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Tomorrow Never Knows – Revolver

Revolver by The Beatles
Revolver by The Beatles

Tomorrow Never Knows – Revolver

Tomorrow Never Knows on Revolver

There are still a few Beatles songs from their major albums that have not yet made an appearance here. When I initially wrote this in early November of 2020, I referred specifically to the title of the song in this way: “Today, the day before what many are calling the most consequential Presidential election in a long time, if not in the history of the republic, is time to highlight one of them, if only for the title of the song – ‘Tomorrow Never Knows’.”

LSD

A highly experimental, and LSD-enhanced song that came at the end of the B-side of Revolver, it denoted a significant moment in the evolution of the Beatles as a group. But before I discuss the song itself, I should mention that for the longest time the working titles were “The Void” or “Mark 1.”

Ringoism

Then, as noted by Kenneth Womack in his 2014 book The Beatles Encyclopedia: Everything Fab Four, the group recalled an interview Ringo had given during the group’s first concert tour in America, after a female fan had come up and cut off a swatch of Ringo’s hair in DC. His response, which may not have risen to the level of his most famous malapropism – “It’s been a hard day’s night” – was another, now famous malapropism of the phrase “tomorrow never comes.”

                You know – what can you say? Tomorrow never knows.

The phrase never appears in the mystical song, but it stuck as the title.

Timothy Leary

John Lennon wrote this song, and besides some significant LSD usage also leaned heavily on Timothy Leary’s The Psychedelic Experience: A Manual Based on The Tibetan Book of the Dead. Some of the initial verses from the song, including the very first, are direct quotes from Leary’s book:

Turn off your mind, relax and float downstream….

Lay down all thought, surrender to the void.

Ravi Shankar

All the Beatles, not just John Lennon, joined in the experimentation that made “Tomorrow Never Knows” such a revolutionary piece. Ringo slackened the tuning on his tom-toms and recorded them through an echo chamber. George played the sitar, which he had been studying with master sitar artist Ravi Shankar, and recorded it at varying speeds for playback both forward and backwards; Paul drew on his interest in the electronic music of Karlheinz Stockhausen to encourage all his bandmates to create tape loops of interesting sounds that also could be played forward, backwards, and at different speeds. One of Paul’s loops sounded like a seagull, but really was him laughing and recorded at high speed before playback.

Dalai Lennon

John’s lead vocal required significant experimentation by sound engineer Geoff Emerick, who reported in the Beatles’ Anthology that Lennon said that he wanted his voice

                to sound like the Dalai Lama chanting from a mountaintop, miles away.

As reported in the Anthology, what finally worked, and pleased Lennon greatly, was the directing of his voice track through the rotating speaker of a Leslie cabinet, then through a Hammond organ. Lennon wasn’t the only Beatle excited about the effect; McCartney, upon hearing the track, exclaimed, “It’s the Dalai Lennon!”

Remarkably, for this very, very different song, leaning so heavily on experimental recording techniques, it all came together very quickly: only three takes, and an evening and an afternoon of overdubs for the experimental loops.

The Beatles had introduced an additional “different” song, “Love You To,” also on Revolver (#143), but with this song to round out the Revolver album they made an emphatic statement that their work henceforth would not follow an established pattern. And as I wrote on November 2, 2020, “Tomorrow, as the coronavirus pandemic continues to ravage the country, may provide some insight as to whether there is interest in sustaining – or changing – our nation’s response to it. But for now, ‘Tomorrow Never Knows’.”

This is an excerpt from Tim Hatfield’s book “When We Find Ourselves in Times of Trouble: The Beatles”

Tim Hatfield

GET TIM’S EXCELLENT BOOK NOW!

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Debbie at the Fest for Beatles Fans

Debbie with her Schedule
Debbie with Manhattan
Debbie with Manhattan in the Background

Fest for Beatles Fans, New Jersey

My first Beatles Fest in Jersey City was memorable for all the right reasons. On arrival at our hotel, we were greeted by a magical view of the night skyline of Manhattan from across the Hudson River.

