Twilight of the Four-Headed Monster
(Or, Why the Beatles Phenomenon Can Never Happen Again)
This
just in: Emeli Sandé has just broken the
Beatles' record for the longest stay by an album in the British Top
10. Please Please Me spent
62 weeks there; that feat was recently eclipsed by Emeli Sandé's Our
Version of Events,
63 weeks and counting.
Wonderful!
Congratulations. But my first question was: Emeli who?
Is she the new 'next Beatles'? Dare we hope?
Short
Answer: Are you kidding?
The
Beatles phenomenon, from Beatlemania to Sergeant Pepper to university
courses on the Fab Four, cannot be duplicated or even paralleled for
the same reason that the American Revolution can't happen again. The
circumstances leading up to, surrounding, creating and shaping the
Beatles' musical and cultural impact on global society are gone.
Extinct. History.
There's
more to it than that, but assertions by my generation (the Baby
Boomers) that today's music lacks creativity, originality and depth
come dangerously close to claiming that the currently upcoming
generation is uncreative, unintelligent, untalented and shallow. This
seems to me highly improbable. I read many years ago that the fall of
the Roman Empire was linked to the Romans' use of lead pipes in their
plumbing, subjecting the best and brightest minds of its last few
generations to lead poisoning and its attendant decline in mental
competency. I have no reason to believe that recent, vapid assertions by teenage beauty contestants
(“…some people out there in our nation don't have maps…”) have any connection with ingestion of toxic waste, inbreeding, hereditary mental illness or anything else that could serve either to condemn or excuse said generation, or its forbears. Said generation has, however, been dealt a very different hand than the Beatles were dealt 50 years ago, and no matter how well they play that hand, the pile of chips can never again be as high as that raked in by John, Paul, George and Ringo.
(“…some people out there in our nation don't have maps…”) have any connection with ingestion of toxic waste, inbreeding, hereditary mental illness or anything else that could serve either to condemn or excuse said generation, or its forbears. Said generation has, however, been dealt a very different hand than the Beatles were dealt 50 years ago, and no matter how well they play that hand, the pile of chips can never again be as high as that raked in by John, Paul, George and Ringo.
The
set of circumstances that allowed the Beatles to dominate pop culture
could be likened to a once-per-millennium planetary alignment.
European, African and Latin cultures had combined in the American
Melting Pot to produce a wild hodgepodge of new sounds which
gradually drifted back across the Atlantic, this time to a bleak
seaport called Liverpool. The generation that had fought and won
World War II now fought for personal peace, albeit a suburban peace
of subdivisions, picket fences, station wagons, and patriotism (a
well-deserved peace, by the way.) The generation born during and soon
after the war knew little or nothing of the sacrifice and struggle
that had defined their parents' world, and the 'generation gap' that
had been widening since before the war now became a chasm,
questioning, judging and rejecting traditional values.
A
rare point of agreement between many of both generations was the
election of President John F. Kennedy, who had himself fought in
WWII, yet embodied the hope and vision of a young generation anxious
to move forward. JFK barely had time to champion Civil Rights, the
Space Race, the Peace Corps and other vital issues before being
gunned down in Dallas in November of 1963. A nation was now bereft of
its charismatic young leader, and countless hearts were empty,
waiting for God-knew-what.
Rewind
to the late 1950s, when John Lennon and Paul McCartney met
fortuitously and pooled their talents, passions and lives for the
sake of rock 'n' roll. The Beatles' story has been told and retold
too many times to warrant even the briefest recap here, but I need to
revisit certain key elements in order to force my point down your
throat. The multicultural musical gumbo that American sailors brought
to England on precious phonograph records was now being listened to
and learned from by kids whose earliest listening experiences were
largely European, particularly in the British music hall tradition.
As Lennon and McCartney tried their hand at writing their own songs,
the trans-Atlantic cross-pollination of musical styles was
inevitable. While America coped with the Cold War and early rumblings
of Vietnam, The Beatles, by now honed razor-keen by lengthy stints as
a cabaret band in Hamburg, Germany as well as Liverpool, were taking
England by storm with their unusual image (yes, their hair was
actually considered long in 1963,) electrifying music, and an
interpersonal chemistry that made them greater than the sum of their
parts.
In
January of 1964, into the emotional void left by the JFK
assassination, a strange new song called “I Want To Hold Your Hand”
became a hit in the U.S., paving the way for the Beatles' first visit
to America. Their appearance on 'The Ed Sullivan Show' was like
nothing we'd seen before. A rock and roll group (it wasn't yet 'rock'
music) with its own collective personality? Before, you'd had 'Bill
Haley and the Comets', 'Buddy Holly and the Crickets',
'Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons'. But now - a drummer with
a name and a personality? Ringo? As if the 'long' hair
weren't enough, the songs themselves could polarize any mixed
gathering of young and old (“Yeah, yeah, yeah” arguing for
banality; the eight or so chords in 'I Wanna Hold Your Hand' or 'All
My Loving' raising the bar for baffled garage bands everywhere).
Perhaps
any major fad or fashion could have swept America in the void left
after the Kennedy assassination, but the Beatles were too appealing,
too controversial and too otherworldly to have been a mere fad.
Their early hits, although sometimes displaying more sophistication
than most standard three-chord rock songs had shown up until then,
barely hinted at the groundbreaking creativity that would soon have
critics and public alike grasping for
words to describe it. Their first film, A Hard Day's Night,
proved that they could act as well as sing and play. Lennon's first
book, In His Own Write,
extended the Beatles' reach to the literary realm. Lennon and
McCartney's collective songwriting prowess inspired such aspiring
writers as Mick Jagger and Keith Richards to try their hand, with
far-reaching results.
