Every single Beatles album is worth listening to, but this makes sense as a place to start. It's the bridge between their earlier "pop" sound and the more experimental stuff that came after. Hope you keep going, as the next album chronologically is Revolver, my personal favorite.
Norwegian Wood, Girl, Michelle, and In My Life are some of my all time favorite Beatles songs. In My Life is such a gut punch. It still brings me to tears when I listen to it. It's just a beautiful song. God Only Knows by The Beach Boys is one of the few other 60's songs that really hit you right in the heart. Michelle is such a lovely song. Paul McCartney has always been my favorite vocalist from the band, but all of them can sing.
from here on forth every album has a remix (Revolver 2022 mix, Sgt Pepper's 2017 mix, White Album 2018 mix, Abbey Road 2019 mix, Let it Be 2021 mix) and a big reminder that the B side to Abbey Road is one big medley!!!!!! which means it should be played all in a row
The reason people suggested this is probably because this is the album where they started to transition from the more standard songs to alot more experimental things like the sitar, and tape manipulation techniques. You should listen to Revovler as its the album where they truly started to innovate and change the music industry forever
Awesome to see you get into the Beatles! I got into them earlier this year, and its interesting seeing you start here. I began with their debut in January and did one per month after that. I didn’t get around to this until June and it's definitely the perfect blend of who they are 5 albums before and where they are going Revolver on. Great reaction, even with the copyright 😅
They are short because that was the standard in order to get on the radio. The Beatles broke that rule in 1968 with 'Hey Jude'. They were warned that it wouldn't get played on the radio. Paul responded something along the lines with, 'If it's use, they will'.
@@jnagarya519 I don't believe I ever heard the whole version on AM radio back then. Good song though. I did hear 'Hey Jude' in it's entirety but they packed the half-hour with commercials before and after. Thanks for the info.
It's important to note (for context) that at this time the Beatles weren't putting the singles on their albums, because they didn't want to take advantage of hardcore fans who would buy both (singles and albums) regardless. The single served as a preview for the upcoming album. "We Can Work it Out"/"Day Tripper" was the single that was recorded during these sessions and (in my mind) can be considered as a part of the Rubber Soul album.
Definitely the best place to start with the Beatles. From here it's best to just continue chronologically, Revolver is the perfect companion to this record and is considered one of their best It's also worth noting that Rubber Soul is considered the Beatles "pot album" while revolver is considered their "LSD album"
The best place to start is with their first, and follow along chronologically. It's how one shows respect and stops listening to others about what to listen to and what to ignore. What you ignore you know nothing about -- including whether you shouldn't listen to it.
Love this album I'll stop adding recs for now since there's sooo many already but here's the recs: Quasi - Featuring "Birds" (Awesome Built to Spill-esque/Pacific Northwest indie rock, same label as Modest Mouse, Built to Spill, Duster etc) The Breeders - Pod (Unique early 90s alt rock, Steve Albini prod, was in Kurt Cobain's top 3 albums of all time) Slint - Tweez (Sick late 80s post-hardcore/math rock, also Steve Albini prod) Pinback - Pinback (Very chill and creative late 90s indie rock) Modest Mouse - This Is a Long Drive for Someone with Nothing to Think About (Amazing album, very nearly as good as The Lonesome Crowded West) Crystal Castles - Crystal Castles (Insanely badass aura filled production and vocals, extremely unique) Weezer - Pinkerton (Some of the nicest sounding guitar/drums/everything you'll hear in 90s alt rock, with crazy honest lyrics, ended up inspiring some emo bands) The Prodigy - The Fat Of The Land (badass big-beat dance music) Guided By Voices - Bee Thousand (lovely 90's lo-fi) Hella - Hold Your Horse Is (Math Rock with the drummer from Death Grips, before he was in Death Grips) Pavement - Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain (Absolutely perfect 90's indie rock album)
"It's easy to tell that it's from the 60s" Just wait for their next albums like Revolver, Sgt. Pepper, the white album... a lot of songs that sound super experimental and ahead of their time.
As far as this not being long enough, the non-album single "We Can Work It Out"/"Day Tripper" was recorded at the same sessions, so if you listen to this album and want to hear more, you can listen to those 2 songs. Their next album , Revolver, was one of their very best albums, so I recommend you listen to that next, to follow the chronology and also have a great listening experience. Some are talking down their early stuff, but I love their early stuff too. It's exciting, joyful, and tuneful. A Hard Day's night is the best of their early albums. (I consider Rubber Soul middle period Beatles.) Since you liked the guitar in "If I Needed Someone", you should check out the Byrds, who influenced that record. They're best know for "Mr. Tambourine Man" and "Turn! Turn! Turn!", but they have many more fine songs besides those two.