The Music

It was so good to finally meet all my fellow authors in person and to experience the exciting atmosphere of the Beatles Fest for the first time.  There was so much happening every day.  Author’s panels, celebrity talks and presentations and of course the one ingredient that brought us all together in the first place, the music. 

Terry Crain with Debbie and Nigel
Beatles Bookstore Authors Terry Crain with Debbie and husband Nigel
Author Bruce Spizer with Debbie
Author Bruce Spizer with Debbie

10 Years at the Cavern

I had been invited to give a presentation relating to my ten years at the Cavern; five years as a member and five years as an owner. The audience were thrilled to learn that I had attended all 292 of The Beatles appearances at the Cavern, so much so that they rose as one and gave me a standing ovation which was very gratifying. 

Debbie with her Schedule
Debbie with her Schedule

It was great to catch up with Mark Lewisohn again, who has been a good friend of ours for almost forty years.

Mark Lewisohn with Debbie and Nigel
Mark Lewisohn with Debbie and Nigel

Liverpool

There were so many fantastic bands appearing that we were spoilt for choice.  The spectacular sound of the band LIVERPOOL, and the band that came the closest to transporting me back to hearing The Beatles in the Cavern in the early sixties was The Black Ties.  Their sound was raw and loud, and I felt as if I had jumped aboard a time machine and had been dropped back in the Cavern listening to The Beatles when they started to play , “I Saw Her Standing There”.

Cavern Club: The Inside Story

I did well with sales of my book, CAVERN CLUB THE INSIDE STORY and received very positive feedback.

Nigel and I met such lovely like-minded people, experts, authors, and customers.   Everybody was happy and the feeling was infectious throughout the venue, there was music everywhere.

Tom Frangione and Mark Lapidos
Tom Frangione and Mark Lapidos

I am already looking forward to my next Beatles Fest in Jersey City next year.

Thanks

Huge thanks go to Mark Lapidos, Susan Ratisher Ryan and all the teams of technicians and musicians  and everyone that made the weekend so memorable.

Susan Ryan with Debbie
Susan Ryan with Debbie
Debbie with Bob Abdou
Debbie with Bob Abdou
Debbie and Nigel with Janice Mitchell
Debbie and Nigel with Janice Mitchell
Debbie with Pat Mancuso
Debbie with Pat Mancuso
Kati, Andy Leigh, Me ,Nigel Greenberg, Simon Weitzman and Nancy Cohen
Kati, Andy Leigh, Me ,Nigel Greenberg, Simon Weitzman and Nancy Cohen
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Come Together by The Beatles (from Abbey Road)

Come Together by The Beatles
Something/ Come Together by The Beatles
Something/ Come Together by The Beatles

“Come Together” by The Beatles from Abbey Road [In Tim Hatfield’s When We Find Ourselves in Times of Trouble: The Beatles]

Timothy Leary

Some of you may have been wondering when this, a consensus Beatles Top 10 song, would turn up here.  In 1969 Timothy Leary – he of “tune in, turn on, drop out” LSD fame – had decided to run for Governor of California against Ronald Reagan.  After Leary and his wife attended John and Yoko’s June 1969 “Bed-in” for peace in Montreal, he asked John if he would write him a campaign song to go along with the campaign theme, Come Together.  

Swampy Bass and Drums

After Lennon sent Leary a spare demo tape of some ideas, Leary’s campaign ended and Lennon then began working on what was to become the Beatles version, a funky, bluesy, rhythm-driven song that McCartney suggested be done slower, with “a swampy, bass-and-drums vibe,” than Lennon’s original idea.  It worked, and especially for Lennon, for whom it was one of his favorite Beatles songs.  

