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Eleanor Rigby

"Eleanor Rigby" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1966 album Revolver. It was also issued on a double A-side single, paired with "Yellow Submarine". Credited to the Lennon–McCartney songwriting partnership, the song is one of only a few in which John Lennon and Paul McCartney later disputed primary authorship.[3] Eyewitness testimony from several independent sources, including George Martin and Pete Shotton, supports McCartney's claim to authorship.[4]

"Eleanor Rigby"
US picture sleeve
Single by the Beatles
from the album Revolver
A-side"Yellow Submarine" (double A-side)
Released5 August 1966 (1966-08-05)
Recorded28–29 April & 6 June 1966
StudioEMI, London
GenreBaroque pop,[1] art rock[2]
Length2:08
LabelParlophone (UK),
Capitol (US)
Songwriter(s)Lennon–McCartney
Producer(s)George Martin
The Beatles singles chronology
"Paperback Writer"
(1966)
"Eleanor Rigby" / "Yellow Submarine"
(1966)
"Strawberry Fields Forever" / "Penny Lane"
(1967)
Music video
"Eleanor Rigby" on YouTube

"Eleanor Rigby" continued the transformation of the Beatles from a mainly rock and roll- and pop-oriented act to a more experimental, studio-based band, with a double string quartet arrangement by George Martin and lyrics providing a narrative on loneliness. It broke sharply with popular music conventions, both musically and lyrically.[5] The song topped singles charts in Australia, Belgium, Canada, and New Zealand.

Background and inspiration edit

Paul McCartney came up with the melody for "Eleanor Rigby" as he experimented on his piano.[6][7] Donovan recalled hearing McCartney play an early version of the song on guitar, where the character was named Ola Na Tungee. At this point, the song reflected an Indian musical influence and its lyrics alluded to drug use, with references to "blowing his mind in the dark" and "a pipe full of clay".[8]

The name of the protagonist that McCartney initially chose was not Eleanor Rigby, but Miss Daisy Hawkins.[9] In 1966, McCartney told Sunday Times journalist Hunter Davies how he got the idea for his song:

The first few bars just came to me. And I got this name in my head – "Daisy Hawkins picks up the rice in the church where a wedding has been." I don't know why ... I couldn't think of much more so I put it away for a day. Then the name "Father McCartney" came to me – and "all the lonely people". But I thought people would think it was supposed to be my dad, sitting knitting his socks. Dad's a happy lad. So I went through the telephone book and I got the name McKenzie.[10]

McCartney said that the idea to call his character "Eleanor" was possibly because of Eleanor Bron,[11][12] the actress who starred with the Beatles in their 1965 film Help![10] "Rigby" came from the name of a store in Bristol, Rigby & Evens Ltd.[10] McCartney noticed the store while visiting his girlfriend of the time, actress Jane Asher, during her run in the Bristol Old Vic's production of The Happiest Days of Your Life in January 1966.[13][14] He recalled in 1984: "I just liked the name. I was looking for a name that sounded natural. 'Eleanor Rigby' sounded natural."[12][15][nb 1]

In an October 2021 article in The New Yorker, McCartney wrote that his inspiration for "Eleanor Rigby" was an old lady who lived alone and whom he got to know very well. He would go shopping for her and sit in her kitchen listening to stories and her crystal radio set. McCartney said, "just hearing her stories enriched my soul and influenced the songs I would later write."[19]

Writing collaboration edit

McCartney wrote the melody and first verse alone, after which he presented the song to the Beatles when they were gathered in the music room of John Lennon's home at Kenwood.[20] Lennon, George Harrison, Ringo Starr and Lennon's childhood friend Pete Shotton all listened to McCartney play his song through and contributed ideas.[21] Harrison came up with the "Ah, look at all the lonely people" hook. Starr contributed the line "writing the words of a sermon that no one will hear" and suggested making "Father McCartney" darn his socks, which McCartney liked.[21] It was then that Shotton suggested that McCartney change the name of the priest, in case listeners mistook the fictional character for McCartney's own father.[22]

McCartney could not decide how to end the song, and Shotton suggested that the two lonely people come together too late as Father McKenzie conducts Eleanor Rigby's funeral. At the time, Lennon rejected the idea out of hand, but McCartney said nothing and used the idea, later acknowledging Shotton's help.[21] In Lennon's recollection, the final touches were applied to the lyrics in the recording studio,[23] at which point McCartney sought input from Neil Aspinall and Mal Evans, the Beatles' longstanding road managers.[24][25]

"Eleanor Rigby" serves as a rare example of Lennon subsequently claiming a more substantial role in the creation of a McCartney composition than is supported by others' recollections.[26][27] In the early 1970s, Lennon told music journalist Alan Smith that he wrote "about 70 per cent" of the lyrics,[28][29] and in a letter to Melody Maker complaining about Beatles producer George Martin's comments in a recent interview, he said that "Around 50 per cent of the lyrics were written by me at the studios and at Paul's place."[30] In 1980, he recalled writing almost everything but the first verse.[31][32] Shotton remembered Lennon's contribution as being "virtually nil",[33] while McCartney said that "John helped me on a few words but I'd put it down 80–20 to me, something like that."[34] According to McCartney, "In My Life" and "Eleanor Rigby" are the only Lennon–McCartney songs where he and Lennon disagreed over their authorship.[33]

In musicologist Walter Everett's view, the lyric writing "likely was a group effort".[35] Historiographer Erin Torkelson Weber says that, from all the available accounts, McCartney was the principal author of the song and only Lennon's post-1970 recollections contradict this.[36][nb 2] In the same 1980 interview, Lennon expressed his resentment at the way McCartney had sought their bandmates' and friends' creative input, rather than collaborate with Lennon directly. Lennon added, "That's the kind of insensitivity he would have, which upset me in later years."[24] In addition to citing this emotional hurt, Weber suggests that the song's critical acclaim may have motivated Lennon's assertions, as he sought to portray himself as a greater musical genius than McCartney in the years following the Beatles' break-up.[38][nb 3]

Composition edit

Music edit

The song is a prominent example of mode mixture, [40] specifically between the Aeolian mode, also known as natural minor, and the Dorian mode, a minor scale except with a major sixth scale degree. Set in E minor, the song is based on the chord progression Em–C, typical of the Aeolian mode and utilising notes ♭3, ♭6, and 7 in this scale. The verse melody is written in Dorian mode.[41] "Eleanor Rigby" opens with a C-major vocal harmony ("Aah, look at all ..."), before shifting to E-minor (on "lonely people"). The Aeolian C-natural note returns later in the verse on the word "dre-eam" (C–B) as the C chord resolves to the tonic Em, giving an urgency to the melody's mood.

The Dorian mode appears with the C# note (6 in the Em scale) at the beginning of the phrase "in the church". The chorus beginning "All the lonely people" involves the viola in a chromatic descent to the 5th; from 7 (D natural on "All the lonely peo-") to 6 (C on "-ple") to 6 (C on "they) to 5 (B on "from"). According to musicologist Dominic Pedler, this adds an "air of inevitability to the flow of the music (and perhaps to the plight of the characters in the song)".[42]

Lyrics edit

London may have been swinging in 1966, but in the midst of the Cold War, Britain was also a place where faith in the old religions was fading, and where many feared annihilation in an atomic Third World War. There is a bleak end-times feel to "Eleanor Rigby" ...[43]

– Author Howard Sounes

The lyrics represent a departure from McCartney's previous songs, in their avoidance of first- and second-person pronouns and by diverging from the themes of a standard love song.[44] The narrator takes the form of a detached onlooker, akin to a novelist or screenwriter. Beatles biographer Steve Turner says that this new approach reflects the likely influence of Ray Davies of the Kinks, specifically the latter's singles "A Well Respected Man" and "Dedicated Follower of Fashion".[45]

Author Howard Sounes compares the song's narrative to "the isolated broken figures" typical of a Samuel Beckett play, as Rigby dies alone, no mourners attend her funeral, and the priest "seems to have lost his congregation and faith".[43] In Everett's view, McCartney's description of Rigby and McKenzie elevates individuals' loneliness and wasted lives to a universal level in the manner of Lennon's autobiographical "Nowhere Man". Everett adds that McCartney's imagery is "vivid and yet common enough to elicit enormous compassion for these lost souls".[46]

