IT IS BELIEVING
IT IS BELIEVING
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Been a while since I listened to this whole thing. Just listened to it again as a result. Granted, I still find most of the tracks on it to be just okay, the few good tracks on this are godly.
tomorrow never knows is still one of my favorite tracks of all time
ONE TWO THREE FOUR (cough) ONE TWO
One of my favorite albums
>51 years later people still haven't realized I Want to Tell You is the best track
I wish it didn't have those filler songs but it's still one of their two albums that still remains remarkable today, though Rubber Soul is much more consistent, Revolver has higher highs
>not She Said She Said
1966. jesus christ. i dont buy into a lot of beatles hype but this song was prophetic
i feel hung up and i dont know WHYYYYY
>not I'm Only Sleeping
Some of Ringo's best drumming
Probably my favorite Beatles song. I relate to it so much
fuck I always thought it came out in 68
>white girl in my class makes a presentation on why George Harrison was appropriating Indian cultural by using a sitar on revolver and rubber soul
>1996
Fuck, they WERE ahead of their time. If anyone can prove me wrong by showing me something like Tomorrow Never Knows or She Said She Said from before that year please do.
meant
>1966
AGHH THIS IS SO ANNOYING
I played The White Album on the aux chord at work and my coworker thought it was a modern alternative rock radio station until Helter Skelter came along.
eight miles high could probably be a contender but im not sure
I usually stay out of arguments about cultural appropriation but I can't stand this. George had utmost respect for Indian culture and Hinduism and dedicated most of his life to it.
>dem quints
georgo was satan confrimd
Nah but I agree. George lived and died by his believes in Hinduism.
The thing that I love about Rubber Soul and Revolver is that for their vocals all still sound more like their boyband era rather than their rock/art rock/psych rock/etc era. It's well, a great middle point for their career. Which it literally is, but still.
Mid Beatles best Beatles definitely
Their voices especially ringo's changed so drastically by the end of their careers. Ringo sounds like a chipper grandpa on Octopuses' Garden
honestly, i'm pretty liberal and believe in cultural appropriation in certain circumstances, but the idea of "bad" cultural appropriation in music seems dumb
the only way music advances is by artists copying other artists
Best era my friends
True this. And it's not like a lot of the stuff was simple assimilation either. Love You To for example, down to its song structure and the musical theory behind it, is more Indian than the average Bollywood track one can listen to today and Harrison also went so far as to getting actual Indians/Asians to do more on the track than the rest of The Beatles themselves.
It does seem that their later stuff just didn't do the vocal harmony stuff as much, just a little bit of the usual lead/backing stuff as well.
Who were The Beatles of the nineties? Nirvana? That's the only band I can think of that comes remotely close.
It's always a woman doing this shit.
John was right
Radiohead.
Please Please Me - Pablo Honey
Rubber Soul - The Bends
Revolver - OK Computer
Sgt Peppers - Kid A
Magical Mystery Tour - Amnesiac
White Album - In Rainbows
Yellow Submarine - The King Of Limbs
Let It Be - A Moon Shaped Pool
Not sure what the Beatles equivalent of Hail To The Thief would be, nor Radiohead's equivalent of Abbey Road.
ugh this is so crazy off base. i like radiohead and know their discography but they're not in the same league as the beatles. they took ideas from the beatles like karma police sounds like sexy sadie but those album comparisons are horrible
>Let It Be - A Moon Shaped Pool
>Yellow Submarine - King of Limbs
>White Album - In Rainbows
worst offenders right there i mean at least the kid a pepper and amnesiac mmt thing makes sense.
kid a pepper does not make any sense whatsoever sonically
maybe as the bands 'magnus opus' but that is about it
>Paul's melisma during the outro
George wasn't even the first to use the sitar, The Kinks beat him to it
Eleanor Rigby doesn't get mentioned enough in these threads. I know it's the second most famous track off the album but its still phenomenal. Plus the only Beatle track with a lyric contribution from each member.