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Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band

Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band is the eighth studio album by the English rock band the Beatles. Released on 26 May 1967,[nb 1] Sgt. Pepper is regarded by musicologists as an early concept album that advanced the roles of sound composition, extended form, psychedelic imagery, record sleeves, and the producer in popular music. The album had an immediate cross-generational impact and was associated with numerous touchstones of the era's youth culture, such as fashion, drugs, mysticism, and a sense of optimism and empowerment. Critics lauded the album for its innovations in songwriting, production and graphic design, for bridging a cultural divide between popular music and high art, and for reflecting the interests of contemporary youth and the counterculture.

Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
Studio album by
Released26 May 1967 (1967-05-26)
Recorded6 December 1966 – 21 April 1967
StudioEMI and Regent Sound, London
Genre
Length39:36
Label
ProducerGeorge Martin
The Beatles chronology
A Collection of Beatles Oldies
(1966)
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
(1967)
The Beatles
(1968)
The Beatles North American chronology
Revolver
(1966)
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
(1967)
Magical Mystery Tour
(1967)

At the end of August 1966, the Beatles had permanently retired from touring and pursued individual interests for the next three months. During a return flight to London in November, Paul McCartney had an idea for a song involving an Edwardian military band that formed the impetus of the Sgt. Pepper concept. For this project, they continued the technological experimentation marked by their previous album, Revolver, this time without an absolute deadline for completion. Sessions began on 24 November at EMI Studios with compositions inspired by the Beatles' youth, but after pressure from EMI, the songs "Strawberry Fields Forever" and "Penny Lane" were released as a double A-side single in February 1967 and left off the LP. The album was then loosely conceptualised as a performance by the fictional Sgt. Pepper band, an idea that was conceived after recording the title track.

A key work of British psychedelia, Sgt. Pepper is considered one of the first art rock LPs and a progenitor to progressive rock. It incorporates a range of stylistic influences, including vaudeville, circus, music hall, avant-garde, and Western and Indian classical music. With assistance from producer George Martin and engineer Geoff Emerick, much of the recordings were coloured with sound effects and tape manipulation, as exemplified on "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds", "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!" and "A Day in the Life". Recording was completed on 21 April. The cover, which depicts the Beatles posing in front of a tableau of celebrities and historical figures, was designed by the pop artists Peter Blake and Jann Haworth.

Sgt. Pepper's release was a defining moment in pop culture, heralding the album era and the 1967 Summer of Love, while its reception achieved full cultural legitimisation for pop music and recognition for the medium as a genuine art form. The first Beatles album to be released with the same track listing in both the UK and the US, it spent 27 weeks at number one on the Record Retailer chart in the United Kingdom and 15 weeks at number one on the Billboard Top LPs chart in the United States. In 1968, it won four Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year, the first rock LP to receive this honour; in 2003, it was inducted into the National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress. It has topped several critics' and listeners' polls for the best album of all time, including those published by Rolling Stone magazine and in the book All Time Top 1000 Albums, and the UK's "Music of the Millennium" poll. More than 32 million copies had been sold worldwide as of 2011. It remains one of the best-selling albums of all time and was still, in 2018, the UK's best-selling studio album. A remixed and expanded edition of the album was released in 2017.

Background

We were fed up with being the Beatles. We really hated that fucking four little mop-top approach. We were not boys, we were men ... and thought of ourselves as artists rather than just performers.[2]

Paul McCartney

By late 1965, the Beatles had grown weary of live performance.[3] In John Lennon's opinion, they could "send out four waxworks ... and that would satisfy the crowds. Beatles concerts are nothing to do with music anymore. They're just bloody tribal rites."[4] In June 1966, two days after finishing the album Revolver, the group set off for a tour that started in West Germany.[5] While in Hamburg they received an anonymous telegram stating: "Do not go to Tokyo. Your life is in danger."[6] The threat was taken seriously in light of the controversy surrounding the tour among Japan's religious and conservative groups, with particular opposition to the Beatles' planned performances at the sacred Nippon Budokan arena.[6] As an added precaution, 35,000 police were mobilised and tasked with protecting the group, who were transported from hotels to concert venues in armoured vehicles.[7] The Beatles then performed in the Philippines, where they were threatened and manhandled by its citizens for not visiting First Lady Imelda Marcos. The group were angry with their manager, Brian Epstein, for insisting on what they regarded as an exhausting and demoralising itinerary.[8]

 
The group, with disc jockey Jim Stagg, while on their final tour in August 1966

The publication in the US of Lennon's remarks about the Beatles being "more popular than Jesus" then embroiled the band in controversy and protest in America's Bible Belt.[9] A public apology eased tensions, but a US tour in August that was marked by reduced ticket sales, relative to the group's record attendances in 1965, and subpar performances proved to be their last.[10] The author Nicholas Schaffner writes:

To the Beatles, playing such concerts had become a charade so remote from the new directions they were pursuing that not a single tune was attempted from the just-released Revolver LP, whose arrangements were for the most part impossible to reproduce with the limitations imposed by their two-guitars-bass-and-drums stage lineup.[11]

On the Beatles' return to England, rumours began to circulate that they had decided to break up.[12] George Harrison informed Epstein that he was leaving the band, but he was persuaded to stay on the assurance that there would be no more tours.[9] The group took a three-month break, during which they focused on individual interests.[13] Harrison travelled to India for six weeks to study the sitar under the instruction of Ravi Shankar[14] and develop his interest in Hindu philosophy.[15] Having been the last of the Beatles to concede that their live performances had become futile,[16] Paul McCartney collaborated with Beatles producer George Martin on the soundtrack for the film The Family Way[17] and holidayed in Kenya with Mal Evans, one of the Beatles' tour managers.[18] Lennon acted in the film How I Won the War and attended art showings, such as one at the Indica Gallery where he met his future wife Yoko Ono.[19] Ringo Starr used the break to spend time with his wife Maureen and son Zak.[20]

Inspiration and conception

While in London without his bandmates, McCartney took the hallucinogenic drug LSD (or "acid") for the first time, having long resisted Lennon and Harrison's insistence that he join them and Starr in experiencing its perception-heightening effects.[21][22] According to author Jonathan Gould, this initiation into LSD afforded McCartney the "expansive new sense of possibility" that defined the group's next project, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. Gould adds that McCartney's succumbing to peer pressure allowed Lennon "to play the role of psychedelic guide" to his songwriting partner, thereby facilitating a closer collaboration between the two than had been evident since early in the Beatles' career.[23] For his part, Lennon had turned deeply introspective during the filming of How I Won the War in southern Spain in September 1966. His anxiety over his and the Beatles' future was reflected in "Strawberry Fields Forever",[24] a song that provided the initial theme, regarding a Liverpool childhood, of the new album.[25] On his return to London, Lennon embraced the city's arts culture, of which McCartney was a part,[26] and shared his bandmate's interest in avant-garde and electronic-music composers such as Karlheinz Stockhausen, John Cage and Luciano Berio.[27][28]

In November, during his and Evans' return flight from Kenya, McCartney had an idea for a song that eventually formed the impetus of the Sgt. Pepper concept.[14] His idea involved an Edwardian-era military band, for which Evans invented a name in the style of contemporary San Francisco-based groups such as Big Brother and the Holding Company and Quicksilver Messenger Service.[29][nb 2] In February 1967, McCartney suggested that the new album should represent a performance by the fictional band.[31] This alter ego group would give them the freedom to experiment musically by releasing them from their image as Beatles.[32] Martin recalled that the concept was not discussed at the start of the sessions,[33] but it subsequently gave the album "a life of its own".[34]

Portions of Sgt. Pepper reflect the Beatles' general immersion in the blues, Motown and other American popular musical traditions.[35] The author Ian MacDonald writes that when reviewing their rivals' recent work in late 1966, the Beatles identified the most significant LP as the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds, which Brian Wilson, the band's leader, had created in response to the Beatles' Rubber Soul.[36] McCartney was highly impressed with the "harmonic structures" and choice of instruments used on Pet Sounds, and said that these elements encouraged him to think the Beatles could "get further out" than the Beach Boys had.[37] He identified Pet Sounds as his main musical inspiration for Sgt. Pepper, adding that "[we] nicked a few ideas",[38] although he felt it lacked the avant-garde quality he was seeking.[39] Freak Out! by the Mothers of Invention has also been cited as having influenced Sgt. Pepper.[40] According to the biographer Philip Norman, during the recording sessions McCartney repeatedly stated: "This is our Freak Out!"[41] The music journalist Chet Flippo stated that McCartney was inspired to record a concept album after hearing Freak Out![40]

Indian music was another touchstone on Sgt. Pepper, principally for Lennon and Harrison.[42] In a 1967 interview, Harrison said that the Beatles' ongoing success had encouraged them to continue developing musically and that, given their standing, "We can do things that please us without conforming to the standard pop idea. We are not only involved in pop music, but all music."[43] McCartney envisioned the Beatles' alter egos being able to "do a bit of B.B. King, a bit of Stockhausen, a bit of Albert Ayler, a bit of Ravi Shankar, a bit of Pet Sounds, a bit of the Doors".[44] He saw the group as "pushing frontiers" similar to other composers of the time, even though the Beatles did not "necessarily like what, say, Berio was doing".[45]

Recording and production

Recording history

 
Abbey Road Studio Two, where nearly every track on Sgt. Pepper was recorded[46]

Sessions began on 24 November 1966 in Studio Two at EMI Studios (subsequently Abbey Road Studios), marking the first time that the Beatles had come together since September.[47] Afforded the luxury of a nearly limitless recording budget, and with no absolute deadline for completion,[48] the band booked open-ended sessions that started at 7 pm and allowed them to work as late as they wanted.[36] They began with "Strawberry Fields Forever", followed by two other songs that were thematically linked to their childhoods: "When I'm Sixty-Four", the first session for which took place on 6 December,[49] and "Penny Lane".[50]

"Strawberry Fields Forever" and "Penny Lane" were subsequently released as a double A-side in February 1967 after EMI and Epstein pressured Martin for a single.[51] When it failed to reach number one in the UK, British press agencies speculated that the group's run of success might have ended, with headlines such as "Beatles Fail to Reach the Top", "First Time in Four Years" and "Has the Bubble Burst?"[52] In keeping with the band's approach to their previously issued singles, the songs were then excluded from Sgt. Pepper.[53] Martin later described the decision to drop these two songs as "the biggest mistake of my professional life".[54] In his judgment, "Strawberry Fields Forever", which he and the band spent an unprecedented 55 hours of studio time recording, "set the agenda for the whole album".[55] He explained: "It was going to be a record ... [with songs that] couldn't be performed live: they were designed to be studio productions and that was the difference."[56] McCartney declared: "Now our performance is that record."[56]

Music papers started to slag us off ... because [Sgt. Pepper] took five months to record, and I remember the great glee seeing in one of the papers how the Beatles have dried up ... and I was sitting rubbing my hands, saying "You just wait."[57]

Paul McCartney

According to the musicologist Walter Everett, Sgt. Pepper marks the beginning of McCartney's ascendancy as the Beatles' dominant creative force. He wrote more than half of the album's material while asserting increasing control over the recording of his compositions.[25][nb 3] In an effort to get the right sound, the Beatles attempted numerous re-takes of McCartney's song "Getting Better". When the decision was made to re-record the basic track, Starr was summoned to the studio, but called off soon afterwards as the focus switched from rhythm to vocal tracking.[59] Much of the bass guitar on the album was mixed upfront.[60] Preferring to overdub his bass part last, McCartney tended to play other instruments when recording a song's backing track. This approach afforded him the time to devise bass lines that were melodically adventurous – one of the qualities he especially admired in Wilson's work on Pet Sounds – and complemented the song's final arrangement.[61][nb 4] McCartney played keyboard instruments such as piano, grand piano and Lowrey organ, in addition to electric guitar on some songs, while Martin variously contributed on Hohner Pianet, harpsichord and harmonium.[64] Lennon's songs similarly showed a preference for keyboard instruments.[25][nb 5]

 
Abbey Road Studios (formerly EMI Studios) in 2005

Although Harrison's role as lead guitarist was limited during the sessions, Everett considers that "his contribution to the album is strong in several ways."[68] He provided Indian instrumentation in the form of sitar, tambura and swarmandal,[69][70] and Martin credited him with being the most committed of the Beatles in striving for new sounds.[71][nb 6] Starr's adoption of loose calfskin heads for his tom-toms ensured his drum kit had a deeper timbre than he had previously achieved with plastic heads.[68] As on Revolver,[73] the Beatles increasingly used session musicians, particularly for classical-inspired arrangements.[37] Norman comments that Lennon's prominent vocal on some of McCartney's songs "hugely enhanced their atmosphere", particularly "Lovely Rita".[74]

Within an hour of completing the last overdubs on the album's songs, on 20 April 1967, the group returned to Harrison's "Only a Northern Song", the basic track of which they had taped in February.[75] The Beatles overdubbed random sounds and instrumentation before submitting it as the first of four new songs they were contracted to supply to United Artists for inclusion in the animated film Yellow Submarine.[76] In author Mark Lewisohn's description, it was a "curious" session, but one that demonstrated the Beatles' "tremendous appetite for recording".[75] During the Sgt. Pepper sessions, the band also recorded "Carnival of Light", a McCartney-led experimental piece created for the Million Volt Light and Sound Rave, held at the Roundhouse Theatre on 28 January and 4 February.[77] The album was completed on 21 April with the recording of random noises and voices that were included on the run-out groove, preceded by a high-pitched tone that could be heard by dogs but was inaudible to most human ears.[78]

Studio ambience and happenings

The Beatles sought to inject an atmosphere of celebration into the recording sessions.[79] Weary of the bland look inside EMI, they introduced psychedelic lighting to the studio space,[80] including a device on which five red fluorescent tubes were fixed to a microphone stand, a lava lamp, a red darkroom lamp, and a stroboscope, the last of which they soon abandoned.[81] Harrison later said the studio became the band's clubhouse for Sgt. Pepper;[82] David Crosby, Mick Jagger and Donovan were among the musician friends who visited them there.[68][nb 7] The band members also dressed up in psychedelic fashions,[81] leading one session trumpeter to wonder whether they were in costume for a new film.[85] Drug-taking was prevalent during the sessions,[81] with Martin later recalling that the group would steal away to "have something".[86][nb 8]

The 10 February session for orchestral overdubs on "A Day in the Life" was staged as a happening typical of the London avant-garde scene.[91][92] The Beatles invited numerous friends[93] and the session players wore formal dinner-wear augmented with fancy-dress props.[94][95] Overseen by NEMS employee Tony Bramwell, the proceedings were filmed on seven handheld cameras,[96] with the band doing some of the filming.[97] Following this event, the group considered making a television special based on the album.[93] Each of the songs was to be represented with a clip directed by a different director,[98] but the cost of recording Sgt. Pepper made the idea prohibitive to EMI.[99][nb 9] For the 15 March session for "Within You Without You", Studio Two was transformed with Indian carpets placed on the walls, dimmed lighting and burning incense to evoke the requisite Indian mood.[101] Lennon described the session as a "great swinging evening" with "400 Indian fellas" among the guests.[102]

The Beatles took an acetate disc of the completed album to the flat of American singer Cass Elliot, off King's Road in Chelsea.[103] There, at six in the morning, they played it at full volume with speakers set in open window frames. The group's friend and former press agent, Derek Taylor, remembered that residents of the neighbourhood opened their windows and listened without complaint to what they understood to be unreleased Beatles music.[104]

Technical aspects

 
One of EMI's Studer J37 four-track tape recorders, the machines used to record Sgt. Pepper

In his book on ambient music, The Ambient Century: From Mahler to Moby, Mark Prendergast views Sgt. Pepper as the Beatles' "homage" to Stockhausen and Cage, adding that its "rich, tape-manipulated sound" shows the influence of electronic and experimental composer Pierre Schaeffer.[105] Martin recalled that Sgt. Pepper "grew naturally out of Revolver", marking "an era of almost continuous technological experimentation".[106] The album was recorded using four-track equipment, since eight-track tape recorders were not operational in commercial studios in London until late 1967.[107] As with previous Beatles albums, the Sgt. Pepper recordings made extensive use of reduction mixing, a technique in which one to four tracks from one recorder are mixed and dubbed down onto a master four-track machine, enabling the engineers to give the group a virtual multitrack studio.[108] EMI's Studer J37 four-track machines were well suited to reduction mixing, as the high quality of the recordings that they produced minimised the increased noise associated with the process.[109] When recording the orchestra for "A Day in the Life", Martin synchronised a four-track recorder playing the Beatles' backing track to another one taping the orchestral overdub. The engineer Ken Townsend devised a method for accomplishing this by using a 50 Hz control signal between the two machines.[110]

Listening to each stage of their recording, once they've done the first couple of tracks, it's often hard to see what they're still looking for, it sounds so complete. Often the final complicated, well-layered version seems to have drowned the initial simple melody. But they know it's not right, even if they can't put it into words. Their dedication is impressive, gnawing away at the same song for stretches of ten hours each.[111]

Hunter Davies, 1968

The production on "Strawberry Fields Forever" was especially complex, involving the innovative splicing of two takes that were recorded in different tempos and pitches.[112][113] Emerick remembers that during the recording of Revolver, "we had got used to being asked to do the impossible, and we knew that the word 'no' didn't exist in the Beatles' vocabulary."[114] A key feature of Sgt. Pepper is Martin and Emerick's liberal use of signal processing to shape the sound of the recording, which included the application of dynamic range compression, reverb and signal limiting.[115] Relatively new modular effects units were used, such as running voices and instruments through a Leslie speaker.[116] Several innovative production techniques feature prominently on the recordings, including direct injection, pitch control and ambiophonics.[35] The bass part on "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" was the first example of the Beatles recording via direct injection (DI), which Townsend devised as a method for plugging electric guitars directly into the recording console.[117] In Kenneth Womack's opinion, the use of DI on the album's title track "afforded McCartney's bass with richer textures and tonal clarity".[117]

Some of the mixing employed automatic double tracking (ADT), a system that uses tape recorders to create a simultaneous doubling of a sound. ADT was invented by Townsend during the Revolver sessions in 1966 especially for the Beatles, who regularly expressed a desire for a technical alternative to having to record doubled lead vocals.[118] Another important effect was varispeeding, a technique that the Beatles used extensively on Revolver.[116] Martin cites "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" as having the most variations of tape speed on Sgt. Pepper. During the recording of Lennon's vocals, the tape speed was reduced from 50 cycles per second to 45, which produced a higher and thinner-sounding track when played back at the normal speed.[119] For the album's title track, the recording of Starr's drum kit was enhanced by the use of damping and close-miking. MacDonald credits the new recording technique with creating a "three-dimensional" sound that, along with other Beatles innovations, engineers in the US would soon adopt as standard practice.[120]

Artistic experimentation, such as the placement of random gibberish in the run-out groove, became one of the album's defining features.[121] Sgt. Pepper was the first pop album to be mastered without the momentary gaps that are typically placed between tracks as a point of demarcation.[122] It made use of two crossfades that blended songs together, giving the impression of a continuous live performance.[123][nb 10] Although both stereo and monaural mixes of the album were prepared, the Beatles were minimally involved in what they regarded as the less important stereo mix sessions, leaving the task to Martin and Emerick.[125] Emerick recalls: "We spent three weeks on the mono mixes and maybe three days on the stereo."[126] Most listeners ultimately heard only the stereo version.[127] He estimates that the group spent 700 hours on the LP, more than 30 times that of the first Beatles album, Please Please Me, which cost £400 to produce.[128] The final cost of Sgt. Pepper was approximately £25,000 (equivalent to £483,000 in 2021).[129]

Band dynamics

Author Robert Rodriguez writes that while Lennon, Harrison and Starr embraced the creative freedom afforded by McCartney's band-within-a-band idea, they "went along with the concept with varying degrees of enthusiasm".[130] Studio personnel recalled that Lennon had "never seemed so happy" as during the Sgt. Pepper sessions.[131] In a 1969 interview with Barry Miles, however, Lennon said he was depressed and that while McCartney was "full of confidence", he was "going through murder".[132] Lennon explained his view of the album's concept: "Paul said, 'Come and see the show', I didn't. I said, 'I read the news today, oh boy.'"[133]

Everett describes Starr as having been "largely bored" during the sessions, with the drummer later lamenting: "The biggest memory I have of Sgt. Pepper ... is I learned to play chess".[68] In The Beatles Anthology, Harrison said he had little interest in McCartney's concept of a fictitious group and that, after his experiences in India, "my heart was still out there ... I was losing interest in being 'fab' at that point."[134] Harrison added that, having enjoyed recording Rubber Soul and Revolver, he disliked how the group's approach on Sgt. Pepper became "an assembly process" whereby, "A lot of the time it ended up with just Paul playing the piano and Ringo keeping the tempo, and we weren't allowed to play as a band as much."[90]

In Lewisohn's opinion, Sgt. Pepper represents the group's last unified effort, displaying a cohesion that deteriorated immediately following the album's completion and entirely disappeared by the release of The Beatles (also known as the "White Album") in 1968.[135] Martin recalled in 1987 that throughout the making of Sgt. Pepper, "There was a very good spirit at that time between all the Beatles and ourselves. We were all conscious that we were doing something that was great." He said that while McCartney effectively led the project, and sometimes annoyed his bandmates, "Paul appreciated John's contribution on Pepper. In terms of quantity, it wasn't great, but in terms of quality, it was enormous."[136]

Songs

Overview

Among musicologists, Allan Moore says that Sgt. Pepper is composed mainly of rock and pop music, while Michael Hannan and Naphtali Wagner both see it as an album of various genres; Hannan says it features "a broad variety of musical and theatrical genres".[137] According to Hannan and Wagner, the music incorporates the stylistic influences of rock and roll, vaudeville, big band, piano jazz, blues, chamber, circus, music hall, avant-garde, and Western and Indian classical music.[138] Wagner feels the album's music reconciles the "diametrically opposed aesthetic ideals" of classical and psychedelia, achieving a "psycheclassical synthesis" of the two forms.[139] Musicologist John Covach describes Sgt. Pepper as "proto-progressive".[140]

We didn't really shove the LP full of pot and drugs but, I mean, there was an effect. We were more consciously trying to keep it out. You wouldn't say, "I had some acid, baby, so groovy," but there was a feeling that something had happened between Revolver and Sgt. Pepper.[90]

John Lennon, 1968

According to author George Case, all of the songs on Sgt. Pepper were perceived by contemporary listeners as being drug-inspired, with 1967 marking the pinnacle of LSD's influence on pop music.[141] Shortly before the album's release, the BBC banned "A Day in the Life" from British radio[142] because of the phrase "I'd love to turn you on";[143] the BBC stated that it could "encourage a permissive attitude towards drug-taking".[144] Although Lennon and McCartney denied any drug-related interpretation of the song at the time, McCartney later suggested that the line referred to either drugs or sex.[145] The meaning of "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" became the subject of speculation, as many believed that the title was code for LSD.[146] In "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!", the reference to "Henry the Horse" contains two common slang terms for heroin.[147] Fans speculated that Henry the Horse was a drug dealer and "Fixing a Hole" was a reference to heroin use.[148] Others noted lyrics such as "I get high" from "With a Little Help from My Friends", "take some tea" – slang for cannabis use – from "Lovely Rita", and "digging the weeds" from "When I'm Sixty-Four".[149]

The author Sheila Whiteley attributes Sgt. Pepper's underlying philosophy not only to the drug culture, but also to metaphysics and the non-violent approach of the flower power movement.[150] The musicologist Oliver Julien views the album as an embodiment of "the social, the musical, and more generally, the cultural changes of the 1960s".[151] The album's primary value, according to Moore, is its ability to "capture, more vividly than almost anything contemporaneous, its own time and place".[152] Whiteley agrees, crediting the album with "provid[ing] a historical snapshot of England during the run-up to the Summer of Love".[153] Several scholars have applied a hermeneutic strategy to their analysis of Sgt. Pepper's lyrics, identifying loss of innocence and the dangers of overindulgence in fantasies or illusions as the most prominent themes.[154]

Side one

"Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band"

Sgt. Pepper opens with the title track, starting with 10 seconds of the combined sounds of a pit orchestra warming up and an audience waiting for a concert, creating the illusion of the album as a live performance.[157][nb 11] McCartney serves as the master of ceremonies, welcoming the audience to a twentieth-anniversary reunion concert by Sgt. Pepper's band, who, led by Lennon, then sing a message of appreciation for the crowd's warm response.[155] Womack says the lyric bridges the fourth wall between the artist and their audience.[160] He argues that, paradoxically, the lyrics "exemplify the mindless rhetoric of rock concert banter" while "mock[ing] the very notion of a pop album's capacity for engendering authentic interconnection between artist and audience".[160] In his view, the mixed message ironically serves to distance the group from their fans while simultaneously "gesturing toward" them as alter egos.[160]

The song's five-bar bridge is filled by a French horn quartet.[161][162] Womack credits the recording's use of a brass ensemble with distorted electric guitars as an early example of rock fusion.[160] MacDonald agrees, describing the track as an overture rather than a song, and a "fusion of Edwardian variety orchestra" and contemporary hard rock.[161][nb 12] Hannan describes the track's unorthodox stereo mix as "typical of the album", with the lead vocal in the right speaker during the verses, but in the left during the chorus and middle eight.[164] McCartney returns as the master of ceremonies near the end of the song,[165] announcing the entrance of an alter ego named Billy Shears.[117]

"With a Little Help from My Friends"

The title track segues into "With a Little Help from My Friends" amid the sound of screaming fans recorded during a Beatles concert at the Hollywood Bowl.[166] In his role as Billy Shears, Starr contributes a baritone lead vocal that Womack credits with imparting an element of "earnestness in sharp contrast with the ironic distance of the title track".[166] Written by Lennon and McCartney, the song's lyrics centre on a theme of questions,[167] beginning with Starr asking the audience whether they would leave if he sang out of tune.[168] In the call-and-response style, Lennon, McCartney and Harrison go on to ask their bandmate questions about the meaning of friendship and true love;[166] by the final verse, Starr provides unequivocal answers.[169] In MacDonald's opinion, the lyric is "at once communal and personal ... [and] meant as a gesture of inclusivity; everyone could join in."[170] Everett comments that the track's use of a major key double-plagal cadence became commonplace in pop music following the release of Sgt. Pepper.[169]

"Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds"

Despite widespread suspicion that the title of "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" contained a hidden reference to LSD, Lennon insisted that it was derived from a pastel drawing by his four-year-old son Julian. A hallucinatory chapter from Lewis Carroll's 1871 novel Through the Looking-Glass, a favourite of Lennon's, inspired the song's atmosphere.[173] According to MacDonald, "the lyric explicitly recreates the psychedelic experience".[146]

The first verse begins with what Womack characterises as "an invitation in the form of an imperative" through the line: "Picture yourself in a boat on a river", and continues with imaginative imagery, including "tangerine trees", "rocking horse people" and "newspaper taxis".[172] The musical backing includes a phrase played by McCartney on a Lowrey organ, treated with ADT to sound like a celeste,[174] and tambura drone.[172] Harrison also contributed a lead guitar part that doubles Lennon's vocal over the verses in the style of a sarangi player accompanying an Indian khyal singer.[175][102] The music critic Tim Riley identifies the track as a moment "in the album, [where] the material world is completely clouded in the mythical by both text and musical atmosphere".[176]

"Getting Better"

MacDonald considers "Getting Better" to contain "the most ebullient performance" on Sgt. Pepper.[177] Womack credits the track's "driving rock sound" with distinguishing it from the album's overtly psychedelic material; its lyrics inspire the listener "to usurp the past by living well and flourishing in the present".[172] He cites it as a strong example of Lennon and McCartney's collaborative songwriting, particularly Lennon's addition of the line "It can't get no worse",[178] which serves as a "sarcastic rejoinder" to McCartney's chorus: "It's getting better all the time".[179] Lennon's contribution to the lyric also includes a confessional regarding his having been violent with female companions: "I used to be cruel to my woman".[179] In Womack's opinion, the song encourages the listener to follow the speaker's example and "alter their own angst-ridden ways": "Man I was mean, but I'm changing my scene and I'm doing the best that I can."[179]

"Fixing a Hole"

"Fixing a Hole" deals with McCartney's desire to let his mind wander freely and to express his creativity without the burden of self-conscious insecurities.[180][nb 13] Womack interprets the lyric as "the speaker's search for identity among the crowd", in particular the "quests for consciousness and connection" that differentiate individuals from society as a whole.[179] MacDonald characterises it as a "distracted and introverted track", during which McCartney forgoes his "usual smooth design" in favour of "something more preoccupied".[182] He cites Harrison's electric guitar solo as serving the track well, capturing its mood by conveying detachment.[182] Womack notes McCartney's adaptation of the lyric "a hole in the roof where the rain leaks in" from Elvis Presley's "We're Gonna Move".[183]

"She's Leaving Home"

 
The Pablo Fanque Circus Royal poster from 1843 that inspired Lennon's lyrics to "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!"