Elvis Parody

The lyrics were replete with a brief Elvis parody, in-jokes, puns, and what Lennon described as “gobbledygook” that he made up on the spot in the studio. I would have loved to be a fly on the wall during these sessions, because it seems like Lennon was demonstrably having fun, and it rubbed off on the other three guys.  “Got to be a joker, He just do what he please……He got feet down below his knee, He holds you in his arms, yeah, you can feel his disease…!”  Really?!  He even began the song explicitly with a line lifted from the 1956 Chuck Berry song “You Can’t Catch Me”: “Here come old flat-top.” 

Chuck Berry

Of course, Berry’s publisher sued him for infringement, but Lennon and the guy settled out of court on the condition that Lennon would record more songs owned by the publisher (he included a couple Chuck Berry songs on his Rock ‘n’ Roll album in the early 70’s and a Lee Dorsey song “Ya Ya” on his Walls and Bridges.) 

Abbey Road

Producer George Martin had agreed to work with the group on Abbey Road only on the condition that they would be collaborative, as opposed to the messy, fraught sessions that eventually became the Let It Be album a year later.  All four Beatles bought in, and Martin was especially pleased with the contributions that each member made for this song.  Collectively, the contributions of the four “became much, much better than the individual components,” said Martin.  It was a momentous collaboration in late July of 1969.  

As I said above, the four Beatles certainly seemed to be having fun making this song.  And sandwiched into the song there were a couple of lines that Beatles scholars could arguably say were a preview of what was to come for the group shortly thereafter and, tragically, for John Lennon a decade later: “One thing I can tell you is You got to be free,” and the repeated “Shoot me” throughout the song.

And “Come Together” was the very last song of their career that all four Beatles participated in recording together.

It’s not much of a stretch, is it, to consider the possibilities during a time of trouble if it were possible for everyone to come together? 

Find more lessons to learn from Tim Hatfield’s great book, “When We Find Ourselves in Times of Trouble: The Beatles

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I’m (NOT) Looking Through You! (Reflecting on Beatles Mirrors

The Beatles Mirror
The Beatles Mirror
The Beatles Mirror

“I’m looking through you…” Not with this item. Celebrate the moptops as you neatly tend to your style! No wonder it takes you so long time to start your day. How can you be expected to be prompt when you constantly gaze into your Beatles mirror and dream of the Fab Four? 

Photos of The Beatles

Manufactured by Bassett Mirror Company, 1290 Philpott Drive, Bassett, Virginia, this rare mirror measured 15″x21″ housed in an 18″x32″ wood frame and embellished with four 3¼”x3½” color photos of the Beatles along the top. The advertisement for this artifact read:

Advert for the Beatles Mirror
Advert for the Beatles Mirror

Dating for a hard day’s night at Convention Hall with John, Paul, George, and Ringo? Like you’ll scream, screech, shriek over this beat teen treat in Pittsburgh Plate Glass topped with built-in picture frames and 4 full-color photos of the world’s wildest 4! Back panel opens…. change pix at any time, even replace Liverpool’s answer to the high cost of haircuts! Dig yours in white, maple, or decorator green. And you’ll want to hold Gimbels’ hand for the hip low price!”

Gimbel Brothers (Gimbels) was an American department store.

The sticker attached to the mirror read, “This is a High Fidelity Mirror of Twin-Ground Pittsburgh Plate Glass.” The shipping box read “Bassett Mirror Co. Bassett, VA. Caution-Do Not Lay Flat. Furniture, Including Mirrors or Glass, Fragile, Handle With Care.”

“Bassett has been America’s first name in home furnishings since 1902 when my great-grandfather opened his first furniture factory on the eastern slopes of the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia.” – www.bassettmirror.com.

Bassett Mirror Co. Inc. was named in a NEMS Enterprises, Ltd vs. Seltaeb, Incorporated lawsuit filed in the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, First Judicial Department, dated: New York, New York, July 6, 1965.

Find out more incredible stories in Terry Crain’s book: