FILM: It Was Fifty Years Ago Today

FILM: It Was Fifty Years Ago Today

It Was Fifty Years Ago Today! The Beatles: Sgt. Pepper & Beyond (dir. Alan G. Parker)

It’s easy to sneer at The Beatles, for a lot of people at least. Pop music for people who don’t like pop music. A band who were more than the sum of their parts (reinforced by several decades of four very very variable solo careers). A band who were too successful for their own good, and everyone else’s, their back catalogue is constantly repackaged and their story constantly retold, without (m)any new angles.

There are, of course, some people who delight in sacrificing sacred cows, to the point that such an activity is as clichéd as those they believe they are attacking. But life is too short to deal with such idiocy.

The Beatles’ eighth studio album, Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,  celebrated its 50th anniversary on June 1st. That’s how old it is now, and it still has a hold on people. Why is it so lauded? Because it was groundbreaking in so many ways, in which this documentary explains.

In many ways – and I mean this with the greatest respect to all involved – it continues this important story where Ron Howard‘s excellent documentary from last year Eight Days A Week: The Touring Years reached. It starts off with the Beatles about to go off to the US on what would be their final tour. This was against a backdrop of protests in the Bible Belt with religious objections to John Lennon‘s remarks that ‘the Beatles were now bigger than Christ.’ This included record burnings in Memphis, and Lennon having to apologise and explain his remarks.

This was a time of transition. Though the most recent Beatles studio albums – 1965’s Rubber Soul and 1966’s Revolver had seen them up their game, they were still looking to take their music further. Yet much of these albums weren’t played on the tour as it was felt that they couldn’t be replicated live. They were talking about giving up live performance, something that worried manager Brian Epstein, who was in his element organising tours. His death, a matter of months after the album’s release is handled sensitively.

The musical world was changing. There’s exploration of the move from being described as pop to rock, notion of long term rather than disposable. This wasn’t some controversy along the lines of Bob Dylan going electric, but certainly musically and lyrically the band had left three chord tunes about love far behind them.

This documentary explores the making of the album, the response and what followed. It transpires that ‘When I’m 64‘ had been played by Paul McCartney at the cavern back in ’63. EMI were somewhat aghast at how much the album cost and how long it took to make. Three months in the studio and £25,000 on one concept album were unthinkable for the time.

The documentary is a mixture of archived footage with the Beatles and new interviews with associates. The latter include their authorised biographer Hunter Davies and Jenny Boyd (sister of Patti, George Harrison‘s first wife). They explore how The Beatles were pushing back against the image of the ‘loveable moptops.’ Not for the first time, the theory is pushed again that it was McCartney not Lennon who was the avant-garde one.

Sure, much of the story may be familiar. But it’s beautifully told and explored, and far from a cash-in or rehash. Given that there were still a few more chapters to be written, I hope that Alan G. Parker will get the opportunity to explore this for us, too.

 

  1. “It’s easy to sneer at The Beatles” – bang on!

    “Pop music for people who don’t like pop music.” – bang on!

    “There are, of course, some people who delight in sacrificing sacred cows” – bang on!

    “to the point that such an activity is as clichéd as those they believe they are attacking.” – saying tories are selfish arsehole who hate disabled people and only do stuff for the rich is a cliche too – but it is true and worth repeating as often as possible because evil things (like tories and sgt pepper) deserve to be destroyed and consigned to history, never to be seen or heard from again.

    “But life is too short to deal with such idiocy.” Don’t call me an idiot. And it is not idiocy. And you did deal with it, albeit in a pretty pointless way.

  2. Do you walk around with someone who’s permanently giving you a wedgie, Wild Eye? Just curious.

  3. Ha! Loz, I think he almost certainly does. As he (or she) managed to miss the point that they think they are making about it, they give me a laugh.

    1. I just think this album is horrifically bad on every level. I buy that at the time it might have been ground-breaking but it reminds me of vera lynn. “nice” mainstream uber-shit. I would genuinely prefer to listen to the complete works of jason donovan than this piece of fucking crap for people who hate music. Horrid. I hate lots of music. This I hate more than most, though they did do some stuff equally bad (magical, abbey, yellow, a couple fo others). I LOVE the white album and quite like revolver and rubber, but that taxman song is fucking shit as well. Next you’ll be telling me radiohead have released a single decent song since creep or that blur should be allowed to live.

      1. Heartily agree. I remember the hype around the 25th anniversary edition of Sgt Pepper & my dad buying it & playing it, & thinking, is this it? This pile of twee, cringeworthy sub-music hall shite is the greatest album of all time?

        1. Yes this album/the Beatles are over hyped in some respects.And this is far from their best album, but it was quite influential in terms of recording techniques and the album as a concept.The problem is the Beatles story has been told so many times that I struggle to be interested.I watched a Bbc doc about Sgt Peppers and they were analysing it like classical music, I really couldn’t be doing with that.The Anthology was the definitive Beatles doc for me.

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God is in the TV is an online music and culture fanzine founded in Cardiff by the editor Bill Cummings in 2003. GIITTV Bill has developed the site with the aid of a team of sub-editors and writers from across Britain, covering a wide range of music from unsigned and independent artists to major releases.