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The Beatles Lyrics

Page 25

by Hunter Davies


  It’s easy.

  All you need is love (All together, now!)

  All you need is love. (Everybody!)

  All you need is love, love.

  Love is all you need (love is all you need)

  (love is all you need) (love is all you need)

  (love is all you need) Yesterday (love is all you need)

  (love is all you need) (love is all you need)

  Yee-hai!

  Oh yeah!

  love is all you need, love is all you need, love is all you need, love is all you need, oh yeah oh hell yea! love is all you need love is all you need love is all you need.

  Baby You’re A Rich Man

  This was the B side of ‘All You Need Is Love’, released 7 July 1967. It didn’t appear on the Yellow Submarine LP (as ‘All You Need Is Love’ did). It is a bit of a mess and shows signs of over-confidence and under-achievement.

  It began as two different songs that then got lumped together. John was responsible for ‘How does it feel to be one of the beautiful people’, while Paul’s contribution was ‘Baby you’re a rich man’. Two different and incomplete sets of verses, with not much to connect them, and neither John nor Paul really worked hard enough to improve them.

  The Beautiful People, self-titled, were the affluent Californian hippies with beads and flowers, supposedly all doped up in San Francisco’s Haight Ashbury district, who were being written about in all the newspapers. A week or so before the recording, John was present at The 14-Hour Technicolor Dream, an all-night festival held at Alexandra Palace in north London, where Britain’s version of the Beautiful People turned up, tuned in, turned on. John, presumably, was mocking the use of the phrase, and their lifestyle–but the hippies loved the song.

  Paul is thought to have been mocking Brian Epstein with ‘Baby you’re a rich man’, as their manager had made a lot of money out of them. His line ‘what a thing to do’ must be one of the weakest he had ever written. The reference to a natural E is not to drugs, but the musical key–and also a pun on ‘naturally’.

  The first manuscript–in Mal Evans’s hand–includes one line in John’s final verse which wasn’t used: ‘How do you like to be free’.

  The second manuscript–in capitals and different inks with lots of patterns–is in Paul’s hand and is much more interesting, despite a few blotches and ink stains. (It is in private hands in the USA and the collector says it has never been seen before.) This version has three lines at the end which were never used: ‘How do you like being free? / Happy to be that way / Changing your tune to another.’

  How does it feel to be

  One of the beautiful people.

  Now that you know who you are

  What do you want to be?

  And have you travelled very far?

  Far as the eye can see.

  How does it feel to be

  One of the beautiful people.

  How often have you been there.

  Often enough to know.

  What did you see, when you were there.

  Nothing that doesn’t show.

  Baby you’re a rich man,

  Baby you’re a rich man,

  Baby you’re a rich man too.

  You keep all your money in a big brown bag inside a zoo.

  What a thing to do.

  Baby you’re a rich man,

  Baby you’re a rich man,

  Baby you’re a rich man too.

  How does it feel to be

  One of the beautiful people

  Tuned to a natural E

  Happy to be that way.

  Now that you’ve found another key

  What are you going to play

  ‘Baby You’re A Rich Man’, the B side of ‘All You Need Is Love’, July 1967, in Mal’s handwriting, includes lines not used.

  ‘Baby You’re A Rich Man’, a decorated, colourful but rather inky version in Paul’s hand.

  Hello, Goodbye

  This track was completed after the Magical Mystery Tour. It was not used in the film but went on the other side of ‘I Am The Walrus’. Officially it was the A side, which did not please John.

  It was composed as a sort of verbal exercise. Alistair Taylor remembers Paul playing it and asking him to shout out the opposite of whatever word or phrase he sang–stop and go, yes and no, hello and goodbye. The song proved very popular and stayed at number 1 in the US and UK for many weeks.

  The phrase you can hear them chanting at the end–‘Hela hey aloha’–is a Hawaiian greeting and was used as a chorus in the Magical Mystery Tour film.

  Paul has said that he was trying to illustrate duality, that things in life come in opposites, but that he personally always takes the positive side.

  Lady Madonna

  Paul came from an Irish Catholic family on his mother’s side. Growing up in Liverpool he was surrounded by similar families, so the image and significance of the Madonna was well known to him. In this case, he has transferred it to all women, an ode to the load that women have to bare.

  He has given slightly different versions of the origin of the title. In one he says that he was thinking of the Virgin Mary, which moved on to working-class women in Liverpool, then on to women everywhere. In another interview he has said that it was inspired by an issue of National Geographic featuring a photograph of a Polynesian woman with a child at her breast and the caption ‘Mountain Madonna’.

  Again the music harks back to another era, this time to fifties, boogie-woogie music–a change from all the recent psychedelic or Indian sounds. One of the tunes in his head when he started was ‘Bad Penny Blues’, as played by Humphrey Lyttleton. To get the right jazzy background, he hired Ronnie Scott and three other well-known saxophonists for the session. It is also a bit of a rocker. One of the many people who did a cover version was Fats Domino.

