- Yellow Submarine
- Only A Northern Song
- All Together Now
- Hey Bulldog
- It's All Too Much
- All You Need Is Love
- Pepperland
- Sea Of Time
- Sea Of Holes
- Sea Of Monsters
- March Of The Meanies
- Pepperland Laid Waist
- Yellow Submarine In Pepperland
- Yellow Submarine Documentary
×
Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date.
For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now.
0094638246725
$18.99
![Yellow Submarine [Remastered]](http://img.images-bn.com/static/redesign/srcs/images/grey-box.png?v8.3.3)
CD(Remastered / Special Edition / Enhanced / Digi-Pak)
Members save with free shipping everyday!
See details
See details
18.99
In Stock
Overview
The only Beatles album that could really be classified as inessential, mostly because it wasn't really a proper album at all, but a soundtrack that only utilized four new Beatles songs. (The rest of the album was filled out with "Yellow Submarine," "All You Need Is Love," and a George Martin score.) What's more, two of the four new tracks were little more than pleasant throwaways that had been recorded during 1967 and early 1968. These aren't all that bad; "All Together Now" is a cute, kiddieish McCartney singalong, while "Hey Bulldog" has some mild Lennon nastiness and a great beat and central piano riff, with some fine playing all around -- each is memorable in its way, and the inclusion of the Lennon song here was all the more important, as the sequence from the movie itself in which it was used was deleted from the original U.S. release of the movie (which had no success whatever in the U.K. and quickly disappeared, thus making the U.S. version the established cut of the film for decades, until the late-'90s restoration and DVD re-release of the movie). George Harrison's two contributions were the more striking of the new entries -- "Only a Northern Song," a leftover from the Sgt. Pepper's sessions, generated from a period in which the guitarist became increasingly fascinated with keyboards, especially the organ and the Mellotron (and, later, the synthesizer), and is an odd piece of psychedelic ersatz, mixing trippiness and some personal comments; its lyrics (and title) on the one hand express the guitarist/singer/composer's displeasure at being tied in his publishing to Northern Songs, a company in which John Lennon and Paul McCartney were the majority shareholders; and, on the other, they present Harrison's vision of how music and recording sounded, from the inside out and the outside in, during the psychedelic era -- the song thus provided a rare glimpse inside the doors of perception of being a Beatle (or, at least, one aspect of being this particular Beatle) circa 1967. And then there was the jewel of the new songs, "It's All Too Much"; coming from the second half of 1967, the song -- resplendent in swirling Mellotron, larger-than-life percussion, and tidal waves of feedback guitar -- was a virtuoso excursion into otherwise hazy psychedelia, that was actually superior in some respects to "Blue Jay Way," Harrison's songwriting contribution of The Magical Mystery Tour; the song also later rated a dazzling cover by Steve Hillage in the middle of the following decade. The very fact that George Harrison was afforded two song slots and a relatively uncompetitive canvas for his music shows how little the project meant to Lennon and McCartney -- as did the cutting of the "Hey Bulldog" sequence from the movie, apparently with no resistance from Lennon, who had other, more important artistic fish to fry in 1968. What is here, however, is a good enough reason for owning the record, though nothing rates it as anything near a high-priority purchase.
