kids, and for everybody.  Everybody on Earth has heard the song before in their lifetime, as the story goes, except for metalheads and punks who didn’t think much of Paul’s granny music and deny ever hearing the song. The fact remains, “Yellow Submarine” is a song that is fun to listen to, atmospheric and more importantly goes on to inspire the classic animated feature of the same name that’s still highly regarded even today. “Good Day Sunshine” initially was gonna be a second side companion to the first side “Yellow Submarine”; In fact, Ray Davies of the Kinks thought that “Good Day Sunshine” stood out and would go on to become a chart hit. As we look back, couldn’t be further from the truth. “Good Day Sunshine” is a decent song yet lacks the uniqueness of experimentalism that “Revolver” is all about. It’s been even said by different kinds of words that the flow of the album is ruined by this track alone, as a result prevents the album from being as acclaimed as the Sgt Pepper’s.

The album ends with “Tomorrow Never Knows”, without a slightest doubt the very best track of “Revolver”. The psychedelic scene had just emerged for a year or two by the time “Tomorrow Never Knows” came out, with crucial leaders such as Timothy Leary, or Donovan and the Byrds in music.

 Yet, the track defied almost everything that had been laid down before in the genre, raised the eyebrows of even the biggest avant-garde enthusiasts, divided a whole generation of devoted fans into two, the same crowd that two years earlier were singing about holding hands. The entire song is in C chord; there’s no hand-holding this time, only ego deaths and the psychedelic experience demonstrated by tape loops, drone, Leslie speaker, distorted sounds of god only knows, and whatever trick the folks at Abbey Road managed to pull off just to satisfy the boys’ eagerness to experiment and daringness to go the places that nobody in music had even managed to go to or had ever gone since.


“Turn off your mind, relax and float downstream

It is not dying, it is not dying

Lay down all thoughts, surrender to the void

It is shining, it is shining”

All of it, perfectly combined into one three-minute track that changed the course of history of not just electronic/psychedelic/avant-garde music, but popular music as a whole.

Decades for the contemporary artists to take note, yet one thing is certain that the 52-year-old track still remains futuristic to modern ears and rarely has a pop track reached the same level of timelessness, nor trippiness and influence, and that the song could only exist out of time.

And here as usual I’m gonna conclude this with my personal ranking. This time, mine is even more unreliable, for it was such a difficult task for me to decide which one is the worst and which is the best, also the inbetweens. “Revolver” is such a consistently great album and I don’t wanna crap on anyone of them, not even “Good Day Sunshine” and especially “For No One”.

Tomorrow Never Knows

Taxman

Love You To

I Want To Tell You

Here, There and Everywhere

And Your Bird Can Sing

She Said She Said

Yellows Submarine

I’m Only Sleeping

Eleanor Rigby

Doctor Robert

For No One

Got To Get You Into My Life

Good Day Sunshine

10/10

Without a doubt, “Revolver” belongs on the list of the very best music albums of all time.

The album single-handedly paved way for what was to come out of the psychedelic music scene. With “Revolver”, the Beatles find joy in taboo subjects such as drug and sex references, the implementation of unconventional subjects, and most importantly, experimenting with studio techniques – one of the trademarks and certainly the driving fuel of their psychedelic period which only really takes off with “Strawberry Fields Forever”/”Penny Lane” single and eventually cultural landmark Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, the one album that changed the way rock music was seen and listened to forever.

Rubber Soul (1965) Review

Entering the age of Rubber Soul, The Beatles saw no sign of decline. They were still pumping out the greatest hits, particularly “Day Tripper”/”We Can Work It Out”, the very first double A-side single which gave Simon and Garfunkel’s breakthrough “The Sound of Silence” a run for their money. The iconic and unforgettable riff on “Day Tripper” needs not any introduction; for one, it was a major inspiration for Hendrix to kick-start his career as probably the greatest rock ‘n roll guitarist of all time.

“Day Tripper”, reminiscing and somewhat a tribute to blues musicians, had used, up to that time, almost full potential of the guitar riff acting as the basis for the whole song. Lyrically, “Day Tripper” was one of the earliest songs to make references to acid. Not emulating the psychedelic experience, mind you, as they were still nine months short of “Tomorrow Never Knows”.

