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Is 'Sgt. Pepper' overrated?

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Topic: Is 'Sgt. Pepper' overrated?
Posted By: A Crimson Mellotron
Subject: Is 'Sgt. Pepper' overrated?
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 01:28
It's iconic but for a lot of people, including musicians (Steven Wilson, for example) the album is slightly overrated. What do you think?



Replies:
Posted By: Boboulo
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 01:29
Of course not.


Posted By: Cristi
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 02:06
Originally posted by A Crimson Mellotron A Crimson Mellotron wrote:

It's iconic but for a lot of people, including musicians (Steven Wilson, for example) the album is slightly overrated. What do you think?

what makes you say it's overrated?


Posted By: FatherChristmas
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 03:50
Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

Originally posted by A Crimson Mellotron A Crimson Mellotron wrote:

It's iconic but for a lot of people, including musicians (Steven Wilson, for example) the album is slightly overrated. What do you think?

what makes you say it's overrated?
To be fair, when you have a band like the Beatles with a massive maniacal fanbase their stuff is always going to be a little overated.


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"Music is the wine that fills the cup of silence" - Robert Fripp
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Posted By: hellogoodbye
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 03:54
Is life overrated ?


Posted By: dwill123
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 04:32
Is 'Sgt. Pepper' overrated?  NO.


Posted By: dougmcauliffe
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 04:57
No, nor are the Beatles as a whole, sitting down and listening to the later half of their discography easily proves they were and are worth the hype and they were always on top of whatever they were doing at any moment in their career.

It's easy to take the little stuff for granted but the production value and pure psychedelia bliss oozing from that album is incredible.


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Posted By: Hrychu
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 05:00
No.

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Posted By: Cristi
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 05:02
Originally posted by FatherChristmas FatherChristmas wrote:

Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

Originally posted by A Crimson Mellotron A Crimson Mellotron wrote:

It's iconic but for a lot of people, including musicians (Steven Wilson, for example) the album is slightly overrated. What do you think?

what makes you say it's overrated?
To be fair, when you have a band like the Beatles with a massive maniacal fanbase their stuff is always going to be a little overated.

I guess I can call myself lucky I've never met maniacal Beatles fans, not in my everyday life, or online. On the contrary, at least online it was quite the opposite (prog and metal sites I have hanged out). 

Overrated for me means an artist's work that gets more appreciation than it deserves, a hype I cannot understand. In Sgt Pepper's case, I think the appreciation it gets is well deserved, so, no, I don't think it's overrated. 


Posted By: Manuel
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 05:53
Not to me. If you consider the historical importance of it, and the influence it produced in the immediate future, certainly not.


Posted By: FatherChristmas
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 06:00
Originally posted by Manuel Manuel wrote:

Not to me. If you consider the historical importance of it, and the influence it produced in the immediate future, certainly not.
In the end, yes - it was what defined prog rock. I believe the term "progressive pop" began at this point - sice the Beatles made pop music, but it was getting progressive on Sgt. Pepper (this of course later became "progressive rock"). Music we now call prog ("Kinda Prog?" LOL) was of course made earlier, but the Beatles I think made it what it is now.


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"Music is the wine that fills the cup of silence" - Robert Fripp
"I am an anti-Christ" - Johnny Rotten


Posted By: AFlowerKingCrimson
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 06:39
Oddly enough I was just doing a search for versions of "a little help from my friends" on youtube. I wanted to see if any cover versions were based on the original and not the Joe Cocker version. I prefer the original but seem to be a minority. 

Anyway, I'm not sure it's over rated but some of the songs don't fit as well as others. For example I could do without "when I'm sixty four" or "being for the benefit of mr. Kite." Not bad songs but they seem out of place. "Within you without you" is also maybe a bit out of place and should have appeared on a George Harrison solo album maybe. There's no bad songs on it and it's still a great album but I don't think it flows as well as it should except for the first few songs and maybe the last few.


Posted By: Intruder
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 07:13
Of course it's overrated - how can the consistently "de facto" number one album on SO many of those Top Album lists not be?  "They" RATE that album OVER the entire canon of pop music over the past 70 years or so!  That's immediately going to bring out defenders and nay-sayers, especially if those against weren't around at the time of Pepper's release.  

It's popularity at the time was intense - people really believed that the album would stop the war, ease societal tensions, bridge gaps between generations.  That's a lot to expect of an album, eh?  Of course, pop music didn't save the world and as Pepper got overplayed, other music stepped into the hype maching and came out the other side as Top Albums, too.   Your Dark Sides, IVs, CTTEs, not to mention the CSNs, Eltons and Princes.

I personally don't rate Pepper in my Beatles Top 5 (Mystery Tour, Revolver, Rubber Soul, White, Abbey), let alone all-time Top 5.  I love Pepper and always will - I was born a few weeks after its release and its been part of my life ever since......part of those cradle songs that stay with you from birth 'til death.  But, yeah, it's waaaay overrated - five star album, to be sure, but there are SO many better records out there.  


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Posted By: twosteves
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 08:18
many things in life are overrated ---because really all you need is loveWink ---but it probably is overrated-- but its importance in music history is hard to overstate. 


Posted By: siLLy puPPy
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 08:25
These kinds of polls are overrated. Just listened to Sgt Peppers a few days ago. No! If you don't find it the masterpiece that it is, you just don't get it!


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Posted By: Earl of Mar
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 08:26
Pepper is more than just an album. It was released slap bang in the middle of the summer of love when many people thought that a change was coming and music could be a potent force in that change. As such pepper was awaited with huge anticipation and for a generation it seemed to fit the bill. Of course it didn't change the world ( well not immediately) but it is a fine album that was one of the albums that would help facilitate the progressive rock music that followed quite quickly after.

It is not my fave Beatles album, I prefer revolver,MMT and Abbey Road but I feel that if they had put out a double A single of 'when I'm sixty four' and ' within without you" leaving SFF and Penny Lane for Pepper what an album! Also ' when I'm sixty four' would imo have had a better chance of beating Englebert to the No 1 spot.

Still overrated, yes probably but with that expectation understandable.


Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 08:28
Everything should be more over rated than everything else.

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Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 08:54
When Robert Fripp pulls his car over to the side of the road just to listen to Sgt. Pepper's for the first time, I don't think it can be viewed as overrated.

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Posted By: A Crimson Mellotron
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 09:37
Good to see different points of view. I don't think it's overrated but definitely not their best, as it is often said to be.


Posted By: Rednight
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 09:55
Steven Wilson thought it was "slightly" overrated? Coming from a guy who is entirely overrated. No, it pretty much started it all, thank you.

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Posted By: POTA
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 10:35
Whether or not you currently enjoy the album has no bearing on whether it’s overrated. The album changed music. Every single artist was impacted by it in some way. Of course it’s not even close to be overrated.


Posted By: twosteves
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 11:37
Originally posted by Rednight Rednight wrote:

Steven Wilson thought it was "slightly" overrated? Coming from a guy who is entirely overrated. No, it pretty much started it all, thank you.

Oh snap! But agree with you 100%.


Posted By: JD
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 12:23
Not even a little. It's a great album.


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Posted By: Atavachron
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 13:11
Compared to what?

Of course it's not overrated.




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Posted By: The Anders
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 15:10
Is it the Beatles' best album? Not necessarily, my favourite album of all time is Revolver. But overrated? Absolutely not. It's an astonishing piece of work in many respects, and it is very accomplished. "A Day in the Life" alone is one of the greatest pieces of art I can think of...


Posted By: Progosopher
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 16:10
In no way whatsoever is it overrated. Is it the best album ever? Possibly, possibly not, but it is one of the contenders. Do some people rate it highly for the wrong reasons? Of course that has happened. Have others rated it highly for the right reasons. Absolutely. Does everyone like it? No. Should anyone in particular like it? No, that is entirely up to them.

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Posted By: socrates17
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 17:35
Historically is one thing, but artistically it is hugely overrated.  Give me Pretty Things' SF Sorrow or Piper at the Gates of Dawn any day of the week.  Or Shazam by The Move.  In fact, The Beatles and the Stones in general are massively overrated.  Especially compared to The Yardbirds, The Move, Creation, The Kinks, Tomorrow, John's Children, The Who (through Sell Out), East of Eden, et al.  In fact, even historically, the The Yardbirds had a more direct influence on rock music than either The Beatles or the Stones.  The Beatles' primary influence was the short lived power pop era.  Now, I loved Big Star, The Raspberries & Dwight Twilley and the other power pop artists as much as anybody, but punk pretty much put an untimely end to that era.  An argument could also be made that The Byrds were much more influential than The Beatles.


Posted By: siLLy puPPy
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 18:20
What does overrated anyway? Does it mean too many people rate it? Does it mean too many people like it? Too many people find it too enjoyable?

I'll express my own views on the album in a review someday but after listening to the album many, many times i don't understand why anyone doesn't find it a masterpiece.

Rating any given artwork shouldn't be about personal tastes alone. One can see the perfection of a work even if it doesn't suit one's tastes but in the case of Sgt Pepper's how can someone not find it an easy and admirable listen time and time again?


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Posted By: ProcolWho?
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 18:57
Change the poll to the  RUSH  discography before its too late


Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 19:46
Originally posted by socrates17 socrates17 wrote:

Historically is one thing, but artistically it is hugely overrated.  Give me Pretty Things' SF Sorrow or Piper at the Gates of Dawn any day of the week.  Or Shazam by The Move.  In fact, The Beatles and the Stones in general are massively overrated.  Especially compared to The Yardbirds, The Move, Creation, The Kinks, Tomorrow, John's Children, The Who (through Sell Out), East of Eden, et al.  In fact, even historically, the The Yardbirds had a more direct influence on rock music than either The Beatles or the Stones.  The Beatles' primary influence was the short lived power pop era.  Now, I loved Big Star, The Raspberries & Dwight Twilley and the other power pop artists as much as anybody, but punk pretty much put an untimely end to that era.  An argument could also be made that The Byrds were much more influential than The Beatles.

I am sorry, but that is a ponderous pile of cow pies. The Beatles were the most influential rock band of all time. It isn't even close. Not even in the same galaxy.

“I was struck by the thunderbolt that was “Please Please Me.” I immediately bought a copy in a seaside shop. It triggered a tremendous personal awakening, a leap into a new realm. In no time I knew more than a hundred Beatles songs on piano.” – Peter Gabriel

“It was terrifying; I had no idea what it was…Then it kept going. Then, there was this enormous whine note of strings. Then there was this a colossal piano chord. I discovered later that I’d come in half-way through Sgt. Pepper’s… My life was never the same again.”  - Robert Fripp on hearing “A Day in the Life” on the radio for the first time

"If it weren't for the Beatles, there wouldn't be anyone like us around." - Jimmy Page

"I wish I'd been in the Beatles." - David Gilmour (who has played with Paul McCartney on a number of occasions) 

“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 [Sgt. Pepper’s] gave me and my generation permission to branch out and do whatever we wanted.” – Roger Waters

 

If it weren't for the Beatles, I wouldn't be a musician." - Dave Grohl, Nirvana/Foo Fighters

"Everyone influenced someone. But everyone was influenced by the Beatles." - Alice Cooper

"Everyone thought the Beatles will just pass by. But to me, they had staying power." - Bob Dylan

 

"The Beatles are the reason I'm a musician." - Sting

 

"When the Beatles first played on the Ed Sullivan Show, they looked so cool. I knew something changed that night." - Joe Perry, Aerosmith

 

"There's no way I'd be doing what I do now if it wasn't for the Beatles. I saw them on the Ed Sullivan Show, and it blew me away how 4 guys from the middle of nowhere can make that kind of music." - Gene Simmons, KISS

 

"I fell in love with music through The Beatles. I still think there hasn't been a better band than them." -Adam Levine, Maroon 5

 

"Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band is probably the best album I've ever heard." -Brian Wilson, Beach Boys

 

“The Beatles built our bible as far as musical composition, arrangement and production went. The White Album is a complete catalogue of how you should use a studio to build songs. ‘Happiness Is a Warm Gun’ and ‘Dear Prudence’ are blinding examples of how music can be like painting a picture on a canvas.”" - Brian May, Queen

 

"I saw the Beatles. I was able to relate to them. I'm going to play in a rock band." - Tom Petty, Heartbreakers/Traveling Wilburys 

 

"I watched the Ed Sullivan Show and said F*ck School! This makes it! I went to see them at Shea Stadium and screamed with those chicks." - Joe Walsh, The Eagles

 

"The Beatles were the first to find that path between artistic and intellectual." - Keith Richards

 

“The single biggest moment that I can remember being galvanized into wanting to be a musician for life was seeing the Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show.” - Billy Joel

 

"Without The Beatles I don’t think women would be taking their cardigans off in hallways. They were responsible for the birth of the sexual revolution for women.” - Lady Gaga

 

“The lightning bolt came out of the heavens and struck Ann and me the first time we saw the Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show. There’d been so much anticipation and hype about the Beatles that it was a huge event, like the lunar landing: that was the moment Ann and I heard the call to become rock musicians. I was seven or eight at the time." - Nancy Wilson, Heart

 

“It’s impossible for me to talk about popular music without mentioning probably my greatest mentor, John Lennon. I guess he defined for me, at any rate, how one could twist and turn the fabric of pop and imbue it with elements from other artforms, often producing something extremely beautiful, very powerful and imbued with strangeness.” – David Bowie

 

“If you hear something like "Man Behind The Curtain" or "Raining", you’ll see that it really is an attempt at combining the pop sensibilities of The Beatles and the Indian part of The Beatles—the George Harrison part. Speaking just about The Beatles in general though, they meant everything to me—I can’t overstate it because they changed my life.” – Adrian Belew 

 

“Sgt. Pepper’s was a great record. The Beatles are my favorites, you know. When I met Paul McCartney, it was the highlight of my life.” – Ozzy Osbourne

 

“Dear Beatles, it’s my earliest memory of music. I was three years old and in the back garden of 10 Cedarwood Road… I associate the song with the smell of freshly cut grass as I was lying on my back on the damp green patch after my Da had cut the lawn.” - Bono, writing a fan letter to the Beatles about the first time he heard “I Want to Hold Your Hand”


Jimi Hendrix, XTC, Electric Light Orchestra, Todd Rundgren and Utopia, The Squeeze, Crowded House, Smashing Pumpkins, The Cure, Oasis, Elton John, Bryan Ferry, Kate Bush, The Flaming Lips, Kurt Cobain (who wrote 'About a Girl' after listening to 'Meet the Beatles' for three straight hours), Jeff Beck and Al Di Meola are just a few artists who directly acknowledge the Beatles influence.

                                                                                                                                                                                    




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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 20:10
^ Very thorough.
That album was an album that everyone was listening to at the time, it influenced everyone, including people involved in genres outside of rock.

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Posted By: socrates17
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 20:28
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

 

"There's no way I'd be doing what I do now if it wasn't for the Beatles. I saw them on the Ed Sullivan Show, and it blew me away how 4 guys from the middle of nowhere can make that kind of music." - Gene Simmons, KISS

We watched Ed Sullivan every week without fail.  I clearly remember guests like Steve and Edie, Senor Wences, Jose Greco, the Muppets (including one bit when Kermit gets eaten).  I have absolutely no recollection of seeing either The Beatles or The Stones on Ed Sullivan.  They did nothing for me.  On the other hand, when Buffalo Springfield played Hollywood Palace, I was electrified.  THERE was a band!



Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: September 12 2020 at 21:11
Originally posted by socrates17 socrates17 wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

 

"There's no way I'd be doing what I do now if it wasn't for the Beatles. I saw them on the Ed Sullivan Show, and it blew me away how 4 guys from the middle of nowhere can make that kind of music." - Gene Simmons, KISS

We watched Ed Sullivan every week without fail.  I clearly remember guests like Steve and Edie, Senor Wences, Jose Greco, the Muppets (including one bit when Kermit gets eaten).  I have absolutely no recollection of seeing either The Beatles or The Stones on Ed Sullivan.  They did nothing for me.  On the other hand, when Buffalo Springfield played Hollywood Palace, I was electrified.  THERE was a band!

Evidently, you missed it. Evidently, as was recorded by many high-profile rock stars across several genres, seeing The Beatles in February, 1964 was a life changing event - so much so that they decided then and there to become musicians. I remember it clearly, because even as a 4 year old it was special. I've been a Beatles fan ever since. I also remember seeing the Beatles and Stones several times on Ed Sullivan. Evidently, you had some sort of mental block.

And humorously, the Byrds adored and were heavily influenced by The Beatles:

David Crosby: 
"They (The Beatles) were our heroes. They were absolutely what we thought we wanted to do. We listened to every note they played, and savored it, and rubbed it on our foreheads, and were duly affected by it."

Chris Hillman: 
"We also saw The Beatles first movie, A Hard Days Night, which also opened our eyes quite a bit. That's where Roger McGuinn saw George Harrison playing a Rickenbacker 12-string. Roger had been playing a Gibson acoustic 12-string and when he saw Harrison, that was the guitar--and the rest, as they say, is history. So, in the literal sense, yes, we plugged our amplifiers in and by hook or crook, learned how to play to Rock and Roll. It was actually what made The Byrds unique because we didn't have a blueprint to follow."

Roger McGuinn: 
"If you listen to the very early Byrds recordings on, say, Preflyte, you can hear a pronounced Beatles sound."


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Posted By: chopper
Date Posted: September 13 2020 at 06:18
Originally posted by socrates17 socrates17 wrote:

An argument could also be made that The Byrds were much more influential than The Beatles.


An argument could also be made that The Beatles invented The Byrds.


Posted By: geekfreak
Date Posted: September 13 2020 at 06:34
Not imho

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Posted By: chopper
Date Posted: September 13 2020 at 07:13
It's actually hard to gauge the impact of Sgt Pepper unless you were around at the time (I was, but I was far too young). As The Dark Elf has shown above, it had an enormous impact on other musicians, not least it showed them what could be done in the studio.


Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: September 13 2020 at 13:04
Being that the album's creative influence extends all the way to Radiohead's Ok Computer, I would say no.

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Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: September 13 2020 at 13:25
Originally posted by A Crimson Mellotron A Crimson Mellotron wrote:

It's iconic but for a lot of people, including musicians (Steven Wilson, for example) the album is slightly overrated. What do you think?

Hi,

Saying it is overrated TODAY ... is silly and ridiculous, because you can compare to hundreds and hundreds of other albums since then ... we're talking what ... almost 55 years or something like that ... something, is likely to make it look overrated ... but using SW's opinion, is a bit ridiculous. He's not a master of history, and neither is he a musician that will stand the time for some 55 years! 

Now, if you take a time trip ... BACK TO WHEN THE ALBUM WAS RELEASED, there was nothing like it anywhere in the world, and it would not be over rated ... maybe not liked by some people that might think there were too many drug this and that and stupid things ... but no album, since then, has shown a band so intelligent and capable as to make something special stand out ... and they did ... 

THERE WAS NO OTHER then, to make the comment and idea that it is/was overrated a valid comment. It is, undoubtedly a comment made by someone that has no vision of the history of a lot of music, and how some things in the 60's took the world by storm.

It wasn't "overrated" ... and never will be!


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Posted By: AFlowerKingCrimson
Date Posted: September 13 2020 at 13:56
I received it as a birthday present when I turned 8 years old from a family friend. She was a little strange and actually played the album before giving it to me. Apparently she opened it up and put pepper on the sleeve. She asked me to smell it and I didn't understand what I was supposed to smell. "Oh, I get it now I said" after she explained. Anyway, I remember putting it on(or rather having my father put the record on since I wasn't allowed to touch his turntable). I would jump around in my bathrobe with the title track playing(and the rest of the album too probably) pretending to be in the Sgt. Pepper's band. The Beatles in general had an influence on me as a kid but especially that record. This was in the 70's also so the Beatles had already been broken up for 8 years by then but they still had a lingering impact on music.


Posted By: Logan
Date Posted: September 13 2020 at 14:29
My stock answer for most very album, it's underrated by some and overrated by others. Overall, I don't think so. It's an incredibly influential album. In such cases I prefer to look at individual claims and see if that overstates the significance of something/ makes dubious or false claims/ gives undue merit -- the more specific the better. For instance, if someone claims that without Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band Pet Sounds would have never happened, then with this inaccurate statement that person is overrating the significance and impact of the Beatles' album.

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Posted By: Hercules
Date Posted: September 13 2020 at 15:19
In historical terms, it's undeniably an extremely important album. Many people seem to like it a lot.
Personally, I didn't enjoy it at all at the time and the passage of time has done nothing to change that.
At the time, you were generally either a Beatles fan or a Stones fan. I never liked either.


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Posted By: AFlowerKingCrimson
Date Posted: September 13 2020 at 15:49
Originally posted by Hercules Hercules wrote:

In historical terms, it's undeniably an extremely important album. Many people seem to like it a lot.
Personally, I didn't enjoy it at all at the time and the passage of time has done nothing to change that.
At the time, you were generally either a Beatles fan or a Stones fan. I never liked either.

The Monkees? Wink


Posted By: Blaqua
Date Posted: September 13 2020 at 15:58

In my opinion, it is a bit overrated, in that it ranks as the greatest album of all time; hence Beatles’ best release. I always preferred the very multifaceted and oddball White Album.    



Posted By: judahbenkenobi
Date Posted: September 14 2020 at 00:21
Originally posted by A Crimson Mellotron A Crimson Mellotron wrote:

It's iconic but for a lot of people, including musicians (Steven Wilson, for example) the album is slightly overrated. What do you think?


Ironic Steven Wilson himself wrote these lyrics for the PT song "Time Flies":

"I was born in '67
The year of Sgt. Pepper
And Are You Experienced

Into a suburban heaven
Yeah it should've been forever
It all seems to make so much sense"

Is it just me, or is he recognizing here the huge influence Sgt Pepper and Are You Experienced had on his life? If he thinks Sgt Pepper is overrated, the blame is on him also.

Anyway, my answer to your question is NO. It is not overrated.



Posted By: Zeph
Date Posted: September 14 2020 at 00:44
The problem with a question like this is that it doesn't differentiate between the music and the influence it had. Steven Wilson has been mentioned a few times and fwiw., he has said Sgt. Pepper is one of the most influential albums ever recorded, if not the top one. When he says he finds the album overrated, it's from a musical perspective, not the influence it had. He puts other albums by The Beatles ahead of Sgt. Pepper and would not put it anywhere near the top of his all-time favorites. He does not agree with all the lists that put the album as the greatest album of all time. Maybe on a list of most influential, but not the best. And why argue with that? It's musical taste you are arguing. I don't see how him mentioning the album multiple times in his music makes a difference. He is a musician and was born in the year one of the most influential albums ever were released. That doesn't mean he can't disagree with those who rank it as the best album of all time

I also find Sgt. Pepper overrated as a musical album, but I'm not a big fan of Beatles, so it can hardly be a surprise. As an influential album it's probably not overrated.


Posted By: I prophesy disaster
Date Posted: September 14 2020 at 14:29
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

“I was struck by the thunderbolt that was “Please Please Me.” I immediately bought a copy in a seaside shop. It triggered a tremendous personal awakening, a leap into a new realm. In no time I knew more than a hundred Beatles songs on piano.” – Peter Gabriel

“It was terrifying; I had no idea what it was…Then it kept going. Then, there was this enormous whine note of strings. Then there was this a colossal piano chord. I discovered later that I’d come in half-way through Sgt. Pepper’s… My life was never the same again.”  - Robert Fripp on hearing “A Day in the Life” on the radio for the first time

"If it weren't for the Beatles, there wouldn't be anyone like us around." - Jimmy Page

"I wish I'd been in the Beatles." - David Gilmour (who has played with Paul McCartney on a number of occasions) 

“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 [Sgt. Pepper’s] gave me and my generation permission to branch out and do whatever we wanted.” – Roger Waters

 

If it weren't for the Beatles, I wouldn't be a musician." - Dave Grohl, Nirvana/Foo Fighters

"Everyone influenced someone. But everyone was influenced by the Beatles." - Alice Cooper

"Everyone thought the Beatles will just pass by. But to me, they had staying power." - Bob Dylan

 

"The Beatles are the reason I'm a musician." - Sting

 

"When the Beatles first played on the Ed Sullivan Show, they looked so cool. I knew something changed that night." - Joe Perry, Aerosmith

 

"There's no way I'd be doing what I do now if it wasn't for the Beatles. I saw them on the Ed Sullivan Show, and it blew me away how 4 guys from the middle of nowhere can make that kind of music." - Gene Simmons, KISS

 

"I fell in love with music through The Beatles. I still think there hasn't been a better band than them." -Adam Levine, Maroon 5

 

"Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band is probably the best album I've ever heard." -Brian Wilson, Beach Boys

 

“The Beatles built our bible as far as musical composition, arrangement and production went. The White Album is a complete catalogue of how you should use a studio to build songs. ‘Happiness Is a Warm Gun’ and ‘Dear Prudence’ are blinding examples of how music can be like painting a picture on a canvas.”" - Brian May, Queen

 

"I saw the Beatles. I was able to relate to them. I'm going to play in a rock band." - Tom Petty, Heartbreakers/Traveling Wilburys 

 

"I watched the Ed Sullivan Show and said F*ck School! This makes it! I went to see them at Shea Stadium and screamed with those chicks." - Joe Walsh, The Eagles

 

"The Beatles were the first to find that path between artistic and intellectual." - Keith Richards

 

“The single biggest moment that I can remember being galvanized into wanting to be a musician for life was seeing the Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show.” - Billy Joel

 

"Without The Beatles I don’t think women would be taking their cardigans off in hallways. They were responsible for the birth of the sexual revolution for women.” - Lady Gaga

 

“The lightning bolt came out of the heavens and struck Ann and me the first time we saw the Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show. There’d been so much anticipation and hype about the Beatles that it was a huge event, like the lunar landing: that was the moment Ann and I heard the call to become rock musicians. I was seven or eight at the time." - Nancy Wilson, Heart

 

“It’s impossible for me to talk about popular music without mentioning probably my greatest mentor, John Lennon. I guess he defined for me, at any rate, how one could twist and turn the fabric of pop and imbue it with elements from other artforms, often producing something extremely beautiful, very powerful and imbued with strangeness.” – David Bowie

 

“If you hear something like "Man Behind The Curtain" or "Raining", you’ll see that it really is an attempt at combining the pop sensibilities of The Beatles and the Indian part of The Beatles—the George Harrison part. Speaking just about The Beatles in general though, they meant everything to me—I can’t overstate it because they changed my life.” – Adrian Belew 

 

“Sgt. Pepper’s was a great record. The Beatles are my favorites, you know. When I met Paul McCartney, it was the highlight of my life.” – Ozzy Osbourne

 

“Dear Beatles, it’s my earliest memory of music. I was three years old and in the back garden of 10 Cedarwood Road… I associate the song with the smell of freshly cut grass as I was lying on my back on the damp green patch after my Da had cut the lawn.” - Bono, writing a fan letter to the Beatles about the first time he heard “I Want to Hold Your Hand”


Jimi Hendrix, XTC, Electric Light Orchestra, Todd Rundgren and Utopia, The Squeeze, Crowded House, Smashing Pumpkins, The Cure, Oasis, Elton John, Bryan Ferry, Kate Bush, The Flaming Lips, Kurt Cobain (who wrote 'About a Girl' after listening to 'Meet the Beatles' for three straight hours),

 

Jeff Beck and Al Di Meola are just a few artists who directly acknowledge the Beatles influence.

 
And Peter Hammill:
 
 
 
 


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No, I know how to behave in the restaurant now, I don't tear at the meat with my hands. If I've become a man of the world somehow, that's not necessarily to say I'm a worldly man.


Posted By: A Crimson Mellotron
Date Posted: September 14 2020 at 14:32
Originally posted by judahbenkenobi judahbenkenobi wrote:

Originally posted by A Crimson Mellotron A Crimson Mellotron wrote:

It's iconic but for a lot of people, including musicians (Steven Wilson, for example) the album is slightly overrated. What do you think?


Ironic Steven Wilson himself wrote these lyrics for the PT song "Time Flies":

"I was born in '67
The year of Sgt. Pepper
And Are You Experienced

Into a suburban heaven
Yeah it should've been forever
It all seems to make so much sense"

Is it just me, or is he recognizing here the huge influence Sgt Pepper and Are You Experienced had on his life? If he thinks Sgt Pepper is overrated, the blame is on him also.

Anyway, my answer to your question is NO. It is not overrated.



I know, right. Oddly enough, he has said it in an interview for some magazine.


Posted By: Lewian
Date Posted: September 14 2020 at 15:13
I was expecting Sgt. Pepper to be the Beatles' highest rated album on PA, but actually it is only in third place. Revolver (2) and Abbey Road (1) are ahead of it. Third place is about right in my view. I'd rank Revolver first and Rubber Soul second, so the overrated one as far as I'm concerned is Abbey Road.



Posted By: POTA
Date Posted: September 14 2020 at 16:06
Originally posted by Lewian Lewian wrote:

I was expecting Sgt. Pepper to be the Beatles' highest rated album on PA, but actually it is only in third place. Revolver (2) and Abbey Road (1) are ahead of it. Third place is about right in my view. I'd rank Revolver first and Rubber Soul second, so the overrated one as far as I'm concerned is Abbey Road.



How in the hell is Abbey Road ranked so high? It has some great moments, but it’s gotta be one their least inspired albums, with some brutal filler.


Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: September 14 2020 at 16:56
I think so... If you take out "A Day in the Life", it's one of their poorest albums.

My favorites are White Album, and Revolver. but I think it's probably their worst album from 65-70.


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https://www.youtube.com/c/LoyalOpposition

https://www.scribd.com/document/382737647/MortSahlFan-Song-List


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: September 14 2020 at 17:07
It's the only studio Beatles album I own.....but if you give me $0.25 I'll agree with you.

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Posted By: Boboulo
Date Posted: September 14 2020 at 18:09
Originally posted by POTA POTA wrote:

Originally posted by Lewian Lewian wrote:

I was expecting Sgt. Pepper to be the Beatles' highest rated album on PA, but actually it is only in third place. Revolver (2) and Abbey Road (1) are ahead of it. Third place is about right in my view. I'd rank Revolver first and Rubber Soul second, so the overrated one as far as I'm concerned is Abbey Road.



How in the hell is Abbey Road ranked so high? It has some great moments, but it’s gotta be one their least inspired albums, with some brutal filler.
Yeah, I agree. In my humble opinion, "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" / "Magical Mistery Tour" is The Beatles' most creative phase.


Posted By: jamesbaldwin
Date Posted: September 14 2020 at 19:26
In my opinion, 

Historically Sgt. Pepper's it was very important but more for the formal inventions than for the content: the background noises, the initial song resumed at the end (it was the first time in history), the idea of ​​being another band playing (vanished later the second song), the concept of musical entertainment, the final song that mixes pop and John Cage, and which remains the best of the Beatles. It's a fake concept album. 

