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Baby, You're a Rich Man

"Baby, You're a Rich Man" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles that was released as the B-side of their "All You Need Is Love" single in July 1967. It originated from an unfinished song by John Lennon, titled "One of the Beautiful People", to which Paul McCartney added a chorus. It is one of the best-known pop songs to make use of a clavioline, a monophonic keyboard instrument that was a forerunner to the synthesizer. Lennon played the clavioline on its oboe setting, creating a sound that suggests an Indian shehnai. The song was recorded and mixed at Olympic Sound Studios in London, making it the first of the Beatles' EMI recordings to be entirely created outside EMI Studios.

"Baby, You're a Rich Man"
US picture sleeve (reverse)
Single by the Beatles
A-side"All You Need Is Love"
Released7 July 1967
Recorded11 May 1967
StudioOlympic Sound, London
GenrePsychedelic pop,[1] psychedelic rock[2]
Length3:03
LabelParlophone, Capitol
Songwriter(s)Lennon–McCartney
Producer(s)George Martin
The Beatles singles chronology
"Strawberry Fields Forever" / "Penny Lane"
(1967)
"All You Need Is Love" / "Baby, You're a Rich Man"
(1967)
"Hello, Goodbye"
(1967)

Lennon wrote his portion of the song after attending the 14 Hour Technicolor Dream, an all-night festival held at London's Alexandra Palace that served as a key event in the emergence of the counterculture in the UK. His lyrics address the "beautiful people" of the 1960s hippie movement and combine with the chorus to present a statement on the universality of non-material wealth. The lyrics have also invited interpretation as a message to the Beatles' manager, Brian Epstein, and alternatively as a comment on fame. George Harrison performed the song during his visit to San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district in August 1967, at the height of the Summer of Love. The track later appeared on the Beatles' Magical Mystery Tour album. Parts of it were used in their 1968 animated film Yellow Submarine.

"Baby, You're a Rich Man" peaked at number 34 on America's Billboard Hot 100 chart. Among reviewers' varied comments on the song, Billboard admired it as "an Eastern-flavored rocker with an infectious beat and an intricate lyric",[3] while Pitchfork has dismissed it as "a second-rate take on John Lennon's money-isn't-everything theme".[4] In 2010, Rolling Stone ranked "Baby, You're a Rich Man" at number 68 on its list of the "100 Greatest Beatles Songs". The Fat Boys, Kula Shaker and the Presidents of the United States of America are among the artists who have covered the song. The Beatles recording was used at the end of the 2010 film The Social Network, about the rise of Facebook.

Background Edit

That's a combination of two separate pieces ... put together and forced into one song. One half was all mine. [Sings] "How does it feel to be one of the beautiful people, now that you know who you are, da da da da." Then Paul comes in with [sings] "Baby, you're a rich man," which was a lick he had around.[5]

– John Lennon, 1980

"Baby, You're a Rich Man" was the result of combining two unfinished songs written by Lennon and McCartney,[6] in a similar fashion to "A Day in the Life" and "I've Got a Feeling".[7][8] The working title, based on Lennon's verses, was "One of the Beautiful People",[8] to which McCartney added the "Baby, you're a rich man" chorus.[9] In a 1980 interview, Lennon described it as "two separate pieces ... forced into one song".[5] The two songwriters worked on the composition at McCartney's London home, on Cavendish Avenue in St John's Wood.[10]

During the 1960s, "beautiful people" was the term adopted by Californian hippies to refer to themselves.[11] According to author Barry Miles, who was among the leading figures in the UK underground in 1967,[12] Lennon drew inspiration for the song from newspaper articles on the emerging hippie phenomenon.[13] It is thought that McCartney wrote his section about the band's manager, Brian Epstein.[14] Lennon's lyrics are in the form of a question-and-answer exchange, similar to that used by him and McCartney in "With a Little Help from My Friends". Musicologist Walter Everett writes that the song "asks an unnamed Brian Epstein what it's like to be one of the 'beautiful people'"; Everett adds: "This appellation was used of both communal hippies and those who mingle with the most celebrated entertainers."[15] Lennon claimed that the meaning of the song was that everybody is a rich man,[16] saying, "The point was stop moaning. You're a rich man and we're all rich men."[14] George Harrison said the message was that all individuals are wealthy within themselves, regardless of material concerns.[17][nb 1]

According to author and critic Ian MacDonald, Lennon was most likely inspired to write the verses after attending the 14 Hour Technicolor Dream, an all-night festival held at Alexandra Palace in north London on 29 April 1967.[19] Attended by 10,000 people,[20] this musical and performance art event was a fundraiser for the proprietors of the underground newspaper International Times, after a police raid had forced the closure of their offices;[21] in MacDonald's description, it marked the first large-scale coming together of Britain's "beautiful people".[19] Writing in 1981 on the musical and societal developments of 1967, sociomusicologist Simon Frith said that this event was one of the "multi-media happenings" that reflected the new aesthetic represented by English psychedelia, whereby "Dancing became less important than listening" and fashion embraced vivid colours while retaining "the mod concern for looking smart". Frith added: "Psychedelia was essentially elitist but the joy of psychedelic pop was that it made everyone part of the elite."[22]

Composition Edit

The song's principal key is G major in Mixolydian mode, and the time signature throughout is 4/4.[23][24] Its structure comprises an intro, two verses and a chorus, followed by a third verse and repeated choruses.[24] From its opening chord of G major, the verses introduce a VII/I (Fadd9/G), a chord change that constitutes a pedal point on G (sustained harmonic tone)[25] and so recalls some of the Beatles' Indian-inspired melodies from Revolver.[15] Among musicologists, Everett says that from the seventh bar of the verse, C major is revealed as the true key, whereas Alan Pollack writes that the emphasis given to C major at the end of the musical phrases instead suggests "a perilously high center of gravity with respect to G being the home key".[24][nb 2] The Indian influence is heightened on the band's recording of the song through the use of gamak melodies in the accompaniment.[15] Pollack considers a notable aspect of the chorus to be the bass move from C to G via a III (B).[24] According to MacDonald, the song's loose, swinging rhythm, which he describes as "chugging pseudo-march", suggests the influence of the Four Tops' 1966 hit single "Reach Out I'll Be There".[17][nb 3]

Author and critic Kenneth Womack comments that the lyrics appear to "address issues of wealth and celebrity" for listeners unfamiliar with the countercultural concept of "beautiful people".[27] The song reflects the Beatles' disdain for consumerism and materialism, a theme that, inspired by the band members' use of the hallucinogenic drug LSD, they introduced in the lyrics to Revolver tracks such as "And Your Bird Can Sing". Authors Russell Reising and Jim LeBlanc highlight the lines "You keep all your money in a big brown bag inside a zoo / What a thing to do" as particularly dismissive of the acquisition and hoarding of material wealth.[28] The same authors recognise an element of ridicule towards some of the "beautiful people", specifically those that, in Lennon's words, travel no further than "As far as the eye can see" and, even then, see "Nothing that doesn't show".[29] Music critic Tim Riley identifies a droll quality in the answers that Lennon provides to his own questions. With regard to the song's message, he writes: "It's clear that they understand their position: if the Beatles are beautiful people, by extension their listeners become beautiful people ('Baby, you're a rich man, too')."[30]

Recording Edit

 
The Beatles recorded the song at Olympic Sound Studios. According to author Mark Lewisohn, "Baby, You're a Rich Man" was "the first Beatles song to be recorded and mixed for record entirely outside of [EMI Studios]".[31]

The recording of "Baby, You're a Rich Man" took place during a period when, free of deadlines following the completion of their album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band in April 1967, the Beatles worked on songs for the United Artists animated film Yellow Submarine[32] and for what became the band's television film Magical Mystery Tour.[33] They recorded "Baby, You're a Rich Man" in a six-hour session, starting at 9 pm on 11 May, at Olympic Sound Studios in Barnes, south-west London.[34][35] The session marked a rare example of the Beatles recording outside of EMI's facility at Abbey Road, after the band had briefly used Regent Sound in central London during the sessions for Sgt. Pepper.[36] The engineers assisting George Martin, the Beatles' producer, were Olympic manager Keith Grant and Eddie Kramer.[31] Mick Jagger, whose band the Rolling Stones regularly used the same studio,[37][38] also attended the session.[31]

The song was mixed, in mono only,[15] that same day.[39] The music features an unusual oboe-like sound reminiscent of an Indian shehnai,[10] which was created with a clavioline,[40] an early, three-octave forerunner of the synthesizer.[31] Being a monophonic keyboard, it was capable of sounding only one note at a time;[41] according to music journalist Gordon Reid, citing a report from the session, Lennon created the trill sound "by rolling an orange up and down the keyboard" of the clavioline.[42] Musicologist William Echard cites the clavioline part as an example of a psychedelic feature he calls a "garble line" – a musical part that "often meanders widely through pitch space, following a rhythmic profile that does not adhere strongly to the prevailing harmonic or melodic logic" – with "Orientalist connotations".[43][nb 4] A feed back delay effect known as spin-echo was used to fill from the end of one line of the verse to the start of the next.[44] After Lennon had played piano on the basic track, McCartney overdubbed a second part, which enters at 1:45[15] and is heard in reverse over the third verse.[45] In its doubling of the vocal line, Harrison's lead guitar mirrors the role of a sarangi in an Indian khyal vocal piece,[46] an effect that Harrison first used on Lennon's song "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds".[47][48]

Following the completion of Sgt. Pepper in late April 1967, the Beatles' recording sessions for the remainder of that year have been dismissed as uninspired by the majority of commentators.[49][nb 5] Kramer contests this view, however; he says of the Beatles' collaboration on "Baby, You're a Rich Man": "The energy level was so intense … that you were riding wave upon wave of amazing creativity. It was like watching a well-oiled machine. Just incredible."[49] According to another Olympic staff engineer, Grant and Kramer were highly complimentary of Lennon as a vocalist[10] and "couldn't believe anyone could sing that well".[31] Aside from the clavioline part, overdubs on the track included maracas and tambourine, and vibraphone played by Kramer.[52] Only a single note of the vibraphone is clearly audible throughout the track,[53] at the 0:53 mark.[15] McCartney recalled the six-hour session as an energetic one and "rather exciting", adding: "Keith Grant mixed it, instantly, right there. He stood up at the console as he mixed it, so it was a very exciting mix, we were really quite buzzed."[54][nb 6]

During the session, Lennon changed a line in the chorus to "Baby, you're a rich fag Jew".[17] According to author Bob Spitz, this was either a joke at the expense of Epstein or a provocation in reaction to the band's former moptop image.[56] Spitz writes that the session tapes also reveal Lennon improvising similarly "wicked" remarks about McCartney, Ringo Starr and Jagger.[57] Partly as a result of these disruptions, the Beatles required twelve takes before they achieved a satisfactory rhythm track.[58] The group enjoyed working at Olympic Sound, which was an independent facility, free of record company control.[59] They returned to Barnes on 14 June[60] to record the basic track for "All You Need Is Love".[61][62][nb 7]

Release Edit

"Baby, You're a Rich Man" was initially submitted for inclusion in Yellow Submarine.[31][67] While parts of the song were used in the film, its initial release was as the B-side of "All You Need Is Love",[68] which the Beatles performed on the Our World satellite broadcast on 25 June 1967[69] and then rush-released as a single.[70][71] The release took place on 7 July in the United Kingdom and on 17 July in the United States.[72][73] "All You Need Is Love" topped singles charts in many countries around the world.[71] In the United States, the B-side also charted in its own right, peaking at number 34 on the Billboard Hot 100[74] and number 60 on the Cash Box Top 100.[75] In Australia, it was listed with "All You Need Is Love", as a double A-side, when the single topped the Go-Set national chart.[76]

 
Peace symbol drawn on a walkway at Hippie Hill in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park. Harrison busked the song at the hill during his visit to Haight-Ashbury in August 1967.

The single followed soon after Sgt. Pepper, which historian David Simonelli describes as "the most important cultural moment of 1967" through its resonance "across every boundary of class, age, gender, race and geography".[77] Both records provided a soundtrack to that year's Summer of Love, a phenomenon that marked the full emergence of the 1960s counterculture.[67][78] The Beatles were viewed as leaders of the counterculture and, during July and August, pursued interests related to the same utopian-based ideology.[79][nb 8] In a 1970 interview, when asked about Haight-Ashbury, the district of San Francisco that represented "the city of the beautiful people" in 1967,[82] Lennon recalled that he was "all for going and living" there, but "George went over in the end."[83] During this visit, on 7 August, Harrison was handed an acoustic guitar in Golden Gate Park[84] and briefly performed "Baby, You're a Rich Man",[85] leading a crowd around in a manner that press reports likened to the Pied Piper of Hamelin.[67][86]

Although the visit was viewed as the Beatles' endorsement of a youth movement that they helped inspire,[84] Harrison was disappointed at how Haight-Ashbury represented a haven for dropouts and drug addicts, rather than a community looking to explore the possibility of enlightenment that LSD presented.[87] On his return to London, he shared this disillusionment with Lennon.[88] The pair subsequently became avid supporters of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi's Transcendental Meditation technique,[89][90] after the Beatles had attended a seminar by the Maharishi in Bangor, Wales, where they publicly disavowed LSD on 26 August.[91] In light of this development, author Nicholas Schaffner wrote that "Baby, You're a Rich Man", like "Strawberry Fields Forever", revealed the "redundant" aspect of repeated LSD "trips" after the initial sense of spiritual euphoria awakened by the drug, in that the songs "tend[ed] to provide more riddles than solutions".[67]

Against the Beatles' wishes, Capitol Records, EMI's North American affiliate, included "Baby You're a Rich Man" and other tracks from the band's 1967 singles on the US album Magical Mystery Tour, released in November that year.[92][nb 9] In the company's rush to prepare the album, a duophonic (or "mock stereo") mix of the song[97] was used for the stereo version of the LP.[92] While parts of the song were used in the 1968 film Yellow Submarine, it was not included on the accompanying soundtrack album.[10][31] The sequence for "Baby, You're a Rich Man" appears towards the end of the film, when Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band have been released from the paralysis initiated by the Blue Meanies' hatred of music.[57] Later editions of the US single include a voice saying the end of the word "Seven" or "Eleven" before the track starts.[53]

Critical reception Edit

Writing in the NME in July 1967, Derek Johnson commented on the song's modern qualities relative to the sing-along style of the A-side. He highlighted Lennon's falsetto singing, the recording's "Oriental instrumentation and … unusual shuffle beat, emphasised by handclaps", and concluded: "The whole effect is startling and packed with interest from the word go."[98][99] Billboard's reviewer described it as "an Eastern-flavored rocker with an infectious beat and an intricate lyric".[3] In one of the first cultural essays to acknowledge the Beatles' impact on American culture in a meaningful way, for the journal Partisan Review,[100] Richard Poirier cited both sides of the single as a "particularly brilliant example" of how contemporary British rock bands had "restor[ed] to good standing ... the simplicities that have frightened us into irony and the search for irony".[101] He described the musical backing on "Baby, You're a Rich Man" as "bursts of sitar music and the clip-clopping of Indian song", which combined to "operate in the manner of classical allusion in Pope", and he admired the lyrics' satirical quality, saying that they were superior to Lennon's Edward Lear-inspired poetry writing.[102][nb 10]

Nobody thought that Baby You're A Rich Man was about money. And how did it feel to be one of the beautiful people? When we listened to The Beatles, we all were … This music was nothing if not inclusive.[105]

– Music critic Charles Shaar Murray, 2002

In his feature article on the clavioline for Sound on Sound magazine, Gordon Reid pairs the song with the Tornados' 1962 hit "Telstar" as the two seminal pop recordings made with the instrument.[42] In his assessment of "Baby, You're a Rich Man", Ian MacDonald welcomes the use of clavioline, saying that it evokes "a beguiling joss-stick exoticism", and he praises Starr's drumming as the equal of his performance on the song "Rain".[106] MacDonald bemoans the lack of focus evident in this and other Beatles recordings from the immediate post-Sgt. Pepper period, however; he says that, while "Baby, You're a Rich Man" demonstrates the band's command of musical "feel" and "black-white acid-dance fusion" a year ahead of the Rolling Stones, McCartney's choruses are weak and, overall, the song is devoid of "well-crafted music".[107] Tim Riley says that the July 1967 single offers two pieces that are "Not such bad notions in themselves, except that they sound spent."[108] Riley criticises the song's lyrics as "lacking in purpose" and says that, although the "snake-charming Clavioline" provides a degree of interest, "There's no center to this music … 'Help!' and 'Drive My Car' addressed the fallacies of fame from cynical impulses; 'Baby, You're a Rich Man' flounders in privileged emptiness."[30]

Writing for Mojo in 2003, Martin O'Gorman paired "Baby, You're a Rich Man" with Harrison "It's All Too Much" as two of the Beatles' "most sonically intriguing, but unfocused tracks".[109] In a 2009 review of Magical Mystery Tour, Scott Plagenhoef of Pitchfork dismissed the song as "a second-rate take on John Lennon's money-isn't-everything theme from the considerably stronger 'And Your Bird Can Sing'". He added that it was "the one lesser moment on an otherwise massively rewarding [album]".[4] Dan Caffrey of Consequence of Sound writes that, while it lacks the wholly universal scope of other songs by the band, "it's a nice little Lennon morality ditty on the perils of materialism with some innovative work with the clavioline from Lennon."[110] Music critic Jim DeRogatis considers the track to be one of the Beatles' best psychedelic rock songs and an effective comment on Britain's first major countercultural happening.[111] In 2010, "Baby, You're a Rich Man" was ranked at number 68 in Rolling Stone's list of the 100 greatest Beatles songs.[16] The magazine's editors wrote: "Lennon's deeply stoned delivery and abstract questions about 'the beautiful people' captured the playfully spaced-out mood of the summer of 1967 – a spirit the Beatles were more tapped into than anyone."[112]

Remixes, further releases and cover versions Edit

George Martin and recording engineer Geoff Emerick created the first true stereo mix of the song when preparing a 1971 German release of the Magical Mystery Tour album. Unable to recreate the spin-echo effect that had been introduced at the mixing stage of the original recording, they simply omitted it.[44] The mix was completed on 22 October 1971.[92] It was first made available in Britain in December 1981, when "Baby, You're a Rich Man" was included on a bonus EP containing previously unissued stereo mixes[113] in the box set The Beatles EP Collection.[15]

"Baby, You're a Rich Man" was mixed in stereo for a second time for the 1999 DVD release of the Yellow Submarine film and the accompanying Yellow Submarine Songtrack album.[53] Portions of Lennon's clavioline part appear in the Love version of "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds", released in 2006.[114] Elements of "Baby, You're a Rich Man" also appear in the remix of "All You Need Is Love", which closes the Love album.[115] In 2009, remastered stereo and mono Magical Mystery Tour CDs were released.[116]

The Beatles' recording plays at the end of The Social Network, a 2010 film directed by David Fincher about the rise of Facebook[57] and its co-founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg (played by Jesse Eisenberg).[117] Noel Murray and Matt Singer of The Dissolve include this appearance among the five most effective uses of a Beatles song in a feature film, describing it as the "perfect musical summation for The Social Network".[118] According to Inkoo Kang of Slate magazine, the Beatles "sing-taunt" Zuckerberg with the song's chorus;[117] in Murray and Singer's description, "Baby, You're a Rich Man" appears to "ask Zuckerberg all of our questions about what he's done", after he has developed Facebook into a billion-dollar company and, in the final scene, "sits triumphant – and totally alone".[118]

American rappers the Fat Boys covered "Baby, You're a Rich Man"[9] and performed it in the 1987 comedy film Disorderlies.[119][120] Hip-hop duo P.M. Dawn incorporated the "How does it feel to be one of the beautiful people?" line into their song "The Beautiful", from the 1991 album Of the Heart, of the Soul and of the Cross: The Utopian Experience.[121] They also replicated part of the music from "Baby, You're a Rich Man" in their track, having been denied permission to sample the Beatles' version.[122] The song has also been covered by Kula Shaker, the Presidents of the United States of America[9] and Umphrey's McGee.[123]

Personnel Edit

According to Mark Lewisohn[31] and Ian MacDonald:[124]

The Beatles

Additional musicians

Charts Edit

Chart (1967) Peak
position
Australian Go-Set National Top 40[76] 1
US Billboard Hot 100[74] 34
US Cash Box Top 100[75] 60

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Speaking about the song in 1987, Harrison said that, given the Beatles' influence during the 1960s, "the idea was to show that we, being rich and famous and having all these experiences, had realized that there was a greater thing to be got out of life – and what's the point of having that on your own? You want all your friends and everyone else to do it, too."[18]
  2. ^ Pollack also recognises the sustained G note in the bass line, despite the chord change, which creates "the drone-like harmonic style of songs such as 'Rain'".[24]
  3. ^ Following the Beatles' decision to retire from touring in 1966, Epstein had organised for the Four Tops to play at one of his pop presentations at the Saville Theatre, shortly before "Reach Out I'll Be There" topped the UK charts. He went on to present their UK tour the following year.[26]
  4. ^ Other examples of Orientalist "garble" lines, according to Echard, are the lead guitar part on the Byrds' "Eight Miles High", some of the tape loops used on the Beatles' "Tomorrow Never Knows", and the title track to Prince's 1985 album Around the World in a Day.[43]
  5. ^ According to the group's recording historian, Mark Lewisohn, their efforts "display a startling lack of cohesion and enthusiasm",[50] while MacDonald cites the band members' drug intake and over-reliance on random events for inspiration.[51]
  6. ^ Grant's time-conscious approach as the recording engineer contributed to the efficiency of the session.[55] He told Lewisohn in 1987, "I'm a terrible pusher on sessions", and recalled the Beatles telling him that they usually worked at a "much more leisurely pace".[31]
  7. ^ As a further example of the closeness between the Rolling Stones, particularly Jagger, and the Beatles at this time,[63][64] Jagger, Keith Richards and Marianne Faithfull were among the crowd of friends who sang on "All You Need Is Love".[65] Lennon and McCartney also contributed vocals to the Stones' single "We Love You",[66] which was recorded at Olympic in mid June 1967.[64]
  8. ^ At Lennon's insistence, the Beatles spent a week in the Aegean Sea off Greece, in July 1967, searching for an island that could serve as a commune for themselves, their families and members of their inner circle.[79][80] In the Beatles' 1995 Anthology television series, "Baby, You're a Rich Man" plays over footage of this visit to the Greek islands.[81]
  9. ^ In Britain and other markets, Magical Mystery Tour was originally a double EP release, consisting only of the songs from the television film.[93] Because of the difficulty in marketing EPs in the US, Capitol expanded the content to form an LP,[92][94] with the non-album singles tracks filling side two.[95][96]
  10. ^ According to author Jonathan Bellman, Poirier's comments also had an adverse effect on the public's perception of Transcendental Meditation, which became inadvertently linked with rock music, the sitar and LSD.[103] Poirier said that whereas the Beatles' "sitar music" on Sgt. Pepper had represented India in the form of the Bhagavad Gita, on "Baby, You're a Rich Man" it evoked "another India, of fabulous riches, the India of the British and their Maharajahs, a place for exotic travel, but also for josh sticks and the otherworldliness of 'the trip'".[104]
  11. ^ Jagger's name appears on a session tape box,[39] possibly indicating that he provided backing vocals near the end of the song.[31][124]

References Edit

  1. ^ Borack 2007, p. 3.
  2. ^ DeRogatis 2003, p. 48.
  3. ^ a b Billboard Review Panel (15 July 1967). "Spotlight Singles". Billboard. p. 16.
  4. ^ a b Plagenhoef, Scott (9 September 2009). "The Beatles: Magical Mystery Tour Album Review". Pitchfork. Retrieved 8 March 2017.
  5. ^ a b Sheff 2000, p. 184.
  6. ^ Womack 2014, p. 57.
  7. ^ Miles 1997, pp. 370–371.
  8. ^ a b Turner 1999, p. 138.
  9. ^ a b c d Fontenot, Robert. . about.com. Archived from the original on 5 April 2015. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  10. ^ a b c d e Guesdon & Margotin 2013, p. 416.
  11. ^ MacDonald 2005, p. 258fn.
  12. ^ Doggett 2007, pp. 15–16.
  13. ^ Miles 1997, p. 370.
  14. ^ a b Turner 1999, p. 139.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Everett 1999, p. 126.
  16. ^ a b Womack 2014, p. 58.
  17. ^ a b c MacDonald 2005, p. 258.
  18. ^ Dowlding 1989, p. 188.
  19. ^ a b MacDonald 2005, pp. 258fn–259fn.
  20. ^ Cushley, Joe. "Dream On!". In: Mojo Special Limited Edition 2002, p. 98.
  21. ^ Simonelli 2013, p. 118.
  22. ^ Frith, Simon (1981). "1967: The Year It All Came Together". The History of Rock. Available at Rock's Backpages (subscription required).
  23. ^ MacDonald 2005, p. 493.
  24. ^ a b c d e Pollack, Alan W. (1996). "Notes on 'Baby You're a Rich Man'". Soundscapes. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  25. ^ Pedler 2003, pp. 260–61.
  26. ^ Norman 1996, pp. 283–84.
  27. ^ Womack 2007, p. 194.
  28. ^ Reising & LeBlanc 2009, pp. 101–02.
  29. ^ Reising & LeBlanc 2009, p. 104.
  30. ^ a b Riley 2002, p. 235.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Lewisohn 2005, p. 111.
  32. ^ Babiuk 2002, p. 204.
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  34. ^ Miles 2001, p. 264.
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  36. ^ Lewisohn 2005, pp. 95, 111.
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  41. ^ Everett 2009, p. 74.
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  44. ^ a b Russell 1982, p. 246.
  45. ^ Reising & LeBlanc 2009, p. 98.
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  47. ^ The Beatles 2000, p. 243.
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  49. ^ a b Harris, John (March 2007). "The Day the World Turned Day-glo!". Mojo. p. 89.
  50. ^ Lewisohn 2005, p. 114.
  51. ^ MacDonald 2005, pp. 254–55, 259–60.
  52. ^ Guesdon & Margotin 2013, pp. 416–17.
  53. ^ a b c Winn 2009, p. 105.
  54. ^ Miles 1997, p. 371.
  55. ^ Guesdon & Margotin 2013, pp. 416, 417.
  56. ^ Womack 2014, pp. 58–59.
  57. ^ a b c Womack 2014, p. 59.
  58. ^ Unterberger 2006, pp. 187–88.
  59. ^ Babiuk 2002, p. 205.
  60. ^ Miles 2001, p. 269.
  61. ^ Everett 1999, p. 125.
  62. ^ Lewisohn 2005, p. 116.
  63. ^ Norman 2001, pp. 285, 286.
  64. ^ a b Winn 2009, p. 109.
  65. ^ Lewisohn 2005, p. 120.
  66. ^ Everett 1999, p. 129.
  67. ^ a b c d Schaffner 1978, p. 86.
  68. ^ Schaffner 1978, pp. 86, 99.
  69. ^ Miles 2001, p. 271.
  70. ^ Lewisohn 2005, pp. 111, 120–21.
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  72. ^ Castleman & Podrazik 1976, p. 62.
  73. ^ Miles 2001, pp. 271, 272.
  74. ^ a b Billboard staff (7 February 2014). "The Beatles' 50 Biggest Billboard Hits". billboard.com. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
  75. ^ a b "Cash Box Top 100". Cash Box. 19 August 1967. p. 4.
  76. ^ a b . poparchives.com.au. Archived from the original on 29 March 2007. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
  77. ^ Simonelli 2013, p. 107.
  78. ^ Henke 2003, p. 30.
  79. ^ a b Womack 2007, p. 197.
  80. ^ Hunt, Chris. "Fantasy Island". In: Mojo Special Limited Edition 2002, p. 109.
  81. ^ Winn 2009, p. 115.
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External links Edit

  • Full lyrics for the song at the Beatles' official website 9 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • Keyboard magazine article on replicating the song's clavioline sound

baby, rich, song, english, rock, band, beatles, that, released, side, their, need, love, single, july, 1967, originated, from, unfinished, song, john, lennon, titled, beautiful, people, which, paul, mccartney, added, chorus, best, known, songs, make, claviolin. Baby You re a Rich Man is a song by the English rock band the Beatles that was released as the B side of their All You Need Is Love single in July 1967 It originated from an unfinished song by John Lennon titled One of the Beautiful People to which Paul McCartney added a chorus It is one of the best known pop songs to make use of a clavioline a monophonic keyboard instrument that was a forerunner to the synthesizer Lennon played the clavioline on its oboe setting creating a sound that suggests an Indian shehnai The song was recorded and mixed at Olympic Sound Studios in London making it the first of the Beatles EMI recordings to be entirely created outside EMI Studios Baby You re a Rich Man US picture sleeve reverse Single by the BeatlesA side All You Need Is Love Released7 July 1967Recorded11 May 1967StudioOlympic Sound LondonGenrePsychedelic pop 1 psychedelic rock 2 Length3 03LabelParlophone CapitolSongwriter s Lennon McCartneyProducer s George MartinThe Beatles singles chronology Strawberry Fields Forever Penny Lane 1967 All You Need Is Love Baby You re a Rich Man 1967 Hello Goodbye 1967 Lennon wrote his portion of the song after attending the 14 Hour Technicolor Dream an all night festival held at London s Alexandra Palace that served as a key event in the emergence of the counterculture in the UK His lyrics address the beautiful people of the 1960s hippie movement and combine with the chorus to present a statement on the universality of non material wealth The lyrics have also invited interpretation as a message to the Beatles manager Brian Epstein and alternatively as a comment on fame George Harrison performed the song during his visit to San Francisco s Haight Ashbury district in August 1967 at the height of the Summer of Love The track later appeared on the Beatles Magical Mystery Tour album Parts of it were used in their 1968 animated film Yellow Submarine Baby You re a Rich Man peaked at number 34 on America s Billboard Hot 100 chart Among reviewers varied comments on the song Billboard admired it as an Eastern flavored rocker with an infectious beat and an intricate lyric 3 while Pitchfork has dismissed it as a second rate take on John Lennon s money isn t everything theme 4 In 2010 Rolling Stone ranked Baby You re a Rich Man at number 68 on its list of the 100 Greatest Beatles Songs The Fat Boys Kula Shaker and the Presidents of the United States of America are among the artists who have covered the song The Beatles recording was used at the end of the 2010 film The Social Network about the rise of Facebook Contents 1 Background 2 Composition 3 Recording 4 Release 5 Critical reception 6 Remixes further releases and cover versions 7 Personnel 8 Charts 9 Notes 10 References 11 Sources 12 External linksBackground EditThat s a combination of two separate pieces put together and forced into one song One half was all mine Sings How does it feel to be one of the beautiful people now that you know who you are da da da da Then Paul comes in with sings Baby you re a rich man which was a lick he had around 5 John Lennon 1980 Baby You re a Rich Man was the result of combining two unfinished songs written by Lennon and McCartney 6 in a similar fashion to A Day in the Life and I ve Got a Feeling 7 8 The working title based on Lennon s verses was One of the Beautiful People 8 to which McCartney added the Baby you re a rich man chorus 9 In a 1980 interview Lennon described it as two separate pieces forced into one song 5 The two songwriters worked on the composition at McCartney s London home on Cavendish Avenue in St John s Wood 10 During the 1960s beautiful people was the term adopted by Californian hippies to refer to themselves 11 According to author Barry Miles who was among the leading figures in the UK underground in 1967 12 Lennon drew inspiration for the song from newspaper articles on the emerging hippie phenomenon 13 It is thought that McCartney wrote his section about the band s manager Brian Epstein 14 Lennon s lyrics are in the form of a question and answer exchange similar to that used by him and McCartney in With a Little Help from My Friends Musicologist Walter Everett writes that the song asks an unnamed Brian Epstein what it s like to be one of the beautiful people Everett adds This appellation was used of both communal hippies and those who mingle with the most celebrated entertainers 15 Lennon claimed that the meaning of the song was that everybody is a rich man 16 saying The point was stop moaning You re a rich man and we re all rich men 14 George Harrison said the message was that all individuals are wealthy within themselves regardless of material concerns 17 nb 1 According to author and critic Ian MacDonald Lennon was most likely inspired to write the verses after attending the 14 Hour Technicolor Dream an all night festival held at Alexandra Palace in north London on 29 April 1967 19 Attended by 10 000 people 20 this musical and performance art event was a fundraiser for the proprietors of the underground newspaper International Times after a police raid had forced the closure of their offices 21 in MacDonald s description it marked the first large scale coming together of Britain s beautiful people 19 Writing in 1981 on the musical and societal developments of 1967 sociomusicologist Simon Frith said that this event was one of the multi media happenings that reflected the new aesthetic represented by English psychedelia whereby Dancing became less important than listening and fashion embraced vivid colours while retaining the mod concern for looking smart Frith added Psychedelia was essentially elitist but the joy of psychedelic pop was that it made everyone part of the elite 22 Composition EditThe song s principal key is G major in Mixolydian mode and the time signature throughout is 4 4 23 24 Its structure comprises an intro two verses and a chorus followed by a third verse and repeated choruses 24 From its opening chord of G major the verses introduce a VII I Fadd9 G a chord change that constitutes a pedal point on G sustained harmonic tone 25 and so recalls some of the Beatles Indian inspired melodies from Revolver 15 Among musicologists Everett says that from the seventh bar of the verse C major is revealed as the true key whereas Alan Pollack writes that the emphasis given to C major at the end of the musical phrases instead suggests a perilously high center of gravity with respect to G being the home key 24 nb 2 The Indian influence is heightened on the band s recording of the song through the use of gamak melodies in the accompaniment 15 Pollack considers a notable aspect of the chorus to be the bass move from C to G via a III B 24 According to MacDonald the song s loose swinging rhythm which he describes as chugging pseudo march suggests the influence of the Four Tops 1966 hit single Reach Out I ll Be There 17 nb 3 Author and critic Kenneth Womack comments that the lyrics appear to address issues of wealth and celebrity for listeners unfamiliar with the countercultural concept of beautiful people 27 The song reflects the Beatles disdain for consumerism and materialism a theme that inspired by the band members use of the hallucinogenic drug LSD they introduced in the lyrics to Revolver tracks such as And Your Bird Can Sing Authors Russell Reising and Jim LeBlanc highlight the lines You keep all your money in a big brown bag inside a zoo What a thing to do as particularly dismissive of the acquisition and hoarding of material wealth 28 The same authors recognise an element of ridicule towards some of the beautiful people specifically those that in Lennon s words travel no further than As far as the eye can see and even then see Nothing that doesn t show 29 Music critic Tim Riley identifies a droll quality in the answers that Lennon provides to his own questions With regard to the song s message he writes It s clear that they understand their position if the Beatles are beautiful people by extension their listeners become beautiful people Baby you re a rich man too 30 Recording Edit The Beatles recorded the song at Olympic Sound Studios According to author Mark Lewisohn Baby You re a Rich Man was the first Beatles song to be recorded and mixed for record entirely outside of EMI Studios 31 The recording of Baby You re a Rich Man took place during a period when free of deadlines following the completion of their album Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band in April 1967 the Beatles worked on songs for the United Artists animated film Yellow Submarine 32 and for what became the band s television film Magical Mystery Tour 33 They recorded Baby You re a Rich Man in a six hour session starting at 9 pm on 11 May at Olympic Sound Studios in Barnes south west London 34 35 The session marked a rare example of the Beatles recording outside of EMI s facility at Abbey Road after the band had briefly used Regent Sound in central London during the sessions for Sgt Pepper 36 The engineers assisting George Martin the Beatles producer were Olympic manager Keith Grant and Eddie Kramer 31 Mick Jagger whose band the Rolling Stones regularly used the same studio 37 38 also attended the session 31 The song was mixed in mono only 15 that same day 39 The music features an unusual oboe like sound reminiscent of an Indian shehnai 10 which was created with a clavioline 40 an early three octave forerunner of the synthesizer 31 Being a monophonic keyboard it was capable of sounding only one note at a time 41 according to music journalist Gordon Reid citing a report from the session Lennon created the trill sound by rolling an orange up and down the keyboard of the clavioline 42 Musicologist William Echard cites the clavioline part as an example of a psychedelic feature he calls a garble line a musical part that often meanders widely through pitch space following a rhythmic profile that does not adhere strongly to the prevailing harmonic or melodic logic with Orientalist connotations 43 nb 4 A feed back delay effect known as spin echo was used to fill from the end of one line of the verse to the start of the next 44 After Lennon had played piano on the basic track McCartney overdubbed a second part which enters at 1 45 15 and is heard in reverse over the third verse 45 In its doubling of the vocal line Harrison s lead guitar mirrors the role of a sarangi in an Indian khyal vocal piece 46 an effect that Harrison first used on Lennon s song Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds 47 48 Following the completion of Sgt Pepper in late April 1967 the Beatles recording sessions for the remainder of that year have been dismissed as uninspired by the majority of commentators 49 nb 5 Kramer contests this view however he says of the Beatles collaboration on Baby You re a Rich Man The energy level was so intense that you were riding wave upon wave of amazing creativity It was like watching a well oiled machine Just incredible 49 According to another Olympic staff engineer Grant and Kramer were highly complimentary of Lennon as a vocalist 10 and couldn t believe anyone could sing that well 31 Aside from the clavioline part overdubs on the track included maracas and tambourine and vibraphone played by Kramer 52 Only a single note of the vibraphone is clearly audible throughout the track 53 at the 0 53 mark 15 McCartney recalled the six hour session as an energetic one and rather exciting adding Keith Grant mixed it instantly right there He stood up at the console as he mixed it so it was a very exciting mix we were really quite buzzed 54 nb 6 During the session Lennon changed a line in the chorus to Baby you re a rich fag Jew 17 According to author Bob Spitz this was either a joke at the expense of Epstein or a provocation in reaction to the band s former moptop image 56 Spitz writes that the session tapes also reveal Lennon improvising similarly wicked remarks about McCartney Ringo Starr and Jagger 57 Partly as a result of these disruptions the Beatles required twelve takes before they achieved a satisfactory rhythm track 58 The group enjoyed working at Olympic Sound which was an independent facility free of record company control 59 They returned to Barnes on 14 June 60 to record the basic track for All You Need Is Love 61 62 nb 7 Release Edit Baby You re a Rich Man was initially submitted for inclusion in Yellow Submarine 31 67 While parts of the song were used in the film its initial release was as the B side of All You Need Is Love 68 which the Beatles performed on the Our World satellite broadcast on 25 June 1967 69 and then rush released as a single 70 71 The release took place on 7 July in the United Kingdom and on 17 July in the United States 72 73 All You Need Is Love topped singles charts in many countries around the world 71 In the United States the B side also charted in its own right peaking at number 34 on the Billboard Hot 100 74 and number 60 on the Cash Box Top 100 75 In Australia it was listed with All You Need Is Love as a double A side when the single topped the Go Set national chart 76 Peace symbol drawn on a walkway at Hippie Hill in San Francisco s Golden Gate Park Harrison busked the song at the hill during his visit to Haight Ashbury in August 1967 The single followed soon after Sgt Pepper which historian David Simonelli describes as the most important cultural moment of 1967 through its resonance across every boundary of class age gender race and geography 77 Both records provided a soundtrack to that year s Summer of Love a phenomenon that marked the full emergence of the 1960s counterculture 67 78 The Beatles were viewed as leaders of the counterculture and during July and August pursued interests related to the same utopian based ideology 79 nb 8 In a 1970 interview when asked about Haight Ashbury the district of San Francisco that represented the city of the beautiful people in 1967 82 Lennon recalled that he was all for going and living there but George went over in the end 83 During this visit on 7 August Harrison was handed an acoustic guitar in Golden Gate Park 84 and briefly performed Baby You re a Rich Man 85 leading a crowd around in a manner that press reports likened to the Pied Piper of Hamelin 67 86 Although the visit was viewed as the Beatles endorsement of a youth movement that they helped inspire 84 Harrison was disappointed at how Haight Ashbury represented a haven for dropouts and drug addicts rather than a community looking to explore the possibility of enlightenment that LSD presented 87 On his return to London he shared this disillusionment with Lennon 88 The pair subsequently became avid supporters of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi s Transcendental Meditation technique 89 90 after the Beatles had attended a seminar by the Maharishi in Bangor Wales where they publicly disavowed LSD on 26 August 91 In light of this development author Nicholas Schaffner wrote that Baby You re a Rich Man like Strawberry Fields Forever revealed the redundant aspect of repeated LSD trips after the initial sense of spiritual euphoria awakened by the drug in that the songs tend ed to provide more riddles than solutions 67 Against the Beatles wishes Capitol Records EMI s North American affiliate included Baby You re a Rich Man and other tracks from the band s 1967 singles on the US album Magical Mystery Tour released in November that year 92 nb 9 In the company s rush to prepare the album a duophonic or mock stereo mix of the song 97 was used for the stereo version of the LP 92 While parts of the song were used in the 1968 film Yellow Submarine it was not included on the accompanying soundtrack album 10 31 The sequence for Baby You re a Rich Man appears towards the end of the film when Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band have been released from the paralysis initiated by the Blue Meanies hatred of music 57 Later editions of the US single include a voice saying the end of the word Seven or Eleven before the track starts 53 Critical reception EditWriting in the NME in July 1967 Derek Johnson commented on the song s modern qualities relative to the sing along style of the A side He highlighted Lennon s falsetto singing the recording s Oriental instrumentation and unusual shuffle beat emphasised by handclaps and concluded The whole effect is startling and packed with interest from the word go 98 99 Billboard s reviewer described it as an Eastern flavored rocker with an infectious beat and an intricate lyric 3 In one of the first cultural essays to acknowledge the Beatles impact on American culture in a meaningful way for the journal Partisan Review 100 Richard Poirier cited both sides of the single as a particularly brilliant example of how contemporary British rock bands had restor ed to good standing the simplicities that have frightened us into irony and the search for irony 101 He described the musical backing on Baby You re a Rich Man as bursts of sitar music and the clip clopping of Indian song which combined to operate in the manner of classical allusion in Pope and he admired the lyrics satirical quality saying that they were superior to Lennon s Edward Lear inspired poetry writing 102 nb 10 Nobody thought that Baby You re A Rich Man was about money And how did it feel to be one of the beautiful people When we listened to The Beatles we all were This music was nothing if not inclusive 105 Music critic Charles Shaar Murray 2002 In his feature article on the clavioline for Sound on Sound magazine Gordon Reid pairs the song with the Tornados 1962 hit Telstar as the two seminal pop recordings made with the instrument 42 In his assessment of Baby You re a Rich Man Ian MacDonald welcomes the use of clavioline saying that it evokes a beguiling joss stick exoticism and he praises Starr s drumming as the equal of his performance on the song Rain 106 MacDonald bemoans the lack of focus evident in this and other Beatles recordings from the immediate post Sgt Pepper period however he says that while Baby You re a Rich Man demonstrates the band s command of musical feel and black white acid dance fusion a year ahead of the Rolling Stones McCartney s choruses are weak and overall the song is devoid of well crafted music 107 Tim Riley says that the July 1967 single offers two pieces that are Not such bad notions in themselves except that they sound spent 108 Riley criticises the song s lyrics as lacking in purpose and says that although the snake charming Clavioline provides a degree of interest There s no center to this music Help and Drive My Car addressed the fallacies of fame from cynical impulses Baby You re a Rich Man flounders in privileged emptiness 30 Writing for Mojo in 2003 Martin O Gorman paired Baby You re a Rich Man with Harrison It s All Too Much as two of the Beatles most sonically intriguing but unfocused tracks 109 In a 2009 review of Magical Mystery Tour Scott Plagenhoef of Pitchfork dismissed the song as a second rate take on John Lennon s money isn t everything theme from the considerably stronger And Your Bird Can Sing He added that it was the one lesser moment on an otherwise massively rewarding album 4 Dan Caffrey of Consequence of Sound writes that while it lacks the wholly universal scope of other songs by the band it s a nice little Lennon morality ditty on the perils of materialism with some innovative work with the clavioline from Lennon 110 Music critic Jim DeRogatis considers the track to be one of the Beatles best psychedelic rock songs and an effective comment on Britain s first major countercultural happening 111 In 2010 Baby You re a Rich Man was ranked at number 68 in Rolling Stone s list of the 100 greatest Beatles songs 16 The magazine s editors wrote Lennon s deeply stoned delivery and abstract questions about the beautiful people captured the playfully spaced out mood of the summer of 1967 a spirit the Beatles were more tapped into than anyone 112 Remixes further releases and cover versions EditGeorge Martin and recording engineer Geoff Emerick created the first true stereo mix of the song when preparing a 1971 German release of the Magical Mystery Tour album Unable to recreate the spin echo effect that had been introduced at the mixing stage of the original recording they simply omitted it 44 The mix was completed on 22 October 1971 92 It was first made available in Britain in December 1981 when Baby You re a Rich Man was included on a bonus EP containing previously unissued stereo mixes 113 in the box set The Beatles EP Collection 15 Baby You re a Rich Man was mixed in stereo for a second time for the 1999 DVD release of the Yellow Submarine film and the accompanying Yellow Submarine Songtrack album 53 Portions of Lennon s clavioline part appear in the Love version of Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds released in 2006 114 Elements of Baby You re a Rich Man also appear in the remix of All You Need Is Love which closes the Love album 115 In 2009 remastered stereo and mono Magical Mystery Tour CDs were released 116 The Beatles recording plays at the end of The Social Network a 2010 film directed by David Fincher about the rise of Facebook 57 and its co founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg played by Jesse Eisenberg 117 Noel Murray and Matt Singer of The Dissolve include this appearance among the five most effective uses of a Beatles song in a feature film describing it as the perfect musical summation for The Social Network 118 According to Inkoo Kang of Slate magazine the Beatles sing taunt Zuckerberg with the song s chorus 117 in Murray and Singer s description Baby You re a Rich Man appears to ask Zuckerberg all of our questions about what he s done after he has developed Facebook into a billion dollar company and in the final scene sits triumphant and totally alone 118 American rappers the Fat Boys covered Baby You re a Rich Man 9 and performed it in the 1987 comedy film Disorderlies 119 120 Hip hop duo P M Dawn incorporated the How does it feel to be one of the beautiful people line into their song The Beautiful from the 1991 album Of the Heart of the Soul and of the Cross The Utopian Experience 121 They also replicated part of the music from Baby You re a Rich Man in their track having been denied permission to sample the Beatles version 122 The song has also been covered by Kula Shaker the Presidents of the United States of America 9 and Umphrey s McGee 123 Personnel EditAccording to Mark Lewisohn 31 and Ian MacDonald 124 The Beatles John Lennon double tracked lead vocal piano clavioline Paul McCartney backing vocals bass piano George Harrison backing vocals rhythm guitar 9 lead guitar 10 handclaps Ringo Starr drums tambourine maracas handclapsAdditional musicians Eddie Kramer vibraphone Mick Jagger backing vocals nb 11 Charts EditChart 1967 PeakpositionAustralian Go Set National Top 40 76 1US Billboard Hot 100 74 34US Cash Box Top 100 75 60Notes Edit Speaking about the song in 1987 Harrison said that given the Beatles influence during the 1960s the idea was to show that we being rich and famous and having all these experiences had realized that there was a greater thing to be got out of life and what s the point of having that on your own You want all your friends and everyone else to do it too 18 Pollack also recognises the sustained G note in the bass line despite the chord change which creates the drone like harmonic style of songs such as Rain 24 Following the Beatles decision to retire from touring in 1966 Epstein had organised for the Four Tops to play at one of his pop presentations at the Saville Theatre shortly before Reach Out I ll Be There topped the UK charts He went on to present their UK tour the following year 26 Other examples of Orientalist garble lines according to Echard are the lead guitar part on the Byrds Eight Miles High some of the tape loops used on the Beatles Tomorrow Never Knows and the title track to Prince s 1985 album Around the World in a Day 43 According to the group s recording historian Mark Lewisohn their efforts display a startling lack of cohesion and enthusiasm 50 while MacDonald cites the band members drug intake and over reliance on random events for inspiration 51 Grant s time conscious approach as the recording engineer contributed to the efficiency of the session 55 He told Lewisohn in 1987 I m a terrible pusher on sessions and recalled the Beatles telling him that they usually worked at a much more leisurely pace 31 As a further example of the closeness between the Rolling Stones particularly Jagger and the Beatles at this time 63 64 Jagger Keith Richards and Marianne Faithfull were among the crowd of friends who sang on All You Need Is Love 65 Lennon and McCartney also contributed vocals to the Stones single We Love You 66 which was recorded at Olympic in mid June 1967 64 At Lennon s insistence the Beatles spent a week in the Aegean Sea off Greece in July 1967 searching for an island that could serve as a commune for themselves their families and members of their inner circle 79 80 In the Beatles 1995 Anthology television series Baby You re a Rich Man plays over footage of this visit to the Greek islands 81 In Britain and other markets Magical Mystery Tour was originally a double EP release consisting only of the songs from the television film 93 Because of the difficulty in marketing EPs in the US Capitol expanded the content to form an LP 92 94 with the non album singles tracks filling side two 95 96 According to author Jonathan Bellman Poirier s comments also had an adverse effect on the public s perception of Transcendental Meditation which became inadvertently linked with rock music the sitar and LSD 103 Poirier said that whereas the Beatles sitar music on Sgt Pepper had represented India in the form of the Bhagavad Gita on Baby You re a Rich Man it evoked another India of fabulous riches the India of the British and their Maharajahs a place for exotic travel but also for josh sticks and the otherworldliness of the trip 104 Jagger s name appears on a session tape box 39 possibly indicating that he provided backing vocals near the end of the song 31 124 References Edit Borack 2007 p 3 DeRogatis 2003 p 48 a b Billboard Review Panel 15 July 1967 Spotlight Singles Billboard p 16 a b Plagenhoef Scott 9 September 2009 The Beatles Magical Mystery Tour Album Review Pitchfork Retrieved 8 March 2017 a b Sheff 2000 p 184 Womack 2014 p 57 Miles 1997 pp 370 371 a b Turner 1999 p 138 a b c d Fontenot Robert The Beatles Songs Baby You re a Rich Man The history of this classic Beatles song about com Archived from the original on 5 April 2015 Retrieved 13 March 2018 a b c d e Guesdon amp Margotin 2013 p 416 MacDonald 2005 p 258fn Doggett 2007 pp 15 16 Miles 1997 p 370 a b Turner 1999 p 139 a b c d e f g Everett 1999 p 126 a b Womack 2014 p 58 a b c MacDonald 2005 p 258 Dowlding 1989 p 188 a b MacDonald 2005 pp 258fn 259fn Cushley Joe Dream On In Mojo Special Limited Edition 2002 p 98 Simonelli 2013 p 118 Frith Simon 1981 1967 The Year It All Came Together The History of Rock Available at Rock s Backpages subscription required MacDonald 2005 p 493 a b c d e Pollack Alan W 1996 Notes on Baby You re a Rich Man Soundscapes Retrieved 13 March 2018 Pedler 2003 pp 260 61 Norman 1996 pp 283 84 Womack 2007 p 194 Reising amp LeBlanc 2009 pp 101 02 Reising amp LeBlanc 2009 p 104 a b Riley 2002 p 235 a b c d e f g h i j Lewisohn 2005 p 111 Babiuk 2002 p 204 Turner 1999 p 135 Miles 2001 p 264 Unterberger 2006 p 187 Lewisohn 2005 pp 95 111 Frost Matt August 2012 Keith Grant The Story of Olympic Studios Sound on Sound Retrieved 10 March 2017 Norman 2001 pp 288 89 a b Guesdon amp Margotin 2013 p 417 MacDonald 2005 p 259 Everett 2009 p 74 a b Reid Gordon March 2007 The Story of the Clavioline Sound on Sound