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Topic ClosedDoes anyone like the Beatles Revolution #9?

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KarmaPolice View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Does anyone like the Beatles Revolution #9?
    Posted: October 20 2008 at 19:48

Many Beatles fans hate this track while some who really don't like the Beatles that much seem to like this track. Any one like this track and did it have any real influence on their peers?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2008 at 19:55
I like the track for it's weirdness.
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2008 at 20:00
No, when i listen to the White Album , i make sure to find the button ''skip'' when it comes to this....(.i wanted to write ''song'')  ....noise collage ..fits the description better....number 9 number 9, number 9.Dead..and it lasts how long?? ....7..8 mns!!!
 
However, i am sure we are maybe going to find someone who thinks that this is the highlight of the disc, a definitive piece of genious creativity of modern musicLOL.Who knows!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2008 at 23:00
Its interesting
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2008 at 23:02
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

I like the track for it's weirdness.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2008 at 23:10
Its a track that used to scare me as a child
 
Now I can appreciate its high strangeness and artistic merit - there is nothing like it in music since and its a bonafide prog track.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2008 at 23:16
In fact, I don't like it so much, but neither press the "skip" button. But it has something that makes it, I don't know, beautiful? ...not the best word, maybe interesting. At least more than King Crimson's Moonchild.
 
And surelly influenced Las Jaivas in making "Los Caminos Que Se Abren".
P
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2008 at 23:21
I am not interested in Moonchild either... too slow and meandering - we live in an instant society and if we are not instantly satisfied we hit the skip button.... theres too much great music out there to waste time.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 21 2008 at 02:10
I always thought it was rather strange, i never liked it. This seemed to be an attempt at avant-garde which was lost on most people, a stain on an otherwise brilliant album (and "Goodnight", the worst Beatle track ever). Dead
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 21 2008 at 03:42
I don't mind the track at all.
http://www.last.fm/user/Avantgardian
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 21 2008 at 07:41
I listen to it (very) occasionally. An interesting experiment which the rest of the Fabs hated.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 21 2008 at 07:50
Can't say I love Revolution#9. But the only White Album  track I always skip is Obla-di-obla-da, like any sane person.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 21 2008 at 08:44
Originally posted by AtomicCrimsonRush AtomicCrimsonRush wrote:

Its a track that used to scare me as a child
 
Now I can appreciate its high strangeness and artistic merit - there is nothing like it in music since and its a bonafide prog track.
 
There's not much artistic merit in "Revolution #9" - it was influenced by Stockhausen's experiments (as were many Beatles pieces at that time, such as "Rain", "Tomorrow Never Knows" and "A Day In The Life"), but is clearly just a piece of fun rather than a highbrow attempt at avant-garde music - in fact, it seems to poke fun at a particular Stockhausen piece. If you listen to it often enough, a manic kind of logic shows through - but I rather think that's accidental, hence it's not Prog, because it's not composed, there is not inherent improvisational logic, and the influence is from one single identifiable source.
 
"Kontakte"  is the Stockhausen masterpiece that really influenced both John and Paul, so much that John produced 3 albums with Yoko, and Paul produced a piece of myth and legend called "Carnival of LIght", which has only ever been performed once, at an Electronic music festival in 1967, alongside the likes of Delia Derbyshire. If you're even vaguely interested in avant-garde music featuring electronics and tape manipulation, you should hear this - and also "Poem Electronique" by Edgard Varese - which are good introductions to this sort of music.
 
 
Originally posted by AtomicCrimsonRush AtomicCrimsonRush wrote:

I am not interested in Moonchild either... too slow and meandering - we live in an instant society and if we are not instantly satisfied we hit the skip button.... theres too much great music out there to waste time.
 
The famous section of MoonChild on the other hand is a fantastic work of near avant-garde wierdness - it's a common mistake to write it off as meandering. It isn't - it has a definite purpose and internal logic. 
 
It's not quite avant-garde, because it contains a beautiful central logic that is essential to the expression of the song - it's not at all random, and patience is rewarded by music of unearthly beauty. It most definitely is not a waste of time, and it is great music.
 
Prog is not about being instantly satisfied, it's about lasting art.
 
 
 


Edited by Certif1ed - October 21 2008 at 08:51
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 21 2008 at 08:50
FYI - the only chart I've ever seen of the Beatles' worst songs had Mr Moonlight at number one, as far as I remember, although Revolution #9 was near the top.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 21 2008 at 09:01
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:


If you listen to it often enough, a manic kind of logic shows through - but I rather think that's accidental, hence it's not Prog, because it's not composed
 


Is that some kind of rule we all have to agree on (I'm not thinking about Revolution #9)? 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 21 2008 at 09:18
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:

Can't say I love Revolution#9. But the only White Album  track I always skip is Obla-di-obla-da, like any sane person.
 
I guess i am insane, not that i really love Obla-di, but i don't feel the need to skip this one  as much as Revoulution 9.....Now i go back to the asylum before they notice i escaped for a while.LOLTongue
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 21 2008 at 09:54
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:


If you listen to it often enough, a manic kind of logic shows through - but I rather think that's accidental, hence it's not Prog, because it's not composed
 


Is that some kind of rule we all have to agree on (I'm not thinking about Revolution #9)? 
 
We don't have to agree on rules - but they are there, nonetheless.
 
The examples discussed here in some ways show differences between Non-Prog (Revolution #9), Prog (MoonChild) and, for want of a better word, "Classical" (Kontakte), where the non-Prog is more or less random - pieced together merely because the sound appeals (in the same way as pop songs), the Prog is artfully contrived, and delivered in an improvisatory manner, producing a pre-conceived narrative, and the "Classical" is structured according to the various sections and sound groupings (although here the difference becomes blurred, as a performance of "Kontakte" may become improvisatory up to a point, due to the graphical nature of the score).
 
As everybody knows, Prog does not have a clearly defined set of rules - but here the differences are distinct.
 
 
 
 


Edited by Certif1ed - October 21 2008 at 09:56
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 21 2008 at 10:20
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

We don't have to agree on rules - but they are there, nonetheless.


As Budgie said: "If I were Britannia I'd waive the rules..."


Edited by Angelo - October 21 2008 at 10:20
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 21 2008 at 11:01

I too was scared of "Revolution 9" as a child, but as an adult I can truly appreciate it regardless of how random or devoid of structure it may seem. My only complaint is that it's a bit long for a sound collage.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 21 2008 at 13:33
Moonchild gets beat up on a lot by reviewers, unfairly so.  Cry

I'd also rank number nine number nine number nine above all the Beatles stuff pre Rubber Soul. Wink
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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