People - USA - The Beatles 1969 (2019)

(Antfer) #1
side one

TRACK ONE



  • WRITTEN BY: Lennon

  • LEAD VOCAL: Lennon
    When psychologist and LSD advocate
    Timothy Leary (above) asked pal John
    Lennon to write a campaign song for
    his 1970 California governor’s run, the
    slogan he wanted set to music was “Come
    Together, Join the Party.” The campaign
    ended with Leary’s pot-possession arrest,
    but Lennon kept part of the line, which
    appealed both to his peace-and-love
    sensibility and his appreciation of double
    entendres. (The song was banned by
    the BBC but not for the reason you’d
    think: A mention of Coca-Cola in the
    lyrics violated a no-advertising rule. )
    The song’s eerie signature opening begins
    with Lennon’s voice hissing “Shoot me,”
    the second word muffled by his own
    dramatic handclap. Paul McCartney
    contributed the “swampy” piano and
    prominent bass line. Decades later, when
    the Beatles catalog was at last legally
    streaming online , “Come Together” was
    the most-listened-to song in the first
    48 hours, with 1.8 million streams.


TRACK TWO



  • WRITTEN BY: Harrison

  • LEAD VOCAL: Harrison
    The first Harrison song released
    as the “A side” of a Beatles single,
    “Something” heralded the full
    flowering of the youngest band
    member’s songwriting talent.
    Harrison would coyly claim that he
    wrote this much-covered classic
    with Ray Charles in mind. The
    Genius of Soul would sing his own
    version and so would more than
    150 other artists, from Elvis Presley
    to Peggy Lee, making this second
    only to McCartney’s Yesterday
    as the most interpreted in the
    Beatles canon. Frank Sinatra called
    it the “greatest love song of the
    past 50 years.” (Sinatra knew love


songs but lagged in his Beatles
knowledge; when he performed
“Something” in concert, he often
introduced it as one of Lennon
and McCartney’s best). But real
fans knew the truth, just as they
knew the identity of the muse who
inspired Harrison: his then-wife,
Pattie Boyd. More than a year later
Harrison’s friend Eric Clapton
came out with a song, “Layla,” also
evidently inspired by Boyd, for
whom he had fallen. With trouble
in the marriage, Pattie left George
for Eric and later wrote about
those heady days in a memoir,
Wonderful Tonight. So which song
was her favorite? “I dearly love all
of them.” Boyd diplomatically told
People in 2007. “I just feel that
they’re part of my growing up.”

58 THE BEATLES 1969 PEOPLE

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