After this album, it's all bangers after bangers. Revolver->Sgt Peppers->White Album->Abbey Road All these are atleast a 9 out of 10. (Especially The White Album and Abbey Road. They don't sound dated at all. That's because these are some of the albums that really revolutionized modern recording and production.
The problem with Magical Mystery Tour is that it's not a main timeline/canon Beatles album. It was just the film soundtrack, but in America Capitol arbitrarily decided to add Penny Lane and Strawberry Fields (and a few others) and call it an album. John was vocal about it at the time, and spoke for all the Beatles on the subject.
Worth noting as well that they often didn’t put the singles on the albums, which they really should have for this one, as it’s so short. Day Tripper and We Can Work It Out came from these sessions and are great too.
Imo the first record and help are worth hearing, hard days night too maybe, good to get some context of where they started and where music was at the time before getting into their masterpieces
LOVE YOUR VIDEOS MY GUY a few recommendations: SMILE :D - Porter Robinson (pop-punk, pop, electronic) Process - Sampha (experimental r&b, great production) Koi No Yokan - Deftones (very heavy, sexier and heavier radiohead imo) Hypochondriac - Brakence (very experimental emo rap, glitch pop) Reading Writing And Arithmetic - The Sundays (the smiths ish, with beautiful female vocals)
Hey smags, loving the videos, keep it up. I would love to recommend a brilliant britpop album by a band called James, album is called laid, it's a banger, saw them live in the o2 and was blown away. also an album by future islands called in evening air which is also a banger. again loving your reactions to songs, i now love fka twigs magdalene cus of your channel, home with you is just wow.
I think for more beatles you should do Revolver, not only is it their next one chronologically but in my opinion its their best although Abbey Road is fierce competition
This is probably my favourite Beatles album although there a couple I haven't heard all the way through yet. You should check out something by the Kinks, my personal favourite is "Arthur or the Decline and Fall of the British Empire".
It took a few decades, but In My Life is now many people's favourite Beatles song. It feels so ahead of its time. Compare to the meaningless dirge of 'Yesterday'
THE BEATLES!!! YEEEAAAHHH!!! I love this album. When I first heard it, it really became an obsessiond of mine. I kind of agree with that chat members comment that their music is so influential that it becomes uninteresting, because I got into them before anything else I love like King Gizzard or Animal Collective and I adored them, but now that I've heard more experimental music that expands the ideas they pioneered way more, it's not as interesting to me. Still really good though. I'm assuming the next album you'll do from them is Revolver. If so, please avoid the 2009 remaster like the plague. The Beatles intended everything they made up until their self titled to be in mono, and 2 of their albums have the mono mix available on streaming, so for Revolver and Sgt. Pepper listen to the mono versions if you can, as they have certain aspects that the stereo versions do not. The new remaster of Sgt. Pepper is really good though.
The new mixes they’ve been doing really make these recordings feel more timeless. The early stereo mixes from the 60s where they just went “yo what if we put the drums on the left” have not aged well. Also, the Beatles weren’t really involved with those for the earlier albums. They oversaw the mono mixes, but not the stereo ones
I hope they redo the mixing on these songs like they did with Revlover, Sgt Peppers, Abbey Road etc. Cuz these 2009 remasters sound horrendous, Every time I want to listen to the whole album I have to set my audio to mono before, though the hits have been remixed so thats good
All songs in the early sixties had to be under 3 minutes to get air play on radio at the time. The Beatles broke through first with longer tracks on their next album.
This album did not inspire Pet Sounds on any kind of musical level - it was about the idea of an album being a complete work instead of a collection of hits. *That* is what inspired Pet Sounds but the actual music is mostly influenced by jazz and classical, BurtBacharach, George Gershwin, etc.
Albums that weren’t hit collections had been around for quite some time. It was rather the quality of every song that impressed Brian. No filler in his opinion, no odd cover, just a solid body of original work which functions as a whole piece. It also pushed boundaries that hadn’t really been pushed before, especially by including non-traditional instruments in a rock’n’roll context. “Pet Sounds” would take this concept way further.
