Revolver was the Beatles' ultimate peak of greatness and Sgt Pepper is when they began to disappear up their backsides
Revolver was the Beatles' ultimate peak of greatness and Sgt Pepper is when they began to disappear up their backsides
Rubber Soul 10/10
Revolver 10/10
Sgt Pepper 9/10
Magical Mystery Tour 9.5/10
White Album 9.5/10
Abbey Road 10/10
Prove me wrong
Knock all of those down a point and I'd agree for the most part
Rubber soul is a 7/10
Nobody cares, Beatles are nearly review-proof.
Can we talk about how Revolver has their best cover tho
Revolver is a very economical album, it covers so many different genres of music in just 35 minutes and does it with excellent production and playing. It's not hard to see why it's considered the Beatles' best album these days.
Yeah, just goes to show that the pop music world was diversifying so much in the 1960s - the Beatles could do every style of music in the pop world on ONE album in 1966 (Revolver), but by 1968 (White Album) it took them a double to do likewise.
Sgt pepper's was the beatles all time commercial peak. Revolver is imo underrated or in some cases overrated. But if I would say what was their peak album, I'd say either a hard days night or help. People loved their rock and roll music more than their later experimental work like Rubber Soul
THE
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Fun fact: No songs from Revolver were played on stage in concert during The Beatles' last world tour in 1966!
Whoa!
White Album and Abbey Road are their best
>disappear up their backsides
What do you mean?
>This is what Sup Forums has come to
You mean more accurate music criticism?
The fact that so many Americans still believe it should be illegal to marry a 12-year-old only tells you how far America still is from becoming a serious culture. The Europeans have long recognized that the greatest relationships of all times are between male adults and female adolescents, who are the most biologically fit to produce offspring, as well as the most physically attractive. Followers of the Muslim faith rank the highly controversial Aisha over all of their prophet Mohammed’s other wives, who were far past the prime age for reproduction. Americans are still blinded by puritan values. Adult females are more mentally developed than adolescents (not true, by the way), therefore they must be the greatest partners. Europeans engaged in relationships with adolescent European girls in the middle ages, radical Islamists engage in relationships with adolescent Muslim girls in the present. Americans are often totally ignorant of the virtues of relationships with adolescent girls, they barely know the biological benefits. No wonder they will think that sexual relations with 12-year-old girls should be criminalized.
If you drive a car, I'll tax the street,
If you try to sit, I'll tax your seat.
If you get too cold I'll tax the heat,
If you take a walk, I'll tax your feet
Sgt pepper should be 6
White should be 8
Good otherwise
Abbey Road will always be the best cover, it's just really bright and such a simple imagine that evokes so many thoughts
This song is yet another example of where another band did something better than the Beatles, as Sunny Afternoon covered this same topic and did it about 100x better
Holy shit
I hate that song though. Worst Kinks hit.
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Wew
Stop posting that eceleb trash
Rubber Soul 7/10
Revolver 9/10
Sgt Pepper 7/10
MMT 6/10
White Album 6/10
Abbey Road 8/10
I'm being very generous.
>White Album 6/10
White album is a solid 7
Too much shit. I know the point was to have a lot of very dissimilar songs, but they are definitely not all of equal quality. In fact, the vast majority of the songs are below their songwriting standards.
It's time to take the redpill, fuccbois.
Please Please Me (1963), 3/10
With The Beatles (1963), 3/10
Meet The Beatles (1964), 4/10
Hard Days' Night (1964), 5/10
For Sale (1964), 3/10
Help (1965), 3/10
Rubber Soul (1965), 5/10
Revolver (1966), 5/10
Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967), 7/10
Magical Mystery Tour (1967), 6/10
The Beatles (1968), 6/10
Yellow Submarine (1969), 5/10
Abbey Road (1969), 7/10
Let It Be (1970), 4/10
t. doesn't know music theory