Few
aspects of the Beatles have been as hotly debated as their
musicianship. Part of the problem stems from so many people's
confusion of being 'good' with being 'great'. To call the Beatles
'the Greatest Rock Band Ever' immediately raises the hackles of those
who rightly point out the nascent virtuosity of their peers –
Cream, The Jimi Hendrix Experience, The Who, The Yardbirds, and the
next wave of British rockers like Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple. The
Beatles never aspired to be able to play circles around guys like
Eric Clapton or Ginger Baker; they simply wanted to express
themselves and create good art. I side with those who assert that
the Beatles' secret weapon was their chemistry - the
inexplicable interaction between them that caused them to spur one
another on, to compete with each other and champion one another at
the same time.
As
a professional musician and music teacher, I know firsthand exactly
what the Beatles had going for them as instrumentalists. John Lennon
is possibly the most underrated rock guitarist ever (try duplicating
his blazing intro to 'Revolution' or his lilting jazz solo on 'Honey
Pie', and report back here.) Paul McCartney took the humble electric
bass to dizzying heights of creativity, tone and taste (I could eat
his work on 'With A Little Help From My Friends' for lunch), while
his occasional forays into six-string territory produced such
landmark tracks as the acoustic rite of passage, 'Blackbird', and his
snarling east-meets-west solo on George Harrison's 'Taxman'. George
himself rose through the ranks, going from minimal competence (his
barely-passable intro to 'Roll Over Beethoven') to delightful
creativity (his tangled descending runs on 'Help!') to indispensable
(his timeless contributions to 'Strawberry Fields Forever'). His
forays into Indian classical music infused his guitar playing with
sitar-hardened discipline – witness the exquisite solo on his Abbey
Road masterpiece 'Something',
and the flawless microtonality of his slide guitar work thereafter.
Ringo
gets his own paragraph (sorry, taller Beatles.) He
holds the distinction of being almost certainly the most underrated
and overrated drummer
of all time. He deserves it, too. A southpaw, forced as a child to
write with his right hand, Ringo brought a secret weapon to the
table, one generally reserved for highly trained percussionists: A
recessive hand that could keep up with his dominant left. Thus his
two-handed unison fills that created the sonic illusion of two
drummers playing the same thing on two different drums. (The
“so-in-love-with-you” climax of “Tell Me Why”, as seen in the
film A Hard Day's Night, is
a perfect example of this difficult technique, effortlessly executed
by this self-taught inspiration to thousands of young drummers.)
Others have written at length about Ringo's musical importance and
vast influence, so I turn reluctantly from an in-depth analysis of
same to the incidental fact, alluded to above, of Ringo's instantly
identifiable persona – for many early Beatles observers, he was the
only member they could pick out at once. (I myself couldn't tell the
other three apart at first, even in the cartoons.) The once-humble
drummer was now a star, an equal partner, receiving the most fan mail
of the Four, and paving the way for the Phil Collinses, the Dave
Grohls and the Don Henleys who would silence those who long
considered drummers to be somehow less than musicians.
This
dynamic, combined with the Beatles' unequalled impact on music and
culture, led many to assume that the drummer of in the Greatest Band
of All Time must therefore be the Greatest Rock Drummer of All Time.
John Lennon, in response to this assumption, allegedly alluded to Paul's
considerable drumming prowess with the quip, “He wasn't even the
best drummer in the Beatles!” (Note: This quote has since been debunked. Ed.) Still, greatness trumps mere
virtuosity, and Ringo's status as Most Influential Drummer Ever is
rivaled only by his friend and colleague, Led Zeppelin's John Bonham.
The
Beatles, more than anybody before or since, raise a
chicken-or-the-egg question: Did they shape culture, or merely
reflect it? The Sixties, that turbulent decade of war, protests,
innovation, discovery, creativity, social and cultural upheaval, ad
infinitum, surely would have
happened anyway. It could be argued that the Fab Four were both agent
and patient, standard bearers of both their own revolutionary brand
of creativity, and that of their contemporaries. The Beatles did in
fact frequently pay homage not only to their early rock 'n' roll
influences (Elvis, Chuck Berry, Little Richard, etc.) but also to
their peers and rivals. The Beach Boys, Jimi Hendrix, The Who, Bob
Dylan, and even Fleetwood Mac provided inspiration for stylistic
experimentation as the Beatles themselves turned influence into
originality.
The
world in which record labels would invest in new artists, allowing
them to develop over the course of several albums, is gone. So are
the days of the album cover, that square foot of cardboard that
allowed artists to boldly express themselves in a way that the measly
CD insert or mp3 artwork can never hope to equal. Boy bands rocket to
stardom, then plummet to punchline status in the same amount of time
it took the Beatles to discover, then abandon the electric 12-string
guitar. Not even Michael Jackson's stunning rise and fall could ever
equal the Beatles' status as game-changers whose influence will
forever extend far beyond mere music (as though music could ever be
thus trivialized.)
So,
the Grand Funk Railroads and Spice Girls and Emeli
Sandés of this world will forever be hyped as “outselling the
Beatles”, “more popular than the Beatles”, “staying on the
charts longer than the Beatles”, and “having more #1 hits than
the Beatles” (remember the remix of Elvis' “A Little Less
Conversation”? Me either.) The Four Headed Monster (as Mick Jagger
dubbed them) continues to roar from the highest mountaintop,
challenging all comers. And eating them for lunch.
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