Let's start by clearing up current
misconceptions of what the upcoming new "Yellow Submarine" release is
about and what it will actually encompass.
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The main thing you need to get over to all the people is that it's
not a soundtrack, but that it's actually the "songtrack." This will be a
total of all the Beatles songs that were used in the film.
The whole "Submarine" thing was written or done around the time of
"Sgt. Pepper," around that period. [But] "Yellow Submarine" only ended
up with just those six new songs that were in the film. And then they
put all that George Martin-orchestrated material on there. But now it
will be every song that was in the movie -- because the film also had
"All You Need Is Love" and "Sgt. Pepper" too -- all together, for the
first time. And they've all been remixed!
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The film also had even older
songs, like "Eleanor Rigby," that are now on the new "Yellow Submarine:
A Songtrack."
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Exactly, and they're in all their new
mixes in that "wraparound sound." So the video and the DVD versions
and the new CDs will also have the same new stereo mixes that will
match the wraparound sound and will come out around the 14th of September.
But I haven't even seen the finished film yet! We're going to a
private screening of the new version in a week or two.
We may have a couple of cinema "events," showing it in theaters, and
I think that's gonna turn into a big night out, but the film is not
going to be out in a general theatrical release.
We've got all sorts of other things coming in time for November,
including an announcement about a Beatles Web site. Neil Aspinall [the
chief executive] at Apple, he's organizing all these details, and he's
got all kinds of things that are going to reach fruition, like some
special merchandising. Having lasted 40 years with the Beatles, Neil is
the only person who's ever really been able to keep in contact with the
four of us at the same time through all the various conflicts and
whatever. And I met him when I was like 13 years old, smoking behind the
air-raid shelters at the Liverpool Institute high school. [Big laugh.]
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There's supposedly a "Yellow
Submarine" EP in the vaults that EMI had thought of putting out about a
year after the "Yellow Submarine" album was finally released in January
1969. The EP had the six songs put on the soundtrack album, plus an
early version of "Across The Universe." Of course it never came
out.
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I remember that the early version of "Across The Universe" was the
best one. But we finally put that one out on a World Wildlife Fund
charity album ["No One's Gonna Change Our World," December 1969, Regal
Starline SRS 5013]. And it also later went on the "Anthology [2]" album.
But, you know, there's certain things where somebody might have said,
like, "Oh, at this point in time we had some songs in the can," but
there's nothing that I can remember that was ever solid discussion about
an EP of any sort like that, other than the [two-disc] "Magical Mystery
Tour" EP [issued in the U.K. in December 1967]; in America they didn't
have extended plays so that had to be made into an album.
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What about "Hey Bulldog," which
was cut at the same February 1968 sessions that included the early
"Across The Universe," your "The Inner Light," "Lady Madonna," and other
material? Do you remember how the group came up with John's piano riff
and your guitar riff for "Bulldog"?
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Well, it was John's song, and it was
a great tune. Funny thing is, in the version for America [as well
as most U.K. prints] of the "Yellow Submarine" film they edited "Bulldog"
out, so we had to make sure this time that it would be in, because
of that whole bit in the movie of the dog with all the heads!
And we do now have an unreleased video of "Hey Bulldog," as you know.
What it was is that when we were in the studio recording [10 takes of]
"Bulldog," apparently it was at a time when they needed some footage for
something else, some other record ["Lady Madonna"], and a film crew came
along and filmed us. Then they cut up the footage and used some of the
shots for something else. But it was Neil Aspinall who found out that
when you watched and listened to what the original thing was, we were
recording "Bulldog"! This was apparently the only time we were actually
filmed recording something, so what Neil did was, he put [the unused
footage] all back together again and put the "Bulldog" soundtrack onto
it, and there it was!
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An unreleased live Beatles
video!
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[Chuckling.] Yeah! And everything has a different mix on it now!
Because when they set up to this new, wraparound five-speaker mix for
the film, they were working away doing that for months and months at
Abbey Road. You see, another thing is that a lot of the time the Beatles
were only working on 4-track tape, so we'd get to the fourth track and
then what we'd do is mix the four tracks onto one track of another
4-track machine, and then we'd do another three tracks.