“We Can Work It Out” is also an underrated Macca track.

The 45 was released on December 3rd of 1965, right on time for Christmas. On the same day, “Rubber Soul” came out.

Almost like “Beatles For Sale”, but different. The boys looked pretty much the same, but different. No name attached on the cover now that everybody knows who they are, just “Rubber Soul” (a word-play on “Plastic Soul”) written in the typeface that would later be crucial to the hippie movement. Everybody knew that they were onto something. And on something. It was the dawn of their years of being actual artists.The greatest pop band on the globe famously known for their good boy images had had their arrogant looks on with their leather jackets and hair that was even longer than ever before, appearing to be absolutely aware of what they were about to show to the world. The group leader John Lennon on the distorted album cover stares directly at the camera, while the other three are drifting off somewhere, probably still coming down off the marijuana joint which had been given prior to the photo shooting.

The album starts off with the riff to the killer opener “Drive My Car”. It’s a typical Macca love song, but “Drive My Car”, much like the rest of the album showcases us what McCartney and the Beatles have never done before. The song is bass-heavy, sarcastic in nature and has sexual intentions, a trait that would become common in later Beatles works.

The second track on the LP is “Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)” (The title of the song went on to inspire the author Haruki Murakami to write a book of the same name with a rather similar theme). Never before had a sitar been used on a Western pop song, at least not the way it is used by George Harrison on the track. Lennon’s nasal voice made even the most annoying screaming girls to shut up and listen.

“I once had a girl

Or should I say

She once had me?”

Poetic yet dreamy, mature yet playful as any pop hit in 1965 could get. “Norwegian Wood” tells an imaginary story in less than three minutes through Indiance influence of an encounter between a man, a woman in a setting that could only be found in fantasy novels. The supposed femme fatale in the song acts atypically and bizarre. She invites the male character into her place; they talk until two and by the time the male character wakes up in the morning, she’s gone (hence the alternate title, “this bird has flown”). Revengefully, he lights up a fire to burn the whole place down.  It could be a love song. It could be not. “Norwegian Wood” is a song that could be interpreted in many different possible ways and it would remain still an exquisite, quaint and charmingly marijuana-induced number that adds tremendous to the overall theme of the album and to the Fabs’ catalogue.

“Nowhere Man” titled as the first non-love song by the Fab is also a gem, especially considering its omission in the US version of the album. It’s introspective, philosophical and existential, it doesn’t fear to assume the position of the listener as similar to the said nowhere man and it’s just so vocally harmonical that one could see the apparent Beach Boys influence here.

“Isn’t he a bit like you and me?”

Some praise “In My Life” as Lennon’s very best composition; it’s justified to say so as much as a bold statement it is. The lyrics are just beautiful and straight to the heart of the listener. It is about love, but not exclusively romantic love.  It’s a song that perfectly captures love in its purest form, even more so than “The Word”. Which is not to say that “The Word” isn’t a bad song. It’s got a catchy hook with obvious early precursors for the hippie “All You Need Is Love” era. Once love is spread you shall be free. Neither is “Wait” or “What Goes On” which  isn’t as bad as one would make it out to be (which is, none more than a filler).  It’s to “Rubber Soul” what “Act Naturally” is to “Help!”. Adds to the overall theme of the album, and is just mindless fun.

“Girl” and “Michelle”, the Lennon and McCartney songs, respectively, showing us brilliantly how the two genius composers approach a love song in different ways, are in fact, alike in some manners. “Girl” is a playful heartbreak song from a guy to the most beautiful lady he’s ever laid eyes on with sexual innuendo (“tit tit tit tit tit” backing vocals) that he calls,  “the kind of girl who puts you down”. Also a praise for a pretty lady, we see Paul showing his limited French skill in “Michelle”. George’s chop for writing is showcased once more with “Think For Yourself”, already philosophical as Lennon and as political as his general views on things in his solo career.

“‘Think for Yourself’ must be about ‘somebody’ from the sound of it – but all this time later, I don’t quite recall who … Probably the Government”. 

Alongside with “If I Needed Someone”, “Think For Yourself” has planted the seeds for what’s to come out of the showcasing of George’s writing ability.


