Category Archives: List

The Beatles 40 best songs: at 25 “Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)”

norwegian_wood_ep
Australian EP

Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)” (also known as simply “Norwegian Wood“)  by The Beatles, mainly written by John Lennon, with the middle eight co-written with Paul McCartney, released on the 1965 album Rubber Soul. It was the first example of a rock band including a sitar in one of their songs, played by lead guitarist George Harrison.

 “George had just got the sitar and I said, ‘Could you play this piece?’ We went through many different sort of versions of the song, it was never right and I was getting very angry about it, it wasn’t coming out like I said. They said, ‘Just do it how you want to do it,’ and I said, ‘I just want to do it like this.’ They let me go and I did the guitar very loudly into the mike and sang it at the same time, and then George had the sitar and I asked him could he play the piece that I’d written, dee diddley dee diddley dee, that bit – and he was not sure whether he could play it yet because he hadn’t done much on the sitar but he was willing to have a go, as is his wont, and he learnt the bit and dubbed it on after. I think we did it in sections.”
– John Lennon (1970)

“… anyway, we were at the point where we’d recorded the Norwegian Wood backing track and it needed something. We would usually start looking through the cupboard to see if we could come up with something, a new sound, and I picked the sitar up – it was just lying around; I hadn’t really figured out what to do with it. It was quite spontaneous: I found the notes that played the lick. It fitted and it worked.”
– George Harrison (Anthology)

Continue reading The Beatles 40 best songs: at 25 “Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)”

Bob Dylan’s best albums – UPDATED

bob dylan album 1962 bob dylan freewheelin Dylan_The_Times_They_Are_A_Changin_front Bob_Dylan_-_Another_Side_Of_Bob_Dylan bob dylan bringing it all back home Bob_Dylan_-_Highway_61_Revisited
bobdylan-blondeonblonde-cover Bob Dyaln-john-wesley-harding bob dylan nashville skyline bobdylan-selfportrait-cover bob dylan new morning Bob Dylan - Pat Garret
Bob_Dylan-Planet_Waves-Frontal blood-on-the-tracks-album-cover Bob_Dylan-Desire-Frontal Bob-Dylan-Street-Legal Bob Dylan slow train bob dylan saved
Bob_Dylan-Shot_Of_Love-Frontal Infidels Bob Dylan - Empire Burlesque Knocked out loaded Bob Dylan - album-down-in-the-groove Bob_Dylan-Oh_Mercy-Frontal
bob dylan under the red sky album-good-as-i-been-to-you Bob_Dylan-World_Gone_Wrong-Frontal bob-dylan-time-out-of-mind-1997 Bob Dylan - love-and-theft bob dylan modern times 2006
Bob Dylan - Together_Through_Life bob_dylan_christmas_in_the_heart_20 COLUMBIA RECORDS BOB DYLAN ALBUM

UPDATED to include 22 lists from the comments section in this post.

The new votes caused some (minor) changes to the list. Most important: BIABH moved up to #4 & TOOM dropped to #5.

Saturday I asked the question – What are your five favorite Bob Dylan studio albums ? – over at our Facebook page. The response was great. As of writing 80 people (all Bob Dylan experts)  have uttered their opinions.
If you’re not on Facebook, or do not “like” our page.. you can use the comment section to post your 5 favorites. I will update this list at a later stage.

Continue reading Bob Dylan’s best albums – UPDATED

The Beatles 40 best songs: at 26 “If I fell”

if-i-fell2

“That’s my first attempt at a ballad proper….It shows that I wrote sentimental love ballads way back when”
– John Lennon (1980)

“People forget that John wrote some nice ballads, people tend to think of him as an acerbic wit and aggressive and abrasive, but he did have a very warm side to him, really, which he didn’t like to show too much in case he got rejected.”
– Paul McCartney

If I Fell”  by The Beatles  first appeared in 1964 on the album A Hard Day’s Night in the United Kingdom and on the North American album Something New. It was mainly written by John Lennon, and credited to Lennon–McCartney. 

Musically, it was one of Lennon’s cleverest songs to date: The harmonic tricks of its strummy, offbeat opening were miles beyond what other bands were doing at the time, and it was “dripping with chords,” as McCartney said. It also showcased some of the Beatles’ finest singing. Lennon and McCartney shared a single microphone for their Everly Brothers-like close harmonies.

“[‘If I Fell’] was the precursor to ‘In My Life,'” Lennon pointed out later. “It has the same chord sequences: D and B minor and E minor, those kind of things. It shows that I wrote sentimental love ballads, silly love songs, way back when.”

– Rolling Stone Magazine

…by the way, Rolling Stone Magazine rate the song at 26 of the hundred best Beatles songs.

Continue reading The Beatles 40 best songs: at 26 “If I fell”

The Beatles 40 best songs: at 27 “Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds”

John Julian

“A song like ‘Got to Get You Into My Life’, that’s directly about pot, although everyone missed it at the time … Day Tripper”, he says, “that’s one about acid. ‘Lucy in the Sky,’ that’s pretty obvious. There’s others that make subtle hints about drugs, but, you know, it’s easy to overestimate the influence of drugs on the Beatles’ music.”
– Paul McCartney (Weekly Standard, 2004)

The Beatles – Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds:

John Lennon: , lead guitar and vocals
Paul McCartney: backing vocals, Lowrey organ and bass
George Harrison: backing vocals, lead guitar, acoustic guitar and tambura
Ringo Starr: drums and maracas

The song has the distinction of being the first Beatles recording to be referenced by the group themselves: the second verse of Lennon’s “I Am the Walrus”, released on Magical Mystery Tour at the end of 1967, contains the lyric “see how they fly, like Lucy in the sky, see how they run…”

“Lucy…” was one of the fastest rehearsal/recordings for Sgt. Pepper.
Continue reading The Beatles 40 best songs: at 27 “Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds”

The Beatles 40 best songs: at 28 “Mother Nature’s Son”

paul mccartney

Paul [wrote this]. That was from a lecture of Maharishi where he was talking about nature, and I had a piece called “I’m just a child of nature,” which turned into “Jealous Guy” years later. Both inspired from the same lecture of Maharishi.
~John Lennon (September 1980, Playboy interviews)

Wikipedia:

Released 22 November 1968
Recorded 9 & 20 August 1968
Genre Folk
Length 2:48
Label Apple Records
Writer Lennon–McCartney
Producer George Martin

Continue reading The Beatles 40 best songs: at 28 “Mother Nature’s Son”