@@Nerkin610 In pop, albums were mostly collections of singles and weren’t thought of as artistic formats in and of themselves; this changed with Rubber Soul
@@timcardona9962 On the American market, The Beatle albums were strongly modified to the point where they indeed resembled collections of the British material. Rubber Soul was modified too, but less than usual, and in a way that according to many favoured its cohesion. It’s true that Wilson was struck by that cohesion. However, this is more a result of the American industry at the time; in Britain the albums were generally separated from the singles since selling the same songs twice was seen as scamming the audience. With a couple exceptions, all original Beatles albums had exclusive non-album singles only, or at least an equal amount of album singles and non-album singles. People may not have thought of the album as a whole art form before ‘65-‘66, but the concept of albums as complete works separated from the hit singles existed.
Refreshing to note that you DO display a hint of skepticism about the greatness of The Beatles, as most reviewers are hesitant to criticize them at all out of fear from their fans. I've been a fanatic fan in the past and am now just starting to look at the band in a little more of detached manner. I saw them twice, once in 1964 and the second time in 1966, I believe. They ARE the best selling musical artists of all time: THAT cannot be disputed, during 1 week, holding the top five songs on the Billboard magazine top 100 list. They, along with Bob Dylan, I would say, were the greatest influence on popular music during the early to late 1960's. The consistency of The Beatles' albums and the quality of their songs up until their last recorded album, "Abbey Road," it is hard to dispute, is amazing. Many consider, even, that "Abbey Road" IS The Beatles' greatest album, which is not usually the case with bands, their last album being their best.
Here before copyright strike
Nah we so good now
@@smags1082 👍
Also can we get a reaction to Acid Bath - When the kite string pops
Iconic sludge metal grunge album
Brother skipped the entirety of my favourite song on my album @@smags1082
Smags Beatles era yessir!!! Revolver next fs after rubber soul!
Every single Beatles album is worth listening to, but this makes sense as a place to start. It's the bridge between their earlier "pop" sound and the more experimental stuff that came after. Hope you keep going, as the next album chronologically is Revolver, my personal favorite.
If you're going down the Beatles rabbit hole you have to start at the beginning. Only way to see the evolution of their musical progression.
Finally you've done it. Rubber Soul is like my most listened Beatles album.
I couldn’t tell
you don't say
I think this guy might like Rubber Soul...
No I don't believe you
No shit
SMAGS BEATLES ERA?! i was not expecting this at all but hell yes. rubber soul is my favorite beatles album!!!
My pants were NOT prepared for this
yea they shidded rn
theyre never prepared for a new smags video
Norwegian Wood, Girl, Michelle, and In My Life are some of my all time favorite Beatles songs. In My Life is such a gut punch. It still brings me to tears when I listen to it. It's just a beautiful song. God Only Knows by The Beach Boys is one of the few other 60's songs that really hit you right in the heart. Michelle is such a lovely song. Paul McCartney has always been my favorite vocalist from the band, but all of them can sing.
MORE BEATLES PLEASE (if it’s possible) 🙏
from here on forth every album has a remix (Revolver 2022 mix, Sgt Pepper's 2017 mix, White Album 2018 mix, Abbey Road 2019 mix, Let it Be 2021 mix) and a big reminder that the B side to Abbey Road is one big medley!!!!!! which means it should be played all in a row
Good job. Your children will not go hungry today
D’Angelo - Voodoo
Broken Social Scene - YFIIP
I’ll cosign these recs
The reason people suggested this is probably because this is the album where they started to transition from the more standard songs to alot more experimental things like the sitar, and tape manipulation techniques. You should listen to Revovler as its the album where they truly started to innovate and change the music industry forever
I’m waiting for “The Village Green preservation society” reaction
Yees, the golden run of the kinks would be so good
Hell yes
PLEASE such a masterpiece
Awesome to see you get into the Beatles! I got into them earlier this year, and its interesting seeing you start here. I began with their debut in January and did one per month after that. I didn’t get around to this until June and it's definitely the perfect blend of who they are 5 albums before and where they are going Revolver on. Great reaction, even with the copyright 😅
Happy to see smags finally get to the Beatles, seems crazy that it took so long
The next one revolver is one of their best and the best of the 60s
They are short because that was the standard in order to get on the radio. The Beatles broke that rule in 1968 with 'Hey Jude'. They were warned that it wouldn't get played on the radio. Paul responded something along the lines with, 'If it's use, they will'.
Dylan broke the rule with "Like a Rolling Stone" in 1965.
It got stopped at #2 by "Help!" at #1.
It was actually John that said that.
@@jnagarya519 I don't believe I ever heard the whole version on AM radio back then. Good song though.
I did hear 'Hey Jude' in it's entirety but they packed the half-hour with commercials before and after.
Thanks for the info.
@@robphilpott43 You are right. According to George Martin, John said it. I stand corrected.
Respect for editing a Beatles reaction
It's important to note (for context) that at this time the Beatles weren't putting the singles on their albums, because they didn't want to take advantage of hardcore fans who would buy both (singles and albums) regardless. The single served as a preview for the upcoming album. "We Can Work it Out"/"Day Tripper" was the single that was recorded during these sessions and (in my mind) can be considered as a part of the Rubber Soul album.
This dude just totally edging me on that drum fill for In My Life🤣
This is the definition of a perfect album.
Definitely the best place to start with the Beatles. From here it's best to just continue chronologically, Revolver is the perfect companion to this record and is considered one of their best
It's also worth noting that Rubber Soul is considered the Beatles "pot album" while revolver is considered their "LSD album"
The best place to start is with their first, and follow along chronologically. It's how one shows respect and stops listening to others about what to listen to and what to ignore.
What you ignore you know nothing about -- including whether you shouldn't listen to it.
HE DON'T MISS
you should try Revolver
Excellent video. I can't wait for you to check out what comes next. The sound really evolves to the point it does sound more modern.
Love this album
I'll stop adding recs for now since there's sooo many already but here's the recs:
Quasi - Featuring "Birds" (Awesome Built to Spill-esque/Pacific Northwest indie rock, same label as Modest Mouse, Built to Spill, Duster etc)
The Breeders - Pod (Unique early 90s alt rock, Steve Albini prod, was in Kurt Cobain's top 3 albums of all time)
Slint - Tweez (Sick late 80s post-hardcore/math rock, also Steve Albini prod)
Pinback - Pinback (Very chill and creative late 90s indie rock)
Modest Mouse - This Is a Long Drive for Someone with Nothing to Think About (Amazing album, very nearly as good as The Lonesome Crowded West)
Crystal Castles - Crystal Castles (Insanely badass aura filled production and vocals, extremely unique)
Weezer - Pinkerton (Some of the nicest sounding guitar/drums/everything you'll hear in 90s alt rock, with crazy honest lyrics, ended up inspiring some emo bands)
The Prodigy - The Fat Of The Land (badass big-beat dance music)
Guided By Voices - Bee Thousand (lovely 90's lo-fi)
Hella - Hold Your Horse Is (Math Rock with the drummer from Death Grips, before he was in Death Grips)
Pavement - Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain (Absolutely perfect 90's indie rock album)
Rare quasi mention
Yes!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Here is THE START!!! I love all the previous albums, but here is when they started to blow all the world
"It's easy to tell that it's from the 60s" Just wait for their next albums like Revolver, Sgt. Pepper, the white album... a lot of songs that sound super experimental and ahead of their time.
As far as this not being long enough, the non-album single "We Can Work It Out"/"Day Tripper" was recorded at the same sessions, so if you listen to this album and want to hear more, you can listen to those 2 songs. Their next album , Revolver, was one of their very best albums, so I recommend you listen to that next, to follow the chronology and also have a great listening experience. Some are talking down their early stuff, but I love their early stuff too. It's exciting, joyful, and tuneful. A Hard Day's night is the best of their early albums. (I consider Rubber Soul middle period Beatles.) Since you liked the guitar in "If I Needed Someone", you should check out the Byrds, who influenced that record. They're best know for "Mr. Tambourine Man" and "Turn! Turn! Turn!", but they have many more fine songs besides those two.
After this album, it's all bangers after bangers.
Revolver->Sgt Peppers->White Album->Abbey Road
All these are atleast a 9 out of 10. (Especially The White Album and Abbey Road. They don't sound dated at all. That's because these are some of the albums that really revolutionized modern recording and production.
Skipping Magical Mystery Tour and Let It Be would be a crime 🚨
You gotta include Magical Mystery Tour. I don't think a Beatles marathon is complete without Strawberry Fields and Penny Lane.
The problem with Magical Mystery Tour is that it's not a main timeline/canon Beatles album. It was just the film soundtrack, but in America Capitol arbitrarily decided to add Penny Lane and Strawberry Fields (and a few others) and call it an album. John was vocal about it at the time, and spoke for all the Beatles on the subject.