In Everett's view, the lyrics to "She's Leaving Home" address the problem of alienation "between disagreeing peoples", particularly those distanced from each other by the generation gap.[184] McCartney's narrative details the plight of a young woman escaping the control of her parents, and was inspired by a piece about teenage runaways published in the Daily Mail.[185] Lennon supplies a supporting vocal that conveys the parents' anguish and confusion.[186] It is the first track on Sgt. Pepper that eschews the use of guitars and drums, featuring only a string nonet with a harp.[187][nb 14] Music historian Doyle Greene views it as the first of the album's songs to address "the crisis of middle-class life in the late 1960s" and comments on its surprisingly conservative sentiments, given McCartney's absorption in the London avant-garde scene.[191]

"Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!"

Lennon adapted the lyrics for "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!" from an 1843 poster for Pablo Fanque's circus that he purchased at an antique shop in Kent on the day of filming the promotional film for "Strawberry Fields Forever".[192] Womack views the track as an effective blending of a print source and music,[193] while MacDonald describes it as "a spontaneous expression of its author's playful hedonism".[194] Tasked by Lennon to evoke a circus atmosphere so vivid that he could "smell the sawdust", Martin and Emerick created a sound collage comprising randomly assembled recordings of harmoniums, harmonicas and calliopes.[195] Everett says that the track's use of Edwardian imagery thematically links it with the album's title song.[196] Gould also views "Mr. Kite!" as a return to the LP's opening motif, albeit that of show business and with the focus now on performers and a show in a radically different setting.[197][nb 15]

Side two

"Within You Without You"

We're not trying to outwit the public. The whole idea is to try a little bit to lead people into different tastes.[199]

George Harrison, 1967

Harrison's Hindustani classical music-inspired "Within You Without You" reflects his immersion in the teachings of the Hindu Vedas, while its musical form and Indian instrumentation, such as sitar, tabla, dilrubas and tamburas, recalls the Hindu devotional tradition known as bhajan.[200] Harrison recorded the song with London-based Indian musicians from the Asian Music Circle; none of the other Beatles played on the recording.[201] He and Martin then worked on a Western string arrangement that imitated the slides and bends typical of Indian music.[202][203] The song's pitch is derived from the eastern Khamaj scale, which is akin to the Mixolydian mode in the West.[203]

MacDonald regards "Within You Without You" as "the most distant departure from the staple Beatles sound in their discography", and a work that represents the "conscience" of the LP through the lyrics' rejection of Western materialism.[204] Womack calls it "quite arguably, the album's ethical soul" and views the line "With our love we could save the world" as a concise reflection of the Beatles' idealism that soon inspired the Summer of Love.[205] The track ends with a burst of laughter gleaned from a tape in the EMI archive;[124] some listeners interpreted this as a mockery of the song, but Harrison explained: "It's a release after five minutes of sad music ... You were supposed to hear the audience anyway, as they listen to Sergeant Pepper's Show. That was the style of the album."[206]

"When I'm Sixty-Four"

MacDonald characterises McCartney's "When I'm Sixty-Four" as a song "aimed chiefly at parents", borrowing heavily from the English music hall style of George Formby, while invoking images of the illustrator Donald McGill's seaside postcards.[208] Its sparse arrangement includes clarinets, chimes and piano.[209] Moore views the song as a synthesis of ragtime and pop, adding that its position following "Within You Without You" – a blend of Indian classical music and pop – demonstrates the diversity of the album's material.[210] He says the music hall atmosphere is reinforced by McCartney's vocal delivery and the recording's use of chromaticism, a harmonic pattern that can be traced to Scott Joplin's "The Ragtime Dance" and "The Blue Danube" by Johann Strauss.[211] Varispeeding was used on the track, raising its pitch by a semitone in an attempt to make McCartney sound younger.[212] Everett comments that the lyric's protagonist is sometimes associated with the Lonely Hearts Club Band, but in his opinion the song is thematically unconnected to the others on the album.[213]

"Lovely Rita"

Womack describes "Lovely Rita" as a work of "full-tilt psychedelia" that contrasts sharply with the preceding track.[214] Citing McCartney's recollection that he drew inspiration from learning that the American term for a female traffic warden was a meter maid, Gould deems it a celebration of an encounter that evokes Swinging London and the contemporaneous chic for military-style uniforms.[215] MacDonald regards the song as a "satire on authority" that is "imbued with an exuberant interest in life that lifts the spirits, dispersing self-absorption".[216] The arrangement includes a quartet of comb-and-paper kazoos,[216] a piano solo by Martin, and a coda in which the Beatles indulge in panting, groaning and other vocalised sounds.[217] In Gould's view, the track represents "the show-stopper in the Pepper Band's repertoire: a funny, sexy, extroverted song that comes closer to the spirit of rock 'n' roll than anything else on the album".[218]

"Good Morning Good Morning"

Lennon was inspired to write "Good Morning Good Morning" after watching a television commercial for Kellogg's Corn Flakes, the jingle from which he adapted for the song's refrain. The track uses the bluesy Mixolydian mode in A, which Everett credits with "perfectly express[ing] Lennon's grievance against complacency".[219] According to Greene, the song contrasts sharply with "She's Leaving Home" by providing "the more 'avant-garde' subversive study of suburban life".[220] The time signature varies across 5/4, 3/4 and 4/4,[221] while the arrangement includes a horn section comprising members of Sounds Inc.[222] MacDonald highlights the "rollicking" brass score, Starr's drumming and McCartney's "coruscating pseudo-Indian guitar solo" among the elements that convey a sense of aggression on a track he deems a "disgusted canter through the muck, mayhem, and mundanity of the human farmyard".[223] A series of animal noises appear during the fade-out that are sequenced – at Lennon's request – so that each successive animal could conceivably scare or devour the preceding one.[224] The sound of a chicken clucking overlaps with a stray guitar note at the start of the next track,[225] creating a seamless transition between the two songs.[226]

"Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)"

"Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)" follows as a segue to the album's finale. The hard-rocking song was written after Neil Aspinall, the Beatles' road manager, suggested that since "Sgt. Pepper" opened the album, the fictional band should make an appearance near the end.[227] Sung by all four Beatles,[228] the reprise omits the brass section from the title track and has a faster tempo.[229] With Harrison on lead guitar, it serves as a rare example from the Sgt. Pepper sessions where the group taped a basic track live with their usual stage instrumentation.[230] MacDonald finds the Beatles' excitement tangibly translated on the recording,[227] which is again augmented with ambient crowd noise.[230]

"A Day in the Life"

The last chord of the "Sgt. Pepper" reprise segues amid audience applause to acoustic guitar strumming and the start of what Moore calls "one of the most harrowing songs ever written".[232] "A Day in the Life" consists of four verses by Lennon, a bridge, two aleatoric orchestral crescendos, and an interpolated middle part written and sung by McCartney. The first crescendo serves as a segue between the third verse and the middle part, leading to a bridge known as the "dream sequence".[232] Lennon drew inspiration for the lyrics from a Daily Mail report on potholes in the Lancashire town of Blackburn and an article in the same newspaper relating to the death of Beatles friend and Guinness heir Tara Browne.[233][234]

According to Martin, Lennon and McCartney were equally responsible for the decision to use an orchestra.[235] Martin said that Lennon requested "a tremendous build-up, from nothing up to something absolutely like the end of the world",[236] while McCartney realised this idea by drawing inspiration from Cage and Stockhausen.[237] Womack describes Starr's performance as "one of his most inventive drum parts on record".[238] The thunderous piano chord that concludes the track and the album was produced by recording Lennon, Starr, McCartney and Evans simultaneously sounding an E major chord on three separate pianos; Martin then augmented the sound with a harmonium.[239]

Riley characterises the song as a "postlude to the Pepper fantasy ... that sets all the other songs in perspective", while shattering the illusion of "Pepperland" by introducing the "parallel universe of everyday life".[240] MacDonald describes the track as "a song not of disillusionment with life itself, but of disenchantment with the limits of mundane perception".[234]

As "A Day in the Life" ends, a 15-kilohertz high-frequency tone is heard; it was added at Lennon's suggestion with the intention that it would annoy dogs.[241][nb 16] This is followed by the sounds of backwards laughter and random gibberish that were pressed into the record's concentric run-out groove, which loops back into itself endlessly on any record player not equipped with an automatic needle return. Lennon can be heard saying, "Been so high", followed by McCartney's response: "Never could be any other way."[243][nb 17]

Concept

According to Womack, with Sgt. Pepper's opening song "the Beatles manufacture an artificial textual space in which to stage their art."[117] The reprise of the title song appears on side two, just before the climactic "A Day in the Life", creating a framing device.[227] In Lennon and Starr's view, only the first two songs and the reprise are conceptually connected.[25] In a 1980 interview, Lennon stated that his compositions had nothing to do with the Sgt. Pepper concept, adding: "Sgt. Pepper is called the first concept album, but it doesn't go anywhere ... it works because we said it worked."[246]

In MacFarlane's view, the Beatles "chose to employ an overarching thematic concept in an apparent effort to unify individual tracks".[247] Everett contends that the album's "musical unity results ... from motivic relationships between key areas, particularly involving C, E, and G".[243] Moore argues that the recording's "use of common harmonic patterns and falling melodies" contributes to its overall cohesiveness, which he describes as narrative unity, but not necessarily conceptual unity.[248] MacFarlane agrees, suggesting that with the exception of the reprise, the album lacks the melodic and harmonic continuity that is consistent with cyclic form.[249]

In a 1995 interview, McCartney recalled that the Liverpool childhood theme behind the first three songs recorded during the Sgt. Pepper sessions was never formalised as an album-wide concept, but he said that it served as a "device" or underlying theme throughout the project.[36] MacDonald identifies allusions to the Beatles' upbringing throughout Sgt. Pepper that are "too persuasive to ignore". These include evocations of the postwar Northern music-hall tradition, references to Northern industrial towns and Liverpool schooldays, Lewis Carroll-inspired imagery (acknowledging Lennon's favourite childhood reading), the use of brass instrumentation in the style of park bandstand performances (familiar to McCartney through his visits to Sefton Park),[250] and the album cover's flower arrangement akin to a floral clock.[251] Norman partly agrees; he says that "In many ways, the album carried on the childhood and Liverpool theme with its circus and fairground effects, its pervading atmosphere of the traditional northern music hall that was in both its main creators' [McCartney and Lennon's] blood."[252][nb 18]

Packaging

Front cover

Pop artists Peter Blake and Jann Haworth designed the album cover for Sgt. Pepper.[253] Blake recalled of the concept: "I offered the idea that if they had just played a concert in the park, the cover could be a photograph of the group just after the concert with the crowd who had just watched the concert, watching them." He added, "If we did this by using cardboard cut-outs, it could be a magical crowd of whomever they wanted."[254] According to McCartney, he himself provided the ink drawing on which Blake and Haworth based the design.[255][nb 19] The cover was art-directed by Robert Fraser and photographed by Michael Cooper.[253]

The front of the LP includes a colourful collage featuring the Beatles in costume as Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, standing with a group of life-sized cardboard cut-outs of famous people.[257] Each of the Beatles sports a heavy moustache, after Harrison had first grown one as a disguise during his visit to India.[15] The moustaches reflected the growing influence of hippie style trends, while the group's clothing, in Gould's description, "spoofed the vogue in Britain for military fashions".[258] The centre of the cover depicts the Beatles standing behind a bass drum on which fairground artist Joe Ephgrave painted the words of the album's title. In front of the drum is an arrangement of flowers that spell out "Beatles".[259] The group are dressed in satin day-glo-coloured military-style uniforms that were manufactured by the London theatrical costumer M. Berman Ltd. Next to the Beatles are wax sculptures of the band members in their suits and moptop haircuts from the Beatlemania era, borrowed from Madame Tussauds.[260] Amid the greenery are figurines of the Eastern deities Buddha and Lakshmi.[261]

The cover collage includes 57 photographs and nine waxworks.[262] Author Ian Inglis views the tableau "as a guidebook to the cultural topography of the decade" that conveyed the increasing democratisation of society whereby "traditional barriers between 'high' and 'low' culture were being eroded",[262] while Case cites it as the most explicit demonstration of pop culture's "continuity with the avant-gardes of yesteryear".[263][nb 20] The final grouping included Stockhausen and Carroll, along with singers such as Bob Dylan and Bobby Breen; film stars Marlon Brando, Tyrone Power, Tony Curtis, Marlene Dietrich, Mae West and Marilyn Monroe; artist Aubrey Beardsley; boxer Sonny Liston and footballer Albert Stubbins. Also included were comedians Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy; writers H.G. Wells, Oscar Wilde and Dylan Thomas; and the philosophers and scientists Karl Marx, Albert Einstein, Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung.[262] Harrison chose the Self-Realization Fellowship gurus Mahavatar Babaji, Lahiri Mahasaya, Sri Yukteswar and Paramahansa Yogananda.[264] The Rolling Stones are represented by a doll wearing a shirt emblazoned with a message of welcome to the band.[263][265]

Fearing controversy, EMI rejected Lennon's request for images of Adolf Hitler and Jesus Christ and Harrison's for Mahatma Gandhi.[70] When McCartney was asked why the Beatles did not include Elvis Presley among the musical artists, he replied: "Elvis was too important and too far above the rest even to mention."[266][267] Starr was the only Beatle who offered no suggestions for the collage, telling Blake, "Whatever the others say is fine by me."[268] The final cost for the cover art was nearly £3,000 (equivalent to £58,000 in 2021), an extravagant sum for a time when album covers would typically cost around £50 (equivalent to £1,000 in 2021).[269]

Back cover, gatefold and cut-outs

 
Sgt. Pepper's inner gatefold. McCartney (in blue) wears a badge on his left sleeve that bears the initials O.P.P. McCartney acquired the badge when the Beatles were on tour in Canada;[266] the initials stand for "Ontario Provincial Police".[270][nb 21]

The 30 March 1967 photo session with Cooper also produced the back cover and the inside gatefold, which Inglis describes as conveying "an obvious and immediate warmth ... which distances it from the sterility and artifice typical of such images".[259] McCartney recalled the inner-gatefold image as an example of the Beatles' interest in "eye messages", adding: "So with Michael Cooper's inside photo, we all said, 'Now look into this camera and really say I love you! Really try and feel love; really give love through this!' ... [And] if you look at it you'll see the big effort from the eyes."[273] In Lennon's description, Cooper's photos of the band showed "two people who are flying [on drugs], and two who aren't".[266]

The album's lyrics were printed in full on the back cover, the first time this had been done on a rock LP.[274] The record's inner sleeve featured artwork by the Dutch design team the Fool that eschewed for the first time the standard white paper in favour of an abstract pattern of waves of maroon, red, pink and white.[259][nb 22] Included as a bonus gift was a sheet of cardboard cut-outs designed by Blake and Haworth. These consisted of a postcard-sized portrait of Sgt. Pepper (probably based on a photograph of British Army officer James Melville Babington,[276] but also noted as being similar to a statue from Lennon's house that was used on the front cover), a fake moustache, two sets of sergeant stripes, two lapel badges, and a stand-up cut-out of the band in their satin uniforms.[269] Moore writes that the inclusion of these items helped fans "pretend to be in the band".[277]

Release

Radio previews and launch party

The album was previewed on the pirate radio station Radio London on 12 May and officially on the BBC Light Programme's show Where It's At, by Kenny Everett, on 20 May.[278] Everett played the entire album apart from "A Day in the Life".[142] The day before Everett's broadcast, Epstein hosted a launch party for music journalists and disc jockeys at his house in Belgravia in central London.[279][280] The event was a new initiative in pop promotion and furthered the significance of the album's release.[281] Melody Maker's reporter described it as the first "listen-in" and typical of the Beatles' penchant for innovation.[282]

 
The Beatles at the Sgt. Pepper launch party, held at Brian Epstein's house on 19 May 1967

The party marked the band's first group interaction with the press in close to a year.[283][284] Norrie Drummond of the NME wrote that they had been "virtually incommunicado" over that time, leading a national newspaper to complain that the band were "contemplative, secretive and exclusive".[284] Some of the journalists present were shocked by the Beatles' appearance, particularly that of Lennon and Harrison,[285] as the band members' bohemian attire contrasted sharply with their former image.[283] Music journalist Ray Coleman recalled that Lennon looked "haggard, old, ill" and clearly under the influence of drugs.[286] Biographer Howard Sounes likens the Beatles' presence to a gathering of the British royal family and highlights a photo from the event that shows Lennon shaking McCartney's hand "in an exaggeratedly congratulatory way, throwing his head back in sarcastic laughter".[287]

On 26 May, Sgt. Pepper was given a rush-release in the UK, ahead of the scheduled date of 1 June.[288] The band's eighth LP,[289] it was the first Beatles album where the track listings were exactly the same for the UK and US versions.[81] The US release took place on 2 June.[288] Capitol Records' advertising for the album emphasised that the Beatles and Sgt. Pepper's band were one and the same.[290]

Public reaction

Sgt. Pepper was widely perceived by listeners as the soundtrack to the Summer of Love,[291][292] during a year that author Peter Lavezzoli calls "a watershed moment in the West when the search for higher consciousness and an alternative world view had reached critical mass".[293] Rolling Stone magazine's Langdon Winner recalled:

The closest Western Civilization has come to unity since the Congress of Vienna in 1815 was the week the Sgt. Pepper album was released. In every city in Europe and America the radio stations played [it] ... and everyone listened ... For a brief while the irreparable fragmented consciousness of the West was unified, at least in the minds of the young.[294]

According to Riley, the album "drew people together through the common experience of pop on a larger scale than ever before".[295] In MacDonald's description, an "almost religious awe surrounded the LP"; he says that its impact was cross-generational, as "Young and old alike were entranced", and era-defining, in that the "psychic shiver" it inspired across the world was "nothing less than a cinematic dissolve from one Zeitgeist to another". In his view, Sgt. Pepper conveyed the psychedelic experience so effectively to listeners unfamiliar with hallucinogenic drugs that "If such a thing as a cultural 'contact high' is possible, it happened here."[296][nb 23] Music journalist Mark Ellen, a teenager in 1967, recalls listening to part of the album at a friend's house and then hearing the rest playing at the next house he visited as if the record was emanating communally from "one giant Dansette". He says the most remarkable thing was its acceptance by adults who had turned against the Beatles when they became "gaunt and enigmatic", and how the group, recast as polished "masters of ceremony", were now "the very family favourites they'd sought to satirise".[297][nb 24]

Writing in his book Electric Shock, Peter Doggett describes Sgt. Pepper as "the biggest pop happening" to take place between the Beatles' debut on American television in February 1964 and Lennon's murder in December 1980,[299] while Norman writes: "A whole generation, still used to happy landmarks through life, would always remember exactly when and where they first played it ..."[300] The album's impact was felt at the Monterey International Pop Festival, the second event in the Summer of Love, organised by Taylor and held over 16–18 June in county fairgrounds south of San Francisco.[301][302] Sgt. Pepper was played in kiosks and stands there, and festival staff wore badges carrying Lennon's lyric "A splendid time is guaranteed for all".[43]

American radio stations interrupted their regular scheduling, playing the album virtually non-stop, often from start to finish.[303] Emphasising its identity as a self-contained work, none of the songs were issued as singles at the time[304][305] or available on spin-off EPs.[306] Instead, the Beatles released "All You Need Is Love" as a single in July, after performing the song on the Our World satellite broadcast on 25 June[307] before an audience estimated at 400 million.[308] According to sociomusicologist Simon Frith, the international broadcast served to confirm "the Beatles' evangelical role" amid the public's embrace of Sgt. Pepper.[309] In the UK, Our World also quelled the furore that followed McCartney's repeated admission in mid June that he had taken LSD.[310] In Norman's description, this admission was indicative of how "invulnerable" McCartney felt after Sgt. Pepper;[311] it made the band's drug-taking public knowledge[312] and confirmed the link between the album and drugs.[313][nb 25]

Commercial performance

Sgt. Pepper topped the Record Retailer albums chart (now the UK Albums Chart) for 23 consecutive weeks from 10 June, with a further four weeks at number one in the period through to February 1968.[317] The record sold 250,000 copies in the UK during its first seven days on sale there.[288][nb 26] The album held the number one position on the Billboard Top LPs chart in the US for 15 weeks, from 1 July to 13 October 1967, and remained in the top 200 for 113 consecutive weeks.[321] It also topped charts in many other countries.[322]

With 2.5 million copies sold within three months of its release,[323] Sgt. Pepper's initial commercial success exceeded that of all previous Beatles albums.[148] In the UK, it was the best-selling album of 1967[324] and of the decade.[325] According to figures published in 2009 by former Capitol executive David Kronemyer, further to estimates he gave in MuseWire magazine,[326] the album had sold 2,360,423 copies in the US by 31 December 1967 and 3,372,581 copies by the end of the decade.[327]

Contemporary critical reception

Sgt. Pepper's arrival in late spring 1967 came at a most opportune moment in Western cultural history: mainstream journalism had at last warmed to the idea that the "rock" world ... could produce a lasting masterpiece that transcended the genre's lowly origins, while a new and legitimate niche called "rock journalism" was working up its own head of steam ... [E]veryone wanted the Beatles to succeed – and to lead. The wind was at their back, and they knew it.[328]

– Beatles biographer Robert Rodriguez, 2012

The release of Sgt. Pepper coincided with a period when, with the advent of dedicated rock criticism, commentators sought to recognise artistry in pop music, particularly in the Beatles' work, and identify albums as refined artistic statements.[329][330] In America, this approach had been heightened by the "Strawberry Fields Forever" / "Penny Lane" single,[331] and was also exemplified by Leonard Bernstein's television program Inside Pop: The Rock Revolution, broadcast by CBS in April 1967.[329] Following the release of the Beatles' single, in author Bernard Gendron's description, a "discursive frenzy" ensued as Time, Newsweek and other publications from the cultural mainstream increasingly voiced their "ecstatic approbation toward the Beatles".[331]