So what they've gone doing in these new mixes -- which we did a
little bit of on the "Anthologies" -- was to connect all the four tracks
together and have the first four tracks all separated, and then the
three overdubbed tracks separated, in order to create a new mix.
Normally the mixes heard since the '60s up till now from Beatles records
have all been on these finished 4-tracks with the pre-mix of the other
three tracks stuck onto it.
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In other words, the individual
tracks on the basic tapes were rediscovered, allowing you to separate
each of the original, incremental tracks.
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So for the first time you've actually got a much bigger, cleaner mix,
because you've got the original bass and drum and guitar tracks
unmixed-together, you know? And also, with all the old equipment and all
the compressors and the stuff that we used in those days, you'd spend
ages trying to improve the final 4-track mix you figured you were stuck
with. This engineer, a fellow named Peter Mew, did a lot of the work
with a guy called Allan Rouse, who's kind of in charge of all the
Beatles catalog. So we went in and listened to all these new, fully
remixed tracks, and they really are good, with the sound coming all
around you, you know!
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A few more questions about the
classic songs originally on the "Yellow Submarine" album, like "It's All
Too Much." Is that you playing the organ on that track?
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That's right! I probably wrote it on the organ, I think.
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At the end of "Too Much" there are
snippets of Jeremiah Clarke's "Prince Of Denmark's March" and the
Merseys' '66 [No. 4 U.K.] hit "Sorrow."
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You mean on the fade-out? Yeah, with "Your long blond hair/And your
eyes of blue." That was all just this big ending we had, going out. And
as it was in those days, we had the horn players just play a bit of
trumpet voluntarily, and so that's how that "Prince Of Denmark" bit was
played.
And Paul and John just came up with and sang that lyric of "your eyes
of blue." But just a couple of years ago somebody suddenly tried to sue
us for that!
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For them singing a little snatch
of lyric to give exposure to an obscure song?
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Oh yeah. I just ignored it. I think
that's one of my songs that's actually published now by ATV and Michael
Jackson's Northern Songs, so I just thought, "Well, they can deal
with it." I just thought it's so ridiculous, you know.
Incidentally, that riff that's played on "It's All Too Much," I seem
to have heard at least 50 songs that've used that lick since then. [He
hums the melody on the chorus.] You know the one I mean: Dah ding ding
ding, dah ding ding ding. I mean, that's become like a stock thing. The
difference is some people admit where their influences come from, like
the Byrds [did] with the Rickenbacker 12-string thing after they all
went to see "A Hard Day's Night."
But then I've had people writing to me and telling me about a group
called Texas with a song called "Black Eyed Boy" [a No. 5 U.K. hit in
1997], and everybody's saying, "Hey, they've ripped off your song!" But
I don't know, because somebody sent me a cassette and I put it on, and I
couldn't hear a thing!
We've never really been into suing people for things like that. I've
heard a bunch of records in the past that took things from things like
"What Is Life," or "Living In The Material World," or "Here's Comes The
Sun." What's the point? But I suppose the point would be like Bright
Tunes [the publishing company that started the protracted plagiarism
suit against Harrison's "My Sweet Lord" in which George ultimately
prevailed] -- you could just try and make some money out of people.
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The guitar feedback on the intro
to "It's All Too Much" was done in May of '67, so it was pre-Hendrix,
before he started to go wild with that stuff, since his "Are You
Experienced?" album [released in the U.K. on Dec. 5, 1967] hadn't come
out yet.
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But, now, I don't think I was playing the guitar feedback; as I say,
I was playing the organ, so I think that was probably Paul that did
that. But it was, like, manufactured, meaning that it wasn't like an
accident or anything; it was part of the arrangement.
I just wanted to write a rock'n'roll song about the whole psychedelic
thing of the time: "Sail me on a silver sun/Where I know that I am
free/Show me that I'm everywhere/And get me home for tea." [Laughs.]
Because you'd trip out, you see, on all this stuff, and then whoops!
you'd just be back having your evening cup of tea!
But we also had that feedback on "I Feel Fine" [in 1964], and John
always claimed it came about from playing an acoustic Gibson with a
pickup in it, and it had a big round sound hole, and it just used to
feed back very easily if you faced it toward the amplifier.