In content, the second side is weak, and many of the songs on the disc are similar to those of Revolver or Rubber Soul only that they are arranged in a more baroque fashion, and generally have taken the variety of musical genres already present on Revolver to exasperation, arriving at a certain point to make rock music appear as a minority, present in a few songs. 

McCartney now only writes vaudeville or swing or symphonic songs, in short, all retro songs. 

Sgt Pepper's is therefore a masterpiece of light music, popular music, but not of rock. For rock it's not a cutting-edge album at all. Personally I love it a lot but I see all these flaws. The White Album seems to me to contain songs that are more in step with the times, and Abbey Road (and Let It Be) brought the Beatles back to playing rock music, in their own way, comparing themselves with contemporary groups, and remains their best work, more complete and mature, less varied, perhaps, but certainly with more mature and committed songs.




-------------
Amos Goldberg (professor of Genocide Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem): Yes, it's genocide. It's so difficult and painful to admit it, but we can no longer avoid this conclusion.


Posted By: Yallghurt
Date Posted: September 14 2020 at 19:59
I wouldn't say overrated, because it is actually a great album (most Beatles albums are), but I tend to agree with other people that Revolver and White Album are much more elaborate. Eleanor Rigby surprised me so much when I first listened to it that I still remember where I was and what I was doing.


Posted By: Zeph
Date Posted: September 15 2020 at 02:27
Originally posted by A Crimson Mellotron A Crimson Mellotron wrote:

Originally posted by judahbenkenobi judahbenkenobi wrote:

Originally posted by A Crimson Mellotron A Crimson Mellotron wrote:

It's iconic but for a lot of people, including musicians (Steven Wilson, for example) the album is slightly overrated. What do you think?


Ironic Steven Wilson himself wrote these lyrics for the PT song "Time Flies":

"I was born in '67
The year of Sgt. Pepper
And Are You Experienced

Into a suburban heaven
Yeah it should've been forever
It all seems to make so much sense"

Is it just me, or is he recognizing here the huge influence Sgt Pepper and Are You Experienced had on his life? If he thinks Sgt Pepper is overrated, the blame is on him also.

Anyway, my answer to your question is NO. It is not overrated.



I know, right. Oddly enough, he has said it in an interview for some magazine.
When he says "overrated", it's based on "Best of all time" lists, where Sgt. Pepper frequently appears. Here's a direct quote from an interview:

Quote The record I can't understand why everybody loves is…

"Nearly everything that ends up near the top of all time best album lists, especially 'Sgt. Pepper', 'Blonde on Blonde', 'Stone Roses', and 'Nevermind'. Not saying they aren't very good records mind!"

Quote So when I grew up in the 80s, I didn't find anything of interest. So I went back to the 70s and I went back to 60s. And I found this wonderfully rich period of ten years. I call it „the golden age for albums“, which is really from „Sgt. Pepper“ through to Punk Rock. There's virtually not a single record from that period that I don't like. I just love the sound of the records. I love the look of the records. I love the ambition in the records.

He thinks it's a good album, and one of the most influential albums ever released. He just doesn't agree that it is listed as high as it frequently is on those "Best of" lists. If it hadn't appeared on those lists, he probably wouldn't have called it overrated. A list of "Best albums of all time" has every record ever produced to choose from, and how many would put Sgt. Pepper in their top 10 of that? If the list was "Most influential albums of all time" I can see the clear case of picking Sgt. Pepper. Some authors of the lists may of course consider both the musicality and the influence when they say "best", but that may not be communicated very well. Or how you weigh such a list between musicality and influence. 50/50, 30/70?

Don't forget that "overrated" means you state an opinion about someone else's opinion. It's not about the album or how you like it. You say that you disagree with how high others rate the album. It does not influence what you think of it or how you rate it. People seem to mistake this with someone (SW in this example) not liking an album or finding it important, which is incorrect.


Posted By: Sean Trane
Date Posted: September 15 2020 at 02:35
Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

Originally posted by A Crimson Mellotron A Crimson Mellotron wrote:

It's iconic but for a lot of people, including musicians (Steven Wilson, for example) the album is slightly overrated. What do you think?

what makes you say it's overrated?


I can see where Crim is comming from....

I mean Pepper is not even the Fab Four's best album (Road is)


I have a certain fondness for Pepper, because when arriving in Canada's english-speaking side, our english teacher made us learn the language by using Pepper and reading the lyrics.
Great & fun way to learn a barbarian tongue. TongueLOL




Posted By: friso
Date Posted: September 15 2020 at 03:29
I'd rather say its underrated. Its a truly progressive album that's really fun to listen to as well. Even in groups. Its like a Christmas dinner when you're young. Progressive rock could have learned a lot more from its enjoyable, festive vibes.

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I'm guitarist and songwriter for the prog-related band Mother Bass. Find us at http://www.motherbass.com. I also enter stages throughout the Netherlands performing my poetry.


Posted By: Dellinger
Date Posted: September 15 2020 at 13:27
I actually don't really like it that much. That doesn't mean it's overrated.


Posted By: Droxford
Date Posted: September 15 2020 at 14:01
To be honest , I don't know. 
I own several Beatles albums including 'Pepper' . I totally understand that 

The fact that we are having this discussion 53 years later says a great deal. 
That each track on the album is quite individual and stands out well. 
Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention parodying the original cover for their album 'We are only in it for the Money' is still quite a tribute to  the importance of 'Pepper'. 
'A Day in the Life' is astonishing , Two songs rammed together , an orchestra playing in a discordant fashion thrown in, is an absolute classic. I played it to a friend who doesn't get The Beatles, and they had to agree that the track is an achievement. 

But I am an getting on in years. I just do not know, as we stumble further  into the 21st Century if 'Pepper' is that important. But a fascinating thread nevertheless. 






Posted By: FatherChristmas
Date Posted: September 15 2020 at 15:22
Originally posted by Droxford Droxford wrote:

To be honest , I don't know. 
I own several Beatles albums including 'Pepper' . I totally understand that 

The fact that we are having this discussion 53 years later says a great deal. 
That each track on the album is quite individual and stands out well. 
Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention parodying the original cover for their album 'We are only in it for the Money' is still quite a tribute to  the importance of 'Pepper'. 
'A Day in the Life' is astonishing , Two songs rammed together , an orchestra playing in a discordant fashion thrown in, is an absolute classic. I played it to a friend who doesn't get The Beatles, and they had to agree that the track is an achievement. 

But I am an getting on in years. I just do not know, as we stumble further  into the 21st Century if 'Pepper' is that important. But a fascinating thread nevertheless. 





Yes, we are discussing it 53 years later, that means a great deal. It is of huge historical importance. But remember Beatlemania! That exagerrated, emphasised and overated everything they band did. What effect did that have one our opinion?
It all comes down to what you call overated. I do not think it is underated. In fact, I think it's just where it should be, overated or not. If it is overated, perhaps it deserves to be so. Certainly an interesting thread.

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"Music is the wine that fills the cup of silence" - Robert Fripp
"I am an anti-Christ" - Johnny Rotten


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: September 16 2020 at 07:00
Hi,

Sometimes, given the way history is taught in school, people have no understanding as to how different things were 50 years ago ... and worse ... many don't care and think their opinion is more important.

When you do not have the "history" and "perspective" on history, a lot of these things lose some of their ability to stand ... and it is sad ... at the time, it was all they had to do what they did ... so go ahead, be silly and say that Mozart is an idiot and acid-hole for what he created, and on top of it, stupid because he wanted to do something different, and could only do it on bars, drunk and cavorting with anyone. He saw it differently and we don't care ... we think he is over this or that or under this or that ... 

this is one of the main reasons why so much of what I write is related to the time and place ... and it is a constant battle against the "commercialists" because it is like ... they don't believe in time and a place for anything ... so much for history in school! Or literature or any of the arts for that matter!


-------------
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: Cristi
Date Posted: September 16 2020 at 07:03
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Hi,

Sometimes, given the way history is taught in school, people have no understanding as to how different things were 50 years ago ... and worse ... many don't care and think their opinion is more important.