The vast majority of contemporary reviews of Sgt. Pepper were positive, with the album receiving widespread critical acclaim.[332] Schaffner said that the consensus was aptly summed up by Tom Phillips in The Village Voice, when he called the LP "the most ambitious and most successful record album ever issued".[333] Among Britain's pop press, Peter Jones of Record Mirror said the album was "clever and brilliant, from raucous to poignant and back again", while Disc and Music Echo's reviewer called it "a beautiful and potent record, unique, clever, and stunning".[334] In The Times, William Mann described Sgt. Pepper as a "pop music master-class"[335] and commented that, so considerable were its musical advances, "the only track that would have been conceivable in pop songs five years ago" was "With a Little Help from My Friends".[336] Having been among the first British critics to fully appreciate Revolver,[337] Peter Clayton of Gramophone magazine said that the new album was "like nearly everything the Beatles do, bizarre, wonderful, perverse, beautiful, exciting, provocative, exasperating, compassionate and mocking". He found "plenty of electronic gimmickry on the record" before concluding: "but that isn't the heart of the thing. It's the combination of imagination, cheek and skill that make this such a rewarding LP."[338] Wilfrid Mellers, in his review for New Statesman, praised the album's elevation of pop music to the level of fine art,[335] while Kenneth Tynan, The Times' theatre critic, said it represented "a decisive moment in the history of Western civilisation".[339] Newsweek's Jack Kroll called Sgt. Pepper a "masterpiece" and compared its lyrics with literary works by Edith Sitwell, Harold Pinter and T. S. Eliot, particularly "A Day in the Life", which he likened to Eliot's The Waste Land.[340] The New Yorker paired the Beatles with Duke Ellington, as artists who operated "in that special territory where entertainment slips into art".[341][342]

One of the few well-known American rock critics at the time, and another early champion of Revolver, Richard Goldstein wrote a scathing review in The New York Times.[343] He characterised Sgt. Pepper as a "spoiled" child and "an album of special effects, dazzling but ultimately fraudulent",[344][345] and was critical of the Beatles for sacrificing their authenticity to become "cloistered composers".[346] Although he admired "A Day in the Life", comparing it to a work by Wagner,[347] Goldstein said that the songs lacked lyrical substance such that "tone overtakes meaning", an aesthetic he blamed on "posturing and put-on" in the form of production effects such as echo and reverb.[348] As a near-lone voice of dissent, he was widely castigated for his views.[349][nb 27] Four days later, The Village Voice, where Goldstein had become a celebrated columnist since 1966, reacted to the "hornet's nest" of complaints, by publishing Phillips' highly favourable review.[351] According to Schaffner, Goldstein was "kept busy for months" justifying his opinions,[349] which included writing a defence of his review, for the Voice, in July.[352][nb 28]

Among the commentators who responded to Goldstein's critique,[354] composer Ned Rorem, writing in The New York Review of Books, credited the Beatles with possessing a "magic of genius" akin to Mozart and characterised Sgt. Pepper as a harbinger of a "golden Renaissance of Song".[333] Time quoted musicologists and avant-garde composers who equated the standard of the Beatles' songwriting to Schubert and Schumann, and located the band's work to electronic music;[355] the magazine concluded that the album was "a historic departure in the progress of music – any music".[148] Literary critic Richard Poirier wrote a laudatory appreciation of the Beatles in the journal Partisan Review[356] and said that "listening to the Sgt. Pepper album one thinks not simply of the history of popular music but the history of this century."[339] In his December 1967 column for Esquire, Robert Christgau described Sgt. Pepper as "a consolidation, more intricate than Revolver but not more substantial". He suggested that Goldstein had fallen "victim to overanticipation", identifying his primary error as "allow[ing] all the filters and reverbs and orchestral effects and overdubs to deafen him to the stuff underneath, which was pretty nice".[357]

Sociocultural influence

Contemporary youth and counterculture

In the wake of Sgt. Pepper, the underground and mainstream press widely publicised the Beatles as leaders of youth culture, as well as "lifestyle revolutionaries".[358] In Moore's description, the album "seems to have spoken (in a way no other has) for its generation".[359] An educator referenced in a July 1967 New York Times article was reported to have said on the topic of music studies and its relevance to the day's youth: "If you want to know what youths are thinking and feeling ... you cannot find anyone who speaks for them or to them more clearly than the Beatles."[360]

 
A hippie "flower power" bus (pictured in 2004). Sgt. Pepper conveyed the flower power ideology of 1967.[361]

Sgt. Pepper was the focus of much celebration by the counterculture.[362] American Beat poet Allen Ginsberg said of the album: "After the apocalypse of Hitler and the apocalypse of the Bomb, there was here an exclamation of joy, the rediscovery of joy and what it is to be alive."[363] The American psychologist and counterculture figure Timothy Leary labelled the Beatles "avatars of the new world order"[364] and said that the LP "gave a voice to the feeling that the old ways were over" by stressing the need for cultural change based on a peaceful agenda.[153][nb 29] According to author Michael Frontani, the Beatles "legitimiz[ed] the lifestyle of the counterculture", just as they did popular music, and formed the basis of Jann Wenner's scope on these issues when launching Rolling Stone magazine in late 1967.[366] Further to Lennon wearing an Afghan sheepskin coat at the album launch party, "Afghans" became a popular garment among hippies, and Westerners increasingly sought out the coats on the hippie trail in Afghanistan.[367]

McCartney's LSD admission formalised the link between rock music and drugs, and attracted scorn from American religious leaders and conservatives.[368] Vice-president Spiro Agnew contended that the "friends" referred to in "With a Little Help from My Friends" were "assorted drugs". As part of an escalating national debate that triggered an investigation by the US Congress,[369] he launched a campaign in 1970[370] to address the issue of American youth being "brainwashed" into taking drugs through the music of the Beatles and other rock artists.[371] In the UK, according to historian David Simonelli, the album's obvious drug allusions inspired a hierarchy within the youth movement for the first time, based on listeners' ability to "get" psychedelia and align with the elite notion of Romantic artistry.[372][nb 30] Harrison was eager to separate the message of "Within You Without You" from the LSD experience, telling an interviewer: "It's nothing to do with pills ... It's just in your own head, the realisation."[202]

 
The album resonated with Vietnam War protestors at the 1967 "March on the Pentagon".

The Beatles' presentation as Sgt. Pepper's band resonated at a time when many young people in the UK and the US were seeking to redefine their own identity and were drawn to communities that espoused the transformational power of mind-altering drugs.[79] In the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco, the recognised centre of the counterculture,[373] Sgt. Pepper was viewed as a "code for life", according to music journalist Alan Clayson, with street people such as the Merry Band of Pranksters offering "Beatle readings".[374] American social activist Abbie Hoffman credited the album as his inspiration for staging the attempted levitation of the Pentagon during the Mobe's anti-Vietnam War rally in October 1967.[375] The Byrds' David Crosby later expressed surprise that by 1970 the album's powerful sentiments had not been enough to stop the Vietnam War.[376]

Sgt. Pepper informed Frank Zappa's parody of the counterculture and flower power on the Mothers of Invention's 1968 album We're Only in It for the Money.[377][378] By 1968, according to music critic Greil Marcus, Sgt. Pepper appeared shallow against the emotional backdrop of the political and social upheavals of American life.[379] Simon Frith, in his overview of 1967 for The History of Rock, said that Sgt. Pepper "defined the year" by conveying the optimism and sense of empowerment at the centre of the youth movement. He added that the Velvet Underground's The Velvet Underground & Nico – an album that contrasted sharply with the Beatles' message by "offer[ing] no escape" – became more relevant in a cultural climate typified by "the Sex Pistols, the new political aggression, the rioting in the streets" during the 1970s.[309] In a 1987 review for Q magazine, Charles Shaar Murray asserted that Sgt. Pepper "remains a central pillar of the mythology and iconography of the late '60s",[380] while Colin Larkin states in his 1989 Encyclopedia of Popular Music: "[it] turned out to be no mere pop album but a cultural icon, embracing the constituent elements of the 60s' youth culture: pop art, garish fashion, drugs, instant mysticism and freedom from parental control."[381]

Cultural legitimisation of popular music

In The Oxford Encyclopedia of British Literature, Kevin Dettmar writes that Sgt. Pepper achieved "a combination of popular success and critical acclaim unequaled in twentieth-century art ... never before had an aesthetic and technical masterpiece enjoyed such popularity."[382] Through the level of attention it received from the rock press and more culturally elite publications, the album achieved full cultural legitimisation for pop music and recognition for the medium as a genuine art form.[335][383] Riley says that pop had been due this accreditation "at least as early as A Hard Day's Night" in 1964.[384] He adds that the timing of the album's release and its reception ensured that "Sgt. Pepper has attained the kind of populist adoration that renowned works often assume regardless of their larger significance – it's the Beatles' 'Mona Lisa'."[385] At the 10th Annual Grammy Awards in March 1968, Sgt. Pepper won awards in four categories:[386] Album of the Year; Best Contemporary Album; Best Engineered Recording, Non-Classical; and Best Album Cover, Graphic Arts.[387] Its win in the Album of the Year category marked the first time that a rock LP had received this honour.[388][389]

Among the recognised composers who helped legitimise the Beatles as serious musicians at the time were Luciano Berio, Aaron Copland, John Cage, Ned Rorem and Leonard Bernstein.[390] According to Rodriguez, an element of exaggeration accompanied some of the acclaim for Sgt. Pepper, with particularly effusive approbation coming from Rorem, Bernstein and Tynan, "as if every critic was seeking to outdo the other for the most lavish embrace of the Beatles' new direction".[391][nb 31] In Gendron's view, the cultural approbation represented American "highbrow" commentators (Rorem and Poirier) looking to establish themselves over their "low-middlebrow" equivalent, after Time and Newsweek had led the way in recognising the Beatles' artistry, and over the new discipline of rock criticism.[393] Gendron describes the discourse as one whereby, during a period that lasted for six months, "highbrow" composers and musicologists "jostl[ed] to pen the definitive effusive appraisal of the Beatles".[394][nb 32]

Aside from the attention afforded the album in literary and scholarly journals, the American jazz magazines Down Beat and Jazz both began to cover rock music for the first time, with the latter changing its name to Jazz & Pop as a result.[398] In addition, following Sgt. Pepper, established American publications such as Vogue, Playboy and the San Francisco Chronicle started discussing rock as art, in terms usually reserved for jazz criticism.[399] Writing for Rolling Stone in 1969, Michael Lydon said that reviewers had had to invent "new criticism" to match pop's musical advances, since: "Writing had to be an appropriate response to the music; in writing about, say, Sgt. Pepper, you had to try to write something as good as Sgt. Pepper. Because, of course, what made that record beautiful was the beautiful response it created in you; if your written response was true to your listening response, the writing would stand on its own as a creation on par with the record."[400]

Through its acceptance by "serious" composers, according to Schaffner, Sgt. Pepper satisfied the ambitions of a staid, middle-age American audience keen to be seen as in tune with young people's tastes, and every major rock LP was subsequently given the same level of critical analysis.[333] In 1977, the LP won Best British Album at the inaugural Brit Awards,[401] held by the BPI to celebrate the best British music of the last 25 years as part of Elizabeth II's Silver Jubilee.[402] When EMI issued the Beatles' catalogue on CD in 1987, Sgt. Pepper was the only album afforded a dedicated release.[403] EMI marketed it as "the most important record ever released on compact disc".[404]

Development of popular music

Industry and market changes

[Because of Sgt. Pepper] people then started thinking that you could spend a year making an album and they began to consider an album as a sound composition and not just a musical composition. The idea was gradually forming of a record being a performance in its own right and not just a reproduction of a live performance.[405]

– Producer and EMI engineer Alan Parsons

Julien describes Sgt. Pepper as a "masterpiece of British psychedelia" and says that it represents the "epitome of the transformation of the recording studio into a compositional tool", marking the moment when "popular music entered the era of phonographic composition".[406] Many acts copied the album's psychedelic sounds[407] and imitated its production techniques, resulting in a rapid expansion of the producer's role.[408] In this regard, Lennon and McCartney complained that Martin had received too much attention for his part in the album's creation,[409] so beginning a feeling of resentment by the Beatles towards their longtime producer.[410][nb 33]

In 1987, Anthony DeCurtis of Rolling Stone described Sgt. Pepper as the album that "revolutionized rock and roll",[411] while music journalists Andy Greene and Scott Plagenhoef credit it with marking the beginning of the album era.[412][413] For several years following its release, straightforward rock and roll was supplanted by a growing interest in extended form, and for the first time in the history of the music industry, sales of albums outpaced those of singles.[414] In Gould's description, Sgt. Pepper was "the catalyst for an explosion of mass enthusiasm for album-formatted rock that would revolutionize both the aesthetics and the economics of the record business in ways that far out-stripped the earlier pop explosions triggered by the Elvis phenomenon of 1956 and the Beatlemania phenomenon of 1963".[415] The music industry swiftly grew into a billion-dollar enterprise, although record company executives were blindsided by the appeal of new acts who defied established formulas.[416]

Music critic Greg Kot said that Sgt. Pepper introduced a template not only for creating album-oriented rock but also for consuming it, "with listeners no longer twisting the night away to an assortment of three-minute singles, but losing themselves in a succession of 20-minute album sides, taking a journey led by the artist".[417] In Moore's view, the album was "pivotal" in heralding "the realignment of rock from its working-class roots to its subsequent place on the college circuit", as students increasingly embraced the genre and record companies launched labels targeted towards this new market.[418] As another result of Sgt. Pepper, US record companies no longer altered the content of albums by major British acts such as the Rolling Stones, the Kinks and Donovan, and their LPs were released in the artists' intended configuration.[419]

Albums and artistry

According to Simonelli, Sgt. Pepper established the standard for rock musicians, particularly British acts, to strive towards in their self-identification as artists rather than pop stars, whereby, as in the Romantic tradition, creative vision dominated at the expense of all commercial concerns.[420] In the US, the album paved the way for British groups such as Pink Floyd and the Incredible String Band, whose work echoed the eclectic, mystical and escapist qualities of Sgt. Pepper.[416]

Following the Beatles' example, many acts spent months in the studio creating their albums, focused on an artistic aesthetic and in the hope of winning critical approval.[407] Among the many LPs influenced by Sgt. Pepper were Jefferson Airplane's After Bathing at Baxter's, the Rolling Stones' Their Satanic Majesties Request[322] and the Moody Blues' Days of Future Passed, all released in 1967;[421] and the Zombies' Odessey and Oracle, the Small Faces' Ogdens' Nut Gone Flake[422] and the Pretty Things' S.F. Sorrow, all issued the following year.[423] All rock albums were subsequently measured against Sgt. Pepper.[407] Discussing Their Satanic Majesties Request, Wenner referred to "the post–Sgt. Pepper trap of trying to put out a 'progressive,' 'significant' and 'different' album, as revolutionary as the Beatles. But it couldn't be done, because only the Beatles can put out an album by the Beatles."[424]

The Guardian viewed the album's effect on Carla Bley as one of the "50 key events in the history of dance music".[425] Bley spent four years crafting her musical response to Sgt. Pepper[423] – the 1971 avant-jazz triple album Escalator Over the Hill[426] – which combined rock, Indo-jazz fusion and chamber jazz.[425] Roger Waters cited Sgt. Pepper as his influence when Pink Floyd created their 1973 album The Dark Side of the Moon, saying: "I learned from Lennon, McCartney and Harrison that it was OK for us to write about our lives and express what we felt ... More than any other record it gave me and my generation permission to branch out and do whatever we wanted."[423][nb 34]

Over subsequent decades, musical acts referred to their major artistic work as "our Sgt. Pepper".[427] In this regard, Mojo magazine recognises Prince's Around the World in a Day (1985), Tears for Fears' The Seeds of Love (1989), Smashing Pumpkins' Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness (1995), Radiohead's OK Computer (1997), Oasis' Be Here Now (1997) and the Flaming Lips' The Soft Bulletin (1999) as albums that "for better or for worse ... would not have existed" without Sgt. Pepper.[428] Writing for Mojo in 2007, John Harris said that the album's influence resonates in the "identity games" of Gnarls Barkley, in the ambitious song cycle of Green Day's 2004 album American Idiot, in the respect afforded adventurous musicians such as Damon Albarn and Wayne Coyne, and particularly in the audience's expectation that foremost artists will "progress" and perhaps "ascend to a watershed point at which influence, experience and ambition cohere into something that just might blow our minds".[427]

Stylistic developments

Sgt. Pepper was highly influential on bands in the US acid rock (or psychedelic rock) scene.[429] Lavezzoli views it as a key factor in 1967's standing as the "annus mirabilis" for Indian classical music's acceptance in the West, with the genre having been fully absorbed into psychedelic music.[430][nb 35] Sgt. Pepper is commonly recognised as having originated progressive rock, due to the album's self-conscious lyrics, its studio experimentation, and its efforts to expand the barriers of conventional three-minute tracks.[432] In addition to influencing Pink Floyd records such as Atom Heart Mother, it was a source of inspiration for Robert Fripp when he formed King Crimson.[426] The band's 1969 debut In the Court of the Crimson King was intended as a homage to Sgt. Pepper.[423]

MacFarlane writes that, despite concerns regarding its thematic unity, Sgt. Pepper "is widely regarded as the first true concept album in popular music".[247] According to author Martina Elicker, despite earlier examples, it was Sgt. Pepper that familiarised critics and listeners with the notion of a "concept and unified structure underlying a pop album", thus originating the term "concept album".[433] Further to Sgt. Pepper, musicians increasingly explored literary and sociological themes in their concept albums and adopted its anti-establishment sentiments.[434] It also inspired rock opera works such as the Who's double album Tommy and the musical Jesus Christ Superstar.[423]

Author Carys Wyn Jones locates Pet Sounds and Sgt. Pepper as the beginning of art rock.[435] Doyle Greene says that Sgt. Pepper provides a "crucial locus in the assemblage of popular music and avant-garde/experimental music", notwithstanding the Beatles' presentation of the latter within formal song structures.[436] He also says that, although the band are usually viewed as modernists, the album "can be heard as a crucial postmodernist moment", through its incorporation of self-conscious artistry, irony and pastiche, and "arguably marked rock music's entry into postmodernism as opposed to high-modernism".[437] During the 1970s, glam rock acts co-opted the Beatles' use of alter ego personas,[438] including David Bowie when he adopted the guise of Ziggy Stardust.[439]

Graphic design

Inglis states that almost every account of the significance of Sgt. Pepper emphasises the cover's "unprecedented correspondence between music and art, time and space".[440] The cover helped to elevate album art as a respected topic for critical analysis whereby the "structures and cultures of popular music" could henceforth justify intellectual discourse in a way that – before Sgt. Pepper – would have seemed like "fanciful conceit".[441] He writes: "[The Sgt. Pepper] cover has been regarded as groundbreaking in its visual and aesthetic properties, congratulated for its innovative and imaginative design, credited with providing an early impetus for the expansion of the graphic design industry into popular music, and perceived as largely responsible for the connections between art and pop to be made explicit."[441]

Sgt. Pepper contributed to the popular trend for military-style fashions as adopted by London's boutique shops.[442] Following the LP's release, rock acts afforded cover art greater consideration and increasingly sought to create a thematic link between their album artwork and the record's musical statements.[407][nb 36] Riley describes the cover as "one of the best-known works that pop art ever produced",[446] while Norman calls it "the most famous album cover of all time".[447] The Beatles' 1968 self-titled double LP became known as the White Album for its plain white sleeve,[448] which the band chose as a contrast with the wave of psychedelic imagery and album covers inspired by Sgt. Pepper.[449] In the late 1990s, the BBC included the Sgt. Pepper cover in its list of British masterpieces of twentieth-century art and design, placing it ahead of the red telephone box, Mary Quant's miniskirt, and the Mini motorcar.[269]

Retrospective appraisal

Although few critics initially agreed with Richard Goldstein's criticism of the album, many came to appreciate his sentiments by the early 1980s.[339] In his 1979 book Stranded: Rock and Roll for a Desert Island, Greil Marcus described Sgt. Pepper as "playful but contrived" and "a Day-Glo tombstone for its time".[458][dubious ] Marcus believed that the album "strangled on its own conceits" while being "vindicated by world-wide acclaim".[459][nb 37] Lester Bangs – the so-called "godfather" of punk rock journalism – wrote in 1981 that "Goldstein was right in his much-vilified review ... predicting that this record had the power to almost singlehandedly destroy rock and roll."[462] He added: "In the sixties rock and roll began to think of itself as an 'art form'. Rock and roll is not an 'art form'; rock and roll is a raw wail from the bottom of the guts."[463]

In a 1976 article for The Village Voice, Christgau revisited the "supposedly epochal Works of Art" from 1967 and found that Sgt. Pepper appeared "bound to a moment" amid the year's culturally important music that had "dated in the sense that it speaks with unusually specific eloquence of a single point in history". Christgau said of the album's "dozen good songs and true", "Perhaps they're too precisely performed, but I'm not going to complain."[457] In his 1981 assessment, Simon Frith described Sgt. Pepper as "the last great pop album, the last LP ambitious to amuse everyone".[464]

It was inevitable that some of the critical assessment of subsequent generations would grumble. Some have griped about the archness of the band-within-a-band concept, the elaborate studio artifice, the dominance of McCartney's songs (routinely but unfairly considered as lightweight and bourgeois), the virtual freezing out of George Harrison ... and the only episodic interest of a perpetually tripping Lennon.[465]

– Chris Ingham, 2006

Once the Beatles' catalogue became available on CD in 1987, a critical consensus formed around Revolver's standing as the band's best work; the White Album also surpassed Sgt. Pepper in many critics' estimation.[466] In his feature article on Sgt. Pepper's 40th anniversary, for Mojo, John Harris said that, such was its "seismic and universal" impact and subsequent identification with 1967, a "fashion for trashing" the album had become commonplace.[467][nb 38] He attributed this to iconoclasm, as successive generations identified the album with baby boomers' retreat into "nostalgia-tinged smugness" during the 1970s, combined with a general distaste for McCartney following Lennon's death.[467] Citing its absence from the NME's best-albums list in 1985 after it had topped the magazine's previous poll, in 1974, Harris wrote:

Though by no means universally degraded ... Sgt. Pepper had taken a protracted beating from which it has perhaps yet to fully recover. Regularly challenged and overtaken in the Best Beatle Album stakes ... it suffered more than any Beatles record from the long fall-out after punk, and even the band's Britpop-era revival mysteriously failed to improve its standing.[469]

Writing in the 2004 edition of The Rolling Stone Album Guide, Rob Sheffield described Sgt. Pepper as "a revelation of how far artists could go in a recording studio with only four tracks, plenty of imagination, and a drug or two", but also "a masterwork of sonics, not songwriting".[470] In his review for Rough Guides, Chris Ingham said that, while the album's detractors typically bemoan McCartney's dominant role, the reliance on studio innovation, and the unconvincing concept, "as long as there are pairs of ears willing to disappear under headphones for forty minutes ... Sgt. Pepper will continue to cast its considerable spell."[465] Among reviews of the 2009 remastered album, Neil McCormick of The Daily Telegraph wrote: "It is impossible to overstate its impact: from a contemporary Sixties perspective it was utterly mind-blowing and original. Looking back from a point when its sonic innovations have been integrated into the mainstream, it remains a wonky, colourful and wildly improbable pop classic, although a little slighter and less cohesive than it may have seemed at the time."[451] Mark Kemp, writing for Paste, said the album was a "blast of avant-rock genius" but also "one of rock's most overrated albums".[454]

According to BBC Music critic Chris Jones, while Sgt. Pepper has long been subsumed under "an avalanche of hyperbole", the album retains an enduring quality "because its sum is greater than its whole ... These guys weren't just recording songs; they were inventing the stuff with which to make this record as they went along."[471] Although the lyrics, particularly McCartney's, were "a far cry from the militancy of their American peers", he continues, "what was revolutionary was the sonic carpet that enveloped the ears and sent the listener spinning into other realms."[472] Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic considers the album to be a refinement of Revolver's "previously unheard-of level of sophistication and fearless experimentation" and a work that combines a wide range of musical styles yet "Not once does the diversity seem forced". He concludes: "After Sgt. Pepper, there were no rules to follow – rock and pop bands could try anything, for better or worse."[450]

Legacy

Further public and critical recognition

 
John Lennon's outfit in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

Sgt. Pepper sustained its immense popularity into the 21st century while breaking numerous sales records.[473] With certified sales of 5.1 million copies in the UK, as of April 2019, Sgt. Pepper is the third-best-selling album in UK chart history and the best-selling studio album there.[474] It is one of the most commercially successful albums in the US, where the RIAA certified sales of 11 million copies in 1997.[475] By 2000, Sgt. Pepper was among the top 20 best-selling albums of all time worldwide.[476] As of 2011, it had sold more than 32 million copies worldwide, making it one of the highest-selling albums of all time.[477]

Sgt. Pepper has topped many "best album" lists.[478] It was voted in first place in Paul Gambaccini's 1978 book Critic's Choice: Top 200 Albums,[479] based on submissions from around 50 British and American critics and broadcasters including Christgau and Marcus,[480] and again in the 1987 edition.[481] In the latter year, it also topped Rolling Stone's list of "The 100 Best Albums of the Last Twenty Years".[482] In 1994, it was ranked first in Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums.[483][nb 39] It was voted best album of all time in the 1998 "Music of the Millennium" poll conducted by HMV and Channel 4,[487] and in the following year's expanded survey, which polled 600,000 people across the UK.[488][489] Among its appearances in other critics' polls, the album was third in Q's 2004 list "The Music That Changed the World" and fifth in the same magazine's 2005 list "The 40 Greatest Psychedelic Albums of All Time".[490]

In 1993, Sgt. Pepper was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame,[490] and ten years later it was one of 50 recordings chosen by the Library of Congress to be added to the National Recording Registry, honouring the work as "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[491] In 2003, Rolling Stone placed it at number one in the magazine's list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time",[492] a ranking it retained in the revised list of 2012, and described the album as "the pinnacle of the Beatles' eight years as recording artists".[493][nb 40] The editors also said that Sgt. Pepper was "the most important rock 'n' roll album ever made",[493] a point to which June Skinner Sawyers adds, in her 2006 collection of essays Read the Beatles: "It has been called the most famous album in the history of popular music. It is certainly among the most written about. It is still being written about."[496] On Rolling Stone's third such list, published in September 2020, Sgt. Pepper appears at number 24.[497]