“Run For Your Life” makes a classic that later was disregarded by the writer himself. The melody is prolific, yet the lyrics are absolutely horrendous. It is a sequel to “You Can’t Do That’, presumably, with even more morbid and bitter qualities of a “jealous guy”. The song might have been written with sarcastic intentions in mind, but that doesn’t change the fact that it’s pure morbidness represented by an upbeat melody.

“You better run for your life if you can, little girl

Hide your head in the sand little girl

Catch you with another man

That’s the end, little girl”

Every single song on “Rubber Soul” could be considered a classic and leagues above what their contemporaries were doing at the time. “Rubber Soul” is the perfect midpoint between the early rock ‘n roll Beatles and the late, more experimental works of the band. Dare to say, “Rubber Soul” had invented the future of pop music. The psychedelic scene was just right around the corner with the eventual release of heavy drugs influenced Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds and the Fabs’ Revolver in the Summer of 1966.  Just like the realization right after one has taken a tab of LSD. We are not in Kansas anymore.

Personal ranking: (Best to worst)

Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)

The Word

Drive My Car

Wait

Nowhere Man

In My Life

Think For Yourself

If I Needed Someone

I’m Looking Through You

You Won’t See Me

What Goes On

9.5/10

Help (1965) Review

The year 1965. Early days of the Vietnam War.

It was during the peak of the folk-rock scene, with The Byrds’ “Mr Tambourine Man”, the second folk rock act ever (after “House of the Rising Sun”) to hit the chart. Bob Dylan was booed off stage during one concert by the fact that he actually dared to, as a folk artist, pulled out an electric guitar in front of thousands of feeling-betrayed die-hard folk enthusiasts. Simon and Garfunkel, also, with a refreshing electric back-tracked “The Sound of Silence” folk hit. Contemporary artists started further taking notes. The mad scientists were back at the lab. The Beatles weren’t the number one artist on the chart anymore.

From the Fab, along came the single “Ticket to Ride” along with B-side “Yes It Is” in early 1965. The and longest heaviest thing the Fab had done yet, “Ticket to Ride” exceeds the three-minute mark and tells us what’s probably a story about a prostitute.

“She’s got a ticket to ride…but she don’t care”

“Yes It Is”, on the other hand, is less experimental harmonically and harboring more interesting chord changes. If we could pin down the exact point when the mop-top Beatles started taking their music experimentation seriously, “Ticket To Ride” would be it. Here’s something new; a song with actual momentum build-up and a song to listen to and say afterwards “What the hell was that?”.  The riff is iconic, inspiring, particularly “See My Friends” by The Kinks which in turned influenced “Norwegian Wood” on Rubber Soul. “Yes It Is”, on the other hand, is less experimental harmonically and harboring more interesting chord changes.

Of course, external factors contribute much here. Bob Dylan had just introduced the Beatles to marijuana in 1964 and by 1965 on the set of “Help!” already were they stoned out of their minds. It’s “I can’t hide” in “I Want To Hold Your Hand” (which Bob had interpreted as “I get high” at first and was surprised to find out that it wasn’t “I get high”). In “It’s Only Love” there is an “I get high”, a sneaky marijuana reference when referring to feelings as the singer sees a girl walk by.

With the release of “Help!”/”I’m Down” single and yet another comedy theatrical film in which the Fab have to fight against an evil cult. Yes, and it actually goes down in the movie.

It was also around the time when the Beatles were at their most famous and most exhausting. They were were doing two albums per year with the touring being almost non-stop, not also accounting the fact that they couldn’t even hear their own voices in spite of the advancement in technology. The boys took it rather well, as they had had years of experience doing gigs at nightclubs up to 12 hours a day.

But then, with “Help!” the song, It really was John Lennon calling for help, though it wasn’t obvious for him at the time, during his own so-called “Fat Elvis” period. Legend has that, he was called the fat Beatle by the media and it stuck with him for the rest of his career as an entertainer. The rest of the songs on the album, however, do not possess the same qualities that had made their earlier albums such classics. The energy of the Hard Day’s Night era was almost non-existent by “Help!” and instead it is filled with lyrics about heartbreak and songs with folky vibes.