When you do not have the "history" and "perspective" on history, a lot of these things lose some of their ability to stand ... and it is sad ... at the time, it was all they had to do what they did ... so go ahead, be silly and say that Mozart is an idiot and acid-hole for what he created, and on top of it, stupid because he wanted to do something different, and could only do it on bars, drunk and cavorting with anyone. He saw it differently and we don't care ... we think he is over this or that or under this or that ... 

this is one of the main reasons why so much of what I write is related to the time and place ... and it is a constant battle against the "commercialists" because it is like ... they don't believe in time and a place for anything ... so much for history in school! Or literature or any of the arts for that matter!

LOL
again, why take this thread so seriously? 
You seem angry... or something. LOL


Posted By: Enchant X
Date Posted: September 16 2020 at 07:26
I just listened to it ... yes and no Tongue


Posted By: judahbenkenobi
Date Posted: September 16 2020 at 08:07
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Hi,

Sometimes, given the way history is taught in school, people have no understanding as to how different things were 50 years ago ... and worse ... many don't care and think their opinion is more important.

When you do not have the "history" and "perspective" on history, a lot of these things lose some of their ability to stand ... and it is sad ... at the time, it was all they had to do what they did ... so go ahead, be silly and say that Mozart is an idiot and acid-hole for what he created, and on top of it, stupid because he wanted to do something different, and could only do it on bars, drunk and cavorting with anyone. He saw it differently and we don't care ... we think he is over this or that or under this or that ... 

this is one of the main reasons why so much of what I write is related to the time and place ... and it is a constant battle against the "commercialists" because it is like ... they don't believe in time and a place for anything ... so much for history in school! Or literature or any of the arts for that matter!


Personally, I prefer to have fun with the music I like, rather than making a philosophy of life out of it. After all I don't think that my life depends on it. But to each his own; it's a free world we live in


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: September 16 2020 at 09:55
Originally posted by judahbenkenobi judahbenkenobi wrote:

 
...
Personally, I prefer to have fun with the music I like, rather than making a philosophy of life out of it. After all I don't think that my life depends on it. But to each his own; it's a free world we live in

Hi,

I would imagine that many folks out there playing music, take it very seriously ... it is probably why they get as far as they do. I'm not sure that so many of the artists/musicians do not take their art seriously ... now, if the audience doesn't care, that's another story isn't it ... but what gives them the right to throw stones when it doesn't matter to them?


-------------
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: judahbenkenobi
Date Posted: September 16 2020 at 10:15
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by judahbenkenobi judahbenkenobi wrote:

 
...
Personally, I prefer to have fun with the music I like, rather than making a philosophy of life out of it. After all I don't think that my life depends on it. But to each his own; it's a free world we live in


Hi,

I would imagine that many folks out there playing music, take it very seriously ... it is probably why they get as far as they do. I'm not sure that so many of the artists/musicians do not take their art seriously ... now, if the audience doesn't care, that's another story isn't it ... but what gives them the right to throw stones when it doesn't matter to them?


Throw stones? I don't think expressing an indifferent opinion about a fan's comment is throwing stones at an artist. I seriously doubt Paul or Ringo would be offended about something I posted as a reply to another person's post.

I am a Beatles' fan and I know they took their work very seriously, that's why they are here, in the center of this discussion, because they did something tremendously influential. And I concur with you, every artist takes what they do very seriously, whether they do it for a living or not.


Posted By: POTA
Date Posted: September 16 2020 at 11:10
Originally posted by Yallghurt Yallghurt wrote:

I wouldn't say overrated, because it is actually a great album (most Beatles albums are), but I tend to agree with other people that Revolver and White Album are much more elaborate. Eleanor Rigby surprised me so much when I first listened to it that I still remember where I was and what I was doing.


White album isn’t even close to being more elaborate. It was a bunch of half baked ideas just tossed into an album. Little regard for fleshing out the tracks into something other than almost noodling around.

Back in the USSR, Glass Onion, Wild Honey Pie, Bungalow Bill, Everybody’s Got Something to Hide, Piggies, Birthday, Don’t Pass Me By, and Good Night are just bad for their standard. Most people would include Revolution 9 there too, but I give it a pass for at least being experimental with some effort put into it.

Many others feel not fleshed out like Dear Prudence, Martha My Dear, I Will, Julia, Long Long Long, Sexy Sadie, Mother Nature’s Son, Cry Baby Cry, and Honey Pie.

Most the others are fine. A few like While My Guitar, Blackbird, and Happiness is a Warm Gun I guess are “great” even though I don’t care for them anymore.


Posted By: Davesax1965
Date Posted: September 17 2020 at 01:18
"No".

Next question, please. 

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Posted By: Spacegod87
Date Posted: September 18 2020 at 09:15
Probably, but that doesn't make the album a lesser album, or the songs bad just because it's talked about too much. 
Still a stellar creation, from top to bottom.


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Levitating downwards,
atomic feedback scream.


Posted By: A Crimson Mellotron
Date Posted: September 18 2020 at 11:01
Good to see so many varying opinions!


Posted By: I prophesy disaster
Date Posted: September 18 2020 at 13:33
Is 'Sgt. Pepper' overrated? Probably. That's because the Beatles are treated like demigods, which means that everything they did was given the Midas touch. Thus, it is inevitable that their music is overrated.
 
 


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No, I know how to behave in the restaurant now, I don't tear at the meat with my hands. If I've become a man of the world somehow, that's not necessarily to say I'm a worldly man.


Posted By: FatherChristmas
Date Posted: September 19 2020 at 02:38
Originally posted by I prophesy disaster I prophesy disaster wrote:

Is 'Sgt. Pepper' overrated? Probably. That's because the Beatles are treated like demigods, which means that everything they did was given the Midas touch. Thus, it is inevitable that their music is overrated.
 
 
That's exactly what I meant when I said:
Originally posted by FatherChristmas FatherChristmas wrote:

To be fair, when you have a band like the Beatles with a massive maniacal fanbase their stuff is always going to be a little overated.


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"Music is the wine that fills the cup of silence" - Robert Fripp
"I am an anti-Christ" - Johnny Rotten


Posted By: iluvmarillion
Date Posted: September 20 2020 at 00:23
Originally posted by Zeph Zeph wrote:

The problem with a question like this is that it doesn't differentiate between the music and the influence it had. Steven Wilson has been mentioned a few times and fwiw., he has said Sgt. Pepper is one of the most influential albums ever recorded, if not the top one. When he says he finds the album overrated, it's from a musical perspective, not the influence it had. He puts other albums by The Beatles ahead of Sgt. Pepper and would not put it anywhere near the top of his all-time favorites. He does not agree with all the lists that put the album as the greatest album of all time. Maybe on a list of most influential, but not the best. And why argue with that? It's musical taste you are arguing. I don't see how him mentioning the album multiple times in his music makes a difference. He is a musician and was born in the year one of the most influential albums ever were released. That doesn't mean he can't disagree with those who rank it as the best album of all time

I also find Sgt. Pepper overrated as a musical album, but I'm not a big fan of Beatles, so it can hardly be a surprise. As an influential album it's probably not overrated.

I think George Martin stated that it was to his regret that Sargent Peppers didn't include Penny Lane and Strawberry Fields Forever. Put those two into the album and take out Lovely Rita and When I'm Sixty-four, you not only have the greatest Beatles recording you have the greatest pop/rock record of all time that not even Steven Wilson could complain about (similarly Brian Wilson regretted not including Good Vibrations on Pet Sounds; he eventually included it on Smile but it doesn't belong there).


Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: September 21 2020 at 23:42
In a way it is. There are 4 really great songs on it

A Day In The Life kick started prog rock
She's Leaving Home is achingly beautiful 
With A Little Help From My Friends and LSD make up the four.

