Extract from a new Kindle single about the recording of Abbey Road
The Beatles/Get Back sessions, january 1969 |
Summer was nigh. In May 1969 the Lennons bought Tittenhurst Park, an
85-acre estate in the same stockbroker belt as John’s first Beatles
home, Kenwood. It needed work and a while would pass before they moved
in. At EMI, John and Yoko busied themselves with their resistible third
LP, The Wedding Album. Heroin intake was vigorous.
The Beatles, January 1969 |
There were many soi-disant
Apple-Allen Klein business meetings through April and May, most of
which went nowhere. One of them, however, at Olympic Studios in Barnes
in south-west London (on 9 May), was overshadowed by three Beatles
having, the previous day, pledged their signatures to management by
ABKCO, and a fourth - Paul McCartney - now and forever withholding his,
and confirming it. After the Klein-gang who wanted McCartney on board
had marched off, Paul spent the rest of the evening at Olympic bashing
drums and doing backing vocals for Steve Miller, who was there recording
a song called “My Dark Hour”.
Beatles songs such as “Octopus’s
Garden”, “Oh! Darling” and “Something” were taking shape. At Olympic,
where producer Glyn Johns continued to chisel away at Twickenham’s “Get
Back” sessions of January 1969, a medley beginning with a song about
lack of cash-flow - brainchild of McCartney’s, this, oddly enough -
began to germinate. At some point - no exact date in May (or June at the
latest) has been nailed - McCartney rang George Martin and asked if the
five could get back together. Could they make another LP just the way
they used to? Martin agreed that was the only way they could do it.
Sometimes, miracles have happened for real.
There
was no plan, contractually fixed and certain, or otherwise, for the
next Beatles album. In the first quarter of 1969 it was probable there’d
be no more Beatles music. The fluke of the single “The Ballad of John
and Yoko”, recorded in April (and backed by Harrison’s rollicking “Old
Brown Shoe”, a great and neglected B-side) was really down to there
being no other Beatles around to record Lennon’s diary-rocker than
McCartney; and who better than McCartney did Lennon have to do his
bidding? The opposite of “band commitment”, however it might be
characterised - absenteeism, ennui, anger - might have been emblematic
of where The Beatles had arrived by the start of the year’s second
quarter. But when it came to their going back into EMI, it was a matter
of who-had-what and, Christ, let’s-see-what-we-can-make-of-it if we
dare!
With
any other outfit this would have led to more or less a mess, however
forgiveable, languishing no doubt for sessions super-experts to pick
through in the years ahead. This outfit was The Beatles. They’d had
nothing to prove since 1965. Now, they preferred the company of their
wives, families, girlfriends and other musicians; more or less anyone
except each other. The staying power the four found as they sought to
work together in EMI’s large house in St John’s Wood that last summer
was, with a bit of help from George Martin, as epic as anything they’d
pulled from the hat since Hamburg.
Yet it’s as well to realise
that there was by 1969 little or no chronological method to how The
Beatles were recording. Ideas would form and takes be taped, sometimes
dozens of them, sometimes performed by only one or two Beatles present.
Overdubs would follow that would be reduced to a master. Further
instrumentation and vocals could and would be added to that. The Beatles
were using each other to have a go with songs they each had, and unity
was really no longer an issue. And tempting as it might be to think of Abbey Road’s
track order as the one the band must surely have started out with -
mainly because it seems, and for over four decades has seemed perfectly
sequential - it didn’t happen that way at all.
“Maxwell’s Silver
Hammer” (3), “Oh! Darling” (4) and “Octopus’s Garden” (5) had basic life
before and/or during Twickenham. “I Want You” (6) came immediately
after, at Apple, as did “She Came in Through the Bathroom Window” (13).
“Something” (2) was first taped the day after the “I Want You” edit of
its three favoured takes of 23 February. Then, with over a month’s gap,
came first signs of a medley, just alluded to, with McCartney’s “You
Never Give Me Your Money” (9), on 6 May.
Nearly
two more months passed, with holidays and time off from the studio at
least (if not from Klein matters), before the meat of the album was
tackled. Lennon and Ono, John’s son Julian and Yoko’s daughter Kyoko
with them, had a car accident while trying to holiday in Scotland at the
start of July; hospitalised, the two of them didn’t appear at EMI until
the 9th. Record tells us that the first week of work back at Abbey Road
without them was uncommonly light and breezy.
Every weekday from 1
July to 29 August, 2.30-10.00 pm, the Abbey Road studios were booked
for The Beatles. First track to be finished was “Her Majesty” (17),
recorded by McCartney on 2 July. That same session also saw “Golden
Slumbers” (14) and “Carry That Weight” (15) come to life. Harrison’s
“Here Comes the Sun” (7) emerged - without Lennon - on the 7th. When
Lennon did arrive (Ono, now pregnant and still suffering injuries from
the crash, was enthroned in a double bed and provided with a microphone
into which she should, and did, simper her wisdom about what was being
played in the studios), “Maxwell…” was in progress and remained so until
the 15th.
