Paul with Glyn Johns |
Glyn Johns lashes out at Phil Spector’s work with the Beatles: ‘Let It Be is a bunch of garbage’
Glyn Johns was famously brought in to make some sense of the hours upon hours of rehearsal tapes that eventually became the Beatles’ Let It Be, though both of his initial mixes were subsequently rejected.
He’d envisioned the project, then titled Get Back, as a verite project — something that showed the Beatles as they were, with studio flubs, off-the-cuff chatter and goofy cover tunes in tact.
That’s not how it turned out, of course. John Lennon subsequently passed the moldering tapes to Phil Spector, who then added his infamous Wall of Sound production techniques to an album that had once been framed as an attempt to get back to the basics.
Johns, in a new talk with the New York Times, clearly remains horrified — 45 years later.
“I was disappointed that Lennon got away with giving it to Spector, and even more disappointed with what Spector did to it,” says Johns, who has just released a new memoir titled Sound Man. “It has nothing to do with the Beatles at all. Let It Be is a bunch of garbage.”
Glyn Johns initially began work on the Get Back tapes in March of 1969, even as the Beatles started tandem sessions for the album that would become Abbey Road.
After his initial pass was turned down, additional sessions were held in early January 1970. Johns was handed the tapes again, and once again failed to earn the Beatles’ approval. By March, Spector had been given the same songs; he completed the heavily overdubbed project in April 1970.
“As I say in the book, he puked all over it,” John adds. “I’ve never listened to the whole thing, I’ve only listened to the first few bars of some things and said, ‘Oh, forget it.’ It was ridiculously, disgustingly syrupy.”
Paul McCartney agreed, eventually releasing his own stripped-down mix in 2003, called Let It Be: Naked. It is a remixed and remastered version of their 1970 album Let
It Be.The project was overseen by Paul,who felt that Phil
Spector's production did not accurately represent the group's
"stripped-down" intentions for the original album. Let It Be...
Naked presents the songs "naked"—without Spector's overdubs and without
the incidental studio chatter featured between most cuts of the original
album. Let It Be... Naked also replaces "Dig It" and "Maggie Mae" with
"Don't Let Me Down", originally featured as the B-side of the "Get Back"
single.
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