Monday, July 20, 2009

John Lennon: 1968

By Jonathan Cott/November 23, 1968

I've listed a group of songs that I associate with you, in terms of what you are or what you were, songs that struck me as embodying you a little bit: "You've Got To Hide Your Love Away," "Strawberry Fields," "It's Only Love," "She Said She Said," "Lucy in the Sky," "I'm Only Sleeping," "Run for Your Life," "I Am the Walrus," "All You Need Is Love," "Rain," "Girl."

The ones that really meant something to me - look, I don't know about "Hide Your Love Away," that's so long ago - probably "Strawberry Fields," "She Said," "Walrus," "Rain," "Girl," there are just one or two others, "Day Tripper," "Paperback Writer," even. "Ticket To Ride" was one more, I remember that. It was a definite sort of change. "Norwegian Wood" - that was the sitar bit. Definitely, I consider them moods or moments.

There have been a lot of philosophical analyses written about your songs, "Strawberry Fields," in particular . . .

Well, they can take them apart. They can take anything apart. I mean, I hit it on all levels, you know. We write lyrics, and I write lyrics that you don't realize what they mean till after. Especially some of the better songs or some of the more flowing ones, like "Walrus." The whole first verse was written without any knowledge. And "Tomorrow Never Knows" - I didn't know what I was saying, and you just find out later. I know that when there are some lyrics I dig I know that somewhere people will be looking at them. And I dig the people that notice that I have a sort of strange rhythm scene, because I've never been able to keep rhythm on the stage. I always used to get lost. It's me double off-beats.

What is Strawberry Fields?

It's a name, it's a nice name. When I was writing "In My Life," - I was trying "Penny Lane" at that time - we were trying to write about Liverpool, and I just listed all the nice-sounding names, just arbitrarily. Strawberry Fields was a place near us that happened to be a Salvation Army home. But Strawberry Fields - I mean, I have visions of Strawberry Fields. And there was Penny Lane, and the Cast Iron Shore, which I've just got in some song now, and they were just good names - just groovy names. Just good sounding. Because Strawberry Fields is anywhere you want to go.

Pop analysts are often trying to read something into songs that isn't there.

It is there. It's like abstract art really. It's just the same really. It's just that when you have to think about it to write it, it just means that you labored at it. But when you just say it, man, you know you're saying it, it's a continuous flow. The same as when you're recording or just playing. You come out of a thing and you know "I've been there," and it was nothing, it was just pure, and that's what we're looking for all the time, really.

How much do you think the songs go toward building up a myth of a state of mind?

I don't know. I mean, we got a bit pretentious. Like everybody, we had our phase and now it's a little change over to trying to be more natural, less "newspaper taxis," say. I mean, we're just changing. I don't know what we're doing at all, I just write them. Really, I just like rock & roll. I mean, these [pointing to a pile of Fifties records] are the records I dug then, I dig them now and I'm still trying to reproduce "Some Other Guy" sometimes or "Be-Bop-A-Lula." Whatever it is, it's the same bit for me. It's really just the sound.

The Beatles seem to be one of the only groups who ever made a distinction between friends and lovers. For instance, there's "baby" who can drive your car. But when it comes to "We Can Work It Out," you talk about "my friend." In most other groups' songs, calling someone "baby" is a bit demeaning compared to your distinction.

Yeah, I don't know why. It's Paul's bit that - "Buy you a diamond ring, my friend" - it's an alternative to baby. You can take it logically, the way you took it. See, I don't know really. Yours is as true a way of looking at it as any other way. In "Baby, You're a Rich Man" the point was, stop moaning. You're a rich man and we're all rich men, heh, heh, baby!

I've felt your other mood recently: "Here I stand, head in hand" in "Hide Your Love Away" and "When I was a boy, everything was right" in "She Said She Said."

Yeah, right. That was pure. That was what I meant all right. You see, when I wrote that I had the "She said she said," but it was just meaning nothing. It was just vaguely to do with someone who had said something like he knew what it was like to be dead, and then it was just a sound. And then I wanted a middle-eight. The beginning had been around for days and days and so I wrote the first thing that came into my head and it was "When I was a boy," in a different beat, but it was real because it just happened.
It's funny, because while we're recording we're all aware and listening to our old records and we say, we'll do one like "The Word" - make it like that. It never does turn out like that, but we're always comparing and talking about the old albums - just checking up, what is it? like swatting up for the exam - just listening to everything.