Really the best Beatles album is a decent compilation that includes Eleanor Rigby, Penny Lane, It's All Too Much , I Am The Walrus etc. However it was the first time a band had turned rock music into art and so that alone makes it massively important. At least its nowhere near as dull as Dark Side Of The Moon (waits for the brick bats to fly Smile)



Posted By: Spacegod87
Date Posted: September 22 2020 at 00:06
^ I actually agree about 'Dark side of the moon'. There's a few good songs on it, but ultimately it's kind of bland.




-------------
Levitating downwards,
atomic feedback scream.


Posted By: A Crimson Mellotron
Date Posted: September 22 2020 at 01:01
Originally posted by Enchant X Enchant X wrote:

I just listened to it ... yes and no Tongue

Quite an exact answer! LOL


Posted By: Jeffro
Date Posted: September 22 2020 at 06:36
I think any iconic album contains at least some element of overratedness. That just goes along with the territory for monster albums such as this one.

For me, Sgt Pepper's is not overrated. I consider it to be about as perfect a Beatles record as you can get. 


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We all dwell in an amber subdomain, amber subdomain, amber subdomain.

My face IS a maserati


Posted By: TheLionOfPrague
Date Posted: September 23 2020 at 18:31
The Beatles have been one of my top favorite bands since I started (properly) listening to music 14 years ago. But I'd say it's slightly overrated. In the musical aspect, well, it's very subjective, but I think there are albums that are as good that don't get nowhear near the same attention. I mean, I won't even compare to an "obscure" artists like Magma or something that is avant garde, etc. which will obviously never be commercially successful. But I think "Arthur" by The Kinks is as good and doesn't get nowher near the same attention. Or Days of Future Passed by Moody Blues. I'm not saying they're better, but they could be easily considered as good and it's a similar genre and time period. Also, I think Abbey Road and the White Album are the greatest Beatles albums, slightly above Sgt. Pepper's and Revolver, but it's sort of being established that Sgt. Pepper's was their number one, though that seems to be changing.

When it comes to "influence" and "innovation", it's not like you can measure it, but I don't see why Revolver wasn't more groundbreaking. They're very similar and, well, Revolver came out before. And albums like In the Court of the Crimson King, Black Sabbath, Ramones, etc. basically created genres so they can be considered as innovative as well. 

But it's an excellent album and that's all that matters, overrated or not, it's a must for anyone that has a mild interest in rock music like any Beatle album from the '66-'69 period. 


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I shook my head and smiled a whisper knowing all about the place


Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: September 24 2020 at 00:55
Originally posted by TheLionOfPrague TheLionOfPrague wrote:

The Beatles have been one of my top favorite bands since I started (properly) listening to music 14 years ago. But I'd say it's slightly overrated. In the musical aspect, well, it's very subjective, but I think there are albums that are as good that don't get nowhear near the same attention. I mean, I won't even compare to an "obscure" artists like Magma or something that is avant garde, etc. which will obviously never be commercially successful. But I think "Arthur" by The Kinks is as good and doesn't get nowher near the same attention. Or Days of Future Passed by Moody Blues. I'm not saying they're better, but they could be easily considered as good and it's a similar genre and time period. Also, I think Abbey Road and the White Album are the greatest Beatles albums, slightly above Sgt. Pepper's and Revolver, but it's sort of being established that Sgt. Pepper's was their number one, though that seems to be changing.

When it comes to "influence" and "innovation", it's not like you can measure it, but I don't see why Revolver wasn't more groundbreaking. They're very similar and, well, Revolver came out before. And albums like In the Court of the Crimson King, Black Sabbath, Ramones, etc. basically created genres so they can be considered as innovative as well. 

But it's an excellent album and that's all that matters, overrated or not, it's a must for anyone that has a mild interest in rock music like any Beatle album from the '66-'69 period. 

Rubber Soul arguably was really when The Beatles started to 'wake up'. I think the point of Sg Peppers is that it expressed an intention to treat an album like a work of art and not just a bunch of potential hits for the radio . It fired up a lot of young musicians and lighted the blue touch paper for progressive rock. However in itself it's not an amazing album and I would even question whether any Beatles album is really that good. Often they released their best songs independently of albums which diluted their albums quality imo.


Posted By: Blacksword
Date Posted: September 24 2020 at 01:44
It's not overrated, and has to be considered within the context of the time it was made. It's not an album I listen to these days, although I should probably go back to it at some point. I first heard it in the 80's when I was about 17, so it's difficult for me to guage just just how 'important' an album it was, but again considering when it was made and what was happening in rock music at the time, I can accept that it probably was a very important album, in terms of rock music evolved into the 70's.

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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!


Posted By: dr wu23
Date Posted: September 24 2020 at 08:43
I'm on the same page as Disaster and Christmas above in that being such an iconic band it's natural it would get a little overrated and the same appiles for many classic lp's by other iconic bands. 
I heard it in June of '67 (age 16) and didn't know what to make of it at first....it sounded like the Beatles..but...?


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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin


Posted By: Rednight
Date Posted: September 24 2020 at 10:27
...it was the Beatles, setting the stage like they always did.

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"It just has none of the qualities of your work that I find interesting. Abandon [?] it." - Eno


Posted By: chopper
Date Posted: September 24 2020 at 13:22
Let's not forget that Sgt. Pepper was released less than 4 years after "I Want To Hold Your Hand". Some bands don't make any albums in that time let alone progress that much.


Posted By: uduwudu
Date Posted: October 02 2020 at 07:23
Originally posted by chopper chopper wrote:

Let's not forget that Sgt. Pepper was released less than 4 years after "I Want To Hold Your Hand". Some bands don't make any albums in that time let alone progress that much.


Having shed loads of money Abbey Road Studios and the brains inside there is not something that happens to anyone.


Posted By: Rednight
Date Posted: October 02 2020 at 08:46
^Incomprehensible. Explain.

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"It just has none of the qualities of your work that I find interesting. Abandon [?] it." - Eno


Posted By: chopper
Date Posted: October 02 2020 at 08:59
Originally posted by Rednight Rednight wrote:

^Incomprehensible. Explain.
 
He means a lot of the genius in Sgt Pepper is due to them having the cash and the freedom of Abbey Road studios and its techies (at least I think that's what he means).
 
Which is true to a point but they had to get to that position in the first place.


Posted By: Paulo V
Date Posted: October 05 2020 at 10:28
I don´t think that is over rated, but in comparison for the same year is not one of my choices, i Prefer Revolver instead.
Proto-Prog indeed!
Too many overdubs? Yep!!
Great Production? Absolutely!!
Songs out of the context? Maybe but if the idea was a concept album, it´s on the middle of the road!

Good album but not THE ALBUM!


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Always taking the point with the dawn patrol fraternity...


Posted By: uduwudu
Date Posted: October 14 2020 at 02:39
Originally posted by chopper chopper wrote:

Originally posted by Rednight Rednight wrote:

^Incomprehensible. Explain.
 
He means a lot of the genius in Sgt Pepper is due to them having the cash and the freedom of Abbey Road studios and its techies (at least I think that's what he means).
 
Which is true to a point but they had to get to that position in the first place.


That is exactly what he means. The clout of being a novel teen sensation.

To me the real impact of Sgt Pepper has not really been examined. In between the title track and reprise is a holiday camp representation. But the power of A Day In The Life, bleak, beautiful after all the light weight fun is where the real impact lies. A dire of real life in the real world depiction the real world outside of the purposely escapist fun.

But yes I do mean having someone who can direct sophisticated harmony to his subjects worked very well. Placing an act with a suitable producer worked wonders.


Posted By: Ronstein
Date Posted: October 16 2020 at 04:53
I think it has to be viewed from the perspective of where it was in time. It was a response to Brian Wilson creating Pet Sounds the year before, which completely tore up the rule book and the Beatles were fortunate enough to have the funds and the support from EMI to use it to inspire what was. at the time, unlike anything that had been before. To stand it up alongside more modern music makes no sense to me, as you're comparing it with music that was influenced by the innovations that Lennon/McCartney and Brian Wilson (and others of that generation) made. 


