Tracklist
Taxman | |||
Eleanor Rigby | |||
I'm Only Sleeping | |||
Love You To | |||
Here, There And Everywhere | |||
Yellow Submarine | |||
She Said She Said | |||
Good Day Sunshine | |||
And Your Bird Can Sing | |||
For No One | |||
Dr. Robert | |||
I Want To Tell You | |||
Got To Get You Into My Life | |||
Tomorrow Never Knows |
Credits (5)
- Klaus VoormannDesign [Cover]
- Robert WhitakerPhotography By [Back Cover]
- George MartinProducer
- Harrison*Written-By
- Lennon-McCartneyWritten-By
Notes
Revolver is the seventh studio album by the English rock band The Beatles. Released on 5 August 1966, it was the Beatles' final recording project before their retirement as live performers, and marked a progression on their 1965 release Rubber Soul in of the group's readiness to experiment in the recording studio. The album's diverse sounds include tape loops and backwards recordings on the psychedelic "Tomorrow Never Knows", a classical string octet on "Eleanor Rigby", and Indian-music backing on "Love You To". The album was reduced to eleven songs by Capitol Records in North America, where three of its tracks instead appeared on the June 1966 release Yesterday and Today.
The Beatles recorded the album following a three-month break from professional commitments at the start of 1966, and during a period when London was feted as the era's cultural capital. The songs reflect the influence of psychedelic drugs such as LSD and the increasing sophistication of the Beatles' lyrics to address themes including death and transcendence from material concerns. With no thoughts of reproducing their new material in concert, the band made liberal use of studio techniques such as varispeeding, reversed tapes, close audio miking and automatic double tracking (ADT), in addition to employing musical instrumentation outside of their standard live set-up. Some of the changes in studio practice introduced by Revolver, particularly ADT, were soon adopted throughout the recording industry. The sessions also produced a non-album single, "Paperback Writer" backed with "Rain", for which the Beatles filmed their first on-location promotional films.
In the UK, Revolver's fourteen tracks were released to radio stations throughout July 1966, with the music signifying what author Ian MacDonald later described as "a second pop revolution – one which while galvanising their existing rivals and inspiring many new ones, left all of them far behind". In the US, it was the last Beatles album to be subjected to Capitol's policy of altering the band's intended running order and content. The release there coincided with the Beatles' final concert tour, which was marred by the controversy surrounding John Lennon's remark that the band had become "more popular than Jesus". The record topped the UK Albums Chart for seven weeks and America's Billboard Top LPs list for six weeks. Together with the children's novelty song "Yellow Submarine", "Eleanor Rigby" became an international hit when issued as a double A-side single.
Revolver's cover artwork, designed by Klaus Voormann, won the 1967 Grammy Award for Best Album Cover, Graphic Arts. The album was influential in advancing principles espoused by the 1960s counterculture and in inspiring the development of pop music into subgenres such as psychedelic rock, electronica, progressive rock and world music. With the restoration of the three omitted tracks for its international CD release in 1987, many music critics recognise Revolver as the Beatles' best album, suring Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. The album was ranked first in Colin Larkin's book All-Time Top 1000 Albums and third in Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time. In 2013, after the British Phonographic Industry had changed its sales award rules, Revolver was certified platinum in the UK. The album has been certified 5× platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America.
The Beatles recorded the album following a three-month break from professional commitments at the start of 1966, and during a period when London was feted as the era's cultural capital. The songs reflect the influence of psychedelic drugs such as LSD and the increasing sophistication of the Beatles' lyrics to address themes including death and transcendence from material concerns. With no thoughts of reproducing their new material in concert, the band made liberal use of studio techniques such as varispeeding, reversed tapes, close audio miking and automatic double tracking (ADT), in addition to employing musical instrumentation outside of their standard live set-up. Some of the changes in studio practice introduced by Revolver, particularly ADT, were soon adopted throughout the recording industry. The sessions also produced a non-album single, "Paperback Writer" backed with "Rain", for which the Beatles filmed their first on-location promotional films.
In the UK, Revolver's fourteen tracks were released to radio stations throughout July 1966, with the music signifying what author Ian MacDonald later described as "a second pop revolution – one which while galvanising their existing rivals and inspiring many new ones, left all of them far behind". In the US, it was the last Beatles album to be subjected to Capitol's policy of altering the band's intended running order and content. The release there coincided with the Beatles' final concert tour, which was marred by the controversy surrounding John Lennon's remark that the band had become "more popular than Jesus". The record topped the UK Albums Chart for seven weeks and America's Billboard Top LPs list for six weeks. Together with the children's novelty song "Yellow Submarine", "Eleanor Rigby" became an international hit when issued as a double A-side single.
Revolver's cover artwork, designed by Klaus Voormann, won the 1967 Grammy Award for Best Album Cover, Graphic Arts. The album was influential in advancing principles espoused by the 1960s counterculture and in inspiring the development of pop music into subgenres such as psychedelic rock, electronica, progressive rock and world music. With the restoration of the three omitted tracks for its international CD release in 1987, many music critics recognise Revolver as the Beatles' best album, suring Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. The album was ranked first in Colin Larkin's book All-Time Top 1000 Albums and third in Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time. In 2013, after the British Phonographic Industry had changed its sales award rules, Revolver was certified platinum in the UK. The album has been certified 5× platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America.
Versions
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926 versions
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Parlophone – PCS 7009 | UK | 1966 | UK — 1966 |
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Revolver = リボルバー
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Odeon – OP-7600 | Japan | 1966 | Japan — 1966 |
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First Record – Ⓢ FL-1337 | Taiwan | 1966 | Taiwan — 1966 |
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Recommendations
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1972 UKVinyl —LP, Album, Stereo
Reviews
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referencing Revolver (LP, Album, Stereo) PCS 7009
This is indeed a very good sounding record. Dynamic and clear sound.
I don't think a UK pressing is very much better, and the price for this one is a bit lower ....
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Hi, can someone please explain what does this mean: "The front cover art work is NOT "cut out" for the catalogue number, see image!"
Thanks. -
Sounds amazing, I've never heard this album sound this good. The stereo mix is a crime against humanity, so I'm glad I was able to find this mono copy.
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referencing Revolver (LP, Album, Stereo, Reissue) PCSO 7009
I can't say I'n crazy about this and I regret the money I spent on it. Decent detail and soundstage but the bass and drums have little presence and the vocals are recessed. Guitars also lack bite compared to other pressings I've heard. Honestly I'd easily pick the 2009/2012 remaster over this. -
When Paul's opening bass line punches you right in the chest, you know that mono is the way to hear this pressing. My G+ copy *should* be much noisier but my A-T 33 true mono cart truly tames the wear and unlocks an engaging mix imo.
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do all copies of these cds have the defects? the one i have is the “2008 ebbetts edition” but i can’t tell if they’re different or not. thanks!
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referencing Revolver (LP, Album, Limited Edition, Reissue, Remastered, Stereo, Typo Corrected) B0036541-01
I was recently told by an ex-Target employee that once the version with the typo was fixed and delivered to stores, all the misprints still in stock were required to be sent back to the distributor. This begs the question; were they simply re-packaged and sent back out, or destroyed? Can anybody confirm this with hopefully more details? -
referencing Revolver (LP, Album, Reissue, Remastered, Stereo, Remix, ½ Speed Mastered) 0602445599691
https://www.powmagazine.org/powmagazine/r-evolve-r-beatles-release-special-edition-the-pow-magazine-review/
January 1, 2023. Cleveland, Ohio. During Darwin’s second voyage aboard the HMS Beagle, the young biologist observed Chiasognathus grantii, a Chilian stag Beetle, for which was later given its casual name, Darwin Beetle. This Beetle, marked by its immense mandibles, provided further evidence of natural selection, thus changing the direction of science forever. Giles Martin is not Charles Darwin; however, the lesser Martin has provided Darwinian evidence of psych rock’s evolution, the 1966 fab four masterwork, Revolver. Rock music has never been the same.
With heavy doses of psychedelia, chamber-pop, and hindustani sensibilities, Revolver employs the full capabilities of four individual artists and the endless possibilities of Abbey Road Studio’s modern multi-track facility. Under the capable direction of producer and the senior Martin, Revolver pushes the edge of western pop melody towards the Beatles’ bigger-than-Jesus trajectory. In 1966, sound and culture were rapidly changing, and Revolver remains the score.
Revolver pushes the edge of western pop melody towards the Beatles’ bigger-than-Jesus trajectory.
Dub this remix of Revolver, the “Giles Beatle”. This smartly cellophaned Revolver: Special Edition remains loyal to its 1966 stereo mix: Newly wrapped, hardly distinguishable, yet deeply enjoyable. Give your $30 bucks to wax-man, and you are off, Yellow Submarine included.
The track list is the same. Side one begins with the cryptic, dueling Beatle count-in: “1 – 2 – 3 – 4 / 1 – 2 – 3…”. Then its Paul’s signature Taxman bassline. “Taxman” remains a raucous, Batman-themed rocker, part Tory battle cry. Humming economic/political commentary be damned, “Taxman” is an aisle-crossing ripper.
Next is the somber Ms. Rigby. Prominently featuring the George Martin double string arrangement, “Eleanor Rigby” eschews contemporary pop structure for baroque lyrical lamentation. McCartney’s fictitious, yet vivid Liverpudian snapshots give way to postwar modernism. A sock darning minister give sermons unheard. A faceless rice collector lives in vague, lonely dreams. Rigby is a masterpiece of simplicity, and we are only on song two!
True that Lennon, Macca, Harrison, and Starkey were not unfamiliar with speedy stimulants (Dr. Robert) and London’s loudest weed (Rubber Soul: The Beatles’ reefer album), but acid propelled the Fab Four into musical possibilities unheard and unseen prior to Revolver. Dig Revolver’s hidden paen to love and LSD: “Love You To”. George Harrison, writer, guitarist, sitarist, Beatle, and human, expands our collective notions of pop. “Love You To” is the intersection of top 40 and deep metaphysics. Here Harrison piques Eastern philosophy into a micro-dose, three minute, Western consumable. Surely, Harrison writes with more than his bride, Pattie Boyd, on his expanded mind: “Make love all day long/ Make love singing songs”. “Love You To” is miles beyond the Cavern Club salad days.
With Revolver, the lads saved their best for last. “Tomorrow Never Knows” is the song that continues to define the Beatles’ divergence from pop superstars into transcendent art rock immortals. While Lennon invites you to “Turn off your mind, relax, and float downstream”, Revolver‘s closing psych anthem is well beyond the tantric flow of lysergic sodden lyrics. “Tomorrow Never Knows” is the culminating studio perfection of swirling effects, droning tambura, choral layers, and buzzing guitars. Still, Ringo is the star on this performance. Sir Richard Starkey’s driving, motorik rhythm makes the Beatles engine hum into transcendent aural paradise.
Harrison piques Eastern philosophy into a micro-dose, three minute, Western consumable.
Has revolver evolved? Is it possible to perfect perfection? Does the 180-gram re-issue reveal the “meaning of within”? I don’t think so. That is, unless the meaning of the Giles Martin edition of Revolver is a Beatlemania cash grab. Do you need an excuse to buy a new, high-quality copy of the Beatles’ penultimate record? I don’t think so. Dig Revolver: Special Edition for the fun of a parlor room, hi-fi drag race: 1966 versus 2022. Either way, I want to tell you, this bird — the Giles Beetle — can sing! -
referencing Revolver (LP, Album, Mono) PMC 7009
I have this version of Revolver LP. When was this version released? Still in 1966? -
Got a copy of this years ago somebody busted up a set I guess... a Holy Grail recording I love this...
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