  I don’t remember the lyrics being hailed as feminist at the time, yet in some ways it is, protesting at the lot of women, wondering how they manage to make ends meet, listing the never-ending daily chores.

  Some cynics have suggested that in this Lady Madonna is a prostitute, hence the mystery of how she finds the money to pay the rent, arriving somewhere on a Friday without a suitcase–but I am sure the Friday-morning arrival does not refer to Lady Madonna but her useless fellow, finally turning up. There is a neat pun on the use of the word ‘run’: when referring to a child tying his bootlace, it means normal running, but when it comes to the stockings that need mending, it means a ladder, a tear in the fabric.

  It was only many years later that Paul realized, in going through the days of the week in the lyrics, that he had missed one–Saturday. And on a strictly fascinating factual note, the days of the week that receive the most mentions in Beatles lyrics are: Sunday (5), Monday and Tuesday (3), Wednesday and Friday (2) Thursday and Saturday (1). (Not counting same lines repeated in same song.)

  ‘Lady Madonna’ in Paul’s handwriting, with some splodges.

  Lady Madonna children at your feet

  wonder how you manage to make ends meet.

  Who finds the money, when you pay the rent

  Did you think that money was heaven sent?

  Friday night arrives without a suitcase

  Sunday morning creeping like a nun

  Monday’s child has learned to tie his bootlace.

  See how they run.

  Lady Madonna baby at your breast

  wonder how you manage to feed the rest.

  See how they run.

  Lady Madonna lying on the bed

  listen to the music playing in your head.

  Tuesday afternoon is never ending

  Wednesday morning papers didn’t come

  Thursday night your stockings needed mending.

  See how they run.

  Lady Madonna at your feet

  wonder how you manage to make ends meet.

  The Inner Light

  ‘The Inner Light’ was the B side of ‘Lady Madonna’, released on 15 March 1968. It was the first ti
me a song written by George had appeared on a Beatles single in the UK.

  After ‘Within You Without You’, Juan Mascaro, a Sanskrit lecturer at Cambridge University, wrote to George suggesting he should write a song using the words from a holy book by Tao Te Ching, which he had translated. Its theme of searching for inner light greatly appealed to George, who was still searching for his own inner truths. In the original, the words were ‘Without going out of my door I can know the ways of heaven’. George changed it to: ‘Without going out of my door, I can know all things on earth.’ But in essence, he used all the lines, though Mascaro was not credited as the lyricist on the single.

  In I Me Mine George reveals the background, and thanks Mascaro. He sounds regretful that the song didn’t catch on: ‘I think the song went unnoticed by most people as I was getting a bit out of it as far as Western popular music was concerned, at that period.’

  The manuscript, in George’s hand, is written in capitals, the better to be understood. At the end, he has written ‘Yeah–Yeah–Yeah’ which I take to be a bit of self-mockery, poking fun at his seriousness.

  ‘The Inner Light’, George’s first Beatles single, the B side of ‘Lady Madonna’, March 1968, in George’s hand–including his satirical ‘Yeah Yeah Yeah’ at the end.

  Without going out of my door

  I can know all things on earth

  Without looking out of my window

  I can know the ways of heaven

  The farther one travels

  The less one knows

  The less one really knows

  Without going out of your door

  You can know all things on earth

  Without looking out of your window

  You can know the ways of heaven

  The farther one travels

  The less one knows

  The less one really knows

  Arrive without travelling

  See all without looking

  Do all without doing

  Hey Jude

  This began as ‘Hey Jules’–meaning Julian, John’s five-year-old son. Paul was driving down to see Julian and his mother, Cynthia, after John had left them for Yoko and divorce was imminent. He found himself humming along to ‘Hey Jules’ and then came the lines ‘don’t make it bad, take a sad song and make it better’.

  It was typical of Paul to care about Julian. He has always had a rapport with kids, of any age, and could play with them and amuse them–unlike John, who found it harder to connect, apart from drawing with them. When Paul, along with Linda and her daughter Heather, visited us for a holiday in Portugal in 1968, my own children were constantly clamouring to play with Paul, be with him, climb all over him.

  When he first played the song to John, Paul was a bit embarrassed by the line ‘the movement you need is on your shoulder’, as it was just a fill-in line, till he thought of something better, but John said no, it’s great, go for it. Personally, I am still not sure what that line means, and probably Paul didn’t either. He feared it might suggest a parrot. The best explanation is that on your shoulder is your head, and the movement is to nod, thus saying yes to the world.

  In fact John got it into his head that the song was really about him–encouraging him to go off with Yoko, because of the lines ‘you have found her, now go and get her’ and ‘you’re waiting for someone to perform with’.

  The verses get more complicated as they go on, progressing from a simple encouragement to cheer up, don’t make it worse, then to accept things, not let people down, go out and meet the world, moving on from personal advice to guidance in general.

  So while the verses repay a more careful reading, over recent years the tune itself has taken a bit of a hammering. At seven minutes and nine seconds long–a marathon, as singles went–it featured an orchestra of thirty-six classical musicians as well as the Beatles themselves. It was incredibly successful all over the world when it first came out as a single in August 1968, selling five million copies in six months, and staying at number 1 in the USA for nine weeks. It was soon being sung at public gatherings ranging from national events, pop concerts to football matches. Alas, it has become rather a cliché, in the UK anyway, with Paul being mocked for always seeming to sing it at some public event, leading and encouraging the whole audience in going ‘na na na na…’

  If you are listening in the flesh–and I have recently heard Paul perform it at the O2 Arena in London–it is hard not to join in and enjoy it with everyone else. But I have to admit that, if it comes on the radio when I’m at home, I usually turn off before the interminable na na nas get started.

  Julian did not realize the song was about him till he was about eleven or twelve. Now, whenever he hears it by chance, in a bar or public place, he says it still makes him shiver. He managed to buy a copy of the manuscript–with Paul’s instructions on it–when it was sold at auction in 1996 for $40,000. But several versions of the manuscript have since appeared–some of the verses in the handwriting of Mal Evans.

  This manuscript in Paul’s hand has a couple of variations. In the twelfth line he is undecided between making his life or his world a little colder. Two lines on, ‘She had found you now make it better’ became ‘You have found her now go and get her.’ For some reason, the last eight lines are missing. Did he struggle to come up with them, leaving it until they were in the studio? Or were they written on another page?

  ‘Hey Jude’ single, August 1968, in Paul’s hand. Eight lines from the end, he is undecided about whether his life or his world will be a little colder.

  Hey Jude, don’t make it bad

  Take a sad song and make it better

  Remember to let her into your heart

  Then you can start to make it better

  Hey Jude, don’t be afraid

  You were made to go out and get her

  The minute you let her under your skin

  Then you begin to make it better

  And anytime you feel the pain, hey Jude, refrain

  Don’t carry the world upon your shoulders

  For well you know that it’s a fool who plays it cool

  By making his world a little colder

  Nah nah nah nah nah nah nah nah nah

  Hey Jude, don’t let me down

  she had found you, now make it better

  Remember to let her into your heart

  Then you can start to make it better

  So let it out and let it in, hey Jude, begin

  You’re waiting for someone to perform with

  And don’t you know that it’s just you, hey Jude, you’ll do

  The movement you need is on your shoulder

  Nah nahnah nah nah nah nah nah nah yeah

  Hey Jude, don’t make it bad

  Take a sad song and make it better

  Remember to let her under your skin

  Then you’ll begin to make it

  Better better better better better better, oh

  Nah nah nah nah nah nah, nah nah nah, hey Jude, etc

  Revolution

  The first version of ‘Revolution’ to be released was on the B side of ‘Hey Jude’. There were two released versions in all. John wrestled with it for a long time, musically and lyrically, aided and abetted by Yoko, his new best friend, and with not a lot of help from Paul, who appears not to have been so keen on it.

  The lyrics were attacked by the extreme left who did not agree with John’s view that destruction–i.e. violent action–was not the answer, nor going around carrying photos of Chairman Mao. And if they were wanting money, they would have to wait. After he started speaking out about the Vietnam War and working with Yoko for peace, loads of organizations and action groups began asking him for donations. He did, however, give a lot of money away, and attended several rallies.

  The final message of the song, that it was ‘going to be alright’ also infuriated die-hard revolutionaries who felt John had sold out and was just another rich pop star.

  John himself seems to have been ambivalent
about what he actually thought. He was against the Vietnam War, and against war in general, but he was also against violent action, which upset the revolutionaries, particularly in the USA. On the single version–which is a fairly fast rocker–he asked to be counted out when it came to destruction. On the album version, which is slower, the lyrics of ‘Revolution 1’ are identical except for one additional word: he states his position as both ‘out/in’. (‘Revolution 9’, was a long, mainly instrumental number, with no real lyrics, so does not concern us here.)

  The manuscript is half typed and half written in John’s hand. It includes the line that caused a lot of ill feeling in the underground press when the single was released: ‘Don’t you know that you can count me out.’

  You say you want a revolution

  Well, you know

  We all want to change the world

  You tell me that it’s evolution

  Well, you know

  We all want to change the world

  But when you talk about destruction

  Don’t you know you can count me out

  Don’t you know it’s gonna be alright

  Alright, alright

  You say you got a real solution

  Well, you know

  We don’t love to see the plan

  You ask me for a contribution

  Well, you know

  We’re doing what we can

  But if you want money for people with minds that hate

  Well, all I can tell you is brother you have to wait

  ‘Revolution’, the B side of ‘Hey Jude’, August 1968. The handwriting is John’s and the typing could be, as he could type, but not usually as neatly as this. In line six he clearly says ‘count me out‘. In a later recording he became ambivalent, making it ‘count me out-in’.

 

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