Retrieved 28 July 2017 a b Echard 2017 p 68 a b Russell 1982 p 246 Reising amp LeBlanc 2009 p 98 Leng 2006 p 30 The Beatles 2000 p 243 Lavezzoli 2006 pp 179 80 a b Harris John March 2007 The Day the World Turned Day glo Mojo p 89 Lewisohn 2005 p 114 MacDonald 2005 pp 254 55 259 60 Guesdon amp Margotin 2013 pp 416 17 a b c Winn 2009 p 105 Miles 1997 p 371 Guesdon amp Margotin 2013 pp 416 417 Womack 2014 pp 58 59 a b c Womack 2014 p 59 Unterberger 2006 pp 187 88 Babiuk 2002 p 205 Miles 2001 p 269 Everett 1999 p 125 Lewisohn 2005 p 116 Norman 2001 pp 285 286 a b Winn 2009 p 109 Lewisohn 2005 p 120 Everett 1999 p 129 a b c d Schaffner 1978 p 86 Schaffner 1978 pp 86 99 Miles 2001 p 271 Lewisohn 2005 pp 111 120 21 a b Edwards Gavin 28 August 2014 The Beatles Make History With All You Need Is Love A Minute by Minute Breakdown rollingstone com Retrieved 11 March 2017 Castleman amp Podrazik 1976 p 62 Miles 2001 pp 271 272 a b Billboard staff 7 February 2014 The Beatles 50 Biggest Billboard Hits billboard com Retrieved 9 December 2017 a b Cash Box Top 100 Cash Box 19 August 1967 p 4 a b Go Set Australian charts 9 August 1967 poparchives com au Archived from the original on 29 March 2007 Retrieved 30 May 2018 Simonelli 2013 p 107 Henke 2003 p 30 a b Womack 2007 p 197 Hunt Chris Fantasy Island In Mojo Special Limited Edition 2002 p 109 Winn 2009 p 115 Turner 1999 pp 138 39 Wenner Jann S 4 February 1971 The Rolling Stone Interview John Lennon Part Two Rolling Stone Archived from the original on 3 February 2013 Retrieved 10 March 2018 a b Unterberger Richie June 2007 George Harrison Visits Haight Ashbury In Summer 1967 Mojo Available at Rock s Backpages subscription required MacDonald 2005 p 265 Selvin 2014 p 202 Doggett 2007 pp 100 01 Tillery 2009 p 58 Winn 2009 pp 127 130 Doggett 2007 pp 101 02 Bellman 1998 pp 199 200 a b c d Lewisohn 2005 p 131 Schaffner 1978 p 92 Miles 2001 p 286 Castleman amp Podrazik 1976 p 63 Magical Mystery Tour thebeatles com Retrieved 9 December 2017 Schaffner 1978 pp 92 94 Johnson Derek 8 July 1967 Singles New Musical Express p 6 Sutherland Steve ed 2003 NME Originals Lennon London IPC Ignite p 50 Weber Bruce 18 August 2009 Richard Poirier a Scholar of Literature Dies at 83 The New York Times Retrieved 30 June 2017 Poirier 1992 p 124 Poirier 1992 pp 125 126 Bellman 1998 p 299 Poirier 1992 p 125 Shaar Murray Charles Magical Mystery Tour All Aboard the Magic Bus In Mojo Special Limited Edition 2002 p 130 MacDonald 2005 pp 258fn 259 MacDonald 2005 pp 257 258 261 Riley 2002 p 233 O Gorman Martin 2003 Double Trouble Mojo Special Limited Edition 1000 Days of Revolution The Beatles Final Years Jan 1 1968 to Sept 27 1970 London Emap p 23 Caffrey Dan 23 September 2009 The Beatles Magical Mystery Tour Remastered Consequence of Sound Retrieved 11 March 2017 DeRogatis 2003 pp 48 50 Hudak Joseph Baby You re a Rich Man 100 Greatest Beatles Songs Rolling Stone Retrieved 8 March 2017 Womack 2014 p 107 Winn 2009 p 92 Winn 2009 p 112 Bosso Joe 8 September 2009 Review The Beatles remastered 1967 70 MusicRadar Retrieved 20 August 2011 a b Kang Inkoo 19 November 2018 The Social Network Tried to Dismantle Facebook s Mystique But It Also Gave It a New One Slate Retrieved 23 February 2019 a b Murray Noel Singer Matt 3 February 2014 Five Non Beatles Movies That Make Great Use of Beatles Songs The Dissolve Retrieved 23 February 2019 Greene James Jr 10 August 2017 Step Off Homeboy Thirty Years of Disorderlies No Recess Retrieved 8 December 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Nashawaty Chris 21 June 2013 Disorderlies Entertainment Weekly Retrieved 8 December 2017 Remington Alex 22 November 2009 Of the Heart Of the Soul and of the Cross A Hip Hop Road Not Taken HuffPost Retrieved 14 March 2017 DeRogatis 2003 p 414 Plotnicki Gideon 8 July 2016 Umphrey s McGee Welcomes Taylor Hicks For Rager in Birmingham Live For Live Music Retrieved 14 March 2017 a b MacDonald 2005 p 257 Sources EditBabiuk Andy 2002 Beatles Gear All the Fab Four s Instruments from Stage to Studio San Francisco CA Backbeat Books ISBN 978 0 87930 731 8 The Beatles 2000 The Beatles Anthology San Francisco CA Chronicle Books ISBN 978 0 8118 2684 6 Bellman Jonathan 1998 The Exotic in Western Music Lebanon New Hampshire UPNE ISBN 1 55553 319 1 Borack John M 2007 Shake Some Action The Ultimate Power Pop Guide Fort Collins CO Not Lame Recordings ISBN 978 0 9797714 0 8 Castleman Harry Podrazik Walter J 1976 All Together Now The First Complete Beatles Discography 1961 1975 New York NY Ballantine Books ISBN 0 345 25680 8 DeRogatis Jim 2003 Turn on Your Mind Four Decades of Great Psychedelic Rock Milwaukee WI Hal Leonard ISBN 978 0 634 05548 5 Doggett Peter 2007 There s a Riot Going On Revolutionaries Rock Stars and the Rise and Fall of 60s Counter Culture Edinburgh UK Canongate Books ISBN 978 1 84195 940 5 Dowlding William J 1989 Beatlesongs New York NY Simon amp Schuster Echard William 2017 Psychedelic Popular Music A History Through Musical Topic Theory Bloomington IN Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 02659 0 Everett Walter 1999 The Beatles as Musicians Revolver Through the Anthology New York NY Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 512941 5 Everett Walter 2009 The Foundations of Rock From Blue Suede Shoes to Suite Judy Blue Eyes New York NY Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 531024 5 Guesdon Jean Michel Margotin Philippe 2013 All the Songs The Story Behind Every Beatles Release New York NY Black Dog amp Leventhal ISBN 978 1 57912 952 1 Henke James 2003 Lennon Legend An Illustrated Life of John Lennon San Francisco CA Chronicle Books ISBN 978 0 8118 3517 6 Lavezzoli Peter 2006 The Dawn of Indian Music in the West New York NY Continuum ISBN 0 8264 2819 3 Leng Simon 2006 While My Guitar Gently Weeps The Music of George Harrison Milwaukee WI Hal Leonard ISBN 978 1 4234 0609 9 Lewisohn Mark 2005 1988 The Complete Beatles Recording Sessions The Official Story of the Abbey Road Years 1962 1970 London Bounty Books ISBN 978 0 7537 2545 0 MacDonald Ian 2005 Revolution in the Head The Beatles Records and the Sixties 2nd rev edn Chicago IL Chicago Review Press ISBN 978 1 55652 733 3 Miles Barry 1997 Paul McCartney Many Years from Now New York NY Henry Holt and Company ISBN 0 8050 5249 6 Miles Barry 2001 The Beatles Diary Volume 1 The Beatles Years London Omnibus Press ISBN 0 7119 8308 9 Mojo Special Limited Edition 1000 Days That Shook the World The Psychedelic Beatles April 1 1965 to December 26 1967 London Emap 2002 Norman Philip 1996 1981 Shout The Beatles in Their Generation New York NY Fireside ISBN 0 684 83067 1 Norman Philip 2001 The Stones London Sidgwick amp Jackson ISBN 0 283 07277 6 Pedler Dominic 2003 The Songwriting Secrets of the Beatles London Omnibus Press ISBN 978 0 7119 8167 6 Poirier Richard 1992 1967 Learning from the Beatles The Performing Self Compositions and Decompositions in the Languages of Contemporary Life New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press ISBN 0 8135 1795 8 Reising Russell LeBlanc Jim 2009 Magical Mystery Tours and Other Trips Yellow submarines newspaper taxis and the Beatles psychedelic years In Womack Kenneth ed The Cambridge Companion to the Beatles Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 68976 2 Riley Tim 2002 1988 Tell Me Why The Beatles Album by Album Song by Song the Sixties and After Cambridge MA Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 81120 3 Russell Jeff 1982 The Beatles Album File and Complete Discography London Blandford Press ISBN 0 7137 2065 4 Schaffner Nicholas 1978 The Beatles Forever New York NY McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 055087 5 Selvin Joel 2014 The Haight Love Rock and Revolution San Rafael CA Insight Editions ISBN 978 1608873630 Sheff David 2000 1981 All We Are Saying The Last Major Interview with John Lennon and Yoko Ono New York NY St Martin s Friffin ISBN 0 312 25464 4 Simonelli David 2013 Working Class Heroes Rock Music and British Society in the 1960s and 1970s Lanham MD Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 7051 9 Tillery Gary 2009 The Cynical Idealist A Spiritual Biography of John Lennon Wheaton IL Quest Books ISBN 978 0 8356 0875 6 Turner Steve 1999 A Hard Day s Write The Stories Behind Every Beatles Song 2nd edn New York NY Carlton HarperCollins ISBN 0 06 273698 1 Unterberger Richie 2006 The Unreleased Beatles Music amp Film San Francisco CA Backbeat Books ISBN 978 0 87930 892 6 Winn John C 2009 That Magic Feeling The Beatles Recorded Legacy Volume Two 1966 1970 New York NY Three Rivers Press ISBN 978 0 307 45239 9 Womack Kenneth 2007 Long and Winding Roads The Evolving Artistry of the Beatles New York NY Continuum ISBN 978 0 8264 1746 6 Womack Kenneth 2014 The Beatles Encyclopedia Everything Fab Four Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 39171 2 External links EditFull lyrics for the song at the Beatles official website Archived 9 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine Keyboard magazine article on replicating the song s clavioline sound Wikiquote has quotations related to Magical Mystery Tour Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Baby You 27re a Rich Man amp oldid 1172100823, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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