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The Beatles
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Brian Epstein Bob Wooler and My Bonnie by the Beatles Pride in his ability Decca, Brian Poole and the Tremeloes Stu Sutcliffe dies
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George Martin and the Parlophone June 1962, Beatles audition Pete Best Richard Starkey and Ringo
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The Heroes of Liverpool Radio, television and tour appearances
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Beatlemania—American Style Real Rock ‘n’ Roll was not exclusively American music Ed Sullivan
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I Want to Hold Your Hand Recorded in October 1963 Opening a compendium of 50s Rock and Roll First two musical phrases demonstrate this
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Beatlemania—American Style Mass popularity in America Top 5 April 4, 1964 International popularity Lifestyle Drugs Third tour to the United States
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The Middle Period: Experimentation
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Yesterday Written January 1964 but recorded June 1965 Pre-rock pop song Melody develops from a short, simple riff Six sections in AABABA pattern 32-measure AABA form
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Yesterday McCartney’s singing Simple acoustic guitar accompaniment outlines a delicate eight-beat rhythm String accompaniment updated Gone is the nuclear rock band of 2 guitars, bass and drums Stronger connection between words and music
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Rubber Soul Drive My Car
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Cinematic Sexual tension Humorous possibility Accompaniment shows collaboration McCartney, all the details in place
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Rubber Soul Drive My Car Otis Redding’s Respect No rhythm guitar Only chorus has solid chords (heard on piano) Sounds like soul music
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Yesterday and Today
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Revolver Eleanor Rigby
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Unprecedented topic Broke sharply with pop song conventions Detached delivery Time passes, without apparent purpose
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Revolver Eleanor Rigby Musical setting as bleak as the words String octet (four violins, two violas, two cellos) String sound is sparse
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Revolver Eleanor Rigby Chord progressions emulate rock accompaniment Static melody and harmony Repetitive rhythm of accompaniment
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Revolver Eleanor Rigby Pop becoming Art? Classical-style string accompaniment Comparable to Schubert’s art songs
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Penny Lane and Strawberry Fields
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The Later Beatles: Revolution
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Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
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Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds Verse creates dreamy state Lyrics contain numerous psychedelic images (marmalade skies) Music floats in waltz time
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Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds Impression of a person in the middle of an acid trip Chorus is straight-ahead Rock and Roll Conveys normalcy
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A Day in the Life Mundane vs. elevated consciousness Music with words vs. instrumental
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A Day in the Life Four Scenes 1.Lennon’s response to a man who dies in his car while, Lennon suspects, he was tripping 2.Lennon attending a film 3.Lennon in modern life—work is mundane and competitive 4.Lennon’s commentary on counting potholes
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A Day in the Life Starts with soloist and guitar Other instruments layer Juxtaposed to massive orchestral block of sound Echoes of Pendercki’s Threnody for Victims of Hiroshima (1960)
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A Day in the Life Well-known vs. obscure music Tasteful drumming: inventive bass lines Doubling of the tempo in the “Woke up” section Trills on “Laugh” and “photograph” Transition to the acid trip
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A Day in the Life Melodic leap followed by trill blends seamlessly into orchestral texture Final chord An “OM” Striking ending
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The White Album
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Abbey Road
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The “Death” of Paul and the Beatles Break-Up Back masking The Paul-is-Dead hoax By 1970, it was clear that the Beatles were each going separate ways
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Summary Their influence on the music is undeniable Other influences Hard mainstream rock, avant-garde rock, psychedelic rock, symphonic rock, and light-hearted rock
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Summary No longer was Rock simply fun music; it was serious Four directions John Lennon in the 1970s Superstitions Beatlemania end?
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