| TWO OF US
(Lennon/McCartney)
PAUL AND GEORGE 1969:
(arguing during the recording of the song 'Two Of Us')
PAUL: "It's complicated now. We
can get it simpler, and then complicate it where it needs
complications."
GEORGE: "It's not complicated."
PAUL: "This one is like, shall
we play guitars through 'Hey Jude' ...well, I don't think we
should."
GEORGE: "Ok well I don't mind...
I'll play, you know, whatever you want me to play, or I wont
play at all if you don't want to me to play. Whatever it is that
will please you... I'll do it!"
JOHN: "I wish that we could
start hearing the tapes now. Like-- Do it, and then hear what it
is. Is it just 'cuz we don't feel like it, or is it 'Does the
guitar sound alright, really.'"
JOHN 1969: (ad-libbing during the recording sessions)
"'Two of us wearing postcards.'"
DIG A PONY
(Lennon/McCartney)
JOHN 1972: "I was just having
fun with words. It was literally a nonsense song. You just take
words and you stick them together, and you see if they have any
meaning. Some of them do and some of them don't."
JOHN 1980: "Another piece of garbage."
ACROSS THE UNIVERSE
(Lennon/McCartney)
JOHN 1972: "One of my best
songs. Not one of the best recordings, but I like the lyrics."
JOHN 1980: "I was a bit more artsy-fartsy there. I was
lying next to my first wife in bed, (song originally written in
1967) you know, and I was irritated. She must have been going on
and on about something and she'd gone to sleep-- and I kept
hearing these words over and over, flowing like an endless
stream. I went downstairs and it turned into a sort of cosmic
song rather than an irritated song-- rather than 'Why are you
always mouthing off at me?' or whatever, right? ...and I've sat
down and looked at it and said, 'Can I write another one with
this meter?' It's so interesting. 'Words are flowing out like
endless rain into a paper cup/ They slither while the pass, they
slip away across the universe.' Such an extraordinary meter and
I can never repeat it! It's not a matter of craftsmanship-- it
wrote itself. It drove me out of bed. I didn't want to write
it... and I couldn't get to sleep until I put it on paper...
It's like being possessed-- like a psychic or a medium. The
thing has to go down. It won't let you sleep, so you have to get
up, make it into something, and then you're allowed to sleep.
That's always in the middle of the night when you're half-awake
or tired and your critical facilities are switched off."
I ME MINE
(Harrison)
GEORGE 1980: "'I Me Mine' is the
ego problem. I looked around and everything I could see was
relative to my ego. You know, like 'that's my piece of paper,'
and 'that's my flannel,' or 'give it to me,' or 'I am.' It drove
me crackers-- I hated everything about my ego-- it was a flash
of everything false and impermanent which I disliked. But later
I learned from it-- to realize that there is somebody else in
here apart from old blabbermouth. 'Who am I' became the order of
the day. Anyway, that's what came out of it: 'I Me Mine' ...it's
about the ego, the eternal problem."
LET IT BE
(Lennon/McCartney)
JOHN 1980: "That's Paul... I
think it was inspired by 'Bridge Over Troubled Water.' That's my
feeling, although I have nothing to go on. I know he wanted to
write a 'Bridge Over Troubled Water.'"
PAUL 1986: "I had alot of bad times in the '60s. We used
to lie in bed and wonder what was going on and feel quite
paranoid. Probably all the drugs. I had a dream one night about
my mother. She died when I was fourteen so I hadn't really heard
from her in quite a while, and it was very good. It gave me some
strength."
PAUL circa-1994: "One night during this tense time I had
a dream I saw my mum, who'd been dead ten years or so. And it
was great to see her because that's a wonderful thing about
dreams, you actually are reunited with that person for a
second... In the dream she said, 'It'll be alright.' I'm not
sure if she used the words 'Let it be' but that was the gist of
her advice, it was 'Don't worry too much, it will turn out
okay.' It was such a sweet dream I woke up thinking, 'Oh, it was
really great to visit with her again.' I felt very blessed to
have that dream."
I'VE GOT A FEELING
(Lennon/McCartney)
PAUL 1969: (describing a guitar
lick for the middle-eight, during the recording sessions) "It's
coming down too fast-- the note. There shouldn't be any
recognizable jumps. Falling... Falling..."
ONE AFTER 909
(Lennon/McCartney)
JOHN 1980: "That was
something I wrote when I was about seventeen. I lived at 9
Newcastle Road. I was born on the ninth of October-- the ninth
month. It's just a number that follows me around, but
numerologically, apparently I'm a number six or a three or
something, but it's all part of nine."
PAUL circa-1994: "It was one that we always liked doing,
and we rediscovered it. There were a couple of tunes that we
wondered why we never put out-- either George Martin didn't like
them enough to, or he favored others. It's not a great song but
it's a great favorite of mine because it has great memories for
me of John and I trying to write a bluesy freight-train song.
There were alot of those songs at the time, like 'Midnight
Special,' 'Freight Train,' 'Rock Island Line,' so this was the
'One After 909.' She didn't get the 909, she got the one after
it!"
THE LONG AND WINDING ROAD
(Lennon/McCartney)
PAUL 1970: "The album was
finished a year ago, but a few months ago American record
producer Phil Spector was called in by John Lennon to tidy up
some of the tracks. But a few weeks ago, I was sent a re-mixed
version of my song 'The Long And Winding Road' with harps,
horns, an orchestra, and a women's choir added. No one had asked
me what I thought. I couldn't believe it. The record came with a
note from Allen Klein saying he thought the changes were
necessary. I don't blame Phil Spector for doing it, but it just
goes to show that it's no good me sitting here thinking I'm in
control because obviously I'm not. Anyway, I've sent Klein a
letter asking for some things to be altered, but I haven't
received an answer yet."