@@vurogj That's true, but I still think there's so much good stuff on there that it warrants its own reaction.
@@vurogj Capitol was right, John was wrong. There, problem solved
Worth noting as well that they often didn’t put the singles on the albums, which they really should have for this one, as it’s so short. Day Tripper and We Can Work It Out came from these sessions and are great too.
MORE BEATLES
Steve hiett down on the road by the beach album would be so amazing for summer. its such an incredible ambient pop record
You have to do the full Revolver album now. In terms of sound and songwriting, it's a quantum leap from Rubber Soul.
I NEED you to listen to Revolver after this, it won't disappoint
That instrument in Norwegian wood is a sitar.
definetly do more beatles! more 60s and 70s in general
Imo the first record and help are worth hearing, hard days night too maybe, good to get some context of where they started and where music was at the time before getting into their masterpieces
LOVE YOUR VIDEOS MY GUY
a few recommendations:
SMILE :D - Porter Robinson (pop-punk, pop, electronic)
Process - Sampha (experimental r&b, great production)
Koi No Yokan - Deftones (very heavy, sexier and heavier radiohead imo)
Hypochondriac - Brakence (very experimental emo rap, glitch pop)
Reading Writing And Arithmetic - The Sundays (the smiths ish, with beautiful female vocals)
Glad you didn't skip this one. Have to listen to 'Revolver' next.
Hey smags, loving the videos, keep it up. I would love to recommend a brilliant britpop album by a band called James, album is called laid, it's a banger, saw them live in the o2 and was blown away. also an album by future islands called in evening air which is also a banger. again loving your reactions to songs, i now love fka twigs magdalene cus of your channel, home with you is just wow.
Reacting to their great albums (Rubber Soul to Abbey Road) chronologically is definitely the way to go, you're in for a ride buddy
I think for more beatles you should do Revolver, not only is it their next one chronologically but in my opinion its their best although Abbey Road is fierce competition
Revolver and the White Album are my personal favorites! Abbey Road is obviously incredible as well. Revolver would be a great one to listen to next.
i thought the day would never come 🙏
You can see where Crosby Stills Nash And Young got their influence from If I Needed Someone
This is probably my favourite Beatles album although there a couple I haven't heard all the way through yet. You should check out something by the Kinks, my personal favourite is "Arthur or the Decline and Fall of the British Empire".
You definitely gotta check out some more Beach Boys, I would recommend Sunflower and the Smile Sessions
It took a few decades, but In My Life is now many people's favourite Beatles song. It feels so ahead of its time. Compare to the meaningless dirge of 'Yesterday'
Was not expecting this, great choice!
Genesis- a trick of the tail
Any genesis tbh
You gotta get to Abbey Road. An absolute masterpiece. .... also, as always, another reminder for M83 and more Sigur Rós.
THE BEATLES!!! YEEEAAAHHH!!! I love this album. When I first heard it, it really became an obsessiond of mine. I kind of agree with that chat members comment that their music is so influential that it becomes uninteresting, because I got into them before anything else I love like King Gizzard or Animal Collective and I adored them, but now that I've heard more experimental music that expands the ideas they pioneered way more, it's not as interesting to me. Still really good though.
I'm assuming the next album you'll do from them is Revolver. If so, please avoid the 2009 remaster like the plague. The Beatles intended everything they made up until their self titled to be in mono, and 2 of their albums have the mono mix available on streaming, so for Revolver and Sgt. Pepper listen to the mono versions if you can, as they have certain aspects that the stereo versions do not. The new remaster of Sgt. Pepper is really good though.
The new mixes they’ve been doing really make these recordings feel more timeless. The early stereo mixes from the 60s where they just went “yo what if we put the drums on the left” have not aged well. Also, the Beatles weren’t really involved with those for the earlier albums. They oversaw the mono mixes, but not the stereo ones
Rubber Soul was the first truly great Beatles album IMO. Also listen to Duck Stab by The Residents
Oh hell yeah it's time for GIRL
Classic album great review
After this album the Beatles stopped touring and focused solely on making albums and experimenting, you’ll love the next album Revolver
Tbh even as a humongous Beatles fan, Rubber Soul was never one of my favorites, though I still like it. Revolver and MMT are the ones for me
You should listen to The Mars Volta! Frances the Mute will blow your mind for sure!