“I've Just Seen A Face” the one-of-its-kind in the Beatles category, now regarded as a classic has us see Paul's soft side for country music, only played at a much faster tempo.  “Act Naturally” is a cover song sung by Ringo and deservedly so. It doesn’t try to be anything it isn’t, it’s cheesy and catchy at times and doesn’t take itself too seriously; and to not disregard this silly tune, for this very fact it doesn’t seem to fit on “Help!” at all.

“You've Got To Hide Your Love Away” is another noteworthy gem with several chord changes that could easily be considered a classic love song. If any, “You’re Going To Lose That Girl” is the sequel to the track. Both hummable Lennon-themed tunes with similar messages of insecurity about love. “Tell Me What You See” now is an interesting one. The influence of folk music on the song is undeniable, yet the song is sung just as you’d expect on a catchy pop track.

George Harrison’s one of the two compositions since “With The Beatles”, “I Need You” is one of the better tracks off the album. It shows Harrison at his best at writing love songs that are yet to involve Indian instruments or meditative and political lyrics and adds to the bigger theme of the album. The other is “You Like Me Too Much”. Not a mediocre tune by any measure but not spectacular either, at least not enough for its own composer to bat an eye looking back. “It’s Only Love” though a good song, was not really appreciated by its creator. John loathed the song and called it a bunch of nonsense. In contrast with, say, “Another Girl” is yet another catchy Lennon tune without much to add to the album. It's not a terrible number but here you could see desperation and passion for love running through the lyrics.

The most covered song of all time “Yesterday” by Paul McCartney is different from the rest of the tracks, and was different from everything the Fab had done before. “Yesterday” was almost a classical song, with ambiguous lyrics and played exclusively with the guitar and only by Paul. The other guys though credited weren’t involved. It was almost released as a solo track. “Yesterday” is the Beatles’ greatest work to not represent their typical sounds, a classic in vein of of “The Sound of Silence” and in terms of being a harmonically complex yet so-easy-to-sing along sentimental melody. It’s everything that anyone who’s been through falling in love in their lives could ever get out of music. It’s Paulie at his very best. The song was followed up by the final track on the album “Dizzy Miss Lizzy” which it seems, is universally hated for ruining what “Yesterday” had established. Some say it’s a lousy rock ‘n roll cover that should’ve been cut; though oddly enough, I find it appropriate for “Help!” to conclude with a track saying goodbye to the rock 'n roll era. It’s far from experimental and it’s just raw, exactly what this album is not about. But it just works and it works really well.

Regardless, “Help!” is a classic album choke-full of classic songs. What makes “Help!” a hair inferior to its predecessors, I suppose, is the lack of songs with bigger-than-life qualities. Never could the songs on “Help” be deemed mediocre but only the title track, “Ticket to Ride” and “Yesterday” could be considered masterpieces. In the Beatles’ discography as a whole, “Help!”’s place is also icky. It’s not exactly one of the albums full of rockers but it’s not exactly studio technique showroom either. That is not to say it doesn’t serve any purpose for what comes next the same year. Hold onto your hats as things are only gonna get much more interesting musically from now. The clean-cut Beatles will have been long gone by the time we get to the even more folk-rocky and even more lyrically abstract Rubber Soul.

Personal ranking:

Ticket To Ride

Yesterday

You’ve Got To Hide Your Love Away

Help!

It’s Only Love

I Need You

You’re Going To Lose That Girl

I’ve Just Seen A Face

Dizzy Miss Lizzy

Tell Me What You See

You Like Me Too Much

Another Girl

Act Naturally

8.25/10

A Hard Day’s Night & Beatles For Sale (1964) Review

It was 1964 during the peak of the Beatlemania. The four most recognized, worshipped, and controversial  faces on Earth needed not any further introduction. You’d been living under a rock if you didn’t know who John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison or Ringo Starr were. Being a super conservative parent was no exception: Your child had been blasting their latest-annoying-as-shit records and dancing around the house and nothing you could use, ala even Christianity to convince them that their music was shit and would require earmuffs to not get deafened after listening to “She Loves You” or “I Want To Hold Your Hand” or such other music of the devil.

