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10 things you didn’t know about The Beatles’ Revolver album – Radio X

10 things you didn’t know about The Beatles’ Revolver album – Radio X

10 things you didn’t know about The Beatles’ Revolver album – Radio X
August 05
14:08 2019

Beatles "Revolver" Album Cover

Many claim it’s the Beatles’ masterpiece and 5 August sees the classic album celebrate its birthday. But how much do you know about this rather excellent LP from 1966?

  1. Who designed The Beatles’ Revolver album cover?

    Klaus Voormann, a friend of The Beatles from their days in Hamburg at the beginning of the 1960s drew the cover art and put together the collage. Klaus studied art, but had recently moved to the UK to take up a career in music, playing bass with the group Manfred Mann. He created the collage out of a number of photos of the band (some of which appear on the back cover of the previous album, Rubber Soul) and Klaus himself appears on the front cover, just underneath the drawing of John’s mouth.

    Beatles "Revolver" Album Cover
    Beatles “Revolver” Album Cover. Picture: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
  2. Who was the real Eleanor Rigby?

    The song was originally drafted as “Miss Daisy Hawkins”, but Macca changed the name to fit the syllables. The “Eleanor” probably came from actress and comedienne Eleanor Bron, who starred in the Fabs’ film Help! Strangely, however, there’s an Eleanor Rigby buried near Paul’s former home in Woolton, in Liverpool, who died in 1939. WEIRD.

    The grave of Eleanor Rigby in the churchyard of St.Peter's church in Woolton, Liverpool
    The grave of Eleanor Rigby in the churchyard of St.Peter’s church in Woolton, Liverpool. Picture: Jim Dyson/Getty Images
  3. Is Got To Get You Into My Life about drugs?

    Well… yeah. Paul McCartney was always cagey about it, but later admitted that it was “an ode to pot”. In the book Many Years From Now, Macca confessed: “I’d been a rather straight working-class lad but when we started to get into pot it seemed to me to be quite uplifting… Got To Get You Into My Life is really a song about that, it’s not to a person, it’s actually about pot. It’s saying, I’m going to do this. This is not a bad idea.”

  4. What’s the meaning of Tomorrow Never Knows?

    This one is definitely about drugs, too. LSD, to be precise. The words concern psychedelic guru Timothy Leary’s English interpretation of the Tibetan Book Of The Dead, which gives instructions on how a spirit goes through into the “next world”. Leary was an advocate of LSD and his book The Psychedelic Experience was an attempt to guide acid-heads through their use of the often-unpredictable drug. Lennon recorded himself reading the instructions onto tape and played it back as began his trip.

    Psychologist and LSD proponent Timonthy Leary standing next to a mandala in 1966.
    Psychologist and LSD proponent Timonthy Leary standing next to a mandala in 1966. Picture: Bettman/Getty Images
  5. Was Doctor Robert a real person?

    There are lots of theories on who this magical pill-dispensing shaman was, but the most likely is Dr Robert Freymann, a New York physician noted for reportedly offering Vitamin B-12 shots, laced with amphetamines to his wealthy clients. He lost his license in 1975 and died in 1987, leaving behind a book called “What’s So Bad About Feeling Good?”

  6. What do She Said She Said and Loaded by Primal Scream have in common?

    Peter Fonda. Jane’s brother had just starred in a biker movie called The Wild Angels and upset Lennon during a pleasant acid trip by relating the tale of when he accidentally shot himself in the stomach when he was 11. His phrase “I know what it’s like to be dead” found its way into a Beatles song… while a sample of Fonda in The Wild Angels was used to kick off The Scream’s classic 1990 track: “We wanna be free to do what we want to do!”

  7. Why did The Beatles never play any of these songs live?

    They played their summer 1966 single Paperback Writer, on their last tour, but after three solid years of Beatlemania, the band had become bored and disillusioned with not being heard by the screaming fans, and were happy to play their usual collection of crowd-pleasers. The Revolver songs were simply too complex, with too many overdubs and extra instrumentation to be played live, not to mention the rubbish amplification used in those days.

    The Beatles Performing at Shea Stadium on 23 August 1966
    The Beatles Performing at Shea Stadium on 23 August 1966. Picture: Bettmann/Getty Images
  8. Why were the UK and US versions of the album different?

    The US version of the album misses off three tracks: I’m Only Sleeping, And Your Bird Can Sing and Doctor Robert. Back in the 1960s, the US label Capitol would try and eke out more LPs from the Fab Four catalogue, so these three tunes were collected on an album called Yesterday And Today, which also included bits of Help! and Rubber Soul. The Beatles were not happy and this was the last album to be treated this way.

    The Beatles - Yesterday And Today album cover
    The Beatles – Yesterday And Today album cover. Picture: Press
  9. What is the high-pitched bird-like sound on Tomorrow Never Knows?

    It’s Paul McCartney, laughing. Or pretending to laugh. The sound was a tape loop that was sped up and distorted, then mixed into the final track.

  10. Why is the album called Revolver?

    It’s a pun on the way an LP revolves at 33-and-a-third revolutions a minute. However, the name was a work of desperation as it was ALMOST called “Beatles On Safari” or “Abracadabra”. Luckily, taste prevailed.

Source: 10 things you didn’t know about The Beatles’ Revolver album – Radio X

About Author

Martin Nethercutt

Martin Nethercutt

Martin A Nethercutt is a writer, singer, producer and loves music. Creative Director at McCartney Studios Editor-in-Chief at McCartney Times Creator-in-Chief at Geist Musik President (title) at McCartney Multimedia, Inc. Went to Albert-Schweitzer-Schule Kassel Lives in Playa del Rey From Kassel, Germany Married to Ruth McCartney

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