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Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band is an album by The Beatles. It is often cited as the most influential rock album of all time by prominent critics and publications, including Rolling Stone and is among the Pop albums that have consistently appeared in top lists. It was recorded by The Beatles over a 129-day period beginning on December 6, 1966. The album was released on June 1, 1967 in the United Kingdom and on June 2, 1967 in the United States.
On release the album was an immediate critical and popular sensation. Innovative in every sense, from structure to recording techniques to the cover artwork, the artistic effect was felt immediately and influenced nearly every pop-rock album that came after it.
It was later made into a movie in 1978 staring the Bee Gees featuring covers of many Beatle songs including "Come Together" performed by Aerosmith
In 2003, the album was ranked number 1 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.
History
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band was recorded as early Beatlemania was waning. The Beatles had grown tired of touring and had quit the road in late 1966, burned out after the dramas of the "bigger than Jesus" controversy and a tumultuous tour of the Philippines which saw the band expelled from the country more or less at gunpoint.
Retirement from touring gave them, for the first time in their career, more than ample time in which to prepare their next record. As EMI's premier act and England's most successful pop group ever, they had almost unlimited access to the state-of-the-art technology of Abbey Road Studios. All four band members had already developed a preference for long, late-night sessions although they were still extremely efficient and highly disciplined in their studio habits. As noted in Mark Lewisohn's book on the Beatles' recording sessions (1988), one of their greatest strengths as a recording unit was drummer Ringo Starr, who was extremely reliable, rarely needing more than one take.
By the time The Beatles recorded the album, their musical interests had grown from simple blues, pop and rock beginnings to incorporate a variety of new influences. They had become familiar with a wide range of instruments, such as the Hammond organ and the electric piano; their instrumentation now covered the entire range, including strings, brass, woodwind, percussion and a wide range of exotic instruments, including the sitar. McCartney, although unable to read music, had scored a recent British film The Family Way with the assistance of producer-arranger George Martin, which earned him a prestigious Ivor Novello award.
The Beatles also used new modular effects units like the wah-wah pedal and the fuzz box, which the Beatles augmented with their own experimental ideas, such as running voices and instruments through a Leslie speaker. Another important sonic innovation was McCartney's discovery of the direct injection (DI) technique, in which he could record his bass by plugging it directly into an amplifying circuit in the recording console. This provided a vastly improved level of presence, power and fidelity over the old method, which was to record the bass through an amplifier with a microphone.
The Sgt. Pepper period also coincided with the introduction of some important musical innovations, both from within the band and the rest of the musical industry. The work of Bob Dylan, Frank Zappa, Phil Spector and Brian Wilson was radically redefining what was possible for pop musicians in terms of both songwriting and recording. Studio and recording technology had already reached a high degree of development and was poised for even greater innovation. The old rules of pop songwriting were being abandoned, as complex lyrical themes were explored for the first time in popular music, and songs were growing longer (such as Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone").
Technical innovation
Since the introduction of the core technology of magnetic recording tape in 1949, multitrack recording had progressed rapidly, with 8-track recorders already available in the USA and the first 8-tracks coming on-line in commercial studios in London in late 1967, shortly after Sgt. Pepper was released.
All of the Sgt. Pepper tracks were recorded at Abbey Road using mono, stereo and 4-track recorders. Like its predecessors, the recording made extensive use of the technique known as bouncing down, in which a number of tracks were recorded across the four tracks of one recorder, which were then mixed and dubbed down onto one track of the master 4-track machine. This enabled the Abbey Road engineers to give The Beatles a virtual 16-track studio, since they could bounce down 16 tracks into four with only the loss of one generation in quality.
The build-up of noise during over-dubbing was a major problem for engineers. The Abbey Road album was one of the first to use the Dolby noise reduction system. The album remains a landmark in the history of sound recording and is remarkable for the clarity, fidelity and quietness of the transfers.
Magnetic tape had also led to innovative use of instruments and production effects, notably the tape-based keyboard sampler, the Mellotron, and effects like flanging (a term invented by George Martin) and phasing, and a greatly improved system for creating echo and reverberation.
Several then-new productions effects feature extensively on the recordings. One of the most important was automatic double tracking (ADT), a system that used tape recorders to create an instant and simultaneous doubling of a sound. Although it had long been recognised that using multitrack tape to record 'doubled' lead vocals gave them a greatly enhanced sound (especially with weaker singers) it had always been necessary to record such vocal tracks twice, a task which was both tedious and exacting.
ADT was invented specially for The Beatles by EMI engineer Ken Townshend in 1965, mainly at the behest of Lennon, who hated tracking sessions and regularly expressed a desire for a technical solution to the problem. ADT quickly became a near-universal recording practice in popular music.
Also important was varispeeding, the technique of recording various tracks on a multi-track tape at slightly different tape speeds. The Beatles use this effect extensively on their vocals in this period. The speeding up of vocals (also known as 'tweaking') also became a widespread technique in pop production. The Beatles also used the effect on portions of their backing tracks (as on "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds") to give them a 'thicker' and more diffuse sound.
In another innovation, the album (in its original LP form that was later released on CD) ends in an unusual way, beginning with a 15-kilohertz high-frequency tone (put on the album at John Lennon's suggestion, said to be "especially intended to annoy your dog"), followed by an endless loop made by the runout groove looping back into itself.
The sound in the loop is also the subject of much controversy, being widely interpreted as some kind of secret message. However, it seems that in reality it is nothing more than a few random samples and tape edits played backwards. The loop is recreated on the CD version which plays for a few seconds, then fades out. Although most of the content of the runout groove is impossible to decipher, it is possible to distinguish a sped-up voice (possibly Paul McCartney's) reciting the phrase "never to be any other way".
Instrumentation
Sgt. Pepper features elaborate arrangements — for example, the clarinet ensemble on "When I'm Sixty-Four" — and extensive use of studio effects including echo, reverberation and reverse tape effects. Many of these effects were devised in collaboration with producer George Martin and his team of engineers.
One of the few moments of discord came during the recording of "She's Leaving Home", when an impatient McCartney, frustrated by Martin's unavailability on another recording session, hired freelance arranger Mike Leander to arrange the string section — the only time during the group's entire career that he worked with another arranger, with the exception of some backing orchestration used in the Magical Mystery Tour film (12 October 1967 session; see Lewisohn), which were also arranged by Leander.
Another example of the album's unusual production is Lennon's song "Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite", which closes Side 1 of the album. The lyrics were adapted almost word for word from an old circus poster which Lennon had bought at an antique shop in Kent. The flowing sound collage that gives the song its distinctive character was created by Martin and his engineers, who collected recordings of calliopes and fairground organs, which were then cut into strips of various lengths, thrown into a box, mixed up and edited together in random order, creating a long loop which was mixed in during final production.
The opening track of Side 2, "Within You Without You", is unusually long for a 'pop' recording of the day, and features only George Harrison, on vocals and sitar, with all other instruments played by a group of London-based Indian musicians. These deviations from the traditional rock and roll band formula were facilitated by the Beatles' decision not to tour, by their ability to hire top-rate session musicians, and by Harrison's burgeoning interest in India and Indian music, which led him to take lessons from sitar maestro Ravi Shankar.
Album cover
See also: List of images on the cover of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
The Grammy Award-winning album packaging was created by art director Robert Fraser mostly in collaboration with McCartney, designed by Peter Blake and photographed by Michael Cooper, it featured a colourful collage of life-sized cardboard models of famous people on the front of the album cover; and, as a bow to the interest that Beatles' songs now inspired, the lyrics were printed on the back cover, the first time this had been done on a pop LP. The Beatles themselves, in the guise of the Sgt Pepper band, were dressed in eye-catching military-style outfits made of satin dyed in day-glo colours. Among the insignia on their uniforms are:
- An Ontario Provincial Police badge, on Paul's left sleeve (later a "Paul Is Dead" clue, since it is misinterpreted as OPD, rumored to mean Officially Pronounced Dead)
- MBE medals on Paul and George's jackets
- The Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom, on John's right sleeve
Art director Robert Fraser was a prominent London art dealer who ran the Indica Gallery. He had become a close friend of McCartney and it was only at his strong urging that the group abandoned their original cover design, a psychedelic painting by The Fool.
Fraser was one of the leading champions of modern art in Britain in the Sixties and beyond. He argued strongly that the Fool artwork was not well-executed and that the design would soon date. He convinced McCartney to abandon it, and offered to art-direct the cover; it was Fraser's suggestion to use an established fine artist and he introduced the band to a client, noted British 'pop' artist Peter Blake, who in collaboration with his wife, created the famous cover collage, known as "People We Like".
According to Blake, the original concept was to create a scene that showed the Sgt Pepper band performing in a park; this gradually evolved into its final form, which shows the Beatles, as the Sgt Pepper band, surrounded by a large group of their heroes, which were created as lifesize cut-out figures. Also included were wax-work figures of The Beatles as they appeared in the early Sixties, borrowed from Madame Tussauds.
The collage depicted more than 70 famous people, including writers, musicians, films stars and (at Harrison's request) a number of Indian gurus. Ringo Starr reportedly made no contribution to the design. The final grouping included Marlene Dietrich, author Terry Southern, Bob Dylan, Aleister Crowley, Edgar Allan Poe, Oscar Wilde, Marlon Brando, Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy and controversial comedian Lenny Bruce. Also included was the image of the original Beatles bass player, the late Stuart Sutcliffe. The entire list can be found at List of images on the cover of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.
The package was also one of the first 'gatefold' album covers, that is, the album could be opened up like a book, to reveal a large picture of the Fab Four in costume against a yellow background. The reason for the gatefold was that the Beatles planned on filling two LPs for the release. The designs had already been approved and sent to be printed when they realized they would only have enough material for one LP.
The album came with a page of cut-outs, with a description in the top left corner:
- SGT. PEPPER
CUT-OUTS
- Moustache
- Picture Card
- Stripes
- Badges
- Stand Up
The special inner sleeve, included in the early pressings of the LP, featured a multi-coloured psychedelic pattern designed by The Fool.
The collage created legal worries for EMI's legal department, which had to contact those who were still living to obtain their permission. Mae West initially refused — famously asking "What would I be doing in a lonely heart's club?" — but she relented after The Beatles sent her a personal letter. Actor Leo Gorcey requested payment for inclusion on the cover, so his image was removed. An image of Mohandas Gandhi was also removed at the request of EMI, who had a branch in India and were fearful that it might cause offense there. John Lennon had, perhaps facetiously, asked to include images of Jesus Christ and Adolf Hitler, but these were rejected because they would almost certainly have generated enormous controversy. Most of the suggestions for names to be included came from McCartney, Lennon and Harrison, with additional suggestions from Blake and Fraser (Ringo said he'd be okay with whatever the others chose). The Rolling Stones shirt worn by the Shirley Temple doll which was placed to the right of the band belonged to Cooper's young son Adam.
The depiction of a guitar made out of hyacinths on the cover was made by the flower delivery boy, who asked if he could help with the making of the artwork. Although it has long been rumoured that some of the plants in the arrangement were marijuana plants, this is untrue.
The collage was assembled by Blake and his wife during the last two weeks of March 1967 at the London studio of photographer Michael Cooper, who took the cover shots on March 30, 1967 in a three-hour evening session. By McCartney's own admission, two of the group members were tripping on LSD while the photographs were being taken. The final bill for the cover was £2,867 25s/3d, a staggering sum for the time — it has been estimated that this was 100 times the average cost for an album cover in those days.
The cover was subsequently parodied by Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention in the cover art of their album We're Only In It For The Money (although McCartney initially refused permission for the Mothers parody cover to be released, he later relented). It was also parodied in the opening credits of an episode of The Simpsons. It has also been mimicked by a Dutch artist as Sgt Croppers Fairport Band for the many Fairport Convention band members and associates. Swedish artist David Liljemark did a parody of the cover for a magazine, depicting a hypothetical future for the band Sven-Ingvars. MAD Magazine also parodied the cover in its August 2002 issue (#420), featuring "The 50 Worst Things About Music."
Themes and structure
With Sgt. Pepper, The Beatles wanted to create a record that could, in effect, tour for them — an idea they had already explored with the promotional film-clips made over the previous years, intended to promote them in the United States when they were not touring there.
McCartney decided that they should create fictitious characters for each band member and record an album that would be a performance by that fictitious band. The idea of disguise or change of identity was one in which the Beatles, naturally enough, had an avid interest — they were four of the most recogniseable and widely known individuals of all time.
The Beatles' recognisability was the motivation for their growing moustaches and beards and even longer hair, and was an inspiration for the disguise of their flamboyant Sgt. Pepper costumes. McCartney was well known for going out in public in disguise and all four had used aliases for travel bookings and hotel reservations.
Thus, the album starts with the title song, which introduces Sgt. Pepper's band itself; this song segues seamlessly into a sung introduction for bandleader "Billy Shears" (Ringo Starr), who performs "With a Little Help from My Friends". A reprise version of the title song was also recorded, and appears on side 2 of the original album (just prior to the climactic "A Day in the Life"), creating a "bookending" effect.
However, the Beatles essentially abandoned the concept after recording the first two songs and the reprise. Lennon was unequivocal in stating that the songs he wrote for the album had nothing to do with the Sgt. Pepper concept. Since the other songs on the album are actually unrelated, one might be tempted to conclude that the album does not form an overarching theme. However, the cohesive structure and careful sequencing of and transitioning between songs on the album, as well as the use of the Sgt. Pepper framing device, has led the album to be widely acknowleged as an early and groundbreaking example of the concept album.
Drugs
The group's habitual use of cannabis and their increasing intake of the hallucinogen LSD are widely thought to be a major influence on the style and sound of the album. The album features many effects and themes that appear to be psychedelic. At points there seem to be many explicit references to drugs. The album's closing track "A Day in the Life", which is one of the last major Lennon-McCartney collaborations, includes the phrase "I'd love to turn you on" — 'turning on' was a common drug culture colloquialism at the time, referring to getting 'high' on marijuana or LSD. Also the narrator of "With a Little Help From My Friends" repeatedly declares that he gets high with a little help from his friends. Phrases such as "Take some tea" (a synonym for pot) in "Lovely Rita", and "digging the weeds" in "When I'm Sixty-Four" have also been cited as possible drug references.
The song "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" became the subject of much speculation regarding its meaning. John Lennon maintained that the song describes a surreal dreamscape inspired by a picture drawn by his son Julian.
However, the song became controversial as many believed that the words of the chorus were code for LSD, a claim Lennon consistently denied. Julian, McCartney, Harrison and Starr backed up Lennon's story (Starr even said he saw the picture at the time), and the picture itself has appeared in the media. However, during a newspaper interview in 2004, McCartney was quoted as saying, "...Lucy In The Sky, that's pretty obvious. ...but the writing was too important for us to mess it up by getting off our heads all the time."
Debate continues among critics and fans about the meaning, extent, and depth of the drug references. Some interpretations of the album have focused on the use of drugs as central to the meaning of the entire album. Some critics, such as Sheila Whitely, have claimed that the experience of LSD use is fundamental and infused into the album. Most critics acknowledge some drug references, but believe that the album cannot be simply reduced to these references. George Melly, for example, points out that many songs, such "A Day in the Life", can easily be interpreted as rejections of drug culture, and that the culture is portrayed in a "desperate light."
Historical relevance
A period of experimentation in The Beatles' music had begun with their album Rubber Soul two years earlier. During this period, new influences and instruments from as far afield as India were incorporated in their recordings, which evolved further from simple teen pop and into more artistic sounds. Sgt. Pepper continued this process and became more avant-garde in style and form than previous or subsequent recordings.
Paul McCartney cited The Beach Boys' album Pet Sounds and Frank Zappa's album Freak Out! as key influences.
Their follow up, Magical Mystery Tour contained songs that were stylistically very like those on Sgt. Pepper, but after two years at the forefront of psychedelic rock, the Beatles began to return to more conventional musical expression in 1968. Several tracks recorded during the Sgt. Pepper sessions were not released on the album; some later appeared on Magical Mystery Tour, and a Harrison composition, Only A Northern Song, eventually surfaced on the 1968 soundtrack album to the animated feature Yellow Submarine.
Two songs dropped from Sgt. Pepper, "Strawberry Fields Forever" and "Penny Lane", were both recorded in late 1966 and early 1967. The unusually long gap between Beatles releases, combined with the group's withdrawal from touring, saw producer George Martin placed under increasing pressure by EMI and Capitol to deliver new material. He reluctantly issued the two songs as a double-A-sided single in February 1967. In keeping with the group's usual practice, the single tracks were not included on the LP (a decision Martin maintains he regrets to this day). They were only released as a single in the UK at the time, but were subsequently included as part of the American LP version of Magical Mystery Tour (which was issued as a 6-track EP in Britain).
"A Day in the Life"
Main article: A Day in the Life
The climactic and final track on the LP, the epic "A Day in the Life" was a long, kaleidoscopic piece, comprising several different sections edited together. The diary style and imagery of the verses was drawn from events that affected Lennon at the time.
The first verse refers obliquely to the death of Tara Browne, young heir to the Guinness fortune, whom the Beatles knew socially; he had been recently killed in a car accident, referred to in the line "He blew his mind out in a car; he didn't notice that the lights had changed". The second verse alluded to Lennon's recent role as Sgt. Gripweed in the Richard Lester film How I Won the War, in the line "The English Army had just won the war".
The middle-eight section was a small independently written piece contributed by McCartney and this was to be the last major song on which he and Lennon collaborated.
Although allegations were made by the British Broadcasting Corporation (who banned the song from airplay) that the song implicitly advocated drug use, both McCartney and Lennon have flatly denied this claim.
The final session for the song, held on the evening of February 10, 1967, was to record the orchestral overdubs with a forty-piece ensemble, conducted by McCartney and drawn from members of the London Symphony Orchestra. The Beatles invited a number of special guests for the occasion including Donovan and members of The Rolling Stones. McCartney and others filmed portions of the evening's proceedings with hand-held colour Super-8 cameras, and this footage can be seen on the video version of The Beatles Anthology.
Critical reception
Upon release, Sgt. Pepper became both popular and critically acclaimed. Various reviews appearing in the mainstream press and trade publications throughout June of 1967, immediately after the album's release were generally quite positive. In The Times prominent critic Kenneth Tynan described Sgt. Pepper as "a decisive moment in the history of Western civilization." Others including Richard Poirier, and Geoffrey Stokes were similarly expansive in their praise, Stokes noting, "listening to the Sgt. Pepper album one thinks not simply of the history of popular music but the history of this century". One notable critic who did not like the album was Richard Goldstein, a critic for the New York Times, who wrote, "Like an overattended child, this album is spoiled. It reeks of horns and harps, harmonica quartets, assorted animal noises, and a 41-piece orchestra," and that it was an "album of special effects, dazzling but ultimately fraudulent" (18th of June). (The Beatles: Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band by Allan F Moore, Cambridge University Press) The only rock musician who appearently did not like the album was Frank Zappa, who accused the Beatles of co-opting the flower power aesthetic for monetary gain, saying in a Rolling Stone article that he felt 'they were only in it for the money'-which became the title of the album (We're Only In It For The Money), that mocked Sgt. Pepper with a similar album cover. Zappa's record company decided to keep that cover from ever being displayed, and it was only after twenty years had passed that the original satirical cover was seen on the CD version.
Within days of its release, Jimi Hendrix was performing the title track in concert, first performing it for an audience that included Lennon and McCartney, who were greatly impressed by his unique version of their song. Also, Australian band The Twilights — who had obtained an advance copy of the LP in London — wowed audiences in Australia with note-perfect live renditions of the entire album, weeks before it was even released there.
The album won the Grammy Award for Album of the Year, the first rock album to do so, and Best Contemporary Album in 1967.
It has been on many lists of the best rock albums, including Rolling Stone, Bill Shapiro, Alternative Melbourne, Rod Underhill and VH1. In 1997 Sgt. Pepper was named the number 1 greatest album of all time in a 'Music of the Millennium' poll conducted by HMV, Channel 4, The Guardian and Classic FM. In 1998 Q magazine readers placed it at number 7, while in 2003 the TV network VH1 placed it at number 10; also in 2003, Rolling Stone placed the album at the top of its "Top 500 Albums" feature.
In the years since the album's release some have criticized the album for the trends that it started, such as supposed "over indulgence" on the part of artists, spending a great deal of time and money producing high minded concept albums, and the beginning of supposed decadence in rock and roll. Many critics have also become more negative about the album's music, many claiming that other albums such as Revolver are superior.
Mono version
The Beatles themselves mixed the album in mono and the LP was originally released as such alongside a stereo mix prepared by Abbey Road engineers (with the mono version now out-of-print). The two mixes are fundamentally different. For example, the stereo "She's Leaving Home" was mixed at a lower pitch than the original recording and plays at a slower tempo. Similarly, the mono version of "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds" is considerably slower than the stereo version and features much heavier gating and reverb effects. Paul McCartney's yelling voice in the coda section of "Sgt. Pepper (Reprise)" (just before the segue into "A Day In The Life") can plainly be heard in the mono version, but is inaudible in the stereo version. Also in the stereo mix, the famous segue at the end of "Good Morning, Good Morning" (the chicken-clucking sound which becomes a guitar noise) is timed differently and a crowd noise tape comes in later during the intro to "Sgt. Pepper (Reprise)". Other variations between the two mixes abound.
Track listing
- Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band was the first Beatles album to be released with identical track listings in the United Kingdom and the United States (although the American release did not contain the Side Two runout groove and inner groove sound effects).
- All songs written by Lennon-McCartney, except where noted.
Side one
- "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" – 2:02 SAMPLE (121k)
- "With a Little Help from My Friends" – 2:44
- "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" – 3:28 SAMPLE (99k)
- "Getting Better" – 2:47
- "Fixing a Hole" – 2:36
- "She's Leaving Home" – 3:35
- "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!" – 2:37
Side two
- "Within You Without You" (Harrison) – 5:05
- "When I'm Sixty-Four" – 2:37 SAMPLE (114k)
- "Lovely Rita" – 2:42
- "Good Morning Good Morning" – 2:41
- "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)" – 1:18
- "A Day in the Life" – 5:33 SAMPLE (178k)
Release history
Country | Date | Label | Format | Catalog |
United Kingdom | June 1 1967 | Parlophone | mono LP | PMC 7027 |
stereo LP | PCS 7027 | |||
United States | June 2 1967 | Capitol Records | mono LP | MAS 2653 |
stereo LP | SMAS 2653 | |||
Worldwide reissue | May 19 1987 | Apple, Parlophone, EMI | CD | CDP 7 46442 2 |
Japan | March 11 1998 | Toshiba-EMI | CD | TOCP 51118 |
Japan | January 21 2004 | Toshiba-EMI | Remastered LP | TOJP 60138 |
Recording details
The following is a summary of the recording of each song in the order they were recorded.
- "When I'm Sixty-Four". Recording commenced in studio two at Abbey Road on December 6, 1966. Album version mixed from take four. Writer: Paul. Lead vocal: Paul. Producer: George Martin. Recording engineer: Geoff Emerick. Second engineer: Phil McDonald.
- "A Day in the Life". Recording commenced in studio two at Abbey Road on January 19, 1967. Album version mixed from takes six and seven. Writers: John and Paul. Lead vocal: John, with Paul. Producer: George Martin. Recording engineer: Geoff Emerick. Second engineer: Richard Lush, Phil McDonald.
- "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band". Recording commenced in studio two at Abbey Road on February 1, 1967. Album version mixed from take ten. Writer: Paul. Lead vocal: Paul. Producer: George Martin. Recording engineer: Geoff Emerick. Second engineer: Richard Lush.
- "Good Morning Good Morning". Recording commenced in studio two at Abbey Road on February 8, 1967. Album version mixed from take eleven. Writer: John. Lead vocal: John. Producer: George Martin. Recording engineer: Geoff Emerick. Second engineer: Richard Lush.
- "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!". Recording commenced in studio two at Abbey Road on February 17, 1967. Album version mixed from take nine. Writer: John. Lead vocal: John. Producer: George Martin. Recording engineer: Geoff Emerick. Second engineer: Richard Lush.
- "Fixing a Hole". Recording commenced at Regent Sound Studio, Tottemham Court Road, London, on February 21, 1967, and later completed at Abbey Road. Album version mixed from take three. Writer: Paul. Lead vocal: Paul. Producer: George Martin. Recording engineers: Adrien Ibbetson (Regent Sound) and Geoff Emerick (Abbey Road). Second engineer: Richard Lush.