 The Beatles were bigger than Jesus Christ and after decades it seems, remain still. The top five songs on Billboard Hot 100 were all by the Beatles on April 4th of 1964. Nobody in the music history had ever reached that level of magnitude before, not even the King.

The single “Can’t Buy Me Love” (with the excellent B-side accompanying it, “You Can’t Do That”) single-handedly proved that The Beatles were more than just a fad and dared to experiment with exotic chord arrangements, with which extents made the lyricist of all lyricists Bob Dylan’s admiration even as justified as ever. Or, even when touching topics that regarded downright jealousy, they could still make catchy and harmonically interesting tunes:

“If I catch you talking to that boy again,

I'm gonna let you down,

And leave you flat,

Because I told you before, oh,

You can't do that.”

It wasn’t anything like the Beatles or any artist in contemporary pop had done at the time.

The same kind of strange music that had been showcased by the hit single would go on to appear on the band’s third album release: A Hard Day's Night.

It's difficult to mention the LP without also mentioning the comedy A Hard Day's Night released around the same time, featuring most of the songs on the album and went as well to include some of Martin's classical arrangements. The now-classic film was a proof that alongside with their gifted talents for music ability and aesthetics, they could also get witty in an extremely British way. The film shows us the Beatles in their prime years and at their rawest form; four boys goofing off while making some of the greatest tunes in history of modern music.

A Hard Day's Night the album further demonstrated how way above of everyone else the Beatles were at the time in terms of, well, making music. They had experimented and perfected almost everything about early rock 'n roll could offer. The album is filled with gold after gold pop songs; though you don’t have to be a huge folk rock fan to see the folk influence here. The chord changes, despite the poppy sounds, owe a huge debt to folk musicians. We here could for the first hear George Harrison’s secret weapon: the 12-string Rickenbacker 360/12.

The first chord, rather mysterious on the title track is a complete blast and sets the tone for the whole album. Not until recent years had it been replicated by using mathematics to decify. Moving on, we've got “I Should Have Known Better”, which makes great use of the harmonica and has an awesome melody. Same thing with the next track “If I Fell” in retrospect, a rather fresh ballad with many innovative key changes that were way ahead of the game. A classic Lennon- McCartney track. Also a classic is the quintessential early rocky track from the early Fab “I’m Happy Just To Dance With You” which helps the album have a sense of flow to it, planting seeds for what would become of the very first concept albums in pop music from the 60s.

The album moves onto “And I Love Her”. One of the best tracks off the album and belonged to the list of one of the most beautiful romantic songs ever put out by Macca, “And I Love Her” proved once again, that the Beatles were more than just another teenage boyband and actually raised some of the most close-minded wankers’ eyebrows.  

The sixth track on the album “Tell Me Why” is an authentic attempt by Lennon at doo-wop. The melody is catchy as usual and there’s also a backing track with vocals by George and Paul.

Previously released as a single (along with the B-side “You Can’t Do That”), “Can’t Buy Me Love” was one of the earliest statements made by the Beatles after “I Want To Hold Your Hand” and the Ed Sullivan Show that nobody else in show business could match their talent for creating catchy melodies.

Side B begins with “Any Time At All”, sort of a sequel to “It Won’t Be Long”. Same chord arrangements, same Lennon vocal works and it’s also been suggested so by Lennon himself. Moving on, the country-pop song “I’ll Cry Instead” is drastically different from any other track on the album. It’s Lennon crying for help, essentially, just like how he did a year later with “Help”. It was the point where Lennon realized that everything has got a price; even if you’re a Beatle. “Things We Said Today” is a typical charming Paulie track with rather interesting chord changes. Same could be said about “When I Get Home”.

What I consider to be the heaviest track off the album, lyrically and melodically, “You Can't Do That” is one of the few tracks in the Beatles’ discography to show Lennon's darker side, the side that involves the type of behavior that could be considered bigoted in these days and age. Lennon was a young man at the time, foolish and an alpha male, to say the least. It was shown often in his earlier years in the Beatles, and later subverted by remorse in “Getting Better”. Still, it's a great song and was not unlike the extremely progressive “Ticket to Ride” that it had its momentum. A classic proto-metal track.

The album concludes with “I'll Be Back”. It's a sayonara, a promise, that soon they'll be back for more.

And they did come back.

Of course, The feedback loop of which John Lennon was proud of on the single “I Feel Fine” tells all. The first time a feedback loop was used on a pop track. Their next album “Beatles For Sale” the often overlooked and also at the same time essential LP to the eventual growth of the band’s sounds towards the tail end of their early “poppy” years, was gonna be something new just by the look of the cover.

In contrast with A Hard Day’s Night, Beatles For Sale’s cover is much more classy, weary and much more of a downer from the way it looks to compared to the usual upbeat nature of their previous works. The Beatlemania had worn out, somewhat, and what was left also indicated on the cover as we see for probably the very first time those unsmiling guys looking drowsy. The music was no different. There’s still innovation to be found even on a record like Beatles For Sale.

Of course, its influence on the eventual development of folk rock shouldn’t be dismissed.  We could clearly see the Dylan footprints on tracks like “No Reply” or “I’m A Loser”, the first two tracks off the album; perhaps, the main driving forces for Dylan to go electric just a couple of months after For Sale was released, or for the Byrds to do a cover of “Mr Tambourine Man”, considered to be the very first folk rock track. But still, it could all be traced back to the single moment For Sale was released.

There’s only a few songs in history could paint imageries as vivid and as beautiful as those found in the McCartney-sung “I'll Follow The Sun” number, the first of many great Beatle tracks featuring the sun as its main subject. The highly praised “What You’re Doing”, for instance, makes great use of Harrison’s Rickenbacker. Though the Beatles themselves didn’t think very highly of track.

“Every Little Thing” is yet another classic Lennon harmony. An overlooked one, that is. Same could be said about “Everybody’s Trying To Be My Baby”. Even the covers, where the weakest features of the album lie, are great improvements and manifestations over the originals. The Carl Perkins’ covers “Honey Don't” and “Everybody's Trying To Be My Baby” come to mind with early vocal works by Ringo and George. The medley “Kansas City/Hey Hey Hey Hey” isn't one of the best track, but fits perfectly in overall the folkiest album by the Fab. “Rock and Roll Music” stays faithful to Berry's original, yet there's still an undeniable Beatles spin to it.    

Even the universally hated “Mr. Moonlight” in retrospect, is still a classic. It may be annoying to some, but “Moonlight” is a decent cover and to say it was popularized by the Fab would be an understatement. “Baby’s In Black” on the other hand is a rather sentimental song about a one-sided love with a touch of a deeper subject involving having a crush on a widow.

Stay tuned for more, as the drowsiness isn’t gonna wear off any time now. The “Help” era is coming soon with a movie to go in 1965 with even more sentimental and folk-sounding tunes sans the energy we’ve seen so far of the Fab. With that come a load of innovations, paving way for Rubber Soul and beyond down the road.

Personal Ranking (Tough as shit lol)

A Hard Day’s Night

You Can’t Do That

Can't Buy Me Love

Tell Me Why

A Hard Day's Night

Things We Said Today

And I Love Her

I'm Happy Just To Dance With You

I’ll Be Back

I Should Have Known Better

Any Time At All

When I Get Home

I'll Cry Instead

9/10

Beatles For Sale

Eight Days A Week

I'll Follow The Sun

Baby's In Black

Rock and Roll Music

No Reply

I'm A Loser

Words of Love

What You're Doing

I Don't Want To Spoil The Party

Mr Moonlight

Honey Don't

Everybody's Trying To Be My Baby

Kansas City/Hey Hey Hey Hey

8.5/10

The Beatles: With The Beatles Review

mê tú linh.

No American who lived through the 60s could forget the day John F. Kennedy was assassinated. It was the exact starting point of a dark period that the US went through politics-wise. No tragedy with such gloom and dread as large had taken over the US ever since President Abraham Lincoln was shot ninety-nine years earlier, in April 14th 1865. It was the end. The end of an era, of the American Dream, of, then, peak of the greatest nation on Earth.

And somehow, The Beatles are the proofs that no matter what would go down in history, no matter how seemingly nasty and lousy stuff is, in the grand scheme of things there’s always gonna be hope to be found.

The young people of the US lost their innocence and hope for a brief moment after JFK died and the Beatles gave them back, paving way for the British…

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