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: October 16 2020 at 08:59
Originally posted by uduwudu uduwudu wrote:

...
But yes I do mean having someone who can direct sophisticated harmony to his subjects worked very well. Placing an act with a suitable producer worked wonders.

Hi,

George Martin had been with them since HELP ... and GM was very well known in England already, and even done a lot of comedy (for Peter Sellers and Spike Milligan), which was appreciated and loved by the Fab Four. And he was a great choice, because he ended up working with kids that actually like to explore and play music, rather than the street choice to just do the riff and sing over it, continuously! He explains that in his special!

Sgt Pepper was a wonderful "multi media" thing (that is with sound effects mixed in and different things done), because the producer was innovative and liked the ideas he was hearing from the guys ... and he incorporated a lot of them, which ended up giving us a few songs that were very different and made the band sound better and stronger ... which they had become anyway! But it likely would not have happened as well if the producer was some idiot a$h-hole that wanted to do Rock'n'roll ... so the choice of a GM was designed to improve things and the group did not seem to mind ... 

Plz watch the incredibly nice special on GM ... and how he did what he did, not only with the Beatles, but with more artists than you and I will EVER be able to list in our hands! It will help make better sense of what the Beatles did!


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: chopper
Date Posted: October 16 2020 at 09:08
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:


George Martin had been with them since HELP

George Martin was with them from the start - he was the one who signed them to Parlaphone, and also the one who told them not to use Ringo on "Love Me Do".


Posted By: Rednight
Date Posted: October 16 2020 at 12:04
Originally posted by Ronstein Ronstein wrote:

"...and the Beatles were fortunate enough to have the funds and the support from EMI to use it to inspire what was. at the time, unlike anything that had been before."  
Gee, don't you think EMI had no choice in the matter seeing as the Beatles were the biggest thing on the planet at the time?

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"It just has none of the qualities of your work that I find interesting. Abandon [?] it." - Eno


Posted By: Lieutenant_Lan
Date Posted: February 22 2021 at 18:20
I like the album dont get me wrong. But I personally think revolver and rubber soul to be much more deserving of all the love that Sgt. Peppers gets. 


Posted By: ssmarcus
Date Posted: March 01 2021 at 05:57
Let's answer this on two separate axes: the axis of legacy and influence and the axis of overall quality and listenability.  

On the axis of legacy and influence, no the album is not overrated. This was the moment studio album based rock geared towards active listening (as opposed to just general dance or mood music) and began to express real artistic purpose and vision.

On the axis of listenability, there are definitely circles where the record is overrated. But in recent years, I have seen polls and lists in Rolling Stone and Louder Sound that most people realize that records like Abby Road and Revolver are better records. 




Posted By: MortSahlFan
Date Posted: March 01 2021 at 07:28
Yes... It's not even one of their best. Remove "A Day In The Life" and its one of their worst.

Most of great things said about this could have been said about "Revolver".. I think an imaginary band is an interesting concept, but John and George said they didn't have this in mind at all when they wrote their songs.


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https://www.youtube.com/c/LoyalOpposition

https://www.scribd.com/document/382737647/MortSahlFan-Song-List


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: March 01 2021 at 08:03
Originally posted by Rednight Rednight wrote:

^Incomprehensible. Explain.

Hi,

Why bother walking, or driving a car when you have a limousine? With a bar and munchies, and maybe even a girl bartender!

Wink


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: March 01 2021 at 08:11
Originally posted by ssmarcus ssmarcus wrote:

Let's answer this on two separate axes: the axis of legacy and influence and the axis of overall quality and listenability.  
...

Hi,

It's very sad to see that people, do not see or can relate to the incredible thing that the Beatles were at the time, and the most important part ... how different and far out the album was compared to all the crap available on radio and on LP at that time!

Today's folks, are making comments based on what they know, but without the historical fact, I doubt that a comment can stand up ... at the time, there was no "internet" or "media" talking about these things, although both the Beatles and Rolling Stones had broken the barrier, others were making their voice heard as well, which helped folks like The Kinks, The Who and many others take off ...

Seeing many of these comments without a strong background and slight knowledge of the time and place, this album is something that we ... who cares? ... but in the end, the album and the Beatles will survive, because many of the comments don't factor into the history of the whole thing.

Sgt. Pepper's is not over rated and PA needs to stop and close this thread for the lack of intelligent and comments that help the time and place. AND THAT IS SOMETHING THAT IS MISSING in the discussion and definition of PROGRESSIVE BRUHAHA .... to help folks understand it ... I sincerely hope it doesn't take a reign of horror, that sets off a trend of occult and horror novels for some 25 to 30 years ... hello French Revolution ... and all we're doing is bringing the album down to "our level" because we don't like the idea that someone else is more artsy than we are!

So bizarre ... but we buy their music!


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: chopper
Date Posted: March 01 2021 at 08:56
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by ssmarcus ssmarcus wrote:

Let's answer this on two separate axes: the axis of legacy and influence and the axis of overall quality and listenability.  
...

Hi,

It's very sad to see that people, do not see or can relate to the incredible thing that the Beatles were at the time, and the most important part ... how different and far out the album was compared to all the crap available on radio and on LP at that time!

Today's folks, are making comments based on what they know, but without the historical fact, I doubt that a comment can stand up ... at the time, there was no "internet" or "media" talking about these things, although both the Beatles and Rolling Stones had broken the barrier, others were making their voice heard as well, which helped folks like The Kinks, The Who and many others take off ...

Seeing many of these comments without a strong background and slight knowledge of the time and place, this album is something that we ... who cares? ... but in the end, the album and the Beatles will survive, because many of the comments don't factor into the history of the whole thing.

Sgt. Pepper's is not over rated and PA needs to stop and close this thread for the lack of intelligent and comments that help the time and place. AND THAT IS SOMETHING THAT IS MISSING in the discussion and definition of PROGRESSIVE BRUHAHA .... to help folks understand it ... I sincerely hope it doesn't take a reign of horror, that sets off a trend of occult and horror novels for some 25 to 30 years ... hello French Revolution ... and all we're doing is bringing the album down to "our level" because we don't like the idea that someone else is more artsy than we are!

So bizarre ... but we buy their music!
Well for once I agree with Mosh. Part of the legacy of Sgt Pepper is the impact it had at the time of release. People will listen to it now and not understand or know how it compared to other music around at the time and what impact it had on other musicians as well.
Me? I was around but too young to understand.


Posted By: A Crimson Mellotron
Date Posted: March 01 2021 at 09:58
I thought this old poll was forgotten!


Posted By: ssmarcus
Date Posted: March 01 2021 at 10:41
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by ssmarcus ssmarcus wrote:

Let's answer this on two separate axes: the axis of legacy and influence and the axis of overall quality and listenability.  
...

Hi,

It's very sad to see that people, do not see or can relate to the incredible thing that the Beatles were at the time, and the most important part ... how different and far out the album was compared to all the crap available on radio and on LP at that time!

Today's folks, are making comments based on what they know, but without the historical fact, I doubt that a comment can stand up ... 

Hi Mosh, there's two possibilities here, either you did not read what I wrote, or you misunderstood what I wrote. If the latter, it is possible that I simply wasn't clear enough. So I'll restate: the album's influence (i.e. the way it changed music) is NOT overstated in anyway. I gave a reason and you also gave a reason about various barriers it broke, all is well! 

My point about it being overrated is only that, when compared to some other Beatles' records one to one without any consideration for its legacy or place in music, the tunes on albums like Abby Road and Revolver tend to hold up better in a lot of people's opinions (for the record, I prefer peppers to Revolver). While this was not always the case, due to the recorod's legacy, time has allowed fresh ears to make that listenability evaluation without the "baggage" of its historical context. 

So in sum, I am basically agreeing with you. But unlike, I have respect for the question and approach the answer systematically. I don't ask the mods to ban the discussion because my feelings are hurt... 



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