In 2006, Sgt. Pepper was chosen by Time as one of the 100 best albums of all time.[498] Writing that year, Kevin Dettmar described it as "quite simply, the most important and influential rock-and-roll album ever recorded".[382] It is featured in Chris Smith's 2009 book 101 Albums That Changed Popular Music, where Smith highlights the album among the most "obvious" choices for inclusion due to its continued commercial success, the wealth of imitative works it inspired, and its ongoing recognition as "a defining moment in the history of music".[499] In the NME's 2014 article "25 Albums With the Most Incredible Production", Emily Barker described Sgt. Pepper as "kaleidoscopic" and an "orchestral baroque pop masterpiece the likes of which has rarely been matched since".[500]

Adaptations, tributes and anniversary projects

 
French horn players performing as "Sgt. Pepper's band" at Live 8 London in 2005

The Sgt. Pepper mythology was reimagined for the plot of Yellow Submarine. In the animated film, the Beatles travel to Pepperland and rescue Sgt. Pepper's band from evildoers, the Blue Meanies.[501] The album inspired the 1974 off-Broadway musical Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band on the Road, directed by Tom O'Horgan,[502] and the 1978 film Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, produced by Robert Stigwood.[467] In July 2012, athletes donned Sgt. Pepper uniforms to pay tribute to the Beatles' album during the opening ceremony of the London Olympics.[503]

Sgt. Pepper has been the subject of many tribute albums,[504] including a multi-artist CD available with the March 2007 issue of Mojo and a 2009 live album, Sgt. Pepper Live, by Cheap Trick.[490] Other tribute recordings include Sgt. Pepper Knew My Father, a multi-artist charity compilation released by the NME in 1988; Big Daddy's 1992 album Sgt. Pepper's, which Moore recognises as "the most audacious" of all the interpretations of the Beatles' LP up to 1997;[505] and the Flaming Lips' With a Little Help from My Fwends, released in 2014.[506] BBC Radio 2 broadcast Sgt. Pepper's 40th Anniversary in June 2007.[507] The programme contained new versions of the songs by artists such as Oasis, the Killers and Kaiser Chiefs, produced by Emerick using EMI's original four-track recording equipment.[508][509]

The 1987 CD release attracted considerable media interest[479][404] and coincided with a Granada TV documentary, It Was Twenty Years Ago Today, that located the album at the centre of the Summer of Love.[510][511] The reissue peaked at number three on the UK Albums Chart[510] and topped Billboard's CDs chart.[512] The album's 25th anniversary was observed with The South Bank Show's presentation[513] of Martin's TV documentary The Making of Sgt. Pepper, which included interviews with the three surviving Beatles.[514][nb 41] Although there was no official campaign for the 30th anniversary, BBC Radio 2 broadcast Pepper Forever in the UK and some 12,000 schools across the US listened to a radio special dedicated to the album on 2 June 1997.[517] Aside from Radio 2's June 2007 project, the 40th anniversary was marked by the University of Leeds hosting a meeting of British and American commentators to debate the extent of the album's social and cultural impact.[508]

 
Sgt. Pepper 50th anniversary billboard in London

On 26 May 2017, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band was reissued for the album's 50th anniversary as a six-disc box set.[518] The first CD contains a new stereo remix of the album, created by Giles Martin using first-generation tapes rather than their subsequent mixdowns.[519] Apple Corps produced the TV documentary Sgt. Pepper's Musical Revolution to commemorate the anniversary,[520] which was also celebrated with posters, billboards and other decorations in cities around the world.[521] In Liverpool, the anniversary was the focus of a three-week cultural festival that included events dedicated to each of the album's thirteen songs.[522] As part of the festival, Mark Morris choreographed Pepperland to four of the songs from Sgt. Pepper and "Penny Lane", arranged by Ethan Iverson, plus six original compositions by Iverson,[523] and a dawn-to-dusk celebration of Indian music was held in recognition of Harrison's absorption in the genre.[522][524] The 50th anniversary edition of Sgt. Pepper topped the UK Albums Chart.[473]

Track listing

All songs written by Lennon–McCartney, except "Within You Without You" by George Harrison. Track lengths and lead vocals per Mark Lewisohn and Ian MacDonald.[525]

Side one
No.TitleLead vocalsLength
1."Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band"McCartney2:00
2."With a Little Help from My Friends"Starr2:42
3."Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds"Lennon3:28
4."Getting Better"McCartney2:48
5."Fixing a Hole"McCartney2:36
6."She's Leaving Home"McCartney with Lennon3:25
7."Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!"Lennon2:37
Total length:19:36
Side two
No.TitleLead vocalsLength
8."Within You Without You"Harrison5:05
9."When I'm Sixty-Four"McCartney2:37
10."Lovely Rita"McCartney2:42
11."Good Morning Good Morning"Lennon2:42
12."Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)"Lennon, McCartney, Harrison and Starr1:18
13."A Day in the Life"Lennon with McCartney5:38
Total length:20:02

Personnel

According to Mark Lewisohn and Ian MacDonald,[526] except where noted:

The Beatles

Additional musicians and production

  • Sounds Inc. – saxophones, trombones and French horn on "Good Morning Good Morning"
  • Neil Aspinall – tambura, harmonica
  • Geoff Emerickaudio engineering; tape loops, sound effects[nb 42]
  • Mal Evans – counting, harmonica, alarm clock, final piano E chord
  • George Martin – producer, mixer; tape loops, sound effects; harpsichord on "Fixing a Hole", harmonium, Lowrey organ, glockenspiel and Mellotron[530] on "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!", Hammond organ on "With a Little Help from My Friends", piano on "Getting Better", piano solo on "Lovely Rita"; final harmonium chord.
  • Session musicians – four French horns on "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band": Neill Sanders, James W. Buck, John Burden, Tony Randall, arranged and conducted by Martin and McCartney; harp, performed by Sheila Bromberg, and string section on "She's Leaving Home", arranged by Mike Leander and conducted by Martin; tabla by Natwar Soni, dilrubas by Anna Joshi and Amrit Gajjar, and tambura by Buddhadev Kansara on "Within You Without You",[531] with eight violins and four cellos arranged and conducted by Harrison and Martin; clarinet trio on "When I'm Sixty-Four": Robert Burns, Henry MacKenzie, Frank Reidy, arranged and conducted by Martin and McCartney; saxophones on "Good Morning Good Morning", arranged and conducted by Martin and Lennon; and forty-piece orchestra, including strings, brass, woodwinds and percussion on "A Day in the Life", arranged by Martin, Lennon and McCartney, and conducted by Martin and McCartney.

Charts

Weekly charts

Certifications and sales

Sales certifications for Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
Region Certification Certified units/sales
Argentina (CAPIF)[583] 2× Platinum 120,000^
Argentina (CAPIF)[583]
1987 CD issue
3× Platinum 180,000^
Australia (ARIA)[584] 4× Platinum 280,000^
Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil)[586] Gold 290,000[585]
Canada (Music Canada)[587] 8× Platinum 800,000^
Denmark (IFPI Danmark)[588] 3× Platinum 60,000 
France (SNEP)[589] Gold 100,000*
Germany (BVMI)[590] Platinum 500,000^
Italy (FIMI)[591]
sales since 2009
Platinum 50,000 
Japan 208,000[541]
New Zealand (RMNZ)[592] 6× Platinum 90,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[594] 18× Platinum 5,340,000[593]
United States (RIAA)[595] 11× Platinum 11,000,000^
Summaries
Worldwide 32,000,000[477]

* Sales figures based on certification alone.
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
  Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Notes

  1. ^ According to author Allen J. Wiener, the album's intended release date of 1 June has been "traditionally observed" over the ensuing decades, yet the true release date was 26 May.[1]
  2. ^ McCartney has said that the idea for the title came from his mishearing Evans asking for "salt and pepper" over a meal.[30]
  3. ^ In Emerick's opinion, the recording of Sgt. Pepper marks the emergence of McCartney as the Beatles' de facto producer, as Martin was increasingly absent near the end of late-night sessions that often lasted until dawn.[58]
  4. ^ Wilson was similarly impressed with the intricate bass playing on Rubber Soul.[62] McCartney later said that he, Wilson and Motown's James Jamerson were the three players "doing melodic bass lines at that time ... all picking up on what each other did".[63]
  5. ^ "Strawberry Fields Forever" made prominent use of Mellotron,[65][66] a keyboard instrument on which the keys triggered tape-recordings of a variety of instruments, enabling its user to play keyboard parts using those voices.[67]
  6. ^ In a 2017 interview, Starr said with regard to Harrison's guitar contributions: "Actually, Paul and I were talking about him when we were both listening to Sgt Pepper's for the [50th] anniversary and saying how important George's work on guitar was on that record."[72]
  7. ^ During a 24 February overdubbing session for "Lovely Rita", the Beatles' guests included Crosby and Shawn Phillips, Donovan's guitarist.[83] Photos published in Beatles Monthly magazine showed Lennon, McCartney, Harrison and Crosby grouped around a microphone,[84] and a Beat Instrumental report stated that the backing vocals were recorded that night with Crosby's participation.[83] Phillips later supported this and said that he too sang backing vocals with the three Beatles.[84] However, Phillips' recollection is not supported by others,[84] and the group vocals were instead overdubbed on 7 March.[83]
  8. ^ While recording the vocals for "Getting Better" on 21 March, Lennon started feeling ill,[87] having accidentally taken LSD when he meant to take an upper.[88] Unaware that he was under the influence, Martin escorted him to the roof of the building for some fresh air and returned to the studio. When they learned that Lennon was alone on the rail-less rooftop, Harrison and McCartney rushed up to retrieve him and prevent a possible accident.[89][90]
  9. ^ Following the "Day in the Life" filming, the music press often reported on the idea of a Sgt. Pepper TV special.[93] Although a report in July stated that the plan had been scrapped, a filming schedule was drawn up for late in the year, by which point the Beatles were committed to making Magical Mystery Tour.[100]
  10. ^ "Sgt. Pepper" was crossfaded into "With a Little Help from My Friends" and the "Sgt. Pepper" reprise was crossfaded into "A Day in the Life".[124]
  11. ^ The crowd noises were gleaned from EMI's tape archive, including audience sounds recorded at the Royal Albert Hall and the Queen Elizabeth Hall for the murmuring, and Martin's recording of a 1961 comedy show, Beyond the Fringe, for the laughter.[158] The opening ambient sounds were captured during the 10 February orchestral session for "A Day in the Life".[159]
  12. ^ The song's lead guitar part was played by McCartney, who replaced an earlier effort by Harrison.[163]
  13. ^ The backing track for "Fixing a Hole" was recorded at Regent Sound Studio, in central London, after the Beatles were unable to arrange a last-minute session at EMI Studios.[181]
  14. ^ McCartney hired Mike Leander to arrange the string section on "She's Leaving Home" since Martin was producing a session by another artist and was unable to meet with him straightaway.[188] Martin was highly upset at McCartney's impatience,[189] but conducted the musicians using the score more or less as written.[190]
  15. ^ In the initial running order, dated 6 April, "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!" was sequenced as the third track, following "With a Little Help from My Friends".[198]
  16. ^ Lennon was unaware that most record players and speakers of the time were incapable of reproducing the tone, which many listeners would not hear until the release of the CD version in 1987.[242]
  17. ^ When the audio contained in the run-out groove is played in reverse and slowed-down, McCartney can be heard shouting, "I will fuck you like Superman", with Starr and Harrison giggling in the background.[244] The author Will Romano comments that, in this way, Sgt. Pepper closes with nonsensical vocals just as Freak Out! does.[245]
  18. ^ Norman also identifies Sgt. Pepper as being "in other places, grown-up to an unprecedented, indeed perilous, degree". He concludes of this combination: "Its superabundance reflected a conscious wish on the Beatles' part to make amends to their fans for their abandonment of touring. Clamped between headphones in a recording studio, they managed to put on a live show more exciting, more intimate, than any since they'd left the Cavern."[252]
  19. ^ Blake said that Haworth conceived the idea to present the crowd as an imaginary audience. McCartney's original idea, according to Blake, was for the Beatles to pose in an Edwardian-era drawing room in front of a wall filled with portraits of their heroes.[256]
  20. ^ Inglis is paraphrasing George Melly, who in 1970 described the Sgt. Pepper cover as "a microcosm of the Underground world".[262]
  21. ^ The Sgt. Pepper cover piqued a frenzy of analysis.[271] Inglis cites it as the only example in popular music where the album art attracted as much attention as the album. He notes several elements of the cover that were interpreted as evidence of McCartney's death, including: the Beatles are supposedly standing about a grave, the hand above McCartney's head is regarded as a "symbol of death", and on the back cover, he is turned away from the camera.[272]
  22. ^ The Fool also submitted a design for the LP cover, but the Beatles rejected it.[275]
  23. ^ MacDonald cites EMI chairman Joseph Lockwood's recollection of attending a dinner party where "rich older women" sat on the floor and began singing the album's songs, and the description of Jefferson Airplane guitarist Paul Kantner of how he and Crosby played the LP all night in a Seattle hotel lobby to around a hundred entranced fans. Kantner later said: "Something enveloped the whole world at that time and it just exploded into a renaissance."[296]
  24. ^ Miles recalls hearing the album playing from "every shop" along King's Road and that it was similarly ubiquitous in the most fashionable areas of New York. He remembers the record as "the soundtrack to that summer, and that winter ... You just could not get away from it."[298]
  25. ^ Although suspicious of McCartney's motives, Lennon and Harrison, together with Epstein, demonstrated their support by announcing that they too had taken LSD.[314][315] In July, all four Beatles added their signatures to a petition demanding the legalisation of marijuana and paid for its publication in a full-page ad in The Times.[316]
  26. ^ On 4 June, the Jimi Hendrix Experience opened a show at London's Saville Theatre with their rendition of "Sgt. Pepper".[318] Epstein leased the Saville at the time,[319] and Harrison and McCartney attended the performance.[318] McCartney described the moment: "The curtains flew back and [Hendrix] came walking forward playing 'Sgt. Pepper' ... I put that down as one of the great honours of my career."[320]
  27. ^ According to Moore, Goldstein's position was an exception among a group of primarily positive contemporary reviewers that he characterises as the most for any single album at the time. He adds that some negative letters were sent to Melody Maker that he speculates were written by jazz enthusiasts.[350]
  28. ^ In this piece, Goldstein explained that, although the album was not on-par with the best of the Beatles' previous work, he considered it "better than 80 per cent of the music around". He also said that, underneath the production when "the compositions are stripped to their musical and lyrical essentials", the LP was shown to be "an elaboration without improvement" on the group's music.[353]
  29. ^ In his 1968 autobiography, High Priest, Leary adapted lyrics from Sgt. Pepper to relate his psychedelic experiences and journey towards higher consciousness.[365]
  30. ^ In August 1967, The Beatles Book published an article discussing whether the album was "too advanced for the average pop fan". One reader complained that all the songs except "Sgt. Pepper" and "When I'm Sixty-Four" were "over our heads", adding, "The Beatles ought to stop being so clever and give us tunes we can enjoy."[298]
  31. ^ In the November 1967 issue of Down Beat magazine, John Gabree complained that the Beatles were being afforded excessive praise by writers that were unfamiliar with rock music and unaware of the advances made by rival acts such as the Mothers of Invention and the Who.[392]
  32. ^ Lennon's lyrics to "I Am the Walrus" were purposely nonsensical and intended to confound commentators' analysis of the Beatles' work, particularly interpretations of "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds".[395] Harrison later said that Sgt. Pepper became both "a milestone and a millstone in music history". In his view, it paled beside the band's previous two albums, since "There's about half the songs I like and the other half I can't stand."[396] Lennon publicly disparaged the album in the years following its release,[397] a turnaround that offended Martin and other studio personnel.[81]
  33. ^ The group were particularly annoyed that Time had referred to Sgt. Pepper as "George Martin's new album".[410] Years later McCartney said: "I mean, we don't mind him helping us ... but it's not his album, folks, you know. And there's got to be a little bitterness over that."[71]
  34. ^ After listening to Sgt. Pepper, Sandy Denny decided to abandon her solo career as a folk singer and joined the band Fairport Convention. Crosby recalled that whereas previous Beatles releases might have brought out a competitive instinct in him, with Sgt. Pepper "they were so far ahead of everybody ... But it was inspiring; all I wanted to do was approach my music with the same freedom."[298]
  35. ^ Lavezzoli cites Sgt. Pepper's Grammy for Album of the Year along with wins for Shankar's collaboration with violinist Yehudi Menuhin (West Meets East) and for Duke Ellington (Far East Suite) as the only time that Indian-influenced albums have won in categories encompassing rock, classical music and jazz at the annual Grammy awards.[431]
  36. ^ Due to the alleged clues in its artwork, Sgt. Pepper returned to the Billboard LPs chart in late 1969, at the height of the "Paul is dead" rumours.[443][444] One contention in this conspiracy theory was that McCartney had been replaced in the Beatles by a man named William Shears Campbell, or Billy Shears.[445]
  37. ^ According to Riley, Rubber Soul and Revolver are "miracles of intuition" that are "greater than the sum of their parts" while in comparison "Sgt. Pepper is tinged with conceit."[460] He describes Sgt. Pepper as "a flawed masterpiece that can only echo the strength of Revolver".[461]
  38. ^ In a 1998 Melody Maker poll of pop stars, DJs and journalists, the album was voted the worst ever made, with the magazine's editor, Mark Sutherland, commenting: "This poll shows people are sick and tired of having the Beatles rammed down their throats as the greatest rock band ever. It's time to make way for great new music." One of those polled, musician and journalist John Robb, declared the album "the low water point of rock 'n' roll", highlighting the Beatles' moustaches as indicative of this.[468]
  39. ^ In the book's second edition, published four years later, Revolver was ranked first, with Sgt. Pepper second followed by the White Album.[484] In the third edition, published in 2000, Sgt. Pepper was ranked third to Revolver and Radiohead's The Bends.[485][486]
  40. ^ The editors ranked Pet Sounds second in the list in recognition of its influence on the album.[494] In the liner notes to the 1997 CD reissue of the Beach Boys' album, Martin said: "Without Pet Sounds, Sgt. Pepper never would have happened ... Pepper was an attempt to equal Pet Sounds."[495]
  41. ^ The Making of Sgt. Pepper first aired in the US in September 1992 on the Disney Channel.[514] In keeping with the channel's family image,[515] the band members' comments on the role that drugs played in the album's creation were cut from the broadcast and replaced with alternative footage.[516]
  42. ^ Despite Martin's efforts to secure an engineer's credit for Emerick on Sgt. Pepper, EMI refused the request.[288] Emerick was nevertheless the recipient of the 1968 Grammy Award for Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical.[529]

