Sean Highkin | onethirtybpm.com

The Bea­t­les (White Album)

It’s been said that the Bea­t­les invented many rock cliches. How about this one: “This is a dou­ble album that would have been bet­ter if it had been edited down to a sin­gle LP.” To be sure, there is some filler on the Bea­t­les’ epony­mous White Album, but there is no way it could have been edited down. Its 30 tracks vary in qual­ity, but it is so diverse that every­body would pick dif­fer­ent tracks to cut, which means that it is prob­a­bly for the best that all of it is laid out for lis­ten­ers to dis­cover. In its fin­ished state, this album also pro­vided a per­fect snap­shot of where the Bea­t­les were at as a band in 1968. They had already begun to drift apart fol­low­ing the death of man­ager Brian Epstein in 1967, and the White album is the least “Bea­t­les” album they ever recorded. Most of these songs were essen­tially solo tracks from one mem­ber or another, using the other three as side­men where nec­es­sary. Say this about the Bea­t­les: at least they were hon­est. They did not try to pack­age these ses­sions as a suc­cinct 14-song LP – they let all the fat and bad vibes show.

And these ten­sions between the band mem­bers must have kept them all on their toes in order to com­pete with each other, because this album show­cases their strongest song­writ­ing since Revolver. All four Bea­t­les were work­ing at their high­est levels–John at his dark­est and most per­sonal on “Julia” and “Hap­pi­ness is a Warm Gun,” Paul at his pret­ti­est on “Black­bird” and “Martha My Dear,” George at his most acer­bic on “Pig­gies,” and hell, even Ringo turned in far and away his best orig­i­nal song, “Don’t Pass Me By.” Radio­head rewrote “Sexy Sadie” and called it “Karma Police,” and count­less metal bands have forged entire careers with vari­a­tions on “Hel­ter Skel­ter,” but none of them could touch the orig­i­nal. Besides that, there’s some­thing to be said for a 19 million-selling album that con­tains a 9-minute col­lage of tape loops.



Review: by Sean High­kin | onethirtybpm.com
10 Sep­tem­ber 20