But then I've heard other people say that wasn't the first feedback
either: "1897, we had feedback on such and such!" [More laughter.]
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We've talked about "Only A
Northern Song" before, which was intended as a little commentary of
yours.
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It was at the point that I realized Dick James had conned me out of
the copyrights for my own songs by offering to become my publisher. As
an 18- or 19-year-old kid, I thought, "Great, somebody's gonna publish
my songs!" But he never said, "And incidentally, when you sign this
document here, you're assigning me the ownership of the songs [Harrison
had written as a Beatle]," which is what it is. It was just a blatant
theft. By the time I realized what had happened, when they were going
public and making all this money out of this catalog, I wrote "Only A
Northern Song" as what we call a "piss-take," just to have a joke about
it.
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"All Together Now," by Paul and
John, do you have any thoughts about that?
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It was a nursery rhyme kind of thing. Again, if you look at it from
one point of view, it's embarrassing. But we seem to have been the
all-around entertainers, weren't we? Somehow we got away with stuff like
that, either with Ringo singing "Yellow Submarine" or us doing a song
like "All Together Now."
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Thinking of things suited for
children from the Beatles, Al Brodax, who produced the "Yellow
Submarine" movie, also had done the series of Beatles cartoons [several
dozen episodes, broadcast on ABC-TV starting in 1965, but only given
limited later exposure in England on Granada Television] that were shown
on Saturday and Sunday mornings in America. Whatever happened to those
cartoons?
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Oh, we bought them all a few years ago,
just so we had control over them for the future. I always kind of
liked them -- they were so bad or silly they were good, if you know
what I mean. [Grinning.] And I think the passage of time might make
them more fun now, in terms of being more watchable than they really
were back then. But we don't have any plans for them at the moment.
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By the way, the song "Yellow
Submarine" never really did have anything to do with a narcotic pill by
that nickname, did it?
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I never heard of that pill. Paul came up with the concept of "Yellow
Submarine." All I know is just that every time we'd all get around the
piano with guitars and start listening to it and arranging it into a
record, we'd all fool about. As I said, John's doing the voice that
sounds like someone talking down a tube or ship's funnel as they do in
the merchant marine. [Laughs.] And on the final track there's actually
that very small party happening! As I seem to remember, there's a few
screams and what sounds like small crowd noises in the background.
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Fans still wonder if that voice
shouting into the submarine's funnel is John, same as they still ask who
coughed at the start of "Taxman" on the "Revolver" album.
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My son Dhani reckons it was me. He says, "I'd recognize that cough
anywhere!" [Laughs.] But I don't remember.
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Your own "Sgt. Pepper"-ish film
characters in the "Yellow Submarine" movie were dubbed by actors, so the
Beatles' only actual appearance in the film is at the end of the
picture.
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Well the deal was we hadn't really been that involved in the making
of what was supposed to be our third movie. I must say, at the point I
had no idea of how it was going to fit into the film or where it was
going. We had our lines and just kind of did it, but it all turned out
quite well with the animation, didn't it?
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It was excellent, and the film was
very influential, particularly the work of principal animation designer
Heinz Edelmann.
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Right, and then Peter Max built his whole career on the fact that
everybody thought he'd done it! I loved a lot of those characters
[Edelmann] came up with. And the Blue Meanie named Max, I always
wondered if the later idea of the "Mad Max" movie character came from
him.
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It's a spectacular, Dante's
"Inferno"-type tale of good vs. evil. And that "flying glove" character
is scary!
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[Laughs.] It is, it is! And all those Apple Bonkers! The fact is,
with the way the culture and the government are now, it's all still
happening now as it was in "Yellow Submarine." Except the Blue Meanies
have got a bigger stranglehold on the planet right now than they even
had back in '67! And it looks like there's no musical group coming along
to break the bubble of grayness, because even the music industry has
turned gray and is dominated by Blue Meanies.
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Do you think popular music has had
an impact on shaping minds, and that across history it's helped
influence peoples' thinking?
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Music definitely influences you, whether
it just makes you feel happy or sad. And likewise I'm sure all that
horrible music these days is making people change -- there's just
worse crime, more cynicism. I wouldn't necessarily directly blame
the music for all of that, but