On the 21st Lennon eagerly unleashed “Come Together”. Because it is first on the album it has become almost Abbey Road’s
signature tune. It was another free-associating riddle, Lennon’s voice
more expectorating and ethereal than it had ever been, the title lifted
from a recent Timothy Leary political campaign in California. Ono is in
there too, adjectivally a “sideboard” and as the other half of “Bag
Productions”, a company the Lennons had formed in April for their art
marvels, with Apple naturally at its service. A couple of days later The
Beatles were still working on “Come Together” and taping what would
become “The End” (16). Within a few days of that came the unmistakably
Lennon side-two sequence from “Sun King” to “Polythene Pam” (10-12) and,
right at the beginning of August, his “Because” (8).
Much
of the content of this caressing, gladdening track was provided by Ono.
Lennon had been listening to her play on the piano the opening of
Beethoven’s “Moonlight Sonata”. What lodged in his mind was a sequence
of D-minor notes that mirrored exactly the arpeggio in “I Want You”. On
“Because” the Beethoven notes were reversed. When the track emerged,
George Martin played the intro on an electric Baldwin spinet
harpsichord; these arpeggios were then picked up by Lennon’s electric
guitar, and three Beatles - John, Paul and George - chimed in together
in close, three-part harmony, in one of their tightest ever bits of
vocalese.
The song still had two sessions more before it was done:
voices, and overdubs by Moog synthesiser, heard at just over a
minute-and-a-half in, played by Harrison on a machine he’d acquired in
Hollywood the previous November. The wondrousness of the music a given,
the dreamy words reflecting benign infinity were also very much Ono’s
imprimatur. In a peculiar way that exceeds most normal human
relationships, husband was now practically being “written” by wife.
Rather a brilliant move, which wouldn’t take place until 20 August when Abbey Road’s
song order was finalised, was to separate “Because” from “I Want You”
by only one track, “Here Comes the Sun”. In the old days of the LP, the
act of flipping the record would have delayed in the unconscious the
exact relationship between sides one and two, but delay made recognition
all the more exciting. Though it seemed that a strange and abrupt
finality had been reached by the end of track six, where it cuts out, a
simple arpeggio gave linkage and continuity. This effect can be heard
much more quickly today, which perhaps makes it sound contrived where it
once wasn’t; either way, musicologically Abbey Road was and is more of a piece than not, even outside the side-two medley.
They
were nearly there. On the seventh day of August, John, Paul and George
abandoned themselves to the frenetic guitar solos of the end of “The
End” (“like they had gone back in time, like they were kids again,
playing together for the sheer enjoyment of it”, wrote engineer Geoff
Emerick in 2006), which follow Ringo’s only Beatles drum solo.
The next
day, bright and sunny, they were in earlier than usual to be
photographed. Iain Macmillan shot, from a ladder, a few on his film of
the four walking over a zebra crossing outside Abbey Road Studios. One
image - just one - was needed for the album’s front cover.
The day
after that Lennon took to the Moog and, with Starr on an Abbey Road
white-noise machine, proceeded to overdub the whirring and whooshing on
to the remaining three minutes of the 18 April reduction of “I Want
You”. The song was building into a thing of geological immensity but
still didn’t know where to stop. Perhaps because of its weight, the
following Monday, when more voice work was done, the “(She’s So Heavy)”
parenthesis was appended to “I Want You”.
The Lennons moved into
Tittenhurst Park in the second half of August. Further engineering,
editing and mixing were done to Abbey Road; George Martin brought in
orchestration. On the 20th, The Beatles spent a long evening and night
in studios three and two deciding how “I Want You” should end and Abbey Road
be ordered. For the latter, the two sides were reversed. For a time it
was possible the record would end with Lennon’s huge track but, rightly,
to finish with “The End” (“Her Majesty” aside) made the only sense.
On
“I Want You”, Emerick was instructed by Lennon to snip the tape of the
track, with no rhyme or reason - just where he (Lennon) deemed it should
happen (at seven minutes 44 seconds, as it turned out). So that’s what
Emerick did. That’s where it stopped. The randomness of it was in
keeping with Lennon’s Ono-inspired aesthetic of anything-can-happen, one
of the driving forces behind The White Album. The Beatles were at least being artistically more consistent than might have been apparent on that date.
After it, the four would never meet at Abbey Road again.
- The Story of The Beatles' Last Song is available as a Kindle single on Amazon for £1.99
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