I hope they redo the mixing on these songs like they did with Revlover, Sgt Peppers, Abbey Road etc. Cuz these 2009 remasters sound horrendous, Every time I want to listen to the whole album I have to set my audio to mono before, though the hits have been remixed so thats good
HELL YEAH!!! Revolver is my favorite so if u do that one next i hope you manage to edit it down to something viewable ;P
Welcome to the Beatles era, you know that we want to see all albums right??😊
Oh I see what TH-cam made 😢
Best Beatles album
3rd best Beatles album and still in top 50 albums OAT.
Woah … SHE is the one offering to let him drive her car… and maybe she loves him. Total role reversal song. Brilliant
That was the length of most songs back then... short and sweet.
Revolver next baby!
Don't forget magical mystery tour
All songs in the early sixties had to be under 3 minutes to get air play on radio at the time. The Beatles broke through first with longer tracks on their next album.
You have to hear Loss of Life by MGMT - an absolute masterpiece from this year
Well this is a nice (slightly late) birthday present lol
Their albums grow on you for a lifetime.
U gotta listen to Revolver from them next, imo its their best album
agreed. that or magical mystery tour (if u see it as an album)
You gotta do revolver
now PLEASE do Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, it's not my favourite by them but that one is what i want to see you react the most
Finally, yoooooooo
Day 2 of asking for Repeater by Fugazi or 24 Hour Revenge Therapy by Jawbreaker
more beatles please
This album did not inspire Pet Sounds on any kind of musical level - it was about the idea of an album being a complete work instead of a collection of hits. *That* is what inspired Pet Sounds but the actual music is mostly influenced by jazz and classical, BurtBacharach, George Gershwin, etc.
Albums that weren’t hit collections had been around for quite some time. It was rather the quality of every song that impressed Brian. No filler in his opinion, no odd cover, just a solid body of original work which functions as a whole piece. It also pushed boundaries that hadn’t really been pushed before, especially by including non-traditional instruments in a rock’n’roll context. “Pet Sounds” would take this concept way further.
@@Nerkin610 In pop, albums were mostly collections of singles and weren’t thought of as artistic formats in and of themselves; this changed with Rubber Soul
@@timcardona9962 On the American market, The Beatle albums were strongly modified to the point where they indeed resembled collections of the British material. Rubber Soul was modified too, but less than usual, and in a way that according to many favoured its cohesion. It’s true that Wilson was struck by that cohesion.
However, this is more a result of the American industry at the time; in Britain the albums were generally separated from the singles since selling the same songs twice was seen as scamming the audience. With a couple exceptions, all original Beatles albums had exclusive non-album singles only, or at least an equal amount of album singles and non-album singles. People may not have thought of the album as a whole art form before ‘65-‘66, but the concept of albums as complete works separated from the hit singles existed.
bro you have GOT to listen to a dream is all we know by the lemon twigs, they're highly influenced by the beatles
REVOLVER NEXT i beggg
Lets hope this stays up.
Day 5 of asking Smags to react to my newer album
if you're gonna do revolver next, ignore the stereo mix and crank up the mono mix
Go in order from here
BIG DAY FOR MEEEE
you should do magical mistery tour after sgt peppers!!
Revolver NOW!!!
HELL YEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH
silverchair- frogstomp please bro!
lets gooo
This is the only second phase Beatles record I could never get into
maybe you're not into folk idk
Please react to band on the run!
I remember you uploading this and it instantly getting blocked lol
YEEEEES
Refreshing to note that you DO display a hint of skepticism about the greatness of The Beatles, as most reviewers are hesitant to criticize them at all out of fear from their fans. I've been a fanatic fan in the past and am now just starting to look at the band in a little more of detached manner. I saw them twice, once in 1964 and the second time in 1966, I believe. They ARE the best selling musical artists of all time: THAT cannot be disputed, during 1 week, holding the top five songs on the Billboard magazine top 100 list. They, along with Bob Dylan, I would say, were the greatest influence on popular music during the early to late 1960's. The consistency of The Beatles' albums and the quality of their songs up until their last recorded album, "Abbey Road," it is hard to dispute, is amazing. Many consider, even, that "Abbey Road" IS The Beatles' greatest album, which is not usually the case with bands, their last album being their best.
She's saying to him, he can drive her car.
Sweet
thats a indian sitar on norwegian wood!
Yessssssssssssssssssssssss
Time for some more Elliott!