― the pinefox, Thursday, 2 October 2003 15:23 (twenty years ago) link
― jel -- (jel), Thursday, 2 October 2003 15:40 (twenty years ago) link
― Lord Custos Omicron (Lord Custos Omicron), Thursday, 2 October 2003 15:41 (twenty years ago) link
― Dom Passantino (Dom Passantino), Thursday, 2 October 2003 15:49 (twenty years ago) link
I still don't like much that they did, but the only Beatle I actively dislike (musically) is McCartney.
― miloauckerman (miloauckerman), Thursday, 2 October 2003 15:50 (twenty years ago) link
one reason i don't feel bad about being an unabashed beatles lover anymore is that people who say they hate the beatles tend to big up the stones. recently i realized that no matter how many stones songs i say i like (and i do like a lot) i could never LOVE them, for so many reasons (mainly that i find their myth/reputation far more irritating than the beatles' ever was), and i do love the beatles. i could sell all my beatles albums tomorrow and use the money to buy every stones record i don't have and this would be no less true.
― Justyn Dillingham (Justyn Dillingham), Thursday, 2 October 2003 16:05 (twenty years ago) link
― Ronan (Ronan), Thursday, 2 October 2003 16:37 (twenty years ago) link
― Ronan (Ronan), Thursday, 2 October 2003 16:38 (twenty years ago) link
― nickalicious (nickalicious), Thursday, 2 October 2003 16:49 (twenty years ago) link
― Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 2 October 2003 16:50 (twenty years ago) link
― jaymc (jaymc), Thursday, 2 October 2003 17:54 (twenty years ago) link
I don't hate the Beatles, but for me, it's the Beach Boys and the Kinks who I praise a lot more.
― jaymc (jaymc), Thursday, 2 October 2003 17:57 (twenty years ago) link
― stevem (blueski), Thursday, 2 October 2003 17:59 (twenty years ago) link
― Andrew L (Andrew L), Thursday, 2 October 2003 20:08 (twenty years ago) link
― Andrew L (Andrew L), Thursday, 2 October 2003 20:10 (twenty years ago) link
I often find the Kinks to be wildly overrated. Although I like them, I think.
― Ally C (Ally C), Thursday, 2 October 2003 20:43 (twenty years ago) link
anthology 2 (tape 2)
― gygax! (gygax!), Thursday, 2 October 2003 21:16 (twenty years ago) link
Who would dare, and risk getting trampled by hordes of indignant girls?
― Nichole Graham (Nichole Graham), Thursday, 2 October 2003 21:19 (twenty years ago) link
― Chris P (Chris P), Thursday, 2 October 2003 21:29 (twenty years ago) link
― the pinefox, Thursday, 2 October 2003 21:41 (twenty years ago) link
― Ally C (Ally C), Thursday, 2 October 2003 21:53 (twenty years ago) link
― sucka (sucka), Thursday, 2 October 2003 22:46 (twenty years ago) link
― Pashmina (Pashmina), Thursday, 2 October 2003 23:07 (twenty years ago) link
― stolenbus (stolenbus), Thursday, 2 October 2003 23:32 (twenty years ago) link
I like everything the Beatles did. Or every song the Beatles sang (I don't much like the film Yellow Submarine, or the members' houses). There are lots of songs that I think are weak (half of Sgt. Pepper, 'Piggies', 'Get Back'), but I like them enough to listen to them, to not skip them. When I'm listening, I'm liking.
The overfamiliarity: I know, but then I listen to, of all things, 'Yesterday' and I think I'm not familiar enough with the version that's on the record, which is pure and bold.
But I don't understand what liking the Beatles can actually mean, even as I'm doing it. Who is being propped up? Not the liker, not the likee. I meet people, at bus-stops and stuff, who claim to like dinosaurs, or the Romans. But I can't take them seriously unless the bus is taking them to a bone-dig, or a toga fitting. And still, 'seriously' is pushing it. And I never meet people who hate these things. Big deal for the brontosaurus, no doubt.
Abba, mentioned somewhere, are kind of the same.
― Eyeball Kicks (Eyeball Kicks), Thursday, 2 October 2003 23:59 (twenty years ago) link
I must have heard it, I know I must have, but it seems like the song has surpassed the record to such an extent that I don't need to have heard it. I suspect there are very few other acts who can do that (Sinatra is one).
― Matt DC (Matt DC), Friday, 3 October 2003 07:15 (twenty years ago) link
― sucka (sucka), Friday, 3 October 2003 07:32 (twenty years ago) link
Full disclosure: my favorite Beatle is Yoko. My second favorite is George Martin.
― Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Friday, 3 October 2003 07:53 (twenty years ago) link
So you habitually avoid the well-known to preserve an elitist cool then?
― Dr. C (Dr. C), Friday, 3 October 2003 07:58 (twenty years ago) link
The myth overshadows the music *as much as you let it*. So don't let it. I mean you lot wouldn't NOT buy the new Basement Jaxx just because everyone's pissing their pants about it, would you?
But now it doesn't and it's an "elitist cool" thing?
Which is it!
― Ronan (Ronan), Friday, 3 October 2003 09:08 (twenty years ago) link
I dunno...being into music and ignoring The Beatles *because of the myths* is like bothering to go to the Musee D'Orsay but closing your eyes each time a Monet or a Van Gogh was nearby. Like reading Zadie Smith but not bothering with Charles Dickens. You don't HAVE to like the Beatles (in fact there's lots to dislike) but to rule them out completely on these grounds is ludicrous. Maybe there's a ton of myth and fable because they're, you know....good.