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pepper, lonely, hearts, club, band, this, article, about, 1967, album, other, uses, disambiguation, eighth, studio, album, english, rock, band, beatles, released, 1967, pepper, regarded, musicologists, early, concept, album, that, advanced, roles, sound, compo. This article is about the 1967 album For other uses see Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band disambiguation Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band is the eighth studio album by the English rock band the Beatles Released on 26 May 1967 nb 1 Sgt Pepper is regarded by musicologists as an early concept album that advanced the roles of sound composition extended form psychedelic imagery record sleeves and the producer in popular music The album had an immediate cross generational impact and was associated with numerous touchstones of the era s youth culture such as fashion drugs mysticism and a sense of optimism and empowerment Critics lauded the album for its innovations in songwriting production and graphic design for bridging a cultural divide between popular music and high art and for reflecting the interests of contemporary youth and the counterculture Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club BandStudio album by the BeatlesReleased26 May 1967 1967 05 26 Recorded6 December 1966 21 April 1967StudioEMI and Regent Sound LondonGenreRock pop psychedelia art rockLength39 36LabelParlophone CapitolProducerGeorge MartinThe Beatles chronologyA Collection of Beatles Oldies 1966 Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band 1967 The Beatles 1968 The Beatles North American chronologyRevolver 1966 Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band 1967 Magical Mystery Tour 1967 At the end of August 1966 the Beatles had permanently retired from touring and pursued individual interests for the next three months During a return flight to London in November Paul McCartney had an idea for a song involving an Edwardian military band that formed the impetus of the Sgt Pepper concept For this project they continued the technological experimentation marked by their previous album Revolver this time without an absolute deadline for completion Sessions began on 24 November at EMI Studios with compositions inspired by the Beatles youth but after pressure from EMI the songs Strawberry Fields Forever and Penny Lane were released as a double A side single in February 1967 and left off the LP The album was then loosely conceptualised as a performance by the fictional Sgt Pepper band an idea that was conceived after recording the title track A key work of British psychedelia Sgt Pepper is considered one of the first art rock LPs and a progenitor to progressive rock It incorporates a range of stylistic influences including vaudeville circus music hall avant garde and Western and Indian classical music With assistance from producer George Martin and engineer Geoff Emerick much of the recordings were coloured with sound effects and tape manipulation as exemplified on Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite and A Day in the Life Recording was completed on 21 April The cover which depicts the Beatles posing in front of a tableau of celebrities and historical figures was designed by the pop artists Peter Blake and Jann Haworth Sgt Pepper s release was a defining moment in pop culture heralding the album era and the 1967 Summer of Love while its reception achieved full cultural legitimisation for pop music and recognition for the medium as a genuine art form The first Beatles album to be released with the same track listing in both the UK and the US it spent 27 weeks at number one on the Record Retailer chart in the United Kingdom and 15 weeks at number one on the Billboard Top LPs chart in the United States In 1968 it won four Grammy Awards including Album of the Year the first rock LP to receive this honour in 2003 it was inducted into the National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress It has topped several critics and listeners polls for the best album of all time including those published by Rolling Stone magazine and in the book All Time Top 1000 Albums and the UK s Music of the Millennium poll More than 32 million copies had been sold worldwide as of 2011 It remains one of the best selling albums of all time and was still in 2018 the UK s best selling studio album A remixed and expanded edition of the album was released in 2017 Contents 1 Background 2 Inspiration and conception 3 Recording and production 3 1 Recording history 3 2 Studio ambience and happenings 3 3 Technical aspects 3 4 Band dynamics 4 Songs 4 1 Overview 4 2 Side one 4 2 1 Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band 4 2 2 With a Little Help from My Friends 4 2 3 Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds 4 2 4 Getting Better 4 2 5 Fixing a Hole 4 2 6 She s Leaving Home 4 2 7 Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite 4 3 Side two 4 3 1 Within You Without You 4 3 2 When I m Sixty Four 4 3 3 Lovely Rita 4 3 4 Good Morning Good Morning 4 3 5 Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band Reprise 4 3 6 A Day in the Life 4 4 Concept 5 Packaging 5 1 Front cover 5 2 Back cover gatefold and cut outs 6 Release 6 1 Radio previews and launch party 6 2 Public reaction 6 3 Commercial performance 7 Contemporary critical reception 8 Sociocultural influence 8 1 Contemporary youth and counterculture 8 2 Cultural legitimisation of popular music 8 3 Development of popular music 8 3 1 Industry and market changes 8 3 2 Albums and artistry 8 3 3 Stylistic developments 8 3 4 Graphic design 9 Retrospective appraisal 10 Legacy 10 1 Further public and critical recognition 10 2 Adaptations tributes and anniversary projects 11 Track listing 12 Personnel 13 Charts 13 1 Weekly charts 13 2 Year end charts 13 3 Decade end charts 14 Certifications and sales 15 Notes 16 References 17 Bibliography 18 Further reading 19 External linksBackground EditWe were fed up with being the Beatles We really hated that fucking four little mop top approach We were not boys we were men and thought of ourselves as artists rather than just performers 2 Paul McCartney By late 1965 the Beatles had grown weary of live performance 3 In John Lennon s opinion they could send out four waxworks and that would satisfy the crowds Beatles concerts are nothing to do with music anymore They re just bloody tribal rites 4 In June 1966 two days after finishing the album Revolver the group set off for a tour that started in West Germany 5 While in Hamburg they received an anonymous telegram stating Do not go to Tokyo Your life is in danger 6 The threat was taken seriously in light of the controversy surrounding the tour among Japan s religious and conservative groups with particular opposition to the Beatles planned performances at the sacred Nippon Budokan arena 6 As an added precaution 35 000 police were mobilised and tasked with protecting the group who were transported from hotels to concert venues in armoured vehicles 7 The Beatles then performed in the Philippines where they were threatened and manhandled by its citizens for not visiting First Lady Imelda Marcos The group were angry with their manager Brian Epstein for insisting on what they regarded as an exhausting and demoralising itinerary 8 The group with disc jockey Jim Stagg while on their final tour in August 1966 The publication in the US of Lennon s remarks about the Beatles being more popular than Jesus then embroiled the band in controversy and protest in America s Bible Belt 9 A public apology eased tensions but a US tour in August that was marked by reduced ticket sales relative to the group s record attendances in 1965 and subpar performances proved to be their last 10 The author Nicholas Schaffner writes To the Beatles playing such concerts had become a charade so remote from the new directions they were pursuing that not a single tune was attempted from the just released Revolver LP whose arrangements were for the most part impossible to reproduce with the limitations imposed by their two guitars bass and drums stage lineup 11 On the Beatles return to England rumours began to circulate that they had decided to break up 12 George Harrison informed Epstein that he was leaving the band but he was persuaded to stay on the assurance that there would be no more tours 9 The group took a three month break during which they focused on individual interests 13 Harrison travelled to India for six weeks to study the sitar under the instruction of Ravi Shankar 14 and develop his interest in Hindu philosophy 15 Having been the last of the Beatles to concede that their live performances had become futile 16 Paul McCartney collaborated with Beatles producer George Martin on the soundtrack for the film The Family Way 17 and holidayed in Kenya with Mal Evans one of the Beatles tour managers 18 Lennon acted in the film How I Won the War and attended art showings such as one at the Indica Gallery where he met his future wife Yoko Ono 19 Ringo Starr used the break to spend time with his wife Maureen and son Zak 20 Inspiration and conception EditWhile in London without his bandmates McCartney took the hallucinogenic drug LSD or acid for the first time having long resisted Lennon and Harrison s insistence that he join them and Starr in experiencing its perception heightening effects 21 22 According to author Jonathan Gould this initiation into LSD afforded McCartney the expansive new sense of possibility that defined the group s next project Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band Gould adds that McCartney s succumbing to peer pressure allowed Lennon to play the role of psychedelic guide to his songwriting partner thereby facilitating a closer collaboration between the two than had been evident since early in the Beatles career 23 For his part Lennon had turned deeply introspective during the filming of How I Won the War in southern Spain in September 1966 His anxiety over his and the Beatles future was reflected in Strawberry Fields Forever 24 a song that provided the initial theme regarding a Liverpool childhood of the new album 25 On his return to London Lennon embraced the city s arts culture of which McCartney was a part 26 and shared his bandmate s interest in avant garde and electronic music composers such as Karlheinz Stockhausen John Cage and Luciano Berio 27 28 In November during his and Evans return flight from Kenya McCartney had an idea for a song that eventually formed the impetus of the Sgt Pepper concept 14 His idea involved an Edwardian era military band for which Evans invented a name in the style of contemporary San Francisco based groups such as Big Brother and the Holding Company and Quicksilver Messenger Service 29 nb 2 In February 1967 McCartney suggested that the new album should represent a performance by the fictional band 31 This alter ego group would give them the freedom to experiment musically by releasing them from their image as Beatles 32 Martin recalled that the concept was not discussed at the start of the sessions 33 but it subsequently gave the album a life of its own 34 Portions of Sgt Pepper reflect the Beatles general immersion in the blues Motown and other American popular musical traditions 35 The author Ian MacDonald writes that when reviewing their rivals recent work in late 1966 the Beatles identified the most significant LP as the Beach Boys Pet Sounds which Brian Wilson the band s leader had created in response to the Beatles Rubber Soul 36 McCartney was highly impressed with the harmonic structures and choice of instruments used on Pet Sounds and said that these elements encouraged him to think the Beatles could get further out than the Beach Boys had 37 He identified Pet Sounds as his main musical inspiration for Sgt Pepper adding that we nicked a few ideas 38 although he felt it lacked the avant garde quality he was seeking 39 Freak Out by the Mothers of Invention has also been cited as having influenced Sgt Pepper 40 According to the biographer Philip Norman during the recording sessions McCartney repeatedly stated This is our Freak Out 41 The music journalist Chet Flippo stated that McCartney was inspired to record a concept album after hearing Freak Out 40 Indian music was another touchstone on Sgt Pepper principally for Lennon and Harrison 42 In a 1967 interview Harrison said that the Beatles ongoing success had encouraged them to continue developing musically and that given their standing We can do things that please us without conforming to the standard pop idea We are not only involved in pop music but all music 43 McCartney envisioned the Beatles alter egos being able to do a bit of B B King a bit of Stockhausen a bit of Albert Ayler a bit of Ravi Shankar a bit of Pet Sounds a bit of the Doors 44 He saw the group as pushing frontiers similar to other composers of the time even though the Beatles did not necessarily like what say Berio was doing 45 Recording and production EditRecording history Edit Abbey Road Studio Two where nearly every track on Sgt Pepper was recorded 46 Sessions began on 24 November 1966 in Studio Two at EMI Studios subsequently Abbey Road Studios marking the first time that the Beatles had come together since September 47 Afforded the luxury of a nearly limitless recording budget and with no absolute deadline for completion 48 the band booked open ended sessions that started at 7 pm and allowed them to work as late as they wanted 36 They began with Strawberry Fields Forever followed by two other songs that were thematically linked to their childhoods When I m Sixty Four the first session for which took place on 6 December 49 and Penny Lane 50 Strawberry Fields Forever and Penny Lane were subsequently released as a double A side in February 1967 after EMI and Epstein pressured Martin for a single 51 When it failed to reach number one in the UK British press agencies speculated that the group s run of success might have ended with headlines such as Beatles Fail to Reach the Top First Time in Four Years and Has the Bubble Burst 52 In keeping with the band s approach to their previously issued singles the songs were then excluded from Sgt Pepper 53 Martin later described the decision to drop these two songs as the biggest mistake of my professional life 54 In his judgment Strawberry Fields Forever which he and the band spent an unprecedented 55 hours of studio time recording set the agenda for the whole album 55 He explained It was going to be a record with songs that couldn t be performed live they were designed to be studio productions and that was the difference 56 McCartney declared Now our performance is that record 56 Music papers started to slag us off because Sgt Pepper took five months to record and I remember the great glee seeing in one of the papers how the Beatles have dried up and I was sitting rubbing my hands saying You just wait 57 Paul McCartney According to the musicologist Walter Everett Sgt Pepper marks the beginning of McCartney s ascendancy as the Beatles dominant creative force He wrote more than half of the album s material while asserting increasing control over the recording of his compositions 25 nb 3 In an effort to get the right sound the Beatles attempted numerous re takes of McCartney s song Getting Better When the decision was made to re record the basic track Starr was summoned to the studio but called off soon afterwards as the focus switched from rhythm to vocal tracking 59 Much of the bass guitar on the album was mixed upfront 60 Preferring to overdub his bass part last McCartney tended to play other instruments when recording a song s backing track This approach afforded him the time to devise bass lines that were melodically adventurous one of the qualities he especially admired in Wilson s work on Pet Sounds and complemented the song s final arrangement 61 nb 4 McCartney played keyboard instruments such as piano grand piano and Lowrey organ in addition to electric guitar on some songs while Martin variously contributed on Hohner Pianet harpsichord and harmonium 64 Lennon s songs similarly showed a preference for keyboard instruments 25 nb 5 Abbey Road Studios formerly EMI Studios in 2005 Although Harrison s role as lead guitarist was limited during the sessions Everett considers that his contribution to the album is strong in several ways 68 He provided Indian instrumentation in the form of sitar tambura and swarmandal 69 70 and Martin credited him with being the most committed of the Beatles in striving for new sounds 71 nb 6 Starr s adoption of loose calfskin heads for his tom toms ensured his drum kit had a deeper timbre than he had previously achieved with plastic heads 68 As on Revolver 73 the Beatles increasingly used session musicians particularly for classical inspired arrangements 37 Norman comments that Lennon s prominent vocal on some of McCartney s songs hugely enhanced their atmosphere particularly Lovely Rita 74 Within an hour of completing the last overdubs on the album s songs on 20 April 1967 the group returned to Harrison s Only a Northern Song the basic track of which they had taped in February 75 The Beatles overdubbed random sounds and instrumentation before submitting it as the first of four new songs they were contracted to supply to United Artists for inclusion in the animated film Yellow Submarine 76 In author Mark Lewisohn s description it was a curious session but one that demonstrated the Beatles tremendous appetite for recording 75 During the Sgt Pepper sessions the band also recorded Carnival of Light a McCartney led experimental piece created for the Million Volt Light and Sound Rave held at the Roundhouse Theatre on 28 January and 4 February 77 The album was completed on 21 April with the recording of random noises and voices that were included on the run out groove preceded by a high pitched tone that could be heard by dogs but was inaudible to most human ears 78 Studio ambience and happenings Edit The Beatles sought to inject an atmosphere of celebration into the recording sessions 79 Weary of the bland look inside EMI they introduced psychedelic lighting to the studio space 80 including a device on which five red fluorescent tubes were fixed to a microphone stand a lava lamp a red darkroom lamp and a stroboscope the last of which they soon abandoned 81 Harrison later said the studio became the band s clubhouse for Sgt Pepper 82 David Crosby Mick Jagger and Donovan were among the musician friends who visited them there 68 nb 7 The band members also dressed up in psychedelic fashions 81 leading one session trumpeter to wonder whether they were in costume for a new film 85 Drug taking was prevalent during the sessions 81 with Martin later recalling that the group would steal away to have something 86 nb 8 The 10 February session for orchestral overdubs on A Day in the Life was staged as a happening typical of the London avant garde scene 91 92 The Beatles invited numerous friends 93 and the session players wore formal dinner wear augmented with fancy dress props 94 95 Overseen by NEMS employee Tony Bramwell the proceedings were filmed on seven handheld cameras 96 with the band doing some of the filming 97 Following this event the group considered making a television special based on the album 93 Each of the songs was to be represented with a clip directed by a different director 98 but the cost of recording Sgt Pepper made the idea prohibitive to EMI 99 nb 9 For the 15 March session for Within You Without You Studio Two was transformed with Indian carpets placed on the walls dimmed lighting and burning incense to evoke the requisite Indian mood 101 Lennon described the session as a great swinging evening with 400 Indian fellas among the guests 102 The Beatles took an acetate disc of the completed album to the flat of American singer Cass Elliot off King s Road in Chelsea 103 There at six in the morning they played it at full volume with speakers set in open window frames The group s friend and former press agent Derek Taylor remembered that residents of the neighbourhood opened their windows and listened without complaint to what they understood to be unreleased Beatles music 104 Technical aspects Edit One of EMI s Studer J37 four track tape recorders the machines used to record Sgt Pepper In his book on ambient music The Ambient Century From Mahler to Moby Mark Prendergast views Sgt Pepper as the Beatles homage to Stockhausen and Cage adding that its rich tape manipulated sound shows the influence of electronic and experimental composer Pierre Schaeffer 105 Martin recalled that Sgt Pepper grew naturally out of Revolver marking an era of almost continuous technological experimentation 106 The album was recorded using four track equipment since eight track tape recorders were not operational in commercial studios in London until late 1967 107 As with previous Beatles albums the Sgt Pepper recordings made extensive use of reduction mixing a technique in which one to four tracks from one recorder are mixed and dubbed down onto a master four track machine enabling the engineers to give the group a virtual multitrack studio 108 EMI s Studer J37 four track machines were well suited to reduction mixing as the high quality of the recordings that they produced minimised the increased noise associated with the process 109 When recording the orchestra for A Day in the Life Martin synchronised a four track recorder playing the Beatles backing track to another one taping the orchestral overdub The engineer Ken Townsend devised a method for accomplishing this by using a 50 Hz control signal between the two machines 110 Listening to each stage of their recording once they ve done the first couple of tracks it s often hard to see what they re still looking for it sounds so complete Often the final complicated well layered version seems to have drowned the initial simple melody But they know it s not right even if they can t put it into words Their dedication is impressive gnawing away at the same song for stretches of ten hours each 111 Hunter Davies 1968 The production on Strawberry Fields Forever was especially complex involving the innovative splicing of two takes that were recorded in different tempos and pitches 112 113 Emerick remembers that during the recording of Revolver we had got used to being asked to do the impossible and we knew that the word no didn t exist in the Beatles vocabulary 114 A key feature of Sgt Pepper is Martin and Emerick s liberal use of signal processing to shape the sound of the recording which included the application of dynamic range compression reverb and signal limiting 115 Relatively new modular effects units were used such as running voices and instruments through a Leslie speaker 116 Several innovative production techniques feature prominently on the recordings including direct injection pitch control and ambiophonics 35 The bass part on Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band was the first example of the Beatles recording via direct injection DI which Townsend devised as a method for plugging electric guitars directly into the recording console 117 In Kenneth Womack s opinion the use of DI on the album s title track afforded McCartney s bass with richer textures and tonal clarity 117 Some of the mixing employed automatic double tracking ADT a system that uses tape recorders to create a simultaneous doubling of a sound ADT was invented by Townsend during the Revolver sessions in 1966 especially for the Beatles who regularly expressed a desire for a technical alternative to having to record doubled lead vocals 118 Another important effect was varispeeding a technique that the Beatles used extensively on Revolver 116 Martin cites Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds as having the most variations of tape speed on Sgt Pepper During the recording of Lennon s vocals the tape speed was reduced from 50 cycles per second to 45 which produced a higher and thinner sounding track when played back at the normal speed 119 For the album s title track the recording of Starr s drum kit was enhanced by the use of damping and close miking MacDonald credits the new recording technique with creating a three dimensional sound that along with other Beatles innovations engineers in the US would soon adopt as standard practice 120 Artistic experimentation such as the placement of random gibberish in the run out groove became one of the album s defining features 121 Sgt Pepper was the first pop album to be mastered without the momentary gaps that are typically placed between tracks as a point of demarcation 122 It made use of two crossfades that blended songs together giving the impression of a continuous live performance 123 nb 10 Although both stereo and monaural mixes of the album were prepared the Beatles were minimally involved in what they regarded as the less important stereo mix sessions leaving the task to Martin and Emerick 125 Emerick recalls We spent three weeks on the mono mixes and maybe three days on the stereo 126 Most listeners ultimately heard only the stereo version 127 He estimates that the group spent 700 hours on the LP more than 30 times that of the first Beatles album Please Please Me which cost 400 to produce 128 The final cost of Sgt Pepper was approximately 25 000 equivalent to 483 000 in 2021 129 Band dynamics Edit Author Robert Rodriguez writes that while Lennon Harrison and Starr embraced the creative freedom afforded by McCartney s band within a band idea they went along with the concept with varying degrees of enthusiasm 130 Studio personnel recalled that Lennon had never seemed so happy as during the Sgt Pepper sessions 131 In a 1969 interview with Barry Miles however Lennon said he was depressed and that while McCartney was full of confidence he was going through murder 132 Lennon explained his view of the album s concept Paul said Come and see the show I didn t I said I read the news today oh boy 133 Everett describes Starr as having been largely bored during the sessions with the drummer later lamenting The biggest memory I have of Sgt Pepper is I learned to play chess 68 In The Beatles Anthology Harrison said he had little interest in McCartney s concept of a fictitious group and that after his experiences in India my heart was still out there I was losing interest in being fab at that point 134 Harrison added that having enjoyed recording Rubber Soul and Revolver he disliked how the group s approach on Sgt Pepper became an assembly process whereby A lot of the time it ended up with just Paul playing the piano and Ringo keeping the tempo and we weren t allowed to play as a band as much 90 In Lewisohn s opinion Sgt Pepper represents the group s last unified effort displaying a cohesion that deteriorated immediately following the album s completion and entirely disappeared by the release of The Beatles also known as the White Album in 1968 135 Martin recalled in 1987 that throughout the making of Sgt Pepper There was a very good spirit at that time between all the Beatles and ourselves We were all conscious that we were doing something that was great He said that while McCartney effectively led the project and sometimes annoyed his bandmates Paul appreciated John s contribution on Pepper In terms of quantity it wasn t great but in terms of quality it was enormous 136 Songs EditOverview Edit Among musicologists Allan Moore says that Sgt Pepper is composed mainly of rock and pop music while Michael Hannan and Naphtali Wagner both see it as an album of various genres Hannan says it features a broad variety of musical and theatrical genres 137 According to Hannan and Wagner the music incorporates the stylistic influences of rock and roll vaudeville big band piano jazz blues chamber circus music hall avant garde and Western and Indian classical music 138 Wagner feels the album s music reconciles the diametrically opposed aesthetic ideals of classical and psychedelia achieving a psycheclassical synthesis of the two forms 139 Musicologist John Covach describes Sgt Pepper as proto progressive 140 We didn t really shove the LP full of pot and drugs but I mean there was an effect We were more consciously trying to keep it out You wouldn t say I had some acid baby so groovy but there was a feeling that something had happened between Revolver and Sgt Pepper 90 John Lennon 1968 According to author George Case all of the songs on Sgt Pepper were perceived by contemporary listeners as being drug inspired with 1967 marking the pinnacle of LSD s influence on pop music 141 Shortly before the album s release the BBC banned A Day in the Life from British radio 142 because of the phrase I d love to turn you on 143 the BBC stated that it could encourage a permissive attitude towards drug taking 144 Although Lennon and McCartney denied any drug related interpretation of the song at the time McCartney later suggested that the line referred to either drugs or sex 145 The meaning of Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds became the subject of speculation as many believed that the title was code for LSD 146 In Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite the reference to Henry the Horse contains two common slang terms for heroin 147 Fans speculated that Henry the Horse was a drug dealer and Fixing a Hole was a reference to heroin use 148 Others noted lyrics such as I get high from With a Little Help from My Friends take some tea slang for cannabis use from Lovely Rita and digging the weeds from When I m Sixty Four 149 The author Sheila Whiteley attributes Sgt Pepper s underlying philosophy not only to the drug culture but also to metaphysics and the non violent approach of the flower power movement 150 The musicologist Oliver Julien views the album as an embodiment of the social the musical and more generally the cultural changes of the 1960s 151 The album s primary value according to Moore is its ability to capture more vividly than almost anything contemporaneous its own time and place 152 Whiteley agrees crediting the album with provid ing a historical snapshot of England during the run up to the Summer of Love 153 Several scholars have applied a hermeneutic strategy to their analysis of Sgt Pepper s lyrics identifying loss of innocence and the dangers of overindulgence in fantasies or illusions as the most prominent themes 154 Side one Edit Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band Edit The beginning of the first verse of Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band source source track In its opening line It was twenty years ago today the song introduces a historical perspective on pop music 155 delivered in what music journalist Chris Ingham terms McCartney s best Little Richard holler 156 Problems playing this file See media help Sgt Pepper opens with the title track starting with 10 seconds of the combined sounds of a pit orchestra warming up and an audience waiting for a concert creating the illusion of the album as a live performance 157 nb 11 McCartney serves as the master of ceremonies welcoming the audience to a twentieth anniversary reunion concert by Sgt Pepper s band who led by Lennon then sing a message of appreciation for the crowd s warm response 155 Womack says the lyric bridges the fourth wall between the artist and their audience 160 He argues that paradoxically the lyrics exemplify the mindless rhetoric of rock concert banter while mock ing the very notion of a pop album s capacity for engendering authentic interconnection between artist and audience 160 In his view the mixed message ironically serves to distance the group from their fans while simultaneously gesturing toward them as alter egos 160 The song s five bar bridge is filled by a French horn quartet 161 162 Womack credits the recording s use of a brass ensemble with distorted electric guitars as an early example of rock