Opening with a sharp swipe at Harold Wilson’s supertax rate for big
earners, it ends half an hour later in a revolutionary mystical
soundscape sculpted from LSD and dope, and drenched in technical
wizardry the like of which had never been heard before. In between, a
dozen of the finest pop songs ever written – including Eleanor Rigby,
Good Day Sunshine and Here, There and Everywhere – all wrapped up in a
piece of artwork as unexpected and intricate as the music it was created
to contain.
Half a century after the release of Revolver, the Beatles
album hailed not only as the group’s creative summit but arguably pop’s
greatest achievement, the artist who designed the record’s monochrome
sleeve – itself acclaimed as one of the finest pop artworks – has
revealed how he did it: on a kitchen table in an attic flat, for £50.
Klaus Voormann – veteran Beatles confidant, inventor of the mop-top
haircut, and member of the group’s inner circle of friends since their
formative years playing Hamburg bars and strip joints – has decided to
tell the story of his relationship with the Fab Four not in words, but
in pictures. Voormann’s graphic novel, Birth of an Icon: Revolver 50,
opens with his first encounter with the group one night in 1960 in a
Hamburg bar, the Kaiserkeller, and traces their metamorphosis in five
years from leather-clad rockers to multimillionaire psychedelic
potentates, the greatest band in the world.
Revolver, the Beatles’ seventh album, was released in the UK
on 5 August 1966. England had just won the World Cup and London was
swinging. “Things stay in my memory because people keep on asking me
about that time,” Voormann, now 78 and based in his native Germany, told the Observer. “I remember, where I created the Revolver
cover. It was on the third floor of a house, in a little attic
apartment, it was in the kitchen. Parliament Hill, Hampstead. I was
staying there. I went back there recently, the building is exactly the
same.”
A trained artist and musician, Voormann and his girlfriend, the
photographer Astrid Kirchherr, were quintessential continental beatniks
when they befriended the Beatles – sporting black clothes and a moody
face beneath a low fringe. The look, especially the hair, heavily
influenced the band’s early image. Voormann went on to spend much of the
60s and 70s alternating stints on the pop and rock circuit, playing
bass with Manfred Mann, George Harrison and John Lennon – including on
Lennon’s Imagine – with his work in graphic design and fine art.
“1966 was the time when the Beatles were really, really busy,”
Voormann recalls. “They were doing one album after another. They were
just happy by then that they were spending more time in the studio, in
the control room, messing around with sounds, than they ever did before.
They had a German tour coming up, and also a Japan tour. They had just a
few more weeks available to work on their new LP, the one which would
be called Revolver, and then suddenly they were off on tour. I came to
Abbey Road Studios to listen to the tracks for that album as they were
recording them.”
The commission for the album cover design was unexpected, but, for
the Beatles, characteristically spontaneous and left-field. “I got a
phone call from John. He just said: ‘Got any ideas for our new album
cover?’ I thought: ‘Shit! Doing a cover for the most famous band in the
world!’ At moments like that you could suddenly forget that they had
once been scruffy little Liverpool boys. I thought, ‘My God, I can’t do
that!’”
As a freelance graphic designer in the early 60s, Voormann had
created artworks for vintage jazz albums issued by Deutsche Grammophon.
But to come up with ideas for a groundbreaking Beatles record, he needed
to hear the new music.
“So the band all asked me to come down to Abbey Road Studios. This
was when they had recorded about two-thirds of the tracks for that
album. When I heard the music, I was just shocked, it was so great. So
amazing. But it was frightening because the last song that they played
to me was Tomorrow Never Knows.”
The album’s climax, a sonic collage heavily influenced by
hallucinogens and hash, and held together with a hypnotic drum pattern,
baffled many fans and disorientated critics, but fed into the thinking
for a design for the album’s cover. “Tomorrow Never Knows was so far
away from the early Beatles stuff that even I myself thought, well, the
normal kind of Beatles fan won’t want to buy this record,” says
Voormann. “But they did.”
Voormann chose to work in pen and black ink, dotted with cut-out
portions of photographs of the band members and forming a “waterfall” of
imagery.
He says: “When I had finished my work for the cover, [Beatles
manager] Brian Epstein was really moved by my design. He said to me:
‘Klaus, what you did is what we really needed. I was scared that the
band’s new material wasn’t going to be accepted by their audience, but
your cover built that bridge.’”
Voormann adds: “It took me about three weeks to create the cover, but
in terms of concentrated work, about a week.” Much of that time was
spent with scissors, scalpel and glue, selecting and arranging fragments
of photographs within line drawings of the band members.
“In choosing to work in black and white, I wanted not only to shock,
but I wanted also for the work to stand out in a muddle of colour. But a
psychedelic influence in the Revolver cover? Well, what is
psychedelic? Look at Bruegel, or Hieronymus Bosch. Those guys were far
out! I don’t know if they ate mushrooms, or whatever. But I know that
whatever is inside of you doesn’t have to come out through drugs.”
Creating
one of the most recognised and acclaimed covers for one of the greatest
pop albums brought Voormann scant reward in the material world. “I got
£50, or £40, for it. I would have done it for nothing – and I didn’t
feel I was in a position to make it hard for them, by saying, ‘You have
to pay me this or that much.’ They [EMI] said £50 is the absolute limit
for a record sleeve. That’s what I got. Of course, I could have thought,
‘Well, Brian, if you think that cover is so good, come up [in money].’
Brian just left it to EMI, and EMI paid me £50, or £40.”
Following the success of Revolver and its cover – which won
Voormann a Grammy award for artwork in 1966 – the Beatles looked to
Peter Blake and Jann Haworth, leading figures of the British pop art
movement, for their next cover, Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,
for which the couple were paid £200. Next, the group approached another
British pop artist, Richard Hamilton, who came up with the white
minimalist cover for the 1968 double album, The Beatles – each one an individual artwork thanks to its unique number embossed on the cover. But for many, Revolver stands out as not only the best Beatles cover, but also one of the great works of 20th-century graphic design.
“What was captured in the Revolver artwork was almost the
first revolt against the San Francisco, west coast scene, whose look was
all about super, hyper colour,” says Professor Lawrence Zeegen, dean of
design at Ravensbourne College, London. “Voormann was brave … he kept
things very stark. It fits the sound of the album – this very British
version of what was happening with psychedelic music was important to
capture visually.”
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