― Dr. C (Dr. C), Friday, 3 October 2003 09:52 (twenty years ago) link
― Tom (Groke), Friday, 3 October 2003 10:04 (twenty years ago) link
― Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Friday, 3 October 2003 10:16 (twenty years ago) link
― Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Friday, 3 October 2003 10:18 (twenty years ago) link
― Enrique (Enrique), Friday, 3 October 2003 10:23 (twenty years ago) link
How did the Beatles become big in the first place? Through the quality of the songs alone? Through slogging round the UK gig circuit, moderindiebandstyle? Through massive record company promotion? Through originality? Through looks? Through sheer luck?
― Matt DC (Matt DC), Friday, 3 October 2003 10:26 (twenty years ago) link
I know what you mean - the new is always more exciting. But people aren't saying that they are making the choice the way you described. They seem to be saying that buying a Beatles album amounts to giving in to some sort of mass opinion that *must be resisted at all costs*. Or as Matt said : "it feels like walking into a record shop and buying Revolver would be like admitting defeat, like admitting there's NOTHING else I want to buy in the entire shop".
I wonder how much this has to do with notions of personal 'cool'. (I'm not having a pop at you here, Matt)
Btw pop kids get The Kinks or The Small Faces or The Who instead, they're better.
― Dr. C (Dr. C), Friday, 3 October 2003 11:04 (twenty years ago) link
I like dance music mainly, following on from that I like electronic pop music and hiphop, I don't owe the Beatles anything and yes as a point of principle I'm not going to give them anything at this moment in time.
It's not about personal cool, it's just about fairly strong feelings which though not necessarily rational, are very real.
― Ronan (Ronan), Friday, 3 October 2003 11:45 (twenty years ago) link
― Ronan (Ronan), Friday, 3 October 2003 11:47 (twenty years ago) link
1. I don't like any of their records, and dislike most. The simple early rocky ones are okay.
2. I don't like any of their voices.
3. I have scores of covers of their songs, loads by my favourite singers, and they almost always strike me as the worst track on whatever album they are on - for me, the success rate of Beatles covers seems lower than covers of any other act. This means I'm prepared to say that I don't like them as songwriters either.
4. I almost always resent it when someone is set up as the unquestioned top person, or group in this case, the way that the Beatles are. Any broad poll of the public for favourite group ever, you KNOW they will win it, as surely as Shakespeare is the greatest playwright ever. I resent the way they are built up as greater and more important by orders of magnitude than the Stones, Beach Boys, Who and Kinks, for example.
5. I think they were a terrible influence. I think they led to the idea that an act shouldn't be taken seriously if they don't write their own songs, that crafting proper albums is important, and various other rockist notions. Nothing wrong with writing your own songs, and I know they didn't impose the paradigm so it is somewhat unfair to blame them, but they are at the root of its spread, I think. I dislike Hendrix's music for similar reasons, while recognising that it isn't his fault.
6. I am sick of hearing them. They still crop up pretty often.
7. Contrary to what I think Matt was saying above, they are still prominent in the magazine racks. Q, for instance, make my point 4 for me: their idea of a suitable cover feature would be one album of the Beatles (this issue: The Beatles from march 26th-29th 1966), the whole career of the Kinks or Nirvana, say, or all reggae ever. The Beatles seem to be Q's cover feature at least three months out of every year. (No, I don't buy Q, but it's there in the racks every week for me to see.)
8. The mystification of some people at my not liking the Beatles, as if I am confessing to molesting children or something.
I don't think there is any hipster posing in there. I'm a middle aged guy who goes to work in a suit each day and I love many of the revered giants of music, many of them hopelessly uncool. It's not ignorance or refusal to listen to them in the first place, it's finding their music less to my taste than (literally) tens of thousands of other acts.
I often state that the Monkees wrote none of their songs, didn't play the instruments early on, were TV performers before musicians, didn't produce the records and were as manufactured as Hear'Say - just some of the reasons they were better than the Beatles. That's a joke, but it's also mostly stating my feelings about the matter - but the key missing ingredient is that I like 90% of the songs on the Monkees' first few albums better than any Beatles songs ever. And I think Jones and especially Dolenz were far better singers than any Beatles.
I rather like the live action Beatles films. They seem to me to be almost perfect pop group movies.
― Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Friday, 3 October 2003 12:01 (twenty years ago) link
Something wrong with this picture.
― the pinefox, Friday, 3 October 2003 12:08 (twenty years ago) link
― Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Friday, 3 October 2003 12:12 (twenty years ago) link
I'm not familiar with critical history, but how does this work when their first few albums are mostly covers?
― Andrew Farrell (afarrell), Friday, 3 October 2003 12:27 (twenty years ago) link
I can see why you think that, but I'm not really sure it is (I wouldn't feel embarassed going into HMV and buying the Rachel Stevens album, so I don't reckon a copy of Abbey Road would cause many problems in that department). I think in many ways the problem is pure familiarity - I very rarely buy records I'm already well-acquainted with. To me, much of the fun of buying a record is in the very thrill of not knowing exactly what's contained within and music I know well I'd be more likely to download or copy off friends. I realise this is pretty unique to me and largely irrational (hence the going to the bar comparison above).
― Matt DC (Matt DC), Friday, 3 October 2003 12:32 (twenty years ago) link
― Andrew Thames (Andrew Thames), Friday, 3 October 2003 12:38 (twenty years ago) link
― Ronan (Ronan), Friday, 3 October 2003 12:57 (twenty years ago) link
― Matt DC (Matt DC), Friday, 3 October 2003 13:32 (twenty years ago) link
Martin's point #3 is OTM, but (to me) has no relevance to what I think about The Beatles doing songs by The Beatles.
On point #8 - just in case i'm being misunderstood I don't think there's anything wrong with disliking them.
― Dr. C (Dr. C), Friday, 3 October 2003 13:59 (twenty years ago) link
― Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Friday, 3 October 2003 14:28 (twenty years ago) link