fusion 160 MacDonald agrees describing the track as an overture rather than a song and a fusion of Edwardian variety orchestra and contemporary hard rock 161 nb 12 Hannan describes the track s unorthodox stereo mix as typical of the album with the lead vocal in the right speaker during the verses but in the left during the chorus and middle eight 164 McCartney returns as the master of ceremonies near the end of the song 165 announcing the entrance of an alter ego named Billy Shears 117 With a Little Help from My Friends Edit The title track segues into With a Little Help from My Friends amid the sound of screaming fans recorded during a Beatles concert at the Hollywood Bowl 166 In his role as Billy Shears Starr contributes a baritone lead vocal that Womack credits with imparting an element of earnestness in sharp contrast with the ironic distance of the title track 166 Written by Lennon and McCartney the song s lyrics centre on a theme of questions 167 beginning with Starr asking the audience whether they would leave if he sang out of tune 168 In the call and response style Lennon McCartney and Harrison go on to ask their bandmate questions about the meaning of friendship and true love 166 by the final verse Starr provides unequivocal answers 169 In MacDonald s opinion the lyric is at once communal and personal and meant as a gesture of inclusivity everyone could join in 170 Everett comments that the track s use of a major key double plagal cadence became commonplace in pop music following the release of Sgt Pepper 169 Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds Edit The beginning of Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds source source track The recording s blend of tambura and Lowrey organ creates what Hannan views as one of the album s most unusual sound combination s 171 Womack describes the combination of these instruments and Lennon s vocals as the Beatles most vivid instance of musical timbre 172 Problems playing this file See media help Despite widespread suspicion that the title of Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds contained a hidden reference to LSD Lennon insisted that it was derived from a pastel drawing by his four year old son Julian A hallucinatory chapter from Lewis Carroll s 1871 novel Through the Looking Glass a favourite of Lennon s inspired the song s atmosphere 173 According to MacDonald the lyric explicitly recreates the psychedelic experience 146 The first verse begins with what Womack characterises as an invitation in the form of an imperative through the line Picture yourself in a boat on a river and continues with imaginative imagery including tangerine trees rocking horse people and newspaper taxis 172 The musical backing includes a phrase played by McCartney on a Lowrey organ treated with ADT to sound like a celeste 174 and tambura drone 172 Harrison also contributed a lead guitar part that doubles Lennon s vocal over the verses in the style of a sarangi player accompanying an Indian khyal singer 175 102 The music critic Tim Riley identifies the track as a moment in the album where the material world is completely clouded in the mythical by both text and musical atmosphere 176 Getting Better Edit MacDonald considers Getting Better to contain the most ebullient performance on Sgt Pepper 177 Womack credits the track s driving rock sound with distinguishing it from the album s overtly psychedelic material its lyrics inspire the listener to usurp the past by living well and flourishing in the present 172 He cites it as a strong example of Lennon and McCartney s collaborative songwriting particularly Lennon s addition of the line It can t get no worse 178 which serves as a sarcastic rejoinder to McCartney s chorus It s getting better all the time 179 Lennon s contribution to the lyric also includes a confessional regarding his having been violent with female companions I used to be cruel to my woman 179 In Womack s opinion the song encourages the listener to follow the speaker s example and alter their own angst ridden ways Man I was mean but I m changing my scene and I m doing the best that I can 179 Fixing a Hole Edit Fixing a Hole deals with McCartney s desire to let his mind wander freely and to express his creativity without the burden of self conscious insecurities 180 nb 13 Womack interprets the lyric as the speaker s search for identity among the crowd in particular the quests for consciousness and connection that differentiate individuals from society as a whole 179 MacDonald characterises it as a distracted and introverted track during which McCartney forgoes his usual smooth design in favour of something more preoccupied 182 He cites Harrison s electric guitar solo as serving the track well capturing its mood by conveying detachment 182 Womack notes McCartney s adaptation of the lyric a hole in the roof where the rain leaks in from Elvis Presley s We re Gonna Move 183 She s Leaving Home Edit The Pablo Fanque Circus Royal poster from 1843 that inspired Lennon s lyrics to Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite In Everett s view the lyrics to She s Leaving Home address the problem of alienation between disagreeing peoples particularly those distanced from each other by the generation gap 184 McCartney s narrative details the plight of a young woman escaping the control of her parents and was inspired by a piece about teenage runaways published in the Daily Mail 185 Lennon supplies a supporting vocal that conveys the parents anguish and confusion 186 It is the first track on Sgt Pepper that eschews the use of guitars and drums featuring only a string nonet with a harp 187 nb 14 Music historian Doyle Greene views it as the first of the album s songs to address the crisis of middle class life in the late 1960s and comments on its surprisingly conservative sentiments given McCartney s absorption in the London avant garde scene 191 Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite Edit Lennon adapted the lyrics for Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite from an 1843 poster for Pablo Fanque s circus that he purchased at an antique shop in Kent on the day of filming the promotional film for Strawberry Fields Forever 192 Womack views the track as an effective blending of a print source and music 193 while MacDonald describes it as a spontaneous expression of its author s playful hedonism 194 Tasked by Lennon to evoke a circus atmosphere so vivid that he could smell the sawdust Martin and Emerick created a sound collage comprising randomly assembled recordings of harmoniums harmonicas and calliopes 195 Everett says that the track s use of Edwardian imagery thematically links it with the album s title song 196 Gould also views Mr Kite as a return to the LP s opening motif albeit that of show business and with the focus now on performers and a show in a radically different setting 197 nb 15 Side two Edit Within You Without You Edit We re not trying to outwit the public The whole idea is to try a little bit to lead people into different tastes 199 George Harrison 1967 Harrison s Hindustani classical music inspired Within You Without You reflects his immersion in the teachings of the Hindu Vedas while its musical form and Indian instrumentation such as sitar tabla dilrubas and tamburas recalls the Hindu devotional tradition known as bhajan 200 Harrison recorded the song with London based Indian musicians from the Asian Music Circle none of the other Beatles played on the recording 201 He and Martin then worked on a Western string arrangement that imitated the slides and bends typical of Indian music 202 203 The song s pitch is derived from the eastern Khamaj scale which is akin to the Mixolydian mode in the West 203 MacDonald regards Within You Without You as the most distant departure from the staple Beatles sound in their discography and a work that represents the conscience of the LP through the lyrics rejection of Western materialism 204 Womack calls it quite arguably the album s ethical soul and views the line With our love we could save the world as a concise reflection of the Beatles idealism that soon inspired the Summer of Love 205 The track ends with a burst of laughter gleaned from a tape in the EMI archive 124 some listeners interpreted this as a mockery of the song but Harrison explained It s a release after five minutes of sad music You were supposed to hear the audience anyway as they listen to Sergeant Pepper s Show That was the style of the album 206 When I m Sixty Four Edit When I m Sixty Four source source Hannan writes The rich timbres of the clarinets give the mix a fuller fatter sound than many of the other tracks on the album 207 Problems playing this file See media help MacDonald characterises McCartney s When I m Sixty Four as a song aimed chiefly at parents borrowing heavily from the English music hall style of George Formby while invoking images of the illustrator Donald McGill s seaside postcards 208 Its sparse arrangement includes clarinets chimes and piano 209 Moore views the song as a synthesis of ragtime and pop adding that its position following Within You Without You a blend of Indian classical music and pop demonstrates the diversity of the album s material 210 He says the music hall atmosphere is reinforced by McCartney s vocal delivery and the recording s use of chromaticism a harmonic pattern that can be traced to Scott Joplin s The Ragtime Dance and The Blue Danube by Johann Strauss 211 Varispeeding was used on the track raising its pitch by a semitone in an attempt to make McCartney sound younger 212 Everett comments that the lyric s protagonist is sometimes associated with the Lonely Hearts Club Band but in his opinion the song is thematically unconnected to the others on the album 213 Lovely Rita Edit Womack describes Lovely Rita as a work of full tilt psychedelia that contrasts sharply with the preceding track 214 Citing McCartney s recollection that he drew inspiration from learning that the American term for a female traffic warden was a meter maid Gould deems it a celebration of an encounter that evokes Swinging London and the contemporaneous chic for military style uniforms 215 MacDonald regards the song as a satire on authority that is imbued with an exuberant interest in life that lifts the spirits dispersing self absorption 216 The arrangement includes a quartet of comb and paper kazoos 216 a piano solo by Martin and a coda in which the Beatles indulge in panting groaning and other vocalised sounds 217 In Gould s view the track represents the show stopper in the Pepper Band s repertoire a funny sexy extroverted song that comes closer to the spirit of rock n roll than anything else on the album 218 Good Morning Good Morning Edit Lennon was inspired to write Good Morning Good Morning after watching a television commercial for Kellogg s Corn Flakes the jingle from which he adapted for the song s refrain The track uses the bluesy Mixolydian mode in A which Everett credits with perfectly express ing Lennon s grievance against complacency 219 According to Greene the song contrasts sharply with She s Leaving Home by providing the more avant garde subversive study of suburban life 220 The time signature varies across 5 4 3 4 and 4 4 221 while the arrangement includes a horn section comprising members of Sounds Inc 222 MacDonald highlights the rollicking brass score Starr s drumming and McCartney s coruscating pseudo Indian guitar solo among the elements that convey a sense of aggression on a track he deems a disgusted canter through the muck mayhem and mundanity of the human farmyard 223 A series of animal noises appear during the fade out that are sequenced at Lennon s request so that each successive animal could conceivably scare or devour the preceding one 224 The sound of a chicken clucking overlaps with a stray guitar note at the start of the next track 225 creating a seamless transition between the two songs 226 Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band Reprise Edit Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band Reprise follows as a segue to the album s finale The hard rocking song was written after Neil Aspinall the Beatles road manager suggested that since Sgt Pepper opened the album the fictional band should make an appearance near the end 227 Sung by all four Beatles 228 the reprise omits the brass section from the title track and has a faster tempo 229 With Harrison on lead guitar it serves as a rare example from the Sgt Pepper sessions where the group taped a basic track live with their usual stage instrumentation 230 MacDonald finds the Beatles excitement tangibly translated on the recording 227 which is again augmented with ambient crowd noise 230 A Day in the Life Edit The dream sequence from A Day in the Life source source track Womack describes the sarcastic brass retort that ends the sequence as the most decisive moment on Sgt Pepper 231 Problems playing this file See media help The last chord of the Sgt Pepper reprise segues amid audience applause to acoustic guitar strumming and the start of what Moore calls one of the most harrowing songs ever written 232 A Day in the Life consists of four verses by Lennon a bridge two aleatoric orchestral crescendos and an interpolated middle part written and sung by McCartney The first crescendo serves as a segue between the third verse and the middle part leading to a bridge known as the dream sequence 232 Lennon drew inspiration for the lyrics from a Daily Mail report on potholes in the Lancashire town of Blackburn and an article in the same newspaper relating to the death of Beatles friend and Guinness heir Tara Browne 233 234 According to Martin Lennon and McCartney were equally responsible for the decision to use an orchestra 235 Martin said that Lennon requested a tremendous build up from nothing up to something absolutely like the end of the world 236 while McCartney realised this idea by drawing inspiration from Cage and Stockhausen 237 Womack describes Starr s performance as one of his most inventive drum parts on record 238 The thunderous piano chord that concludes the track and the album was produced by recording Lennon Starr McCartney and Evans simultaneously sounding an E major chord on three separate pianos Martin then augmented the sound with a harmonium 239 Riley characterises the song as a postlude to the Pepper fantasy that sets all the other songs in perspective while shattering the illusion of Pepperland by introducing the parallel universe of everyday life 240 MacDonald describes the track as a song not of disillusionment with life itself but of disenchantment with the limits of mundane perception 234 As A Day in the Life ends a 15 kilohertz high frequency tone is heard it was added at Lennon s suggestion with the intention that it would annoy dogs 241 nb 16 This is followed by the sounds of backwards laughter and random gibberish that were pressed into the record s concentric run out groove which loops back into itself endlessly on any record player not equipped with an automatic needle return Lennon can be heard saying Been so high followed by McCartney s response Never could be any other way 243 nb 17 Concept Edit According to Womack with Sgt Pepper s opening song the Beatles manufacture an artificial textual space in which to stage their art 117 The reprise of the title song appears on side two just before the climactic A Day in the Life creating a framing device 227 In Lennon and Starr s view only the first two songs and the reprise are conceptually connected 25 In a 1980 interview Lennon stated that his compositions had nothing to do with the Sgt Pepper concept adding Sgt Pepper is called the first concept album but it doesn t go anywhere it works because we said it worked 246 In MacFarlane s view the Beatles chose to employ an overarching thematic concept in an apparent effort to unify individual tracks 247 Everett contends that the album s musical unity results from motivic relationships between key areas particularly involving C E and G 243 Moore argues that the recording s use of common harmonic patterns and falling melodies contributes to its overall cohesiveness which he describes as narrative unity but not necessarily conceptual unity 248 MacFarlane agrees suggesting that with the exception of the reprise the album lacks the melodic and harmonic continuity that is consistent with cyclic form 249 In a 1995 interview McCartney recalled that the Liverpool childhood theme behind the first three songs recorded during the Sgt Pepper sessions was never formalised as an album wide concept but he said that it served as a device or underlying theme throughout the project 36 MacDonald identifies allusions to the Beatles upbringing throughout Sgt Pepper that are too persuasive to ignore These include evocations of the postwar Northern music hall tradition references to Northern industrial towns and Liverpool schooldays Lewis Carroll inspired imagery acknowledging Lennon s favourite childhood reading the use of brass instrumentation in the style of park bandstand performances familiar to McCartney through his visits to Sefton Park 250 and the album cover s flower arrangement akin to a floral clock 251 Norman partly agrees he says that In many ways the album carried on the childhood and Liverpool theme with its circus and fairground effects its pervading atmosphere of the traditional northern music hall that was in both its main creators McCartney and Lennon s blood 252 nb 18 Packaging EditFront cover Edit Further information List of images on the cover of Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band Pop artists Peter Blake and Jann Haworth designed the album cover for Sgt Pepper 253 Blake recalled of the concept I offered the idea that if they had just played a concert in the park the cover could be a photograph of the group just after the concert with the crowd who had just watched the concert watching them He added If we did this by using cardboard cut outs it could be a magical crowd of whomever they wanted 254 According to McCartney he himself provided the ink drawing on which Blake and Haworth based the design 255 nb 19 The cover was art directed by Robert Fraser and photographed by Michael Cooper 253 The front of the LP includes a colourful collage featuring the Beatles in costume as Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band standing with a group of life sized cardboard cut outs of famous people 257 Each of the Beatles sports a heavy moustache after Harrison had first grown one as a disguise during his visit to India 15 The moustaches reflected the growing influence of hippie style trends while the group s clothing in Gould s description spoofed the vogue in Britain for military fashions 258 The centre of the cover depicts the Beatles standing behind a bass drum on which fairground artist Joe Ephgrave painted the words of the album s title In front of the drum is an arrangement of flowers that spell out Beatles 259 The group are dressed in satin day glo coloured military style uniforms that were manufactured by the London theatrical costumer M Berman Ltd Next to the Beatles are wax sculptures of the band members in their suits and moptop haircuts from the Beatlemania era borrowed from Madame Tussauds 260 Amid the greenery are figurines of the Eastern deities Buddha and Lakshmi 261 The cover collage includes 57 photographs and nine waxworks 262 Author Ian Inglis views the tableau as a guidebook to the cultural topography of the decade that conveyed the increasing democratisation of society whereby traditional barriers between high and low culture were being eroded 262 while Case cites it as the most explicit demonstration of pop culture s continuity with the avant gardes of yesteryear 263 nb 20 The final grouping included Stockhausen and Carroll along with singers such as Bob Dylan and Bobby Breen film stars Marlon Brando Tyrone Power Tony Curtis Marlene Dietrich Mae West and Marilyn Monroe artist Aubrey Beardsley boxer Sonny Liston and footballer Albert Stubbins Also included were comedians Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy writers H G Wells Oscar Wilde and Dylan Thomas and the philosophers and scientists Karl Marx Albert Einstein Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung 262 Harrison chose the Self Realization Fellowship gurus Mahavatar Babaji Lahiri Mahasaya Sri Yukteswar and Paramahansa Yogananda 264 The Rolling Stones are represented by a doll wearing a shirt emblazoned with a message of welcome to the band 263 265 Fearing controversy EMI rejected Lennon s request for images of Adolf Hitler and Jesus Christ and Harrison s for Mahatma Gandhi 70 When McCartney was asked why the Beatles did not include Elvis Presley among the musical artists he replied Elvis was too important and too far above the rest even to mention 266 267 Starr was the only Beatle who offered no suggestions for the collage telling Blake Whatever the others say is fine by me 268 The final cost for the cover art was nearly 3 000 equivalent to 58 000 in 2021 an extravagant sum for a time when album covers would typically cost around 50 equivalent to 1 000 in 2021 269 Back cover gatefold and cut outs Edit Sgt Pepper s inner gatefold McCartney in blue wears a badge on his left sleeve that bears the initials O P P McCartney acquired the badge when the Beatles were on tour in Canada 266 the initials stand for Ontario Provincial Police 270 nb 21 The 30 March 1967 photo session with Cooper also produced the back cover and the inside gatefold which Inglis describes as conveying an obvious and immediate warmth which distances it from the sterility and artifice typical of such images 259 McCartney recalled the inner gatefold image as an example of the Beatles interest in eye messages adding So with Michael Cooper s inside photo we all said Now look into this camera and really say I love you Really try and feel love really give love through this And if you look at it you ll see the big effort from the eyes 273 In Lennon s description Cooper s photos of the band showed two people who are flying on drugs and two who aren t 266 The album s lyrics were printed in full on the back cover the first time this had been done on a rock LP 274 The record s inner sleeve featured artwork by the Dutch design team the Fool that eschewed for the first time the standard white paper in favour of an abstract pattern of waves of maroon red pink and white 259 nb 22 Included as a bonus gift was a sheet of cardboard cut outs designed by Blake and Haworth These consisted of a postcard sized portrait of Sgt Pepper probably based on a photograph of British Army officer James Melville Babington 276 but also noted as being similar to a statue from Lennon s house that was used on the front cover a fake moustache two sets of sergeant stripes two lapel badges and a stand up cut out of the band in their satin uniforms 269 Moore writes that the inclusion of these items helped fans pretend to be in the band 277 Release EditRadio previews and launch party Edit The album was previewed on the pirate radio station Radio London on 12 May and officially on the BBC Light Programme s show Where It s At by Kenny Everett on 20 May 278 Everett played the entire album apart from A Day in the Life 142 The day before Everett s broadcast Epstein hosted a launch party for music journalists and disc jockeys at his house in Belgravia in central London 279 280 The event was a new initiative in pop promotion and furthered the significance of the album s release 281 Melody Maker s reporter described it as the first listen in and typical of the Beatles penchant for innovation 282 The Beatles at the Sgt Pepper launch party held at Brian Epstein s house on 19 May 1967 The party marked the band s first group interaction with the press in close to a year 283 284 Norrie Drummond of the NME wrote that they had been virtually incommunicado over that time leading a national newspaper to complain that the band were contemplative secretive and exclusive 284 Some of the journalists present were shocked by the Beatles appearance particularly that of Lennon and Harrison 285 as the band members bohemian attire contrasted sharply with their former image 283 Music journalist Ray Coleman recalled that Lennon looked haggard old ill and clearly under the influence of drugs 286 Biographer Howard Sounes likens the Beatles presence to a gathering of the British royal family and highlights a photo from the event that shows Lennon shaking McCartney s hand in an exaggeratedly congratulatory way throwing his head back in sarcastic laughter 287 On 26 May Sgt Pepper was given a rush release in the UK ahead of the scheduled date of 1 June 288 The band s eighth LP 289 it was the first Beatles album where the track listings were exactly the same for the UK and US versions 81 The US release took place on 2 June 288 Capitol Records advertising for the album emphasised that the Beatles and Sgt Pepper s band were one and the same 290 Public reaction Edit Sgt Pepper was widely perceived by listeners as the soundtrack to the Summer of Love 291 292 during a year that author Peter Lavezzoli calls a watershed moment in the West when the search for higher consciousness and an alternative world view had reached critical mass 293 Rolling Stone magazine s Langdon Winner recalled The closest Western Civilization has come to unity since the Congress of Vienna in 1815 was the week the Sgt Pepper album was released In every city in Europe and America the radio stations played it and everyone listened For a brief while the irreparable fragmented consciousness of the West was unified at least in the minds of the young 294 According to Riley the album drew people together through the common experience of pop on a larger scale than ever before 295 In MacDonald s description an almost religious awe surrounded the LP he says that its impact was cross generational as Young and old alike were entranced and era defining in that the psychic shiver it inspired across the world was nothing less than a cinematic dissolve from one Zeitgeist to another In his view Sgt Pepper conveyed the psychedelic experience so effectively to listeners unfamiliar with hallucinogenic drugs that If such a thing as a cultural contact high is possible it happened here 296 nb 23 Music journalist Mark Ellen a teenager in 1967 recalls listening to part of the album at a friend s house and then hearing the rest playing at the next house he visited as if the record was emanating communally from one giant Dansette He says the most remarkable thing was its acceptance by adults who had turned against the Beatles when they became gaunt and enigmatic and how the group recast as polished masters of ceremony were now the very family favourites they d sought to satirise 297 nb 24 Writing in his book Electric Shock Peter Doggett describes Sgt Pepper as the biggest pop happening to take place between the Beatles debut on American television in February 1964 and Lennon s murder in December 1980 299 while Norman writes A whole generation still used to happy landmarks through life would always remember exactly when and where they first played it 300 The album s impact was felt at the Monterey International Pop Festival the second event in the Summer of Love organised by Taylor and held over 16 18 June in county fairgrounds south of San Francisco 301 302 Sgt Pepper was played in kiosks and stands there and festival staff wore badges carrying Lennon s lyric A splendid time is guaranteed for all 43 American radio stations interrupted their regular scheduling playing the album virtually non stop often from start to finish 303 Emphasising its identity as a self contained work none of the songs were issued as singles at the time 304 305 or available on spin off EPs 306 Instead the Beatles released All You Need Is Love as a single in July after performing the song on the Our World satellite broadcast on 25 June 307 before an audience estimated at 400 million 308 According to sociomusicologist Simon Frith the international broadcast served to confirm the Beatles evangelical role amid the public s embrace of Sgt Pepper 309 In the UK Our World also quelled the furore that followed McCartney s repeated admission in mid June that he had taken LSD 310 In Norman s description this admission was indicative of how invulnerable McCartney felt after Sgt Pepper 311 it made the band s drug taking public knowledge 312 and confirmed the link between the album and drugs 313 nb 25 Commercial performance Edit Sgt Pepper topped the Record Retailer albums chart now the UK Albums Chart for 23 consecutive weeks from 10 June with a further four weeks at number one in the period through to February 1968 317 The record sold 250 000 copies in the UK during its first seven days on sale there 288 nb 26 The album held the number one position on the Billboard Top LPs chart in the US for 15 weeks from 1 July to 13 October 1967 and remained in the top 200 for 113 consecutive weeks 321 It also topped charts in many other countries 322 With 2 5 million copies sold within three months of its release 323 Sgt Pepper s initial commercial success exceeded that of all previous Beatles albums 148 In the UK it was the best selling album of 1967 324 and of the decade 325 According to figures published in 2009 by former Capitol executive David Kronemyer further to estimates he gave in MuseWire magazine 326 the album had sold 2 360 423 copies in the US by 31 December 1967 and 3 372 581 copies by the end of the decade 327 Contemporary critical reception EditSgt Pepper s arrival in late spring 1967 came at a most opportune moment in Western cultural history mainstream journalism had at last warmed to the idea that the rock world could produce a lasting masterpiece that transcended the genre s lowly origins while a new and legitimate niche called rock journalism was working up its own head of steam E veryone wanted the Beatles to succeed and to lead The wind was at their back and they knew it 328 Beatles biographer Robert Rodriguez 2012 The release of Sgt Pepper coincided with a period when with the advent of dedicated rock criticism commentators sought to recognise artistry in pop music particularly in the Beatles work and identify albums as refined artistic statements 329 330 In America this approach had been heightened by the Strawberry Fields Forever Penny Lane single 331 and was also exemplified by Leonard Bernstein s television program Inside Pop The Rock Revolution broadcast by CBS in April 1967 329 Following the release of the Beatles single in author Bernard Gendron s description a discursive frenzy ensued as Time Newsweek and other publications from the cultural mainstream increasingly voiced their ecstatic approbation toward the Beatles 331 The vast majority of contemporary reviews of Sgt Pepper were positive with the album receiving widespread critical acclaim 332 Schaffner said that the consensus was aptly summed up by Tom Phillips in The Village Voice when he called the LP the most ambitious and most successful record album ever issued 333 Among Britain s pop press Peter Jones of Record Mirror said the album was clever and brilliant from raucous to poignant and back again while Disc and Music Echo s reviewer called it a beautiful and potent record unique clever and stunning 334 In The Times William Mann described Sgt Pepper as a pop music master class 335 and commented that so considerable were its musical advances the only track that would have been conceivable in pop songs five years ago was With a Little Help from My Friends 336 Having been among the first British critics to fully appreciate Revolver 337 Peter Clayton of Gramophone magazine said that the new album was like nearly everything the Beatles do bizarre wonderful perverse beautiful exciting provocative exasperating compassionate and mocking He found plenty of electronic gimmickry on the