- "Lovely Rita". Recording commenced in studio two at Abbey Road on February 23, 1967. Album version mixed from take eleven. Writer: Paul. Lead vocal: Paul. Producer: George Martin. Recording engineer: Geoff Emerick. Second engineer: Richard Lush.
- "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds". Recording commenced in studio two at Abbey Road on March 1, 1967. Album version mixed from take eight. Writer: John. Lead vocal: John. Producer: George Martin. Recording engineer: Geoff Emerick. Second engineer: Richard Lush.
- "Getting Better". Recording commenced in studio two at Abbey Road on March 9, 1967. Album version mixed from take fifteen. Writer: Paul. Lead vocal: Paul. Producer: George Martin. Recording engineers: Malcolm Addey, Ken Townsend, Geoff Emerick, Peter Vince. Second engineer: Graham Kirkby, Richard Lush, Keith Slaughter.
- "She's Leaving Home". Recording commenced in studio two at Abbey Road on March 17, 1967. Album version mixed from take nine. Writer: Paul. Lead vocal: Paul. Producer: George Martin. Recording engineer: Geoff Emerick. Second engineer: Richard Lush, Keith Slaughter.
- "Within You Without You". Recording commenced in studio two at Abbey Road on March 22, 1967. Album version mixed from take two. Writer: George. Lead vocal: George. Producer: George Martin. Recording engineer: Geoff Emerick. Second engineer: Richard Lush.
- "With a Little Help from My Friends". Recording commenced in studio two at Abbey Road on March 29, 1967. Working title 'Bad Finger Boogie'. Album version mixed from take eleven. Writers: John and Paul. Lead vocal: Ringo. Producer: George Martin. Recording engineer: Geoff Emerick. Second engineer: Richard Lush.
- "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)". Recording commenced in studio one at Abbey Road on April 1, 1967. Album version mixed from take nine. Writer: Paul.
Charts
Album
Year | Chart | Position |
---|---|---|
1967 | Pop Albums | 1 |
1984 | The Billboard 200 | 141 |
Singles
Year | Single | Chart | Position |
---|---|---|---|
1978 | "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band"/"With a Little Help from My Friends" | Pop Singles | 71 |
Awards
Grammy awards
Year | Winner | Award | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1967 | Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band | Album of the Year | 1967 | Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band | Best Album Cover, Graphic Arts | |
1967 | Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band | Best Engineered Recording, Non-Classical | ||||
1967 | Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band | Contemporary Album |
Grammy Award nominations
Year | Nominee | Award |
---|---|---|
1967 | Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band | Group Vocal Performance |
1967 | Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band | Contemporary Vocal Group |
1967 | "A Day in the Life" | Best Instrumental Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist(s) |
Stage musical and film
The LP was adapted as a stage musical in the mid-1970s, which would itself provide the partial basis for a disastrous 1978 movie version, produced by Robert Stigwood and starring Peter Frampton as Billy Shears and The Bee Gees as the Hendersons, with an all-star supporting cast including George Burns and Steve Martin. Although the Beatles authorized the use of the title, and of new versions of many Beatles songs in the film, they did not appear in the film or play on the soundtrack. And even though The Bee Gees were among the hottest stars in music at the time, the movie was a critical and commercial debacle.
References
- Lewisohn, Mark (1988). The Complete Beatles Recording Sessions: The Official Story of the Abbey Road Years. London: Hamlyn. ISBN 0600557847.
- Sorgenfrei, Lars Rosenblum. Inkblot Magazine. . Retrieved October 26, 2004.
- Rolling Stone magazine. RS 507 - 27 August 1987. . Retrieved October 26, 2004.
- Haber, David. The Sgt. Pepper's Album. . Retrieved October 26, 2004.
See also
- Sgt. Pepper's was re-recorded in 2005 by a collective of musicians calling themselves 'The Exciting Sandwich'. One of the musicians involved was Adam Leonard. More information can be found here.
External links
- Album lyrics
- Reconstructivist Art: "Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band"
- The greatest album of all time according to Rolling Stone magazine
- Beatle's comments on each of the songs