The album would have been far better value if it had been released as a four-song EP (an idea the Beatles even considered at one point, with the addition of a bonus track in "Across the Universe" but ultimately discarded). And the original soundtrack was partly supplanted by the release at the end of the 1990s of the Yellow Submarine (Songtrack), which marked the first of the remastered Beatles albums, thus reducing the appeal of the original. No one would argue that there's a huge amount more than meets the eye (or ear) there, but listening to the original album anew 40 years on, one is still struck by how mostly second-rate, and recycled and rejected Beatles material still sounds so good. And while George Martin's instrumental music from the film wasn't what a lot of Beatles fans were looking for, it was relegated safely to side two if one wished to ignore it. And even that material offered a pleasant surprise or two -- first, over how much more enjoyable it was than the Ken Thorne-arranged background music for Help! (could one imagine a full side of that on an album?); and, second, the fun that Martin has as an orchestrator with some of George Harrison's recent Hindustanti music excursions on "Sea of Time"; the latter is doubly interesting, as Martin in later years, in his autobiography All You Need Is Ears, admitted to regretting some of the antipathy he showed to Harrison and his music and songwriting during their time together with the Beatles. And, finally, as a Beatles-lite release, Yellow Submarine does have its moments of welcome on the turntable or the CD player -- it's not every time that calls for listening as ambitious and demanding as The White Album, Abbey Road, or Sgt. Pepper's. ~ Richie Unterberger & Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
The album would have been far better value if it had been released as a four-song EP (an idea the Beatles even considered at one point, with the addition of a bonus track in "Across the Universe" but ultimately discarded). And the original soundtrack was partly supplanted by the release at the end of the 1990s of the Yellow Submarine (Songtrack), which marked the first of the remastered Beatles albums, thus reducing the appeal of the original. No one would argue that there's a huge amount more than meets the eye (or ear) there, but listening to the original album anew 40 years on, one is still struck by how mostly second-rate, and recycled and rejected Beatles material still sounds so good. And while George Martin's instrumental music from the film wasn't what a lot of Beatles fans were looking for, it was relegated safely to side two if one wished to ignore it. And even that material offered a pleasant surprise or two -- first, over how much more enjoyable it was than the Ken Thorne-arranged background music for Help! (could one imagine a full side of that on an album?); and, second, the fun that Martin has as an orchestrator with some of George Harrison's recent Hindustanti music excursions on "Sea of Time"; the latter is doubly interesting, as Martin in later years, in his autobiography All You Need Is Ears, admitted to regretting some of the antipathy he showed to Harrison and his music and songwriting during their time together with the Beatles. And, finally, as a Beatles-lite release, Yellow Submarine does have its moments of welcome on the turntable or the CD player -- it's not every time that calls for listening as ambitious and demanding as The White Album, Abbey Road, or Sgt. Pepper's. ~ Richie Unterberger & Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
Product Details
Release Date: | 09/09/2009 |
---|---|
Label: | Capitol |
UPC: | 0094638246725 |
catalogNumber: | 82467 |
Rank: | 5103 |
Tracks
Album Credits
Performance Credits
Beatles Primary ArtistCustomer Reviews
Related Searches
Explore More Items
As expected, the second installment of the Anthology series reflects the Beatles' increasing use of ...
As expected, the second installment of the Anthology series reflects the Beatles' increasing use of
the studio-as-laboratory during their middle years. Some live material from 1965 to 1966 appears on the first disc, and the second reunion single (Real Love) ...
Between 1964 and 1967, seemingly any record with the word Beatles on the cover would ...
Between 1964 and 1967, seemingly any record with the word Beatles on the cover would
move at least a few thousand copies, and while Capitol and EMI seemingly had the market sewn up on actual Beatles product, that didn't stall ...
From 1962 to 1965, the Beatles made 52 appearances on the BBC, recording live-in-the-studio performances ...
From 1962 to 1965, the Beatles made 52 appearances on the BBC, recording live-in-the-studio performances
of both their official releases and several dozen songs that they never issued on disc. This magnificent two-disc compilation features 56 of these tracks, including ...
No one has ever claimed it's the Beatles best album, but it undeniably contains some ...
No one has ever claimed it's the Beatles best album, but it undeniably contains some
of their most magnificent music. That seeming conundrum exists because Magical Mystery Tour isn't really an album per se, but rather a cobbled together mix ...
Part of the long-running hits compilation series, 2017's NOW, Vol. 62 features a set of ...
Part of the long-running hits compilation series, 2017's NOW, Vol. 62 features a set of
contemporary hit singles from a variety of pop genres. Included this time out are tracks by such established artists as Bruno Mars (That's What I ...
The biggest hit on the 64th volume of the U.S. Now That's What I Call ...
The biggest hit on the 64th volume of the U.S. Now That's What I Call
Music! series -- the fourth and last volume of 2017 -- is easily the version of Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee's Despacito that features Justin ...
When Capitol decided to release the original British editions of the Beatles' albums instead of ...
When Capitol decided to release the original British editions of the Beatles' albums instead of
the bastardized American versions, they were left with a bit of a quandary. Since the Beatles had an enormous number of non-LP singles, some of ...
Once Please Please Me rocketed to number one, the Beatles rushed to deliver a debut ...
Once Please Please Me rocketed to number one, the Beatles rushed to deliver a debut
album, bashing out Please Please Me in a day. Decades after its release, the album still sounds fresh, precisely because of its intense origins. As ...