record before concluding but that isn t the heart of the thing It s the combination of imagination cheek and skill that make this such a rewarding LP 338 Wilfrid Mellers in his review for New Statesman praised the album s elevation of pop music to the level of fine art 335 while Kenneth Tynan The Times theatre critic said it represented a decisive moment in the history of Western civilisation 339 Newsweek s Jack Kroll called Sgt Pepper a masterpiece and compared its lyrics with literary works by Edith Sitwell Harold Pinter and T S Eliot particularly A Day in the Life which he likened to Eliot s The Waste Land 340 The New Yorker paired the Beatles with Duke Ellington as artists who operated in that special territory where entertainment slips into art 341 342 One of the few well known American rock critics at the time and another early champion of Revolver Richard Goldstein wrote a scathing review in The New York Times 343 He characterised Sgt Pepper as a spoiled child and an album of special effects dazzling but ultimately fraudulent 344 345 and was critical of the Beatles for sacrificing their authenticity to become cloistered composers 346 Although he admired A Day in the Life comparing it to a work by Wagner 347 Goldstein said that the songs lacked lyrical substance such that tone overtakes meaning an aesthetic he blamed on posturing and put on in the form of production effects such as echo and reverb 348 As a near lone voice of dissent he was widely castigated for his views 349 nb 27 Four days later The Village Voice where Goldstein had become a celebrated columnist since 1966 reacted to the hornet s nest of complaints by publishing Phillips highly favourable review 351 According to Schaffner Goldstein was kept busy for months justifying his opinions 349 which included writing a defence of his review for the Voice in July 352 nb 28 Among the commentators who responded to Goldstein s critique 354 composer Ned Rorem writing in The New York Review of Books credited the Beatles with possessing a magic of genius akin to Mozart and characterised Sgt Pepper as a harbinger of a golden Renaissance of Song 333 Time quoted musicologists and avant garde composers who equated the standard of the Beatles songwriting to Schubert and Schumann and located the band s work to electronic music 355 the magazine concluded that the album was a historic departure in the progress of music any music 148 Literary critic Richard Poirier wrote a laudatory appreciation of the Beatles in the journal Partisan Review 356 and said that listening to the Sgt Pepper album one thinks not simply of the history of popular music but the history of this century 339 In his December 1967 column for Esquire Robert Christgau described Sgt Pepper as a consolidation more intricate than Revolver but not more substantial He suggested that Goldstein had fallen victim to overanticipation identifying his primary error as allow ing all the filters and reverbs and orchestral effects and overdubs to deafen him to the stuff underneath which was pretty nice 357 Sociocultural influence EditContemporary youth and counterculture Edit See also It Was Twenty Years Ago Today film In the wake of Sgt Pepper the underground and mainstream press widely publicised the Beatles as leaders of youth culture as well as lifestyle revolutionaries 358 In Moore s description the album seems to have spoken in a way no other has for its generation 359 An educator referenced in a July 1967 New York Times article was reported to have said on the topic of music studies and its relevance to the day s youth If you want to know what youths are thinking and feeling you cannot find anyone who speaks for them or to them more clearly than the Beatles 360 A hippie flower power bus pictured in 2004 Sgt Pepper conveyed the flower power ideology of 1967 361 Sgt Pepper was the focus of much celebration by the counterculture 362 American Beat poet Allen Ginsberg said of the album After the apocalypse of Hitler and the apocalypse of the Bomb there was here an exclamation of joy the rediscovery of joy and what it is to be alive 363 The American psychologist and counterculture figure Timothy Leary labelled the Beatles avatars of the new world order 364 and said that the LP gave a voice to the feeling that the old ways were over by stressing the need for cultural change based on a peaceful agenda 153 nb 29 According to author Michael Frontani the Beatles legitimiz ed the lifestyle of the counterculture just as they did popular music and formed the basis of Jann Wenner s scope on these issues when launching Rolling Stone magazine in late 1967 366 Further to Lennon wearing an Afghan sheepskin coat at the album launch party Afghans became a popular garment among hippies and Westerners increasingly sought out the coats on the hippie trail in Afghanistan 367 McCartney s LSD admission formalised the link between rock music and drugs and attracted scorn from American religious leaders and conservatives 368 Vice president Spiro Agnew contended that the friends referred to in With a Little Help from My Friends were assorted drugs As part of an escalating national debate that triggered an investigation by the US Congress 369 he launched a campaign in 1970 370 to address the issue of American youth being brainwashed into taking drugs through the music of the Beatles and other rock artists 371 In the UK according to historian David Simonelli the album s obvious drug allusions inspired a hierarchy within the youth movement for the first time based on listeners ability to get psychedelia and align with the elite notion of Romantic artistry 372 nb 30 Harrison was eager to separate the message of Within You Without You from the LSD experience telling an interviewer It s nothing to do with pills It s just in your own head the realisation 202 The album resonated with Vietnam War protestors at the 1967 March on the Pentagon The Beatles presentation as Sgt Pepper s band resonated at a time when many young people in the UK and the US were seeking to redefine their own identity and were drawn to communities that espoused the transformational power of mind altering drugs 79 In the Haight Ashbury district of San Francisco the recognised centre of the counterculture 373 Sgt Pepper was viewed as a code for life according to music journalist Alan Clayson with street people such as the Merry Band of Pranksters offering Beatle readings 374 American social activist Abbie Hoffman credited the album as his inspiration for staging the attempted levitation of the Pentagon during the Mobe s anti Vietnam War rally in October 1967 375 The Byrds David Crosby later expressed surprise that by 1970 the album s powerful sentiments had not been enough to stop the Vietnam War 376 Sgt Pepper informed Frank Zappa s parody of the counterculture and flower power on the Mothers of Invention s 1968 album We re Only in It for the Money 377 378 By 1968 according to music critic Greil Marcus Sgt Pepper appeared shallow against the emotional backdrop of the political and social upheavals of American life 379 Simon Frith in his overview of 1967 for The History of Rock said that Sgt Pepper defined the year by conveying the optimism and sense of empowerment at the centre of the youth movement He added that the Velvet Underground s The Velvet Underground amp Nico an album that contrasted sharply with the Beatles message by offer ing no escape became more relevant in a cultural climate typified by the Sex Pistols the new political aggression the rioting in the streets during the 1970s 309 In a 1987 review for Q magazine Charles Shaar Murray asserted that Sgt Pepper remains a central pillar of the mythology and iconography of the late 60s 380 while Colin Larkin states in his 1989 Encyclopedia of Popular Music it turned out to be no mere pop album but a cultural icon embracing the constituent elements of the 60s youth culture pop art garish fashion drugs instant mysticism and freedom from parental control 381 Cultural legitimisation of popular music Edit In The Oxford Encyclopedia of British Literature Kevin Dettmar writes that Sgt Pepper achieved a combination of popular success and critical acclaim unequaled in twentieth century art never before had an aesthetic and technical masterpiece enjoyed such popularity 382 Through the level of attention it received from the rock press and more culturally elite publications the album achieved full cultural legitimisation for pop music and recognition for the medium as a genuine art form 335 383 Riley says that pop had been due this accreditation at least as early as A Hard Day s Night in 1964 384 He adds that the timing of the album s release and its reception ensured that Sgt Pepper has attained the kind of populist adoration that renowned works often assume regardless of their larger significance it s the Beatles Mona Lisa 385 At the 10th Annual Grammy Awards in March 1968 Sgt Pepper won awards in four categories 386 Album of the Year Best Contemporary Album Best Engineered Recording Non Classical and Best Album Cover Graphic Arts 387 Its win in the Album of the Year category marked the first time that a rock LP had received this honour 388 389 Among the recognised composers who helped legitimise the Beatles as serious musicians at the time were Luciano Berio Aaron Copland John Cage Ned Rorem and Leonard Bernstein 390 According to Rodriguez an element of exaggeration accompanied some of the acclaim for Sgt Pepper with particularly effusive approbation coming from Rorem Bernstein and Tynan as if every critic was seeking to outdo the other for the most lavish embrace of the Beatles new direction 391 nb 31 In Gendron s view the cultural approbation represented American highbrow commentators Rorem and Poirier looking to establish themselves over their low middlebrow equivalent after Time and Newsweek had led the way in recognising the Beatles artistry and over the new discipline of rock criticism 393 Gendron describes the discourse as one whereby during a period that lasted for six months highbrow composers and musicologists jostl ed to pen the definitive effusive appraisal of the Beatles 394 nb 32 Aside from the attention afforded the album in literary and scholarly journals the American jazz magazines Down Beat and Jazz both began to cover rock music for the first time with the latter changing its name to Jazz amp Pop as a result 398 In addition following Sgt Pepper established American publications such as Vogue Playboy and the San Francisco Chronicle started discussing rock as art in terms usually reserved for jazz criticism 399 Writing for Rolling Stone in 1969 Michael Lydon said that reviewers had had to invent new criticism to match pop s musical advances since Writing had to be an appropriate response to the music in writing about say Sgt Pepper you had to try to write something as good as Sgt Pepper Because of course what made that record beautiful was the beautiful response it created in you if your written response was true to your listening response the writing would stand on its own as a creation on par with the record 400 Through its acceptance by serious composers according to Schaffner Sgt Pepper satisfied the ambitions of a staid middle age American audience keen to be seen as in tune with young people s tastes and every major rock LP was subsequently given the same level of critical analysis 333 In 1977 the LP won Best British Album at the inaugural Brit Awards 401 held by the BPI to celebrate the best British music of the last 25 years as part of Elizabeth II s Silver Jubilee 402 When EMI issued the Beatles catalogue on CD in 1987 Sgt Pepper was the only album afforded a dedicated release 403 EMI marketed it as the most important record ever released on compact disc 404 Development of popular music Edit Industry and market changes Edit Because of Sgt Pepper people then started thinking that you could spend a year making an album and they began to consider an album as a sound composition and not just a musical composition The idea was gradually forming of a record being a performance in its own right and not just a reproduction of a live performance 405 Producer and EMI engineer Alan Parsons Julien describes Sgt Pepper as a masterpiece of British psychedelia and says that it represents the epitome of the transformation of the recording studio into a compositional tool marking the moment when popular music entered the era of phonographic composition 406 Many acts copied the album s psychedelic sounds 407 and imitated its production techniques resulting in a rapid expansion of the producer s role 408 In this regard Lennon and McCartney complained that Martin had received too much attention for his part in the album s creation 409 so beginning a feeling of resentment by the Beatles towards their longtime producer 410 nb 33 In 1987 Anthony DeCurtis of Rolling Stone described Sgt Pepper as the album that revolutionized rock and roll 411 while music journalists Andy Greene and Scott Plagenhoef credit it with marking the beginning of the album era 412 413 For several years following its release straightforward rock and roll was supplanted by a growing interest in extended form and for the first time in the history of the music industry sales of albums outpaced those of singles 414 In Gould s description Sgt Pepper was the catalyst for an explosion of mass enthusiasm for album formatted rock that would revolutionize both the aesthetics and the economics of the record business in ways that far out stripped the earlier pop explosions triggered by the Elvis phenomenon of 1956 and the Beatlemania phenomenon of 1963 415 The music industry swiftly grew into a billion dollar enterprise although record company executives were blindsided by the appeal of new acts who defied established formulas 416 Music critic Greg Kot said that Sgt Pepper introduced a template not only for creating album oriented rock but also for consuming it with listeners no longer twisting the night away to an assortment of three minute singles but losing themselves in a succession of 20 minute album sides taking a journey led by the artist 417 In Moore s view the album was pivotal in heralding the realignment of rock from its working class roots to its subsequent place on the college circuit as students increasingly embraced the genre and record companies launched labels targeted towards this new market 418 As another result of Sgt Pepper US record companies no longer altered the content of albums by major British acts such as the Rolling Stones the Kinks and Donovan and their LPs were released in the artists intended configuration 419 Albums and artistry Edit According to Simonelli Sgt Pepper established the standard for rock musicians particularly British acts to strive towards in their self identification as artists rather than pop stars whereby as in the Romantic tradition creative vision dominated at the expense of all commercial concerns 420 In the US the album paved the way for British groups such as Pink Floyd and the Incredible String Band whose work echoed the eclectic mystical and escapist qualities of Sgt Pepper 416 Following the Beatles example many acts spent months in the studio creating their albums focused on an artistic aesthetic and in the hope of winning critical approval 407 Among the many LPs influenced by Sgt Pepper were Jefferson Airplane s After Bathing at Baxter s the Rolling Stones Their Satanic Majesties Request 322 and the Moody Blues Days of Future Passed all released in 1967 421 and the Zombies Odessey and Oracle the Small Faces Ogdens Nut Gone Flake 422 and the Pretty Things S F Sorrow all issued the following year 423 All rock albums were subsequently measured against Sgt Pepper 407 Discussing Their Satanic Majesties Request Wenner referred to the post Sgt Pepper trap of trying to put out a progressive significant and different album as revolutionary as the Beatles But it couldn t be done because only the Beatles can put out an album by the Beatles 424 The Guardian viewed the album s effect on Carla Bley as one of the 50 key events in the history of dance music 425 Bley spent four years crafting her musical response to Sgt Pepper 423 the 1971 avant jazz triple album Escalator Over the Hill 426 which combined rock Indo jazz fusion and chamber jazz 425 Roger Waters cited Sgt Pepper as his influence when Pink Floyd created their 1973 album The Dark Side of the Moon saying I learned from Lennon McCartney and Harrison that it was OK for us to write about our lives and express what we felt More than any other record it gave me and my generation permission to branch out and do whatever we wanted 423 nb 34 Over subsequent decades musical acts referred to their major artistic work as our Sgt Pepper 427 In this regard Mojo magazine recognises Prince s Around the World in a Day 1985 Tears for Fears The Seeds of Love 1989 Smashing Pumpkins Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness 1995 Radiohead s OK Computer 1997 Oasis Be Here Now 1997 and the Flaming Lips The Soft Bulletin 1999 as albums that for better or for worse would not have existed without Sgt Pepper 428 Writing for Mojo in 2007 John Harris said that the album s influence resonates in the identity games of Gnarls Barkley in the ambitious song cycle of Green Day s 2004 album American Idiot in the respect afforded adventurous musicians such as Damon Albarn and Wayne Coyne and particularly in the audience s expectation that foremost artists will progress and perhaps ascend to a watershed point at which influence experience and ambition cohere into something that just might blow our minds 427 Stylistic developments Edit Sgt Pepper was highly influential on bands in the US acid rock or psychedelic rock scene 429 Lavezzoli views it as a key factor in 1967 s standing as the annus mirabilis for Indian classical music s acceptance in the West with the genre having been fully absorbed into psychedelic music 430 nb 35 Sgt Pepper is commonly recognised as having originated progressive rock due to the album s self conscious lyrics its studio experimentation and its efforts to expand the barriers of conventional three minute tracks 432 In addition to influencing Pink Floyd records such as Atom Heart Mother it was a source of inspiration for Robert Fripp when he formed King Crimson 426 The band s 1969 debut In the Court of the Crimson King was intended as a homage to Sgt Pepper 423 MacFarlane writes that despite concerns regarding its thematic unity Sgt Pepper is widely regarded as the first true concept album in popular music 247 According to author Martina Elicker despite earlier examples it was Sgt Pepper that familiarised critics and listeners with the notion of a concept and unified structure underlying a pop album thus originating the term concept album 433 Further to Sgt Pepper musicians increasingly explored literary and sociological themes in their concept albums and adopted its anti establishment sentiments 434 It also inspired rock opera works such as the Who s double album Tommy and the musical Jesus Christ Superstar 423 Author Carys Wyn Jones locates Pet Sounds and Sgt Pepper as the beginning of art rock 435 Doyle Greene says that Sgt Pepper provides a crucial locus in the assemblage of popular music and avant garde experimental music notwithstanding the Beatles presentation of the latter within formal song structures 436 He also says that although the band are usually viewed as modernists the album can be heard as a crucial postmodernist moment through its incorporation of self conscious artistry irony and pastiche and arguably marked rock music s entry into postmodernism as opposed to high modernism 437 During the 1970s glam rock acts co opted the Beatles use of alter ego personas 438 including David Bowie when he adopted the guise of Ziggy Stardust 439 Graphic design Edit Inglis states that almost every account of the significance of Sgt Pepper emphasises the cover s unprecedented correspondence between music and art time and space 440 The cover helped to elevate album art as a respected topic for critical analysis whereby the structures and cultures of popular music could henceforth justify intellectual discourse in a way that before Sgt Pepper would have seemed like fanciful conceit 441 He writes The Sgt Pepper cover has been regarded as groundbreaking in its visual and aesthetic properties congratulated for its innovative and imaginative design credited with providing an early impetus for the expansion of the graphic design industry into popular music and perceived as largely responsible for the connections between art and pop to be made explicit 441 Sgt Pepper contributed to the popular trend for military style fashions as adopted by London s boutique shops 442 Following the LP s release rock acts afforded cover art greater consideration and increasingly sought to create a thematic link between their album artwork and the record s musical statements 407 nb 36 Riley describes the cover as one of the best known works that pop art ever produced 446 while Norman calls it the most famous album cover of all time 447 The Beatles 1968 self titled double LP became known as the White Album for its plain white sleeve 448 which the band chose as a contrast with the wave of psychedelic imagery and album covers inspired by Sgt Pepper 449 In the late 1990s the BBC included the Sgt Pepper cover in its list of British masterpieces of twentieth century art and design placing it ahead of the red telephone box Mary Quant s miniskirt and the Mini motorcar 269 Retrospective appraisal EditProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic 450 The Daily Telegraph 451 Encyclopedia of Popular Music 452 MusicHound Rock5 5 453 Paste89 100 454 Pitchfork10 10 413 Q 380 The Rolling Stone Album Guide 455 Sputnikmusic5 5 456 The Village VoiceA 457 Although few critics initially agreed with Richard Goldstein s criticism of the album many came to appreciate his sentiments by the early 1980s 339 In his 1979 book Stranded Rock and Roll for a Desert Island Greil Marcus described Sgt Pepper as playful but contrived and a Day Glo tombstone for its time 458 dubious discuss Marcus believed that the album strangled on its own conceits while being vindicated by world wide acclaim 459 nb 37 Lester Bangs the so called godfather of punk rock journalism wrote in 1981 that Goldstein was right in his much vilified review predicting that this record had the power to almost singlehandedly destroy rock and roll 462 He added In the sixties rock and roll began to think of itself as an art form Rock and roll is not an art form rock and roll is a raw wail from the bottom of the guts 463 In a 1976 article for The Village Voice Christgau revisited the supposedly epochal Works of Art from 1967 and found that Sgt Pepper appeared bound to a moment amid the year s culturally important music that had dated in the sense that it speaks with unusually specific eloquence of a single point in history Christgau said of the album s dozen good songs and true Perhaps they re too precisely performed but I m not going to complain 457 In his 1981 assessment Simon Frith described Sgt Pepper as the last great pop album the last LP ambitious to amuse everyone 464 It was inevitable that some of the critical assessment of subsequent generations would grumble Some have griped about the archness of the band within a band concept the elaborate studio artifice the dominance of McCartney s songs routinely but unfairly considered as lightweight and bourgeois the virtual freezing out of George Harrison and the only episodic interest of a perpetually tripping Lennon 465 Chris Ingham 2006 Once the Beatles catalogue became available on CD in 1987 a critical consensus formed around Revolver s standing as the band s best work the White Album also surpassed Sgt Pepper in many critics estimation 466 In his feature article on Sgt Pepper s 40th anniversary for Mojo John Harris said that such was its seismic and universal impact and subsequent identification with 1967 a fashion for trashing the album had become commonplace 467 nb 38 He attributed this to iconoclasm as successive generations identified the album with baby boomers retreat into nostalgia tinged smugness during the 1970s combined with a general distaste for McCartney following Lennon s death 467 Citing its absence from the NME s best albums list in 1985 after it had topped the magazine s previous poll in 1974 Harris wrote Though by no means universally degraded Sgt Pepper had taken a protracted beating from which it has perhaps yet to fully recover Regularly challenged and overtaken in the Best Beatle Album stakes it suffered more than any Beatles record from the long fall out after punk and even the band s Britpop era revival mysteriously failed to improve its standing 469 Writing in the 2004 edition of The Rolling Stone Album Guide Rob Sheffield described Sgt Pepper as a revelation of how far artists could go in a recording studio with only four tracks plenty of imagination and a drug or two but also a masterwork of sonics not songwriting 470 In his review for Rough Guides Chris Ingham said that while the album s detractors typically bemoan McCartney s dominant role the reliance on studio innovation and the unconvincing concept as long as there are pairs of ears willing to disappear under headphones for forty minutes Sgt Pepper will continue to cast its considerable spell 465 Among reviews of the 2009 remastered album Neil McCormick of The Daily Telegraph wrote It is impossible to overstate its impact from a contemporary Sixties perspective it was utterly mind blowing and original Looking back from a point when its sonic innovations have been integrated into the mainstream it remains a wonky colourful and wildly improbable pop classic although a little slighter and less cohesive than it may have seemed at the time 451 Mark Kemp writing for Paste said the album was a blast of avant rock genius but also one of rock s most overrated albums 454 According to BBC Music critic Chris Jones while Sgt Pepper has long been subsumed under an avalanche of hyperbole the album retains an enduring quality because its sum is greater than its whole These guys weren t just recording songs they were inventing the stuff with which to make this record as they went along 471 Although the lyrics particularly McCartney s were a far cry from the militancy of their American peers he continues what was revolutionary was the sonic carpet that enveloped the ears and sent the listener spinning into other realms 472 Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic considers the album to be a refinement of Revolver s previously unheard of level of sophistication and fearless experimentation and a work that combines a wide range of musical styles yet Not once does the diversity seem forced He concludes After Sgt Pepper there were no rules to follow rock and pop bands could try anything for better or worse 450 Legacy EditFurther public and critical recognition Edit John Lennon s outfit in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Sgt Pepper sustained its immense popularity into the 21st century while breaking numerous sales records 473 With certified sales of 5 1 million copies in the UK as of April 2019 Sgt Pepper is the third best selling album in UK chart history and the best selling studio album there 474 It is one of the most commercially successful albums in the US where the RIAA certified sales of 11 million copies in 1997 475 By 2000 Sgt Pepper was among the top 20 best selling albums of all time worldwide 476 As of 2011 it had sold more than 32 million copies worldwide making it one of the highest selling albums of all time 477 Sgt Pepper has topped many best album lists 478 It was voted in first place in Paul Gambaccini s 1978 book Critic s Choice Top 200 Albums 479 based on submissions from around 50 British and American critics and broadcasters including Christgau and Marcus 480 and again in the 1987 edition 481 In the latter year it also topped Rolling Stone s list of The 100 Best Albums of the Last Twenty Years 482 In 1994 it was ranked first in Colin Larkin s All Time Top 1000 Albums 483 nb 39 It was voted best album of all time in the 1998 Music of the Millennium poll conducted by HMV and Channel 4 487 and in the following year s expanded survey which polled 600 000 people across the UK 488 489 Among its appearances in other critics polls the album was third in Q s 2004 list The Music That Changed the World and fifth in the same magazine s 2005 list The 40 Greatest Psychedelic Albums of All Time 490 In 1993 Sgt Pepper was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame 490 and ten years later it was one of 50 recordings chosen by the Library of Congress to be added to the National Recording Registry honouring the work as culturally historically or aesthetically significant 491 In 2003 Rolling Stone placed it at number one in the magazine s list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time 492 a ranking it retained in the revised list of 2012 and described the album as the pinnacle of the Beatles eight years as recording artists 493 nb 40 The editors also said that Sgt Pepper was the most important rock n roll album ever made 493 a point to which June Skinner Sawyers adds in her 2006 collection of essays Read the Beatles It has been called the most famous album in the history of popular music It is certainly among the most written about It is still being written about 496 On Rolling Stone s third such list published in September 2020 Sgt Pepper appears at number 24 497 In 2006 Sgt Pepper was chosen by Time as one of the 100 best albums of all time 498 Writing that year Kevin Dettmar described it as quite simply the most important and influential rock and roll album ever recorded 382 It is featured in Chris Smith s 2009 book 101 Albums That Changed Popular Music where Smith highlights the album among the most obvious choices for inclusion due to its continued commercial success the wealth of imitative works it inspired and its ongoing recognition as a defining moment in the history of music 499 In the NME s 2014 article 25 Albums With the Most Incredible Production Emily Barker described Sgt Pepper as kaleidoscopic and an orchestral baroque pop masterpiece the likes of which has rarely been matched since 500 Adaptations tributes and anniversary projects Edit French horn players performing as Sgt Pepper s band at Live 8 London in 2005 The Sgt Pepper mythology was reimagined for the plot of Yellow Submarine In the animated film the Beatles travel to Pepperland and rescue Sgt Pepper s band from evildoers the Blue Meanies 501 The album inspired the 1974 off Broadway musical Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band on the Road directed by Tom O Horgan 502 and the 1978 film Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band produced by Robert Stigwood 467 In July 2012 athletes donned Sgt Pepper uniforms to pay tribute to the Beatles album during the opening ceremony of the London Olympics 503 Sgt Pepper has been the subject of many tribute albums 504 including a multi artist CD available with the March 2007 issue of Mojo and a 2009 live album Sgt Pepper Live by Cheap Trick 490 Other tribute recordings include Sgt Pepper Knew My Father a multi artist charity compilation released by the NME in 1988 Big Daddy s 1992 album Sgt Pepper s which Moore recognises as the most audacious of all the interpretations of the Beatles LP up to 1997 505 and the Flaming Lips With a Little Help from My Fwends released in 2014 506 BBC Radio 2 broadcast Sgt Pepper s 40th Anniversary in June 2007 507 The programme contained new versions of the songs by artists such as Oasis the Killers and Kaiser Chiefs produced by Emerick using EMI s original four track recording equipment 508 509 The 1987 CD release attracted considerable media interest 479 404 and coincided with a Granada TV documentary It