Recording edit

"Eleanor Rigby" does not have a standard pop backing. None of the Beatles played instruments on it, although Lennon and Harrison did contribute harmony vocals.[47] Like the earlier song "Yesterday", "Eleanor Rigby" employs a classical string ensemble – in this case, an octet of studio musicians, comprising four violins, two violas and two cellos, all performing a score composed by George Martin.[48] When writing the string arrangement, Martin drew inspiration from Bernard Herrmann's work,[35] particularly the latter's score for the 1960 film Psycho.[49][nb 4]

Whereas "Yesterday" is played legato, "Eleanor Rigby" is played mainly in staccato chords with melodic embellishments. McCartney, reluctant to repeat what he had done on "Yesterday", explicitly expressed that he did not want the strings to sound too cloying. For the most part, the instruments "double up" – that is, they serve as a single string quartet but with two instruments playing each of the four parts. Microphones were placed close to the instruments to produce a more biting and raw sound. Engineer Geoff Emerick was admonished by the string players saying "You're not supposed to do that." Fearing such close proximity to their instruments would expose the slightest deficiencies in their technique, the players kept moving their chairs away from the microphones[52] until Martin got on the talk-back system and scolded: "Stop moving the chairs!" Martin recorded two versions, one with vibrato and one without, the latter of which was used. Lennon recalled in 1980 that "Eleanor Rigby" was "Paul's baby, and I helped with the education of the child ... The violin backing was Paul's idea. Jane Asher had turned him on to Vivaldi, and it was very good."[53]

The octet was recorded on 28 April 1966, in Studio 2 at EMI Studios. The track was completed in Studio 3 on 29 April and on 6 June. Take 15 was selected as the master.[54] The final overdub, on 6 June, was McCartney's addition of the "Ah, look at all the lonely people" refrain over the song's final chorus. This was requested by Martin,[55] who said he came up with the idea of the line working contrapuntally to the chorus melody.[56]

The original stereo mix had the lead vocal alone in the right channel during the verses, with the strings mixed to one channel, while the mono single and mono LP featured a more balanced mix. For the track's inclusion on Yellow Submarine Songtrack in 1999, a new stereo mix was created that centres McCartney's voice and spreads the string octet across the stereo image.[57]

Release edit

On 5 August 1966, "Eleanor Rigby" was simultaneously released on a double A-side single, paired with "Yellow Submarine",[58] and on the album Revolver.[59][60] In the LP sequencing, it appeared as the second track, between Harrison's "Taxman" and Lennon's "I'm Only Sleeping".[61] The Beatles thereby broke with their policy of ensuring that album tracks were not issued on their UK singles.[62] According to a report in Melody Maker, the reason for this was to thwart sales of cover recordings of "Eleanor Rigby".[63] Harrison confirmed that they expected "dozens" of artists to have a hit with the song;[64] however, he also said the track would "probably only appeal to Ray Davies types".[65] Writing in the 1970s, music critics Roy Carr and Tony Tyler described the motivation behind the single as a "growing dodge in the ever-innovative music industry", building on UK record companies' policy of reissuing an album's most popular tracks, particularly those that had been culled for release as a single in the US, on a spin-off extended play.[66]

The pairing of a ballad devoid of any instrumentation played by a Beatle and a novelty song marked a significant departure from the content of the band's previous singles.[67][68][nb 5] Writing in his 1977 book The Beatles Forever, Nicholas Schaffner recalled that not only did the two sides have little in common with one another, but "'Yellow Submarine' was the most flippant and outrageous piece the Beatles would ever produce, [and] 'Eleanor Rigby' remains the most relentlessly tragic song the group attempted."[68] Unusually for their post-1965 singles also, the Beatles did not make a promotional film for either of the songs.[70] Music historian David Simonelli groups "Eleanor Rigby" with "Taxman" and the band's May 1966 single tracks "Paperback Writer" and "Rain" as examples of the Beatles' "pointed social commentary" that consolidated their "dominance of London's social scene".[71][nb 6]

In the United States, the record's release coincided with the group's final tour[74] and a public furore over the publication of Lennon's remarks that the Beatles had become "more popular than Jesus Christ";[75][76] he also predicted the downfall of Christianity[77] and described Christ's disciples as "thick and ordinary".[78] In the US South, particularly, some radio stations refused to play the band's music and organised public bonfires to burn Beatles records and memorabilia.[79][80] Capitol Records were therefore wary of the religious references in "Eleanor Rigby" and promoted "Yellow Submarine" as the lead side.[81] During the band's first tour press conference, on 11 August, one reporter suggested that Father McKenzie's sermons going unheard referred to the decline of religion in society. McCartney replied that the song was about lonely individuals, one of whom happened to be a priest.[82][nb 7]

The double A-side topped the Record Retailer chart (subsequently adopted as the UK Singles Chart) for four weeks,[86] becoming their eleventh number-one single on the chart,[87] and Melody Maker's chart for three weeks.[88][89] It was also number 1 in Australia.[90] The single topped charts in many other countries around the world,[91] although "Yellow Submarine" was usually the listed side.[90] In the US, disc jockeys began flipping the single midway through the tour as the radio boycotts were lifted.[92] With each song eligible to chart separately there, "Eleanor Rigby" entered the Billboard Hot 100 in late August[93] and peaked at number 11 for two weeks,[94] and "Yellow Submarine" reached number 2.[95][nb 8]

Critical reception edit

[In "Eleanor Rigby", the Beatles are] asking where all the lonely people come from and where they all belong as if they really want to know. Their capacity for fun has been evident since the beginning; their capacity for pity is something new and is a major reason for calling them artists.[97]

Dan Sullivan, The New York Times, March 1967

In Melody Maker's appraisal of Revolver, the writer described "Eleanor Rigby" as a "charming song" and one of the album's best tracks.[98] Derek Johnson, reviewing the single for the NME, said it lacked the immediate appeal of "Yellow Submarine" but "possess[ed] lasting value" and was "beautifully handled by Paul, with baroque-type strings".[99] Although he praised the string arrangement, Peter Jones of Record Mirror found the song "Pleasant enough but rather disjointed", saying, "it's commercial, but I like more meat from the Beatles."[100] Ray Davies offered an unfavourable view[101] when invited to give a song-by-song rundown of Revolver in Disc and Music Echo.[102] He dismissed "Eleanor Rigby" as a song designed "to please music teachers in primary schools",[103] adding: "I can imagine John saying, 'I'm going to write this for my old schoolmistress.' Still it's very commercial."[104]

Reporting from London for The Village Voice, Richard Goldstein stated that Revolver was ubiquitous around the city, as if Londoners were uniting behind the Beatles in response to the antagonism shown towards the band in the US. He wrote: "As a commentary on the state of modern religion, this song will hardly be appreciated by those who see John Lennon as an anti-Christ. But 'Eleanor Rigby' is really about the unloved and un-cared-for."[105] Commenting on the lyrics, Edward Greenfield of The Guardian wrote, "There you have a quality rare in pop music, compassion, born of an artist's ability to project himself into other situations." He found this "Specific understanding of emotion" evident also in McCartney's new love songs and described him as "the Beatle with the strongest musical staying power".[106] While bemoaning that Americans' attention was overly focused on the band's image and non-musical activities, KRLA Beat's album reviewer predicted that "Eleanor Rigby" would "become a contemporary classic", adding that, aside from the quality of the string arrangement, "the haunting melody is one of the most beautiful to be found in our current pop music" and the lyrics "[are] both accurate and unforgettable".[107] Cash Box found the single's pairing "unique" and described "Eleanor Rigby" as "a powerfully arranged, haunting story of sorrow and frustration".[108]

The NME chose "Eleanor Rigby" as its "Single of the Year" for 1966.[109] Melody Maker included the song among the year's five "singles to remember", and Maureen Cleave of The Evening Standard recognised the single and Revolver as the year's best records in her round-up of 1966.[110] At the 9th Annual Grammy Awards in March 1967, "Eleanor Rigby" was nominated in three categories,[111] winning the award for Best Contemporary (R&R) Vocal Performance, Male or Female for McCartney.[112][nb 9]

In 2002, the 1966 Capitol Records recording of "Eleanor Rigby" by The Beatles was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.[114]

Appearance in Yellow Submarine film and subsequent releases edit

"Eleanor Rigby" appears in the Beatles' 1968 animated film Yellow Submarine as the band's submarine drifts over the desolate streets of Liverpool.[115] Its poignancy ties in quite well with Starr (the first member of the group to encounter the submarine), who is represented as quietly bored and depressed. Starr's character states in his inner thoughts: "Compared with my life, Eleanor Rigby's was a gay, mad whirl."[citation needed] Media theorist Stephanie Fremaux groups the song with "Only a Northern Song" and "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" as a scene that most clearly conveys the Beatles' "aims as musicians". In her description, the segment depicts "moments of color and hope in a land of conformity and loneliness".[116] With special effects directed by Charlie Jenkins, the animation incorporates photographs of silhouetted people; bankers with bowler hats and umbrellas are seen on rooftops, overlooking the streets.[116][nb 10]

The track also appears on several of the band's greatest-hits compilations, including A Collection of Beatles Oldies, The Beatles 1962–1966 and 1.[118][119] In 1986, "Yellow Submarine" / "Eleanor Rigby" was reissued in the UK as part of EMI's twentieth anniversary of each of the Beatles' singles and peaked at number 63 on the UK Singles Chart.[120] The 2015 edition of 1 and the expanded 1+ box set includes a video clip for the song, taken from the Yellow Submarine film.[121]

In 1996, a stereo remix of Martin's isolated string arrangement was released on the Beatles' Anthology 2 outtakes compilation.[122] For the song's inclusion on the Love album in 2006, a new mix was created that adds a strings-only portion at the start of the track and closes with a transition featuring part of Lennon's acoustic guitar from the 1968 song "Julia".[123]

The real-life Eleanor Rigby edit

 
The gravestone of Eleanor Rigby (1895–1939) in St Peter's Parish Church, Woolton

McCartney's recollection of how he chose the name of his protagonist came under scrutiny in the 1980s, after a headstone engraved with the name "Eleanor Rigby" was discovered in the graveyard of St Peter's Parish Church in Woolton, in Liverpool.[14][124] Part of a well-known local family,[9] Rigby had died in 1939 at the age of 44.[16] Close by was a headstone bearing the name McKenzie.[125][126] St Peter's was where Lennon attended Sunday school as a boy,[127] and he and McCartney first met at the church fete there in July 1957.[14] McCartney has said that while he often walked through the churchyard, he had no recollection of ever seeing Rigby's grave.[127] He attributed the coincidence to a product of his subconscious.[125][43] McCartney has also dismissed claims by people who, because of their name and a tenuous association with the Beatles, believed they were the real Father McKenzie.[128]

In 1990, McCartney responded to a request from Sunbeams Music Trust by donating a historical document that listed the wages paid by Liverpool City Hospital; among the employees listed was Eleanor Rigby, who worked as a scullery maid at the hospital.[129][130] Dating from 1911 and signed by the 16-year-old Rigby,[124] the document attracted interest from collectors because of what it seemingly revealed about the inspiration behind the Beatles song.[130] It sold at auction in November 2008 for £115,000. McCartney stated at the time: "Eleanor Rigby is a totally fictitious character that I made up ... If someone wants to spend money buying a document to prove a fictitious character exists, that's fine with me."[129]

Rigby's grave in Woolton became a landmark for Beatles fans visiting Liverpool.[15][131] A digitised image of the headstone was added to the 1995 music video for the Beatles' reunion song "Free as a Bird".[109] Continued interest in a possible connection between the real-life Eleanor Rigby and the 1966 song led to the deeds for the grave being put up for auction in 2017,[15][131] along with a Bible that once belonged to Rigby and a handwritten score for the track (subsequently withdrawn) and other items of Beatles memorabilia.[132]

Legacy edit

Sociocultural impact and literary appreciation edit

 
Eleanor Rigby statue by Tommy Steele on Stanley Street, Liverpool.

Although "Eleanor Rigby" was far from the first popular song to deal with death and loneliness, according to Ian MacDonald it "came as quite a shock to pop listeners in 1966".[9] It took a bleak message of depression and desolation, written by a famous pop group, with a sombre, almost funeral-like backing, to the number one spot of the pop charts.[133] Richie Unterberger of AllMusic cites the song's focus on "the neglected concerns and fates of the elderly" as "just one example of why the Beatles' appeal reached so far beyond the traditional rock audience".[67]

In its inclusion of compositions that departed from the format of standard love songs, Revolver marked the start of a change in the Beatles' core audience, as their young, female-dominated fanbase gave way to a following that increasingly comprised more serious-minded, male listeners.[134] Commenting on the preponderance of young people who, under the influence of drugs such as marijuana and LSD, increasingly afforded films and rock music exhaustive analysis, Mark Kurlansky writes: "Beatles songs were examined like Tennyson's poems. Who was Eleanor Rigby?"[135][nb 11]

The song's lyrics became the subject of study by sociologists, who from 1966 began to view the band as spokesmen for their generation.[68] In 2018, Colin Campbell, professor of sociology at the University of York, published a book-length analysis of the lyrics, titled The Continuing Story of Eleanor Rigby.[138] Writing in the 1970s, however, Roy Carr and Tony Tyler dismissed the song's sociological relevance as academics "rear[ing] a mis-shapen skull", adding: "Though much praised at the time (by sociologists), 'Eleanor Rigby' was sentimental, melodramatic and a blind alley."[139][nb 12]

According to author and satirist Craig Brown, the lyrics to "Eleanor Rigby" have been "the most extravagantly praised" of all the Beatles' songs, "and by all the right people".[141] These include poets such as Allen Ginsberg and Thom Gunn, the last of whom likened the song to W.H. Auden's poem "Miss Gee", and literary critic Karl Miller, who included the lyrics in his 1968 anthology Writing in England Today.[142][nb 13]

In his 1970 book Revolt in Style, Liverpudlian musician and critic George Melly admired the "imaginative truth of 'Eleanor Rigby'", likening it to author James Joyce's treatment of his own hometown in Dubliners.[68] Novelist and poet A.S. Byatt recognised the song as having the "minimalist perfection" of a Samuel Beckett story.[16][142] In a talk on BBC Radio 3 in 1993, Byatt said that "Wearing a face that she keeps in a jar by the door" – a line that MacDonald deems "the single most memorable image in The Beatles' output" – conveys a level of despair unacceptable to English middle-class sensibilities and, rather than being a reference to make-up, suggests that Rigby "is faceless, is nothing" once alone in her home.[144]

In 1982, the Eleanor Rigby statue was unveiled on Stanley Street in Liverpool as a donation from Tommy Steele in tribute to the Beatles. The plaque carries a dedication to "All the Lonely People".[145]

In 2004, Revolver appeared second in The Observer's list of "The 100 Greatest British Albums", compiled by a panel of 100 contributors.[146] In his commentary for the newspaper, John Harris highlighted "Eleanor Rigby" as arguably the album's "single greatest achievement", saying that it "perfectly evokes an England of bomb sites and spinsters, where in the darkest moments it does indeed seem that 'no one was saved'". Harris concluded: "Most pop songwriters have always wrapped up Englishness in camp and irony – here, in a rare moment for British rock, post-war Britain is portrayed in terms of its truly grave aspects."[147]

Musical influence and further recognition edit

David Simonelli cites the chamber-orchestrated "Eleanor Rigby" as an example of the Beatles' influence being such that, whatever the style of song, their progressiveness defined the parameters of rock music.[148] Music academics Michael Campbell and James Brody highlight the track's melodic shape and imaginative backing to illustrate how, paired with similarly synergistic elements in "A Day in the Life", the Beatles' use of music and lyrics made them one of the two acts in 1960s rock, along with Bob Dylan, who were "most responsible for elevating its level of discourse and expanding its horizons".[149]

Soon after its release, Melly stated that "Pop has come of age" with "Eleanor Rigby", while songwriter Jerry Leiber said, "I don't think there's ever been a better song written."[142] In a 1967 interview, Pete Townshend of the Who commented on the Beatles: "They are basically my main source of inspiration – and everyone else's for that matter. I think 'Eleanor Rigby' was a very important musical move forward. It certainly inspired me to write and listen to things in that vein."[150] In his television show Inside Pop: The Rock Revolution, which aired in April 1967, American composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein championed the Beatles' talents among contemporary pop acts and highlighted the song's string arrangement as an example of the eclectic qualities that made 1960s pop music worthy of recognition as art.[151] Barry Gibb of the Bee Gees said that their 1969 song "Melody Fair" was influenced by "Eleanor Rigby".[152] America's single "Lonely People" was written by Dan Peek in 1973 as an optimistic response to the Beatles track.[153]

In 2000, Mojo ranked "Eleanor Rigby" at number 19 on the magazine's list of "The 100 Greatest Songs of All Time".[109] In BBC Radio 2's millennium poll, listeners voted it as one of the top 100 songs of the twentieth century.[154] It was ranked at number 137 on Rolling Stone's list "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time" in 2004,[155] and number 243 on the 2021 revised list.[156] "Eleanor Rigby" was inducted into the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences' Grammy Hall of Fame in 2002.[109] It has been a Desert Island Discs selection by individuals such as Cathy Berberian, Charles Aznavour, Patricia Hayes, Carlos Frank and Geoffrey Howe.[142] Similarly, Marshall Crenshaw named it to a list of ten songs that represent perfect songwriting.[157]

Other versions edit

By the mid-2000s, over 200 cover versions of "Eleanor Rigby" had been made.[158] George Martin included the song on his November 1966 album George Martin Instrumentally Salutes "The Beatle Girls",[159] one of a series of interpretive works by the band's producer designed to appeal to the easy listening market.[160]

The song was also popular with soul artists seeking to widen their stylistic range.[46] Ray Charles recorded a version that was released as a single in 1968[46] and peaked at number 35 on the Billboard Hot 100[161] and number 36 in the UK.[162] Lennon highlighted it as a "fantastic" cover.[29] Aretha Franklin's version of "Eleanor Rigby" charted at number 17 on the Billboard Hot 100 in December 1969.[163] Music journalist Chris Ingham recognises the Charles and Franklin recordings as notable progressive soul interpretations of the song.[158]

McCartney recorded a new version of "Eleanor Rigby", with Martin again scoring the orchestration,[164] for his 1984 film Give My Regards to Broad Street.[165] Departing from the premise of the film, the song's sequence features McCartney dressed in Victorian costume.[166] On the accompanying soundtrack album, the track segues into a symphonic extension titled "Eleanor's Dream".[167] He has also performed the song frequently in concert, starting with his 1989–90 world tour.[119]

In 2021, composer Cody Fry arranged recordings submitted by 400 musicians into an orchestral cover of "Eleanor Rigby".[168] It was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Arrangement, Instrumental and Vocals at the 64th Annual Grammy Awards.[169]

Personnel edit

According to Ian MacDonald:[170]

The Beatles

Additional musicians

Charts edit

Certifications edit

Region Certification Certified units/sales
United Kingdom (BPI)[182] Platinum 600,000

Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Composer Lionel Bart offered another account relating to the song's title.[16][17] He recalled advising McCartney not to call it "Eleanor Bygraves",[17] a name they had seen on a gravestone near Wimbledon Common.[18]
  2. ^ In a 2007 interview, Martin said that, such was the mutual admiration and sense of competition between the two songwriters, McCartney always took inspiration from Lennon as a lyricist, and while McCartney "wrote all of it", "['Eleanor Rigby'] wouldn't have happened without John's influence."[37]
  3. ^ Additionally, Weber raises the possibility that manager Allen Klein influenced Lennon's memory. During a 1971 interview, Klein said that he "reminded" Lennon that he "wrote 60 or 70% of the [song's] lyric" and that he "just didn't remember until I sat him down and had him sort through it all".[39]
  4. ^ Martin originally cited Herrmann's score for Fahrenheit 451,[35][50] but this was a mistake as the film was not released until several months after the recording of "Eleanor Rigby".[51]
  5. ^ In a radio interview with David Frost shortly before its release, McCartney said he was disappointed with the string arrangement and agreed with a comment he had heard, that the end of the song seemed like a "send-up" of Disney-style storytelling. He added, however, that it was quite normal for the Beatles to initially dislike their new recordings after finishing an album.[69]
  6. ^ Hunter Davies had intended to make "Eleanor Rigby" the focus of his Atticus column in The Sunday Times when he first visited McCartney in September 1966 and the pair discussed the song.[72] As a result of this association, Davies was chosen to write the Beatles' official biography, published in 1968 as The Beatles: The Authorised Biography.[73]
  7. ^ At press conferences throughout the August US tour, reporters typically focused on religious matters rather than the band's new music.[83] On 24 August,[84] when asked what had inspired "Eleanor Rigby", Lennon quipped, "Two queers ... Two barrow boys."[85]
  8. ^ In author Jonathan Gould's description, it was "the first 'designated' Beatles single since 1963" not to top the Billboard Hot 100, a result he attributes to Capitol's caution in initially overlooking "Eleanor Rigby".[96]
  9. ^ The other categories were Best Vocal Performance, Male and Best Contemporary (R&R) Recording.[111] The Beatles won the Grammy for Song of the Year that night for McCartney's ballad "Michelle".[111][113]
  10. ^ Reviewing the Yellow Submarine DVD release in 2012 for Record Collector, Oregano Rathbone admired the "Eleanor Rigby" sequence as "an extraordinarily affecting interlude of Magritte melancholia".[117]
  11. ^ Many of the Beatles' less progressive fans were alienated by the group's new music in 1966, especially Lennon's uncompromising, psychedelic songs.[136] In Beatles Monthly's Revolver readers poll, "Eleanor Rigby" and McCartney's love songs were comfortably the most popular tracks.[137]
  12. ^ Nicholas Schaffner said that while some of the lines were "trite" and a few critics had found "its pathos veers rather close to bathos", the song succeeded through its "haunting ambiguities".[68] He added that McCartney's next work in the storytelling vein, "She's Leaving Home", about a teenage runaway, was overly literal by comparison, and resembled a soap opera.[140]
  13. ^ Ginsberg played "Eleanor Rigby", along with "Yellow Submarine" and songs by Bob Dylan and Donovan, to Ezra Pound when visiting him in Venice in 1967. The visit was a gesture by Ginsberg to assure Pound that, despite the latter's embrace of fascism and antisemitism during World War II, his standing as the originator of twentieth-century poetry remained acknowledged in the 1960s.[143]

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Sources edit

External links edit

  • Full lyrics for the song at the Beatles' official website
  • The Beatles' "Eleanor Rigby" on YouTube
  • Manuscript Reveals Clues to Beatles Eleanor Rigby 11 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine

eleanor, rigby, this, article, about, beatles, song, other, uses, disambiguation, song, english, rock, band, beatles, from, their, 1966, album, revolver, also, issued, double, side, single, paired, with, yellow, submarine, credited, lennon, mccartney, songwrit. This article is about the Beatles song For other uses see Eleanor Rigby disambiguation Eleanor Rigby is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1966 album Revolver It was also issued on a double A side single paired with Yellow Submarine Credited to the Lennon McCartney songwriting partnership the song is one of only a few in which John Lennon and Paul McCartney later disputed primary authorship 3 Eyewitness testimony from several independent sources including George Martin and Pete Shotton supports McCartney s claim to authorship 4 Eleanor Rigby US picture sleeveSingle by the Beatlesfrom the album RevolverA side Yellow Submarine double A side Released5 August 1966 1966 08 05 Recorded28 29 April amp 6 June 1966StudioEMI LondonGenreBaroque pop 1 art rock 2 Length2 08LabelParlophone UK Capitol US Songwriter s Lennon McCartneyProducer s George MartinThe Beatles singles chronology Paperback Writer 1966 Eleanor Rigby Yellow Submarine 1966 Strawberry Fields Forever Penny Lane 1967 Music video Eleanor Rigby on YouTube Eleanor Rigby continued the transformation of the Beatles from a mainly rock and roll and pop oriented act to a more experimental studio based band with a double string quartet arrangement by George Martin and lyrics providing a narrative on loneliness It broke sharply with popular music conventions both musically and lyrically 5 The song topped singles charts in Australia Belgium Canada and New Zealand Contents 1 Background and inspiration 2 Writing collaboration 3 Composition 3 1 Music 3 2 Lyrics 4 Recording 5 Release 6 Critical reception 7 Appearance in Yellow Submarine film and subsequent releases 8 The real life Eleanor Rigby 9 Legacy 9 1 Sociocultural impact and literary appreciation 9 2 Musical influence and further recognition 10 Other versions 11 Personnel 12 Charts 12 1 Weekly charts 12 2 Year end charts 13 Certifications 14 Notes 15 References 16 Sources 17 External linksBackground and inspiration editPaul McCartney came up with the melody for Eleanor Rigby as he experimented on his piano 6 7 Donovan recalled hearing McCartney play an early version of the song on guitar where the character was named Ola Na Tungee At this point the song reflected an Indian musical influence and its lyrics alluded to drug use with references to blowing his mind in the dark and a pipe full of clay 8 The name of the protagonist that McCartney initially chose was not Eleanor Rigby but Miss Daisy Hawkins 9 In 1966 McCartney told Sunday Times journalist Hunter Davies how he got the idea for his song The first few bars just came to me And I got this name in my head Daisy Hawkins picks up the rice in the church where a wedding has been I don t know why I couldn t think of much more so I put it away for a day Then the name Father McCartney came to me and all the lonely people But I thought people would think it was supposed to be my dad sitting knitting his socks Dad s a happy lad So I went through the telephone book and I got the name McKenzie 10 McCartney said that the idea to call his character Eleanor was possibly because of Eleanor Bron 11 12 the actress who starred with the Beatles in their 1965 film Help 10 Rigby came from the name of a store in Bristol Rigby amp Evens Ltd 10 McCartney noticed the store while visiting his girlfriend of the time actress Jane Asher during her run in the Bristol Old Vic s production of The Happiest Days of Your Life in January 1966 13 14 He recalled in 1984 I just liked the name I was looking for a name that sounded natural Eleanor Rigby sounded natural 12 15 nb 1 In an October 2021 article in The New Yorker McCartney wrote that his inspiration for Eleanor Rigby was an old lady who lived alone and whom he got to know very well He would go shopping for her and sit in her kitchen listening to stories and her crystal radio set McCartney said just hearing her stories enriched my soul and influenced the songs I would later write 19 Writing collaboration editMcCartney wrote the melody and first verse alone after which he presented the song to the Beatles when they were gathered in the music room of John Lennon s home at Kenwood 20 Lennon George Harrison Ringo Starr and Lennon s childhood friend Pete Shotton all listened to McCartney play his song through and contributed ideas 21 Harrison came up with the Ah look at all the lonely people hook Starr contributed the line writing the words of a sermon that no one will hear and suggested making Father McCartney darn his socks which McCartney liked 21 It was then that Shotton suggested that McCartney change the name of the priest in case listeners mistook the fictional character for McCartney s own father 22 McCartney could not decide how to end the song and Shotton suggested that the two lonely people come together too late as Father McKenzie conducts Eleanor Rigby s funeral At the time Lennon rejected the idea out of hand but McCartney said nothing and used the idea later acknowledging Shotton s help 21 In Lennon s recollection the final touches were applied to the lyrics in the recording studio 23 at which point McCartney sought input from Neil Aspinall and Mal Evans the Beatles longstanding road managers 24 25 Eleanor Rigby serves as a rare example of Lennon subsequently claiming a more substantial role in the creation of a McCartney composition than is supported by others recollections 26 27 In the early 1970s Lennon told music journalist Alan Smith that he wrote about 70 per cent of the lyrics 28 29 and in a letter to Melody Maker complaining about Beatles producer George Martin s comments in a recent interview he said that Around 50 per cent of the lyrics were written by me at the studios and at Paul s place 30 In 1980 he recalled writing almost everything but the first verse 31 32 Shotton remembered Lennon s contribution as being virtually nil 33 while McCartney said that John helped me on a few words but I d put it down 80 20 to me something like that 34 According to McCartney In My Life and Eleanor Rigby are the only Lennon McCartney songs where he and Lennon disagreed over their authorship 33 In musicologist Walter Everett s view the lyric writing likely was a group effort 35 Historiographer Erin Torkelson Weber says that from all the available accounts McCartney was the principal author of the song and only Lennon s post 1970 recollections contradict this 36 nb 2 In the same 1980 interview Lennon expressed his resentment at the way McCartney had sought their bandmates and friends creative input rather than collaborate with Lennon directly Lennon added That s the kind of insensitivity he would have which upset me in later years 24 In addition to citing this emotional hurt Weber suggests that the song s critical acclaim may have motivated Lennon s assertions as he sought to portray himself as a greater musical genius than McCartney in the years following the Beatles break up 38 nb 3 Composition editMusic edit The song is a prominent example of mode mixture 40 specifically between the Aeolian mode also known as natural minor and the Dorian mode a minor scale except with a major sixth scale degree Set in E minor the song is based on the chord progression Em C typical of the Aeolian mode and utilising notes 3 6 and 7 in this scale The verse melody is written in Dorian mode 41 Eleanor Rigby opens with a C major vocal harmony Aah look at all before shifting to E minor on lonely people The Aeolian C natural note returns later in the verse on the word dre eam C B as the C chord resolves to the tonic Em giving an urgency to the melody s mood The Dorian mode appears with the C note 6 in the Em scale at the beginning of the phrase in the church The chorus beginning All the lonely people involves the viola in a chromatic descent to the 5th from 7 D natural on All the lonely peo to 6 C on ple to 6 C on they to 5 B on from According to musicologist Dominic Pedler this adds an air of inevitability to the flow of the music and perhaps to the plight of the characters in the song 42 Lyrics edit London may have been swinging in 1966 but in the midst of the Cold War Britain was also a place where faith in the old religions was fading and where many feared annihilation in an atomic Third World War There is a bleak end times feel to Eleanor Rigby 43 Author Howard Sounes The lyrics represent a departure from McCartney s previous songs in their avoidance of first and second person pronouns and by diverging from the themes of a standard love song 44 The narrator takes the form of a detached onlooker akin to a novelist or screenwriter Beatles biographer Steve Turner says that this new approach reflects the likely influence of Ray Davies of the Kinks specifically the latter s singles A Well Respected Man and Dedicated Follower of Fashion 45 Author Howard Sounes compares the song s narrative to the isolated broken figures typical of a Samuel Beckett play as Rigby dies alone no mourners attend her funeral and the priest seems to have lost his congregation and faith 43 In Everett s view McCartney s description of Rigby and McKenzie elevates individuals loneliness and wasted lives to a universal level in the manner of Lennon s autobiographical Nowhere Man Everett adds that McCartney s imagery is vivid and yet common enough to elicit enormous compassion for these lost souls 46 Recording edit nbsp Eleanor Rigby source source track Sample of Eleanor Rigby Problems playing this file See media help Eleanor Rigby does not have a standard pop backing None of the Beatles played instruments on it although Lennon and Harrison did contribute harmony vocals 47 Like the earlier song Yesterday Eleanor Rigby employs a classical string ensemble in this case an octet of studio musicians comprising four violins two violas and two cellos all performing a score composed by George Martin 48 When writing the string arrangement Martin drew inspiration from Bernard Herrmann s work 35 particularly the latter s score for the 1960 film Psycho 49 nb 4 Whereas Yesterday is played legato Eleanor Rigby is played mainly in staccato chords with melodic embellishments McCartney reluctant to repeat what he had done on Yesterday explicitly expressed that he did not want the strings to sound too cloying For the most part the instruments double up that is they serve as a single string quartet but with two instruments playing each of the four parts Microphones were placed close to the instruments to produce a more biting and raw sound Engineer Geoff Emerick was admonished by the string players saying You re not supposed to do that Fearing such close proximity to their instruments would expose the slightest deficiencies in their technique the players kept moving their chairs away from the microphones 52 until Martin got on the talk back system and scolded Stop moving the chairs Martin recorded two versions one with vibrato and one without the latter of which was used Lennon recalled in 1980 that Eleanor Rigby was Paul s baby and I helped with the education of the child The violin backing was Paul s idea Jane Asher had turned him on to Vivaldi and it was very good 53 The octet was recorded on 28 April 1966 in Studio 2 at EMI Studios The track was completed in Studio 3 on 29 April and on 6 June Take 15 was selected as the master 54 The final overdub on 6 June was McCartney s addition of the Ah look at all the lonely people refrain over the song s final chorus This was requested by Martin 55 who said he came up with the idea of the line working contrapuntally to the chorus melody 56 The original stereo mix had the lead vocal alone in the right channel during the verses with the strings mixed to one channel while the mono single and mono LP featured a more balanced mix For the track s inclusion on Yellow Submarine Songtrack in 1999 a new stereo mix was created that centres McCartney s voice and spreads the string octet across the stereo image 57 Release editOn 5 August 1966 Eleanor Rigby was simultaneously released on a double A side single paired with Yellow Submarine 58 and on the album Revolver 59 60 In the LP sequencing it appeared as the second track between Harrison s Taxman and Lennon s I m Only Sleeping 61 The Beatles thereby broke with their policy of ensuring that album tracks were not issued on their UK singles 62 According to a report in Melody Maker the reason for this was to thwart sales of cover recordings of Eleanor Rigby 63 Harrison confirmed that they expected dozens of artists to have a hit with the song 64 however he also said the track would probably only appeal to Ray Davies types 65 Writing in the 1970s music critics Roy Carr and Tony Tyler described the motivation behind the single as a growing dodge in the ever innovative music industry building on UK record companies policy of reissuing an album s most popular tracks particularly those that had been culled for release as a single in the US on a spin off extended play 66 The pairing of a ballad devoid of any instrumentation played by a Beatle and a novelty song marked a significant departure from the content of the band s previous singles 67 68 nb 5 Writing in his 1977 book The Beatles Forever Nicholas Schaffner recalled that not only did the two sides have little in common with one another but Yellow Submarine was the most flippant and outrageous piece the Beatles would ever produce and Eleanor Rigby remains the most relentlessly tragic song the group attempted 68 Unusually for their post 1965 singles also the Beatles did not make a promotional film for either of the songs 70 Music historian David Simonelli groups Eleanor Rigby with Taxman and the band s May 1966 single tracks Paperback Writer and Rain as examples of the Beatles pointed social commentary that consolidated their dominance of London s social scene 71 nb 6 In the United States the record s release coincided with the group s final tour 74 and a public furore over the publication of Lennon s remarks that the Beatles had become more popular than Jesus Christ 75 76 he also predicted the downfall of Christianity 77 and described Christ s disciples as thick and ordinary 78 In the US South particularly some radio stations refused to play the band s music and organised public bonfires to burn Beatles records and memorabilia 79 80 Capitol Records were therefore wary of the religious references in Eleanor Rigby and promoted Yellow Submarine as the lead side 81 During the band s first tour press conference on 11 August one reporter suggested that Father McKenzie s sermons going unheard referred to the decline of religion in society McCartney replied that the song was about lonely individuals one of whom happened to be a priest 82 nb 7 The double A side topped the Record Retailer chart subsequently adopted as the UK Singles Chart for four weeks 86 becoming their eleventh number one single on the chart 87 and Melody Maker s chart for three weeks 88 89 It was also number 1 in Australia 90 The single topped charts in many other countries around the world 91 although Yellow Submarine was usually the listed side 90 In the US disc jockeys began flipping the single midway through the tour as the radio boycotts were lifted 92 With each song eligible to chart separately there Eleanor Rigby entered the Billboard Hot 100 in late August 93 and peaked at number 11 for two weeks 94 and Yellow Submarine reached number 2 95 nb 8 Critical reception edit In Eleanor Rigby the Beatles are asking where all the lonely people come from and where they all belong as if they really want to know Their capacity for fun has been evident since the beginning their capacity for pity is something new and is a major reason for calling them artists 97 Dan Sullivan The New York Times March 1967 In Melody Maker s appraisal of Revolver the writer described Eleanor Rigby as a charming song and one of the album s best tracks 98 Derek Johnson reviewing the single for the NME said it lacked the immediate appeal of Yellow Submarine but possess ed lasting value and was beautifully handled by Paul with baroque type strings 99 Although he praised the string arrangement Peter Jones of Record Mirror found the song Pleasant enough but rather disjointed saying it s commercial but I like more meat from the Beatles 100 Ray Davies offered an unfavourable view 101 when invited to give a song by song rundown of Revolver in Disc and Music Echo 102 He dismissed Eleanor Rigby as a song designed to please music teachers in primary schools 103 adding I can imagine John saying I m going to write this for my old schoolmistress Still it s very commercial 104 Reporting from London for The Village Voice Richard Goldstein stated that Revolver was ubiquitous around the city as if Londoners were uniting behind the Beatles in response to the antagonism shown towards the band in the US He wrote As a commentary on the state of modern religion this song will hardly be appreciated by those who see John Lennon as an anti Christ But Eleanor Rigby is really about the unloved and un cared for 105 Commenting on the lyrics Edward Greenfield of The Guardian wrote There you have a quality rare in pop music compassion born of an artist s ability to project himself into other situations He found this Specific understanding of emotion evident also in McCartney s new love songs and described him as the Beatle with the strongest musical staying power 106 While bemoaning that Americans attention was overly focused on the band s image and non musical activities KRLA Beat s album reviewer predicted that Eleanor Rigby would become a contemporary classic adding that aside from the quality of the string arrangement the haunting melody is one of the most beautiful to be found in our current pop music and the lyrics are both accurate and unforgettable 107 Cash Box found the single s pairing unique and described Eleanor Rigby as a powerfully arranged haunting story of sorrow and frustration 108 The NME chose Eleanor Rigby as its Single of the Year for 1966 109 Melody Maker included the song among the year s five singles to remember and Maureen Cleave of The Evening Standard recognised the single and Revolver as the year s best records in her round up of 1966 110 At the 9th Annual Grammy Awards in March 1967 Eleanor Rigby was nominated in three categories 111 winning the award for Best Contemporary R amp R Vocal Performance Male or Female for McCartney 112 nb 9 In 2002 the 1966 Capitol Records recording of Eleanor Rigby by The Beatles was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame 114 Appearance in Yellow Submarine film and subsequent releases edit Eleanor Rigby appears in the Beatles 1968 animated film Yellow Submarine as the band s submarine drifts over the desolate streets of Liverpool 115 Its poignancy ties in quite well with Starr the first member of the group to encounter the submarine who is represented as quietly bored and depressed Starr s character states in his inner thoughts Compared with my life Eleanor Rigby s was a gay mad whirl citation needed Media theorist Stephanie Fremaux groups the song with Only a Northern Song and Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds as a scene that most clearly conveys the Beatles aims as musicians In her description the segment depicts moments of color and hope in a land of conformity and loneliness 116 With special effects directed by Charlie Jenkins the animation incorporates photographs of silhouetted people bankers with bowler hats and umbrellas are seen on rooftops overlooking the streets 116 nb 10 The track also appears on several of the band s greatest hits compilations including A Collection of Beatles Oldies The Beatles 1962 1966 and 1 118 119 In 1986 Yellow Submarine Eleanor Rigby was reissued in the UK as part of EMI s twentieth anniversary of each of the Beatles singles and peaked at number 63 on the UK Singles Chart 120 The 2015 edition of 1 and the expanded 1 box set includes a video clip for the song taken from the Yellow Submarine film 121 In 1996 a stereo remix of Martin s isolated string arrangement was released on the Beatles Anthology 2 outtakes compilation 122 For the song s inclusion on the Love album in 2006 a new mix was created that adds a strings only portion at the start of the track and closes with a transition featuring part of Lennon s acoustic guitar from the 1968 song Julia 123 The real life Eleanor Rigby edit nbsp The gravestone of Eleanor Rigby 1895 1939 in St Peter s Parish Church Woolton McCartney s recollection of how he chose the name of his protagonist came under scrutiny in the 1980s after a headstone engraved with the name Eleanor Rigby was discovered in the graveyard of St Peter s Parish Church in Woolton in Liverpool 14 124 Part of a well known local family 9 Rigby had died in 1939 at the age of 44 16 Close by was a headstone bearing the name McKenzie 125 126 St Peter s was where Lennon attended Sunday school as a boy 127 and he and McCartney first met at the church fete there in July 1957 14 McCartney has said that while he often walked through the churchyard he had no recollection of ever seeing Rigby s grave 127 He attributed the coincidence to a product of his subconscious 125 43 McCartney has also dismissed claims by people who because of their name and a tenuous association with the Beatles believed they were the real Father McKenzie 128 In 1990 McCartney responded to a request from Sunbeams Music Trust by donating a historical document that listed the wages paid by Liverpool City Hospital among the employees listed was Eleanor Rigby who worked as a scullery maid at the hospital 129 130 Dating from 1911 and signed by the 16 year old Rigby 124 the document attracted interest from collectors because of what it seemingly revealed about the inspiration behind the Beatles song 130 It sold at auction in November 2008 for 115 000 McCartney stated at the time Eleanor Rigby is a totally fictitious character that I made up If someone wants to spend money buying a document to prove a fictitious character exists that s fine with me 129 Rigby s grave in Woolton became a landmark for Beatles fans visiting Liverpool 15 131 A digitised image of the headstone was added to the 1995 music video for the Beatles reunion song Free as a Bird 109 Continued interest in a possible connection between the real life Eleanor Rigby and the 1966 song led to the deeds for the grave being put up for auction in 2017 15 131 along with a Bible that once belonged to Rigby and a handwritten score for the track subsequently withdrawn and other items of Beatles memorabilia 132 Legacy editSociocultural impact and literary appreciation edit nbsp Eleanor Rigby statue by Tommy Steele on Stanley Street Liverpool Although Eleanor Rigby was far from the first popular song to deal with death and loneliness according to Ian MacDonald it came as quite a shock to pop listeners in 1966 9 It took a bleak message of depression and desolation written by a famous pop group with a sombre almost funeral like backing to the number one spot of the pop charts 133 Richie Unterberger of AllMusic cites the song s focus on the neglected concerns and fates of the elderly as just one example of why the Beatles appeal reached so far beyond the traditional rock audience 67 In its inclusion of compositions that departed from the format of standard love songs Revolver marked the start of a change in the Beatles core audience as their young female dominated fanbase gave way to a following that increasingly comprised more serious minded male listeners 134 Commenting on the preponderance of young people who under the influence of drugs such as marijuana and LSD increasingly afforded films and rock music exhaustive analysis Mark Kurlansky writes Beatles songs were examined like Tennyson s poems Who was Eleanor Rigby 135 nb 11 The song s lyrics became the subject of study by sociologists who from 1966 began to view the band as spokesmen for their generation 68 In 2018 Colin Campbell professor of sociology at the University of York published a book length analysis of the lyrics titled The Continuing Story of Eleanor Rigby 138 Writing in the 1970s however Roy Carr and Tony Tyler dismissed the song s sociological relevance as academics rear ing a mis shapen skull adding Though much praised at the time by sociologists Eleanor Rigby was sentimental melodramatic and a blind alley 139 nb 12 According to author and satirist Craig Brown the lyrics to Eleanor Rigby have been the most extravagantly praised of all the Beatles songs and by all the right people 141 These include poets such as Allen Ginsberg and Thom Gunn the last of whom likened the song to W H Auden s poem Miss Gee and literary critic Karl Miller who included the lyrics in his 1968 anthology Writing in England Today 142 nb 13 In his 1970 book Revolt in Style Liverpudlian musician and critic George Melly admired the imaginative truth of Eleanor Rigby likening it to author James Joyce s treatment of his own hometown in Dubliners 68 Novelist and poet A S Byatt recognised the song as having the minimalist perfection of a Samuel Beckett story 16 142 In a talk on BBC Radio 3 in 1993 Byatt said that Wearing a face that she keeps in a jar by the door a line that MacDonald deems the single most memorable image in The Beatles output conveys a level of despair unacceptable to English middle class sensibilities and rather than being a reference to make up suggests that Rigby is faceless is nothing once alone in her home 144 In 1982 the Eleanor Rigby statue was unveiled on Stanley Street in Liverpool as a donation from Tommy Steele in tribute to the Beatles The plaque carries a dedication to All the Lonely People 145 In 2004 Revolver appeared second in The Observer s list of The 100 Greatest British Albums compiled by a panel of 100 contributors 146 In his commentary for the newspaper John Harris highlighted Eleanor Rigby as arguably the album s single greatest achievement saying that it perfectly evokes an England of bomb sites and spinsters where in the darkest moments it does indeed seem that no one was saved Harris concluded Most pop songwriters have always wrapped up Englishness in camp and irony here in a rare moment for British rock post war Britain is portrayed in terms of its truly grave aspects 147 Musical influence and further recognition edit David Simonelli cites the chamber orchestrated Eleanor Rigby as an example of the Beatles influence being such that whatever the style of song their progressiveness defined the parameters of rock music 148 Music academics Michael Campbell and James Brody highlight the track s melodic shape and imaginative backing to illustrate how paired with similarly synergistic elements in A Day in the Life the Beatles use of music and lyrics made them one of the two acts in 1960s rock along with Bob Dylan who were most responsible for elevating its level of discourse and expanding its horizons 149 Soon after its release Melly stated that Pop has come of age with Eleanor Rigby while songwriter Jerry Leiber said I don t think there s ever been a better song written 142 In a 1967 interview Pete Townshend of the Who commented on the Beatles They are basically my main source of inspiration and everyone else s for that matter I think Eleanor Rigby was a very important musical move forward It certainly inspired me to write and listen to things in that vein 150 In his television show Inside Pop The Rock Revolution which aired in April 1967 American composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein championed the Beatles talents among contemporary pop acts and highlighted the song s string arrangement as an example of the eclectic qualities that made 1960s pop music worthy of recognition as art 151 Barry Gibb of the Bee Gees said that their 1969 song Melody Fair was influenced by Eleanor Rigby 152 America s single Lonely People was written by Dan Peek in 1973 as an optimistic response to the Beatles track 153 In 2000 Mojo ranked Eleanor Rigby at number 19 on the magazine s list of The 100 Greatest Songs of All Time 109 In BBC Radio 2 s millennium poll listeners voted it as one of the top 100 songs of the twentieth century 154 It was ranked at number 137 on Rolling Stone s list The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time in 2004 155 and number 243 on the 2021 revised list 156 Eleanor Rigby was inducted into the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences Grammy Hall of Fame in 2002 109 It has been a Desert Island Discs selection by individuals such as Cathy Berberian Charles Aznavour Patricia Hayes Carlos Frank and Geoffrey Howe 142 Similarly Marshall Crenshaw named it to a list of ten songs that represent perfect songwriting 157 Other versions editFurther information List of cover versions of Beatles songs By the mid 2000s over 200 cover versions of Eleanor Rigby had been made 158 George Martin included the song on his November 1966 album George Martin Instrumentally Salutes The Beatle Girls 159 one of a series of interpretive works by the band s producer designed to appeal to the easy listening market 160 The song was also popular with soul artists seeking to widen their stylistic range 46 Ray Charles recorded a version that was released as a single in 1968 46 and peaked at number 35 on the Billboard Hot 100 161 and number 36 in the UK 162 Lennon highlighted it as a fantastic cover 29 Aretha Franklin s version of Eleanor Rigby charted at number 17 on the Billboard Hot 100 in December 1969 163 Music journalist Chris Ingham recognises the Charles and Franklin recordings as notable progressive soul interpretations of the song 158 McCartney recorded a new version of Eleanor Rigby with Martin again scoring the orchestration 164 for his 1984 film Give My Regards to Broad Street 165 Departing from the premise of the film the song s sequence features McCartney dressed in Victorian costume 166 On the accompanying soundtrack album the track segues into a symphonic extension titled Eleanor s Dream 167 He has also performed the song frequently in concert starting with his 1989 90 world tour 119 In 2021 composer Cody Fry arranged recordings submitted by 400 musicians into an orchestral cover of Eleanor Rigby 168 It was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Arrangement Instrumental and Vocals at the 64th Annual Grammy Awards 169 Personnel editAccording to Ian MacDonald 170 The Beatles Paul McCartney lead and harmony vocals 171 John Lennon harmony vocal George Harrison harmony vocal Additional musicians Tony Gilbert violin Sidney Sax violin John Sharpe violin Juergen Hess violin Stephen Shingles viola John Underwood viola Derek Simpson cello Norman Jones cello Stephen Lansberry cello George Martin string arrangementCharts editWeekly charts edit Chart 1966 67 Peakposition Australian Go Set National Top 40 172 1 Belgian Walloon Singles 173 1 Canadian RPM Top Singles 174 1 Finland Suomen virallinen lista 175 6 New Zealand Listener Chart 176 1 UK Record Retailer Chart 177 1 US Billboard Hot 100 178 11 US Cash Box Top 100 179 12 Chart 1986 Peakposition UK Singles Chart 180 63 Year end charts edit Chart 1966 Position UK Record Retailer Chart 181 3Certifications editRegion Certification Certified units sales United Kingdom BPI 182 Platinum 600 000 Sales streaming figures based on certification alone Notes edit Composer Lionel Bart offered another account relating to the song s title 16 17 He recalled advising McCartney not to call it Eleanor Bygraves 17 a name they had seen on a gravestone near Wimbledon Common 18 In a 2007 interview Martin said that such was the mutual admiration and sense of competition between the two songwriters McCartney always took inspiration from Lennon as a lyricist and while McCartney wrote all of it Eleanor Rigby wouldn t have happened without John s influence 37 Additionally Weber raises the possibility that manager Allen Klein influenced Lennon s memory During a 1971 interview Klein said that he reminded Lennon that he wrote 60 or 70 of the song s lyric and that he just didn t remember until I sat him down and had him sort through it all 39 Martin originally cited Herrmann s score for Fahrenheit 451 35 50 but this was a mistake as the film was not released until several months after the recording of Eleanor Rigby 51 In a radio interview with David Frost shortly before its release McCartney said he was disappointed with the string arrangement and agreed with a comment he had heard that the end of the song seemed like a send up of Disney style storytelling He added however that it was quite normal for the Beatles to initially dislike their new recordings after finishing an album 69 Hunter Davies had intended to make Eleanor Rigby the focus of his Atticus column in The Sunday Times when he first visited McCartney in September 1966 and the pair discussed the song 72 As a result of this association Davies was chosen to write the Beatles official biography published in 1968 as The Beatles The Authorised Biography 73 At press conferences throughout the August US tour reporters typically focused on religious matters rather than the band s new music 83 On 24 August 84 when asked what had inspired Eleanor Rigby Lennon quipped Two queers Two barrow boys 85 In author Jonathan Gould s description it was the first designated Beatles single since 1963 not to top the Billboard Hot 100 a result he attributes to Capitol s caution in initially overlooking Eleanor Rigby 96 The other categories were Best Vocal Performance Male and Best Contemporary R amp R Recording 111 The Beatles won the Grammy for Song of the Year that night for McCartney s ballad Michelle 111 113 Reviewing the Yellow Submarine DVD release in 2012 for Record Collector Oregano Rathbone admired the Eleanor Rigby sequence as an extraordinarily affecting interlude of Magritte melancholia 117 Many of the Beatles less progressive fans were alienated by the group s new music in 1966 especially Lennon s uncompromising psychedelic songs 136 In Beatles Monthly s Revolver readers poll Eleanor Rigby and McCartney s love songs were comfortably the most popular tracks 137 Nicholas Schaffner said that while some of the lines were trite and a few critics had found its pathos veers rather close to bathos the song succeeded through its haunting ambiguities 68 He added that McCartney s next work in the storytelling vein She s Leaving Home about a teenage runaway was overly literal by comparison and resembled a soap opera 140 Ginsberg played Eleanor Rigby along with Yellow Submarine and songs by Bob Dylan and Donovan to Ezra Pound when visiting him in Venice in 1967 The visit was a gesture by Ginsberg to assure Pound that despite the latter s embrace of fascism and antisemitism during World War II his standing as the originator of twentieth century poetry remained acknowledged in the 1960s 143 References edit Stanley Bob 20 September 2007 Pop Baroque and a soft place The Guardian Film amp music section p 8 Archived from the original on 21 September 2013 Retrieved 4 February 2013 Rodriguez 2012 p 138 Weber 2016 p 95 One of the rare songs in which primary authorship is disputed is Eleanor Rigby Weber 2016 p 96 T here is eyewitness testimony from at least four separate and independent sources including Martin William Burroughs Donovan and Shotton all of whom support McCartney s claim to authorship Campbell amp Brody 2008 pp 172 73 Miles 1997 p 282 Hertsgaard 1996 p 182 Rodriguez 2012 pp 83 84 a b c MacDonald 2005 p 203 a b c Turner 2016 p 62 Miles 1997 pp 282 83 a b Revolver Eleanor Rigby beatlesinterviews org Archived from the original on 5 July 2017 Retrieved 5 November 2021 Turner 2016 pp 60 62 a b c Rodriguez 2012 p 83 a b c Mullen Tom 11 September 2017 The Beatles What really inspired Eleanor Rigby BBC News Retrieved 11 November 2021 a b c Ingham 2006 p 192 a b MacDonald 2005 p 203fn Brown 2020 p 357 McCartney Paul 18 October 2021 Writing Eleanor Rigby The New Yorker Archived from the original on 21 October 2021 Retrieved 21 October 2021 Hertsgaard 1996 pp 182 83 a b c Turner 2005 pp 104 105 Hertsgaard 1996 p 183 Hertsgaard 1996 pp 183 382 a b Rodriguez 2012 p 82 Everett 1999 p 11 Rodriguez 2012 pp 81 82 Weber 2016 pp 94 98 Miles 1997 p 283 a b Lennon McCartney Songalog Who Wrote What Hit Parader Winter 1977 April 1972 pp 38 41 Retrieved 10 November 2021 Badman 2001 pp 49 50 Sheff 2000 p 139 Frontani 2007 pp 121 246 a b Womack 2014 p 252 Miles 1997 pp 283 84 a b c Everett 1999 p 51 Weber Erin Torkelson Lennon vs McCartney How Beatles History was Written and Re Written youtube Newman University History Department Archived from the original on 24 July 2021 Retrieved 24 July 2021 Irvin Jim March 2007 The Mojo Interview Sir George Martin Mojo p 39 Weber 2016 pp 96 97 Weber 2016 p 97 Thoughts on Eleanor Rigby PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2 February 2014 Pedler 2003 p 276 Pedler 2003 pp 333 34 a b c Sounes 2010 p 145 Turner 2016 pp 61 63 Turner 2016 pp 61 62 a b c Everett 1999 p 53 MacDonald 2005 pp 203 04 Rodriguez 2012 pp 132 33 Turner 2016 p 164 Pollack Alan W 13 February 1994 Notes on Eleanor Rigby Soundscapes Archived from the original on 9 November 2012 Retrieved 5 November 2021 Rodriguez 2012 p 134 Womack 2014 pp 252 53 Sheff 2000 p 140 Lewisohn 2005 pp 77 82 Rodriguez 2012 p 135 Fontenot Robert Eleanor Rigby The history of this classic Beatles song oldies about com Archived from the original on 6 September 2015 Retrieved 15 November 2021 Rodriguez 2012 pp 135 36 Sullivan 2013 pp 318 19 Lewisohn 2005 pp 84 200 Castleman amp Podrazik 1976 p 55 Miles 2001 pp 237 38 Rodriguez 2012 p 167 Everett 1999 pp 68 329 Rodriguez 2012 p 168 Turner 2016 p 61 Carr amp Tyler 1978 pp 52 58 a b Unterberger Richie The Beatles Eleanor Rigby AllMusic Archived from the original on 5 December 2012 Retrieved 8 November 2021 a b c d e Schaffner 1978 p 62 Winn 2009 pp 38 39 Unterberger 2006 p 318 Simonelli 2013 p 53 Davies Hunter Paperback Writer In Mojo Special Limited Edition 2002 p 93 Gould 2007 p 375 Carr amp Tyler 1978 p 54 Everett 1999 pp 69 70 Frontani 2007 pp 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Martin s Press 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 Sounes Howard 2010 Fab An Intimate Life of Paul McCartney London HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 00 723705 0 Sullivan Steve 2013 Encyclopedia of Great Popular Song Recordings Volume 1 Lanham MD Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 8296 6 Sutherland Steve ed 2003 NME Originals Lennon London IPC Ignite Turner Steve 2005 1994 A Hard Day s Write The Stories Behind Every Beatles Song New and Updated ed New York NY HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 084409 7 Turner Steve 2016 Beatles 66 The Revolutionary Year New York NY Ecco ISBN 978 0 06 247558 9 Unterberger Richie 2006 The Unreleased Beatles Music amp Film San Francisco CA Backbeat Books ISBN 978 0 87930 892 6 Weber Erin Torkelson 2016 The Beatles and the Historians An Analysis of Writings About the Fab Four Jefferson NC McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 1 4766 6266 4 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 2014 The Beatles Encyclopedia Everything Fab Four Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 39171 2 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Revolver Beatles album Full lyrics for the song at the Beatles official website The Beatles Eleanor Rigby on YouTube Manuscript Reveals Clues to Beatles Eleanor Rigby Archived 11 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine Howard Goodall s recognition of the role played by Lennon McCartney in salvaging Western classical music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eleanor Rigby amp oldid 1220519332, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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