It's not my favorite Beatles album ever, that is The White Album, but it is probably the most perfect album they ever did. Definitely the most cohesive and arguably the most consistent (although Revolver's got a pretty good case too.)
While it's been said by many that the whole "concept album" thing has been overstated and that the songs really don't have much to do with each other, I think that's missing the point entirely. I actually think the concept works best because it isn't forced (like it would be in some later concept albums by other bands.) The "concept" is really quite loose. It's just an imaginary band going through their set.
The effect works now and I can imagine it must have been even more effective back in 1967. This is a band that totally destroyed their prior "mop top" image. This is "art rock." This is something more than just a bunch of tunes to tap your toes to. It's something more.
What I enjoy so much about this album is how every song seems so necessary and vital to the whole of the album and every song flows so perfectly into the next despite the fact that the songs are all so incredibly different. Songs like "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" & "Within You Without You" & "When I'm 64" have very little in common with each other but somehow they all work together as one whole.
The album is truly a "trip" in that when I listen to it I feel as if I'm walking through some strange carnival, particularly during "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite" of course.
That's the big reason why I think it's a better album than Revolver. Yes Revolver's songs are just as brilliant, if not even more brilliant but it just doesn't have the same flow that Sgt. Pepper does. Revolver sounds like a collection of (amazing) songs. Sgt. Pepper is a trip that flows from one song to the next.
As the album grows with me over the years (I've been listening to it frequently for about 12 years now) it seems that many of the songs that were not originally among my favorites are now the ones that stand out for me the most. In particular "Getting Better" & "Fixing a Hole." Paul McCartney could truly do no wrong at this time. The music is incredible and it contains some of his best lyrics.
Of course I can't write this review of Sgt. Pepper without talking about the album closer, "A Day in the Life" which is the absolute greatest song of all time. I don't even have the slightest doubt in making that claim. How can an album that ends with "A Day in the Life" be overrated? I think it's a logical impossibility.
Sgt Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band
#1 "Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" is probably the "heaviest" song The Beatles had done to that point (although they would surpass it for sure in 1968 with songs such as "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" and of course "Helter Skelter.") But as usual with The Beatles, there is a lot more to the song than just that. Sure there are the heavy rhythm guitars and the Jimi Hendrix inspired guitar solos but there's also the horns and of course the crowd chatter and orchestral "tuning up" which really sets the mood for the song and the entire album.
#2 "With A Little Help From My Friends" may be one of the few Beatles songs where a cover version is more well known than their original. Joe Cocker's cover version was really seared into the public consciousness as it was used in the opening credits of The Wonder Years. While Cocker's version is cool (and totally different than The Beatles) I still greatly prefer this one.
#3 "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds" was one of the most overtly "psychedelic" songs The Beatles recorded. Everything about the song from it's imaginative lyrics to it's phased out sound is tripped out to the extreme.
#4 "Getting Better" is where I really start enjoying the album as an album. I must admit that the first 3 songs on this album have been played so many times and become so well known (by me and by most people I think) that I can't appreciate them the same way I do the rest of the album.
#5 "Fixing A Hole" contains some of Paul McCartney's greatest lyrics and some of his most imaginative music. This is one of the coolest Beatles songs that is not so well known (as much as any Beatles song is "not so well known" that is.)
#6 "She's Leaving Home" is a song the people tend to either hate or love. Except for me. I guess for me it's somewhere in between those extremes. I do enjoy it but I can see why people would find it a bit distasteful too. The song was actually not arranged by George Martin because he was not available so McCartney had Mike Leander help him instead. Another bit of trivia: The harp was played by a woman named Sheila Bromberg. She was the first female to appear on any Beatles recording.
#7 "Being For The Benefit Of Mr Kite!" is one of The Beatles most bizarre and surreal songs and for that I love it.
#8 "Within You Without You" is a song that has caused a fair share of arguments among Beatles fans over the years. Many think it doesn't fit with the other songs but I disagree. To me it's meditative center of the album. It's perfectly placed right in the middle.
#9 "When I'm 64" is another tune that people seem to like to fight about. Again, I love it. I get it. I know what McCartney was going for with songs like this (see "Honey Pie" and "Your Mother Should Know") and I totally dig it. It's important to realize how firmly his tongue is in his cheek with these tunes. That's not to say they are "joke" songs. No. And Ween is not a "joke" band either. That's not it at all. I guess it's one of those things you either get or you don't get. But if you are a fan of Ween then I definitely recommend taking a second listen to McCartney's Beatles stuff. I see it as the seed for Ween's approach.
#10 "Lovely Rita" is one of the songs I tend to always really enjoy when I listen to this album, I think that's partly because it's a song that's not included on any other Beatles release.
#11 "Good Morning Good Morning" is probably the song I had the hardest time getting into and if I had to choose my least favorite, it's probably this one. But that being said, I still like the song and enjoy listening to it which says a lot about how great I think this album is, doesn't it? Also the rooster sound morphing into the guitar sound at the end of the song is awesome.
#12 "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)" actually rocks harder than the opening track. It's like a looser funkier version and I always love hearing it. It's because it rocks and also because of the amazing song that I know is coming next.
#13 "A Day In The Life" is the greatest song ever. Pretty sweet way to end the album, eh?
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