Was Twenty Years Ago Today that located the album at the centre of the Summer of Love 510 511 The reissue peaked at number three on the UK Albums Chart 510 and topped Billboard s CDs chart 512 The album s 25th anniversary was observed with The South Bank Show s presentation 513 of Martin s TV documentary The Making of Sgt Pepper which included interviews with the three surviving Beatles 514 nb 41 Although there was no official campaign for the 30th anniversary BBC Radio 2 broadcast Pepper Forever in the UK and some 12 000 schools across the US listened to a radio special dedicated to the album on 2 June 1997 517 Aside from Radio 2 s June 2007 project the 40th anniversary was marked by the University of Leeds hosting a meeting of British and American commentators to debate the extent of the album s social and cultural impact 508 Sgt Pepper 50th anniversary billboard in London On 26 May 2017 Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band was reissued for the album s 50th anniversary as a six disc box set 518 The first CD contains a new stereo remix of the album created by Giles Martin using first generation tapes rather than their subsequent mixdowns 519 Apple Corps produced the TV documentary Sgt Pepper s Musical Revolution to commemorate the anniversary 520 which was also celebrated with posters billboards and other decorations in cities around the world 521 In Liverpool the anniversary was the focus of a three week cultural festival that included events dedicated to each of the album s thirteen songs 522 As part of the festival Mark Morris choreographed Pepperland to four of the songs from Sgt Pepper and Penny Lane arranged by Ethan Iverson plus six original compositions by Iverson 523 and a dawn to dusk celebration of Indian music was held in recognition of Harrison s absorption in the genre 522 524 The 50th anniversary edition of Sgt Pepper topped the UK Albums Chart 473 Track listing EditAll songs written by Lennon McCartney except Within You Without You by George Harrison Track lengths and lead vocals per Mark Lewisohn and Ian MacDonald 525 Side oneNo TitleLead vocalsLength1 Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band McCartney2 002 With a Little Help from My Friends Starr2 423 Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds Lennon3 284 Getting Better McCartney2 485 Fixing a Hole McCartney2 366 She s Leaving Home McCartney with Lennon3 257 Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite Lennon2 37Total length 19 36 Side twoNo TitleLead vocalsLength8 Within You Without You Harrison5 059 When I m Sixty Four McCartney2 3710 Lovely Rita McCartney2 4211 Good Morning Good Morning Lennon2 4212 Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band Reprise Lennon McCartney Harrison and Starr1 1813 A Day in the Life Lennon with McCartney5 38Total length 20 02Personnel EditAccording to Mark Lewisohn and Ian MacDonald 526 except where noted The Beatles John Lennon lead harmony and background vocals rhythm acoustic and lead guitars Hammond organ final piano E chord harmonica tape loops sound effects comb and tissue paper handclaps tambourine maracas bass guitar on Fixing a Hole 527 Paul McCartney lead harmony and background vocals bass and lead guitars piano grand piano Lowrey and Hammond organs handclaps vocalisations sound effects comb and tissue paper George Harrison harmony and background vocals lead rhythm and acoustic guitars sitar tambura swarmandal 528 harmonica comb and tissue paper handclaps tambourine maracas lead vocals on Within You Without You Ringo Starr drums congas tambourine maracas handclaps tubular bells lead vocals on With a Little Help from My Friends harmonica comb and tissue paper final piano E chordAdditional musicians and production Sounds Inc saxophones trombones and French horn on Good Morning Good Morning Neil Aspinall tambura harmonica Geoff Emerick audio engineering tape loops sound effects nb 42 Mal Evans counting harmonica alarm clock final piano E chord George Martin producer mixer tape loops sound effects harpsichord on Fixing a Hole harmonium Lowrey organ glockenspiel and Mellotron 530 on Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite Hammond organ on With a Little Help from My Friends piano on Getting Better piano solo on Lovely Rita final harmonium chord Session musicians four French horns on Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band Neill Sanders James W Buck John Burden Tony Randall arranged and conducted by Martin and McCartney harp performed by Sheila Bromberg and string section on She s Leaving Home arranged by Mike Leander and conducted by Martin tabla by Natwar Soni dilrubas by Anna Joshi and Amrit Gajjar and tambura by Buddhadev Kansara on Within You Without You 531 with eight violins and four cellos arranged and conducted by Harrison and Martin clarinet trio on When I m Sixty Four Robert Burns Henry MacKenzie Frank Reidy arranged and conducted by Martin and McCartney saxophones on Good Morning Good Morning arranged and conducted by Martin and Lennon and forty piece orchestra including strings brass woodwinds and percussion on A Day in the Life arranged by Martin Lennon and McCartney and conducted by Martin and McCartney Charts EditWeekly charts Edit Original release Chart PositionAustralian Kent Music Report 532 1Canadian RPM Top LPs 533 1Finnish Albums Chart 534 1Norwegian VG lista Albums 535 1Swedish Kvallstoppen Chart 536 1UK Record Retailer LPs Chart 537 1US Billboard Top LPs 538 1West German Musikmarkt LP Hit Parade 539 11987 reissue Chart PositionDutch Mega Albums Chart 540 2Japanese Albums Chart 541 3UK Albums Chart 542 3US Billboard Top Compact Disks 543 12009 reissue Chart PositionAustralian Albums Chart 544 16Belgian Albums Chart Wallonia 545 22Brazilian Albums Chart 546 20Danish Albums Chart 547 20Finnish Albums Chart 548 9Italian Albums Chart 549 9Japanese Albums Chart 550 20New Zealand Albums Chart 551 12Norwegian Albums Chart 552 31Portuguese Albums Chart 553 4Spanish Albums Chart 554 22Swedish Albums Chart 555 8UK Albums Chart 556 5 2017 reissue Chart PositionAustralian Albums ARIA 557 5Austrian Albums O3 Austria 558 3Belgian Albums Ultratop Flanders 559 2Belgian Albums Ultratop Wallonia 560 1Canadian Albums Billboard 561 7Czech Albums CNS IFPI 562 6Danish Albums Hitlisten 563 3Dutch Albums Album Top 100 564 2Finnish Albums Suomen virallinen lista 565 23German Albums Offizielle Top 100 566 5Irish Albums IRMA 567 2Italian Albums FIMI 568 6Japanese Albums Oricon 569 5Mexican Albums AMPROFON 570 18New Zealand Albums RMNZ 571 4Norwegian Albums VG lista 572 9Polish Albums ZPAV 573 28Portuguese Albums Chart 574 3Scottish Albums OCC 575 1Spanish Albums PROMUSICAE 576 3Swedish Albums Sverigetopplistan 577 2Swiss Albums Schweizer Hitparade 578 2UK Albums OCC 579 1US Billboard 200 580 3 Year end charts Edit Chart 1967 PositionAustralian Albums Chart 532 1UK Albums Chart 324 1US Billboard Year End 581 10Chart 1968 PositionAustralian Albums Chart 532 3US Billboard Year End 582 6 Decade end charts Edit Chart 1960s PositionUK Albums Chart 325 1Certifications and sales EditSales certifications for Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band Region Certification Certified units salesArgentina CAPIF 583 2 Platinum 120 000 Argentina CAPIF 583 1987 CD issue 3 Platinum 180 000 Australia ARIA 584 4 Platinum 280 000 Brazil Pro Musica Brasil 586 Gold 290 000 585 Canada Music Canada 587 8 Platinum 800 000 Denmark IFPI Danmark 588 3 Platinum 60 000 France SNEP 589 Gold 100 000 Germany BVMI 590 Platinum 500 000 Italy FIMI 591 sales since 2009 Platinum 50 000 Japan 208 000 541 New Zealand RMNZ 592 6 Platinum 90 000 United Kingdom BPI 594 18 Platinum 5 340 000 593 United States RIAA 595 11 Platinum 11 000 000 SummariesWorldwide 32 000 000 477 Sales figures based on certification alone Shipments figures based on certification alone Sales streaming figures based on certification alone Notes Edit According to author Allen J Wiener the album s intended release date of 1 June has been traditionally observed over the ensuing decades yet the true release date was 26 May 1 McCartney has said that the idea for the title came from his mishearing Evans asking for salt and pepper over a meal 30 In Emerick s opinion the recording of Sgt Pepper marks the emergence of McCartney as the Beatles de facto producer as Martin was increasingly absent near the end of late night sessions that often lasted until dawn 58 Wilson was similarly impressed with the intricate bass playing on Rubber Soul 62 McCartney later said that he Wilson and Motown s James Jamerson were the three players doing melodic bass lines at that time all picking up on what each other did 63 Strawberry Fields Forever made prominent use of Mellotron 65 66 a keyboard instrument on which the keys triggered tape recordings of a variety of instruments enabling its user to play keyboard parts using those voices 67 In a 2017 interview Starr said with regard to Harrison s guitar contributions Actually Paul and I were talking about him when we were both listening to Sgt Pepper s for the 50th anniversary and saying how important George s work on guitar was on that record 72 During a 24 February overdubbing session for Lovely Rita the Beatles guests included Crosby and Shawn Phillips Donovan s guitarist 83 Photos published in Beatles Monthly magazine showed Lennon McCartney Harrison and Crosby grouped around a microphone 84 and a Beat Instrumental report stated that the backing vocals were recorded that night with Crosby s participation 83 Phillips later supported this and said that he too sang backing vocals with the three Beatles 84 However Phillips recollection is not supported by others 84 and the group vocals were instead overdubbed on 7 March 83 While recording the vocals for Getting Better on 21 March Lennon started feeling ill 87 having accidentally taken LSD when he meant to take an upper 88 Unaware that he was under the influence Martin escorted him to the roof of the building for some fresh air and returned to the studio When they learned that Lennon was alone on the rail less rooftop Harrison and McCartney rushed up to retrieve him and prevent a possible accident 89 90 Following the Day in the Life filming the music press often reported on the idea of a Sgt Pepper TV special 93 Although a report in July stated that the plan had been scrapped a filming schedule was drawn up for late in the year by which point the Beatles were committed to making Magical Mystery Tour 100 Sgt Pepper was crossfaded into With a Little Help from My Friends and the Sgt Pepper reprise was crossfaded into A Day in the Life 124 The crowd noises were gleaned from EMI s tape archive including audience sounds recorded at the Royal Albert Hall and the Queen Elizabeth Hall for the murmuring and Martin s recording of a 1961 comedy show Beyond the Fringe for the laughter 158 The opening ambient sounds were captured during the 10 February orchestral session for A Day in the Life 159 The song s lead guitar part was played by McCartney who replaced an earlier effort by Harrison 163 The backing track for Fixing a Hole was recorded at Regent Sound Studio in central London after the Beatles were unable to arrange a last minute session at EMI Studios 181 McCartney hired Mike Leander to arrange the string section on She s Leaving Home since Martin was producing a session by another artist and was unable to meet with him straightaway 188 Martin was highly upset at McCartney s impatience 189 but conducted the musicians using the score more or less as written 190 In the initial running order dated 6 April Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite was sequenced as the third track following With a Little Help from My Friends 198 Lennon was unaware that most record players and speakers of the time were incapable of reproducing the tone which many listeners would not hear until the release of the CD version in 1987 242 When the audio contained in the run out groove is played in reverse and slowed down McCartney can be heard shouting I will fuck you like Superman with Starr and Harrison giggling in the background 244 The author Will Romano comments that in this way Sgt Pepper closes with nonsensical vocals just as Freak Out does 245 Norman also identifies Sgt Pepper as being in other places grown up to an unprecedented indeed perilous degree He concludes of this combination Its superabundance reflected a conscious wish on the Beatles part to make amends to their fans for their abandonment of touring Clamped between headphones in a recording studio they managed to put on a live show more exciting more intimate than any since they d left the Cavern 252 Blake said that Haworth conceived the idea to present the crowd as an imaginary audience McCartney s original idea according to Blake was for the Beatles to pose in an Edwardian era drawing room in front of a wall filled with portraits of their heroes 256 Inglis is paraphrasing George Melly who in 1970 described the Sgt Pepper cover as a microcosm of the Underground world 262 The Sgt Pepper cover piqued a frenzy of analysis 271 Inglis cites it as the only example in popular music where the album art attracted as much attention as the album He notes several elements of the cover that were interpreted as evidence of McCartney s death including the Beatles are supposedly standing about a grave the hand above McCartney s head is regarded as a symbol of death and on the back cover he is turned away from the camera 272 The Fool also submitted a design for the LP cover but the Beatles rejected it 275 MacDonald cites EMI chairman Joseph Lockwood s recollection of attending a dinner party where rich older women sat on the floor and began singing the album s songs and the description of Jefferson Airplane guitarist Paul Kantner of how he and Crosby played the LP all night in a Seattle hotel lobby to around a hundred entranced fans Kantner later said Something enveloped the whole world at that time and it just exploded into a renaissance 296 Miles recalls hearing the album playing from every shop along King s Road and that it was similarly ubiquitous in the most fashionable areas of New York He remembers the record as the soundtrack to that summer and that winter You just could not get away from it 298 Although suspicious of McCartney s motives Lennon and Harrison together with Epstein demonstrated their support by announcing that they too had taken LSD 314 315 In July all four Beatles added their signatures to a petition demanding the legalisation of marijuana and paid for its publication in a full page ad in The Times 316 On 4 June the Jimi Hendrix Experience opened a show at London s Saville Theatre with their rendition of Sgt Pepper 318 Epstein leased the Saville at the time 319 and Harrison and McCartney attended the performance 318 McCartney described the moment The curtains flew back and Hendrix came walking forward playing Sgt Pepper I put that down as one of the great honours of my career 320 According to Moore Goldstein s position was an exception among a group of primarily positive contemporary reviewers that he characterises as the most for any single album at the time He adds that some negative letters were sent to Melody Maker that he speculates were written by jazz enthusiasts 350 In this piece Goldstein explained that although the album was not on par with the best of the Beatles previous work he considered it better than 80 per cent of the music around He also said that underneath the production when the compositions are stripped to their musical and lyrical essentials the LP was shown to be an elaboration without improvement on the group s music 353 In his 1968 autobiography High Priest Leary adapted lyrics from Sgt Pepper to relate his psychedelic experiences and journey towards higher consciousness 365 In August 1967 The Beatles Book published an article discussing whether the album was too advanced for the average pop fan One reader complained that all the songs except Sgt Pepper and When I m Sixty Four were over our heads adding The Beatles ought to stop being so clever and give us tunes we can enjoy 298 In the November 1967 issue of Down Beat magazine John Gabree complained that the Beatles were being afforded excessive praise by writers that were unfamiliar with rock music and unaware of the advances made by rival acts such as the Mothers of Invention and the Who 392 Lennon s lyrics to I Am the Walrus were purposely nonsensical and intended to confound commentators analysis of the Beatles work particularly interpretations of Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds 395 Harrison later said that Sgt Pepper became both a milestone and a millstone in music history In his view it paled beside the band s previous two albums since There s about half the songs I like and the other half I can t stand 396 Lennon publicly disparaged the album in the years following its release 397 a turnaround that offended Martin and other studio personnel 81 The group were particularly annoyed that Time had referred to Sgt Pepper as George Martin s new album 410 Years later McCartney said I mean we don t mind him helping us but it s not his album folks you know And there s got to be a little bitterness over that 71 After listening to Sgt Pepper Sandy Denny decided to abandon her solo career as a folk singer and joined the band Fairport Convention Crosby recalled that whereas previous Beatles releases might have brought out a competitive instinct in him with Sgt Pepper they were so far ahead of everybody But it was inspiring all I wanted to do was approach my music with the same freedom 298 Lavezzoli cites Sgt Pepper s Grammy for Album of the Year along with wins for Shankar s collaboration with violinist Yehudi Menuhin West Meets East and for Duke Ellington Far East Suite as the only time that Indian influenced albums have won in categories encompassing rock classical music and jazz at the annual Grammy awards 431 Due to the alleged clues in its artwork Sgt Pepper returned to the Billboard LPs chart in late 1969 at the height of the Paul is dead rumours 443 444 One contention in this conspiracy theory was that McCartney had been replaced in the Beatles by a man named William Shears Campbell or Billy Shears 445 According to Riley Rubber Soul and Revolver are miracles of intuition that are greater than the sum of their parts while in comparison Sgt Pepper is tinged with conceit 460 He describes Sgt Pepper as a flawed masterpiece that can only echo the strength of Revolver 461 In a 1998 Melody Maker poll of pop stars DJs and journalists the album was voted the worst ever made with the magazine s editor Mark Sutherland commenting This poll shows people are sick and tired of having the Beatles rammed down their throats as the greatest rock band ever It s time to make way for great new music One of those polled musician and journalist John Robb declared the album the low water point of rock n roll highlighting the Beatles moustaches as indicative of this 468 In the book s second edition published four years later Revolver was ranked first with Sgt Pepper second followed by the White Album 484 In the third edition published in 2000 Sgt Pepper was ranked third to Revolver and Radiohead s The Bends 485 486 The editors ranked Pet Sounds second in the list in recognition of its influence on the album 494 In the liner notes to the 1997 CD reissue of the Beach Boys album Martin said Without Pet Sounds Sgt Pepper never would have happened Pepper was an attempt to equal Pet Sounds 495 The Making of Sgt Pepper first aired in the US in September 1992 on the Disney Channel 514 In keeping with the channel s family image 515 the band members comments on the role that drugs played in the album s creation were cut from the broadcast and replaced with alternative footage 516 Despite Martin s efforts to secure an engineer s credit for Emerick on Sgt Pepper EMI refused the request 288 Emerick was nevertheless the recipient of the 1968 Grammy Award for Best Engineered Album Non Classical 529 References Edit Wiener 1992 p 31 Miles 1997 p 303 Lewisohn 2010 p 210 The Beatles 2000 p 229 MacDonald 2005 p 212 a b Martin amp Pearson 1994 p 7 Lewisohn 2010 p 211 Martin amp Pearson 1994 p 7 MacDonald 2005 pp 212 13 a b MacDonald 2005 p 213 Lewisohn 2010 p 230 the Beatles final commercial performance Turner 2016 pp 295 299 reduced ticket sales record attendances in 1965 MacDonald 2005 p 213 subpar performances Schaffner 1978 pp 58 59 Julien 2008b p 1 Gould 2007 p 367 a b Julien 2008b p 2 a b Everett 1999 p 71 Rodriguez 2012 p 18 Sounes 2010 pp 158 59 Turner 2016 pp 364 65 Womack 2007 pp 158 160 61 Harry 2000 pp 323 333 Julien 2008b p 2 Gould 2007 p 388 Rodriguez 2012 pp 54 56 Gould 2007 pp 388 89 Turner 2016 pp 332 33 a b c d Everett 1999 p 99 Rodriguez 2012 p 88 Sounes 2010 p 165 Prendergast 2003 p 193 Womack 2007 p 168 You Gave Me The Answer Sgt Pepper Special Paulmccartney com 26 April 2017 Archived from the original on 14 August 2017 Retrieved 23 August 2017 Moore 1997 pp 20 21 Miles 1997 pp 303 04 Turner 2016 p 378 Martin 1994 p 202 a b Hannan 2008 p 62 a b c MacDonald 2005 p 215 a b Babiuk 2002 p 197 Babiuk 2002 p 204 The Beatles 2000 p 253 a b Julien 2008c p 160 Julien 2008c p 158 Reck 2008 pp 69 72 73 a b Philo 2015 p 119 Greene 2016 p 19 Lewisohn 2005 Emerick amp Massey 2006 pp 184 190 Lewisohn 2010 p 232 Emerick amp Massey 2006 p 142 Lewisohn 2005 p 89 Everett 1999 pp 99 100 MacDonald 2005 pp 212 223 Moore 1997 pp 19 20 Harry 2002 p 714 Greene 2016 pp 34 42 MacDonald 2005 p 218fn MacDonald 2005 p 219 55 hours of studio time Martin amp Pearson 1994 p 13 set the agenda for the whole album a b Julien 2008b p 6 Martin amp Pearson 1994 p 111 Emerick amp Massey 2006 p 163 Davies 2009 p 270 Hannan 2008 p 52 Emerick amp Massey 2006 pp 169 70 Miles 1997 p 281 one of the qualities he especially admired on Pet Sounds Turner 2016 p 44 Miles 1997 p 271 Everett 1999 p 104 Lowrey organ on Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds Everett 1999 p 106 Hohner Pianet on Getting Better Everett 1999 p 107 harpsichord on Fixing a Hole Everett 1999 p 110 harmonium on Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite Everett 1999 p 120 grand piano on A Day in the Life Cunningham 1998 p 127 Prendergast 2003 p 83 Rodriguez 2012 pp 109 191 93 a b c d Everett 1999 p 100 Everett 1999 pp 104 106 111 a b Clayson 2003 p 212 a b Hertsgaard 1996 p 172 McCabe Kathy 17 September 2017 Ringo Starr The voice behind the yellow submarine and tank engine returns on Give More Love news com au Archived from the original on 2 February 2019 Retrieved 2 February 2019 Rodriguez 2012 p 112 Norman 2016 p 263 a b Lewisohn 2005 p 109 Winn 2009 p 102 MacDonald 2005 pp 224 25 Lewisohn 2010 pp 252 53 a b Gould 2007 p 387 Howard 2004 pp 28 29 a b c d e Lewisohn 2005 p 114 Hertsgaard 1996 pp 211 392 a b c Winn 2009 p 95 a b c Runtagh Jordan 29 May 2017 Beatles Sgt Pepper at 50 When Pink Floyd David Crosby Visited Lovely Rita Sessions Rolling Stone Retrieved 23 March 2020 Cunningham 1998 pp 148 49 Case 2010 p 47 Spitz 2005 pp 670 71 Miles 1997 p 382 Lewisohn 2005 p 104 a b c The Beatles 2000 p 242 Harris 2007 p 76 Sounes 2010 p 166 a b c Lewisohn 2005 p 96 Hertsgaard 1996 p 8 Gould 2007 pp 387 88 Ingham 2006 p 166 Cunningham 1998 p 151 Harris 2007 p 82 Greene 2016 pp 37 38 Winn 2009 p 88 Lavezzoli 2006 p 179 a b The Beatles 2000 p 243 Ellen 2002 p 102 MacDonald 2005 p 249 Prendergast 2003 p 190 Martin amp Pearson 1994 p 78 continuous technological experimentation Martin amp Pearson 1994 p 82 Sgt Pepper grew naturally out of Revolver Emerick amp Massey 2006 p 191 Lewisohn Mark 2009 Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band Media notes Apple EMI Records p 29 Babiuk 2002 p 199 Lewisohn 2010 p 244 Davies 2009 pp 273 74 MacDonald 2005 pp 217 20 Howard 2004 pp 27 28 Emerick amp Massey 2006 p 139 Kimsey 2008 p 133 a b Emerick amp Massey 2006 p 190 a b c d Womack 2007 p 170 Lewisohn 2010 p 216 Martin amp Pearson 1994 p 105 MacDonald 2005 pp 233 34 Julien 2008b p 7 Womack 2007 pp 170 171 Julien 2008c p 162 Lewisohn 2010 p 251 a b Lewisohn 2010 p 251 Lewisohn 2010 p 252 Scapelliti 2007 p 100 Hannan 2008 p 40 Davies 2009 p 262 the recording of Please Please Me cost 400 equivalent to 7 724 in 2021 Lewisohn 2010 p 253 they spent 700 hours recording Sgt Pepper Martin amp Pearson 1994 p 168 Rodriguez 2012 pp 206 07 Hertsgaard 1996 pp 212 396 Miles 2019 September 1969 John Lennon Yoko Ono Interview Rock s Backpages Retrieved 5 June 2020 Northcutt 2006 p 137 The Beatles 2000 pp 241 242 Lewisohn 2010 p 237 Loder Kurt 18 June 1987 The Beatles Sgt Pepper It Was Twenty Years Ago Today Rolling Stone Retrieved 14 November 2018 Hannan 2008 p 61 The album is made up of a broad variety of musical and theatrical genres Moore 1997 pp 18 70 79 rock and pop Wagner 2008 p 76 the multigenre nature of Sgt Pepper Hannan 2008 pp 61 62 music hall and blues Wagner 2008 p 76 rock and roll vaudeville big band piano jazz chamber circus avant garde Western and Indian classical music Wagner 2008 pp 76 89 90 Covach 1997 p 31 Case 2010 pp 47 48 a b Miles 2001 p 265 Sold on Song Top 100 38 A Day in the Life BBC Radio 2 Archived from the original on 22 December 2006 Retrieved 31 December 2006 Ezard John 29 December 1967 BBC and Film Board give order to play down on drug scenes The Guardian p 3 Glausser 2011 p 29 Lennon and McCartney s contemporary denial of an intentional reference to illicit drugs in the lyrics to A Day in the Life Moore 1997 p 60 McCartney s immediate denial in Melody Maker Miles 1997 p 325 McCartney later suggested that the line was deliberately written to ambiguously refer to either illicit drugs or sexual activity a b MacDonald 2005 p 240 Whiteley 2008 pp 18 19 a b c Spitz 2005 p 697 Moore 1997 p 60 Whiteley 2008 pp 15 22 Julien 2008c p 166 Moore 2008 p 140 a b Whiteley 2008 p 22 Moore 1997 pp 61 62 a b Gould 2007 pp 397 98 Ingham 2006 p 197 Everett 1999 p 101 pit orchestra and audience Moore 1997 p 23 the illusion of a live performance Moore 1997 p 27 10 seconds of introductory ambiance Lewisohn 2010 p 248 Lewisohn 2005 p 101 a b c d Womack 2007 p 169 a b MacDonald 2005 p 233 Everett 1999 p 101 MacDonald 2005 p 233 secondary source Martin amp Pearson 1994 pp 66 67 primary source Hannan 2008 p 48 Gould 2007 p 398 a b c Womack 2007 p 171 Hertsgaard 1996 pp 117 18 Riley 2002 p 214 a b Everett 1999 p 103 MacDonald 2005 p 247 Hannan 2008 p 50 a b c d Womack 2007 p 172 MacDonald 2005 p 240 Womack 2007 p 172 Hertsgaard 1996 p 215 Lavezzoli 2006 pp 179 80 Riley 2002 p 216 MacDonald 2005 p 241 Hertsgaard 1996 p 216 a b c d Womack 2007 p 173 Miles 1997 pp 314 15 Winn 2009 p 90 a b MacDonald 2005 p 236 Womack 2007 pp 106 07 Everett 1999 p 107 Everett 1999 p 108 Hertsgaard 1996 pp 217 18 Moore 1997 p 37 Lewisohn 2005 p 103 Hertsgaard 1996 pp 394 95 MacDonald 2005 p 245 Greene 2016 p 26 MacDonald 2005 pp 237 38 Womack 2007 p 175 MacDonald 2005 p 238 MacDonald 2005 pp 237 238 Moore 1997 p 40 Everett 1999 p 110 Gould 2007 p 404 Hertsgaard 1996 p 394 Rodriguez 2012 p 210 Lavezzoli 2006 pp 177 78 Lewisohn 2010 p 248 London based Indian musicians and non participation of the other Beatles Lavezzoli 2006 p 178 Harrison singing and playing sitar and tambura on Within You Without You and contributors from the Asian Music Circle a b Ingham 2006 p 199 a b Everett 1999 p 112 MacDonald 2005 pp 243 44 Womack 2007 p 176 Davies 2009 p 321 Hannan 2008 p 56 MacDonald 2005 pp 220 21 MacDonald 2005 p 220 Moore 1997 p 47 Moore 1997 p 46 Emerick amp Massey 2006 p 137 Everett 1999 p 113 Womack 2007 p 177 Gould 2007 p 409 a b MacDonald 2005 p 239 Lewisohn 2005 pp 101 104 Gould 2007 p 408 Everett 1999 p 116 grievance against complacency Moore 1997 p 50 the bluesy Mixolydian mode in A Greene 2016 pp 26 27 Womack 2007 pp 177 78 Everett 1999 pp 114 15 MacDonald 2005 p 235 Everett 1999 p 115 Hertsgaard 1996 p 220 Schaffner 1978 p 80 a b c MacDonald 2005 p 248 Lewisohn 2005 p 107 Womack 2007 p 178 a b Winn 2009 p 99 Womack 2007 p 181 a b Moore 1997 p 52 Davies 2009 p 276 a b MacDonald 2005 p 229 Everett 1999 p 118 Martin 1994 p 209 Martin amp Pearson 1994 p 56 Womack 2007 p 179 Womack 2007 p 180 Riley 2002 p 225 Womack 2007 p 182 Emerick amp Massey 2006 p 188 a b Everett 1999 p 122 Julien 2008c p 164 see end note number 11 Romano 2010 p 20 Sheff 1981 p 197 a b MacFarlane 2008 p 33 Moore 2008 p 144 MacFarlane 2008 pp 33 37 Irvin Jim March 2007 The Big Bang Mojo p 78 MacDonald 2005 p 215fn a b Norman 2016 p 261 a b Inglis 2008 pp 92 95 Humphries Patrick 2002 Picture Perfect Mojo Special Limited Edition 1000 Days That Shook the World The Psychedelic Beatles April 1 1965 to December 26 1967 London Emap p 97 Inglis 2008 p 92 McCartney s design for the Sgt Pepper cover secondary source Miles 1997 p 333 primary source Ellen 2002 p 105 Gould 2007 pp 391 395 the Sgt Pepper cover featured the Beatles as the imaginary band alluded to in the album s title track standing with a host of celebrities secondary source The Beatles 2000 p 248 standing with a host of celebrities primary source The Beatles 2000 p 236 the growing influence of hippie style on the Beatles Gould 2007 p 385 spoofed the vogue in Britain for military fashions a b c Inglis 2008 p 95 Inglis 2008 p 95 Sounes 2010 p 169 Reck 2008 p 68 a b c d Inglis 2008 p 93 a b Case 2010 p 46 Tillery 2011 p 81 Schaffner 1978 p 85 a b c Fleming Colin 30 March 2017 Beatles Sgt Pepper Artwork 10 Things You Didn t Know Rolling Stone Retrieved 17 June 2020 Harry 2002 p 727 Inglis 2008 p 94 a b c Inglis 2008 p 96 Norman 2016 p 405 Gould 2007 pp 391 95 Inglis 2008 pp 98 99 Miles 1997 pp 344 45 Lewisohn 2010 p 236 the first time lyrics were printed in full on a rock album Inglis 2008 p 96 the lyrics were printed on the back cover Clayson 2003 p 211 Marinucci Steve 13 May 2017 Who s the Real Sgt Pepper New Beatles Book Unveils Identity of Soldier Seen on Album Cover Variety Retrieved 31 August 2022 Moore 1997 p 57 Miles 2001 pp 264 265 Norman 2008 p 496 Wawzenek Bryan 19 May 2017 50 Years Ago The Beatles Experience an Amazing Series of Pre Sgt Pepper Highs and Lows All on a Single Day Ultimate Classic Rock Retrieved 10 June 2020 Gould 2007 p 395 Hutton Jack 27 May 1967 Beatles Listen in Melody Maker p 5 a b Womack Kenneth 9 May 2017 Everything Fab Four Celebrating the First Half Century of Sgt Pepper Launch Parties kennethwomack com Retrieved 10 June 2020 a b Drummond Norrie 27 May 1967 Dinner with the Beatles NME pp 2 3 Spitz 2005 pp 691 92 Spitz 2005 p 692 Sounes 2010 p 176 a b c d Everett 1999 p 123 Moore 1997 p 19 Rodriguez 2012 p 197 Scapelliti 2007 p 104 Ingham 2006 p 42 Lavezzoli 2006 pp 6 7 Riley 2002 p 205 Riley 2002 pp 205 06 a b MacDonald 2005 pp 249 50 Ellen 2002 pp 104 05 a b c Harris 2007 p 87 Doggett 2015 p 373 Norman 2008 p 497 Gould 2007 pp 418 19 Philo 2015 pp 116 17 119 MacDonald 2005 p 249 radio stations interrupted their regular scheduling Riley 2002 p 205 some played the album from start to finish Simonelli 2013 p 107 Smith 2009 p 48 Ellen 2002 p 103 Miles 2001 pp 270 71 Greene 2016 p 36 a b Frith Simon 1981 1967 The Year It All Came Together The History of Rock pp 4 8 Available at Rock s Backpages Archived 18 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine subscription required Norman 1996 pp 294 95 Norman 2016 p 280 Hertsgaard 1996 p 196 Gendron 2002 p 215 Norman 2008 p 499 Gould 2007 p 430 Hertsgaard 1996 p 197 Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band The Beatles gt Chart Facts Official Charts Company Archived from the original on 20 August 2018 Retrieved 11 November 2018 a b Womack 2014 p 813 Sounes 2010 p 180 Miles 1997 p 347 Hoffmann amp Bailey 1990 pp 281 282 a b Smith 2009 p 49 Frontani 2007 p 147 a b Mawer Sharon May 2007 Album Chart History 1967 The Official UK Charts Company Archived from the original on 17 December 2007 Retrieved 23 October 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