Yet people think you're trying to get away from the old records.

But I'd like to make a record like "Some Other Guy." I haven't done one that satisfies me as much as that satisfied me. Or "Be-Bop-A-Lula" or "Heartbreak Hotel" or "Good Golly, Miss Molly" or "Whole Lot of Shakin'." I'm not being modest. I mean, we're still trying it. We sit there in the studio and we say, "How did it go, how did it go? Come on, let's do that." Like what Fats Domino has done with "Lady Madonna" - "See how they ruhhnnn."

Sunday, July 19, 2009

"Glass Onion" Lyrics

by John Lennon and Paul McCartney

As Released by the Beatles (1968)

I told you about Strawberry Fields
You know the place where nothing is real
Well here's another place you can go
Where everything flows
Looking through the bent-backed tulips
To see how the other half live
Looking through a glass onion.

I told you about the walrus and me - man
You know that we're as close as can be - man
Well here's another clue for you all:
The walrus was Paul
Standing on the cast-iron shore - yeah
Lady Madonna trying to make ends meet - yeah
Looking through a glass onion.

Oh yeah, oh yeah, oh yeah! (yeah)
Looking through a glass onion.

I told you about the fool on the hill
I tell you man he living there still
Well here's another place you can be
Listen to me
Fixing a hole in the ocean
Trying to make a dove-tail joint - yeah
Looking through a glass onion.

"Hot as Sun"

"Hot as Sun" is an instrumental penned by Paul McCartney and included on his 1970 album McCartney coupled with the non-song "Glasses" (which also contained a snippet of "Suicide," another unreleased Paul McCartney tune). In that album's press release, Paul informs us that it was a "song written in about 1958 or 59 or maybe earlier, when it was one of those songs that you play now and then." The Beatles performed the song live from 1957 to 1959. They also resurrected the song during the Let It Be sessions (released on bootlegs) in January 1969. Paul later performed the song live with Wings in December 1979.

In 1978, "Hot as Sun / Glasses" was used as the theme tune to The All-New Popeye Hour. The original track was sped up, played at 45 rpm.

Tim Rice later added lyrics to the tune and it was issued as a single in July 1982 by Noosha Fox and also included on the Elaine Paige album of the same title in November 1982 (although the sleeve notes on Elaine's LP claimed that Paul had written the number specially for her).

In a fictional short story which appeared in Rolling Stone magazine around the time of the Beatles' breakup, "Hot as Sun" was a lost Beatles album, unreleased due to the theft of its master tapes.



Beatle People: Barbara Bach

Barbara Bach (born August 27, 1947) is an American actress and model best-known as the Bond girl from the James Bond movie The Spy Who Loved Me (1977). She is married to musician Ringo Starr, former drummer of The Beatles.

Early life

Bach was born Barbara Goldbach in Queens, New York City, New York, the daughter of Marjorie and Howard Goldbach, a policeman. She was the oldest of five children. Her father was Austrian Jewish and her mother was Irish Catholic, and she attended a Catholic high school, Dominican Commercial in Jamaica, Queens Bach left school at sixteen to become a model, quickly rising to the ranks of top models.

Career

In 1971, Bach co-starred with two other Bond girls, Claudine Auger and Barbara Bouchet in the mystery La Tarantola dal ventre nero giallo and had small roles in other Italian films.

In 1977, her role as the Russian spy Anya Amasova in The Spy Who Loved Me gained her recognition as an international sex symbol. Although her character Anya is seen as the first Bond girl who is an equal to Bond, since she is also an experienced spy, Bach still walked away from the film saying that Bond is a "a chauvinist pig who uses girls to shield him against bullets." The following year she appeared in the movie Force 10 from Navarone. She did lose a role to actress Shelley Hack when she auditioned for the television series Charlie's Angels. Bach has 28 films to her credit, although she has not worked as an actress since the mid-1980s.

Personal life

Bach met Italian businessman Augusto Gregorini on a flight to Rome in 1966. They were married in 1968 and moved to Italy where they had a daughter, singer-songwriter Francesca Gregorini (born August 7, 1968) and a son Gianni (born in 1972). In 1975, Bach separated from Gregorini and moved back to the United States with her two children.

Bach met Ringo Starr on the set of the film Caveman in February 1980, and they were married on April 27, 1981, a few weeks after the film's release. Bach in recent years has accompanied Starr on his tours. Bach has appeared on some of Ringo's music videos, and played on some of his songs.

Bach holds a Master's Degree (UCLA, 1993) in Psychology. She started the Self Help Addiction Recovery Program (S.H.A.R.P.) with the help of George Harrison, Eric Clapton and Patti Boyd, who was a former wife of both Harrison and Clapton. Bach and Starr created The Lotus Foundation, a charity with many sub-charities.

Filmography
  • L'Odissea (a.k.a. The Adventures of Ulysses) (1968)
  • Mio padre Monsignore (1971)
  • La Tarantola dal ventre nero (a.k.a. Black Belly of the Tarantula) (1971)
  • La Corta notte delle bambole di vetro (a.k.a. Paralyzed / Short Night of Glass Dolls) (1971)
  • Un peu de soleil dans l'eau froide (a.k.a. A Few Hours of Sunlight / A Little Sun in Cold Water) (1971)
  • I Predatori si muovono all'alba (1972)
  • Paolo il caldo (a.k.a. The Sensual Man / The Sensuous Sicilian) (1973)
  • Il Maschio ruspante (1973)
  • L' Ultima chance (a.k.a. Last Chance / Motel of Fear) (1973)
  • Il Cittadino si ribella (a.k.a. Street Law / The Citizen Rebels) (1974)
  • Il Lupo dei mari (a.k.a. Legend of the Sea Wolf / Larsen, Wolf of the Seven Seas) (1975)
  • Ecco noi per esempio (1977)
  • The Spy Who Loved Me (1977)
  • Force 10 from Navarone (1978)
  • L'Isola degli uomini pesce (a.k.a. The Island of the Fishmen / Island of Mutations / Screamers) (1979)
  • L'Umanoide (a.k.a. The Humanoid) (1979)
  • Jaguar Lives (1979)
  • Il Fiume del grande caimano (a.k.a. Alligators / The Big Alligator River / The Great Alligator) (1979)
  • Up the Academy (1980)
  • Caveman (1981)
  • The Unseen (1981)
  • The Cooler (1982)
  • Give My Regards to Broad Street (1984)
  • To the North of Katmandu (1986)
Wikipedia

Saturday, July 18, 2009

April 15, 1964 - A Degree of Frost

Taped: Wednesday 15 April 1964
Aired: Wednesday 18 May 1964

On April 15, 1964, Paul McCartney was interviewed by David Frost for a BBC1 television show, A Degree Of Frost.

"And Your Bird Can Sing" Lyrics

by John Lennon and Paul McCartney

Original Manuscript, "You Don't Get Me" (1966)

You tell me that you've got everything you want
And your bird can sing
But you don't get me
You say you've seen 7 wonders
And your bird is green
But you can't see me

When your prized possessions start
to weigh you down
look in the my direction
I'll be 'round, I'll be 'round.

You tell me that you've heard every sound
there is
And your bird can swing
But you can't hear me

When your bird is broken
and will it bring you down
you may be awoken
I'll be 'round, I'll be 'round.

Paul McCartney



As Released by the Beatles (1966)

You tell me that you've got everything you want
And your bird can sing
But you don't get me, you don't get me.

You say you've seen seven wonders
And your bird is green
But you can't see me, you can't see me.

When your prized possessions start to weigh you down
Look in my direction
I'll be round, I'll be round.

When your bird is broken will it bring you down?
You may be awoken
I'll be round, I'll be round.

You tell me that you've heard every sound there is
And your bird can swing
But you can't hear me, you can't hear me.

The Quarry-Men - The Dawn of Modern Rock

Label: Pilz 449830-2
Year: 1993

1. Hallelujah, I Love Her So (2:23)
2. The One After 909 (2:29)
3. I'll Always Be In Love With You (2:22)
4. You'll Always Be Mine (1:46)
5. Matchbox (1:02)
6. You Just Don't Understand (2:30)
7. Somedays (1:37)
8. Thinking Of Linking (instrumental) (2:32)
9. I'll Follow The Sun (1:49)
10. The One After 909 (1:32)
11. Hey Darling (3:23)
12. You Must Lie Everyday (2:34)
13. Guitar Bop (instrumental) (2:20)
14. That's When Your Heartaches Begin (1:19)
15. Hello Little Girl (1:55)
16. That'll Be The Day (0:45)

Historical Collectors Series
Limited Edition
Rehearsal Demo Recorded
April 1960