JOHN 1980: "Paul again. He had a little spurt just before
we split."
PAUL circa-1994: "It's rather a sad song. I like writing
sad songs, it's a good bag to get into because you can actually
acknowledge some deeper feelings of your own and put them in it.
It's a good vehicle, it saves having to go to a psychiatrist.
Songwriting often performs that feat-- you say it, but you don't
embarrass yourself because it's only a song, or is it? You are
putting the things that are bothering you on the table and you
are reviewing them, but because it's a song, you don't have to
argue with anyone... It's a sad song because it's all about the
unattainable; the door you never quite reach. This is the road
that you never get to the end of."
FOR YOU BLUE
(Harrison)
GEORGE 1980: "'For You Blue' is
a simple twelve-bar song following all the normal twelve-bar
principles, except that it's happy-go-lucky!"
GET BACK
(Lennon/McCartney)
PAUL 1969: "We were sitting in
the studio and we made it up out of thin air. We started to
write words there and then... When we finished it, we recorded
it at Apple Studios and made it into a song to rollercoast by."
JOHN 1980: "'Get Back' is Paul. That's a better version
of 'Lady Madonna.' You know, a potboiler rewrite."
DON'T LET ME DOWN
(Lennon/McCartney)
JOHN 1969: (to Ringo, regarding
the cymbal smash in the intro) "Give me a big 'kzzzsshhhh!' Give
me the courage to come screaming in."
JOHN 1980: "That's me, singing about Yoko."
PAUL circa-1994: "It was a very tense period. John was
with Yoko, and had escalated to heroin and all the accompanying
paranoias and he was putting himself out on a limb. I think
that, as much as it excited and amused him, at the same time it
secretly terrified him. So 'Don't Let Me Down' was a genuine
plea, 'Don't let me down, please, whatever you do. I'm out on
this limb...' It was saying to Yoko, 'I'm really stepping out of
line on this one. I'm really letting my vulnerability be seen,
so you must not let me down.' I think it was a genuine cry for
help. It was a good song. We recorded it in the basement of
Apple for 'Let It Be' and later did it up on the roof for the
film. We went through it quite alot for this one. I sang harmony
on it, which makes me wonder if I helped with a couple of the
words, but I don't think so. It was John's song."
YOU KNOW MY NAME (LOOK UP THE
NUMBER)(Lennon/McCartney)
JOHN 1980: "That was a piece of
unfinished music that I turned into a comedy record with Paul. I
was waiting for him in his house, and I saw the phone book was
on the piano with the words, 'You know the name, look up the
number.' It was like a logo, and I just changed it. It was going
to be a four tops kind of song-- the chord changes are like
that-- but it never developed and we made a joke out of it."
PAUL 1988: "People are only just discovering the B-sides
of Beatles singles. They're only just discovering things like
'You Know My Name' --probably my favorite Beatles track! Just
because it's so insane. All the memories-- I mean, what would
you do if a guy like John Lennon turned up at the studio and
said, 'I've got a new song.' I said, 'What's the words?' and he
replied, 'You know my name look up the number.' I asked, 'What's
the rest of it?' '...No. No other words, those are the words.
And I wanna do it like a mantra!' We did it over a period of
maybe two or three years. We started off and we just did 20
minutes, and we tried it again and it didn't work. We tried it
again, and we had these endless, crazy fun sessions. Eventually
we pulled it all together and I sang, (sings in jazzy voice)
'You know my name...' and we just did a skit. Mal (Evans) and
his gravel. I can still see Mal digging the gravel. And it was
just so hilarious to put that record together. It's not a great
melody or anything, it's just unique. Some people haven't
discovered that song yet."
PAUL circa-1994: "I remember at one point we asked Mal
(Evans) to shovel a bucket of gravel as a rhythmic device. We
had a bit of a giggle doing those kind of tracks... Brian Jones
(Rolling Stones) plays a funny sax solo. It's not amazingly well
played but it happened to be exactly what we wanted. Brian was
very good like that."
REGARDING THE ALBUM, BEFORE ITS
OFFICIAL RELEASE
JOHN 1969: "It'll be a single
LP, but this one's got a book with it-- a whole book of making
the LP. And we've also made a film of it at the same time, so
we've got to get that together. All the traumas and paranoia--
all the different things that happen to you when you try and
make a record."
ON THE BEATLES 'FINAL' ALBUM
RINGO 1994: "In 1970 'Let It Be'
came out as the last album, though 'Abbey Road' was, of course,
the last to be recorded. It goes to show how quirky the world
is-- the next to the last album comes out as the last album, and
the last album comes out before it. But we split up after 'Abbey
Road,' and weren't really thinking about splitting on the one
before. It's all very strange."
ON PHIL SPECTOR, ALLEN KLEIN, AND
GROUP TENSIONS
PAUL 1996: "It was all done over
my head. I had an acetate of the final mixes that Glyn Johns had
done, and I remember taking it home... and listening to it with
him. Today it would sound 'Unplugged' because it was very basic,
very bare. And I thought, 'This is good... really good. We're
reduced to just bare bones. There's something great about it.
Something very compelling.' But Allen Klein stuck his oar in,
and he said, 'Look I don't think it's right,' and he made alot
of decisions. I think it was his decision to bring Phil Spector
in. We were all sort of feeling that we had come to the end...
The little bunny rabbits' batteries were running down. We were
all fraught with each other and just about everything else. We
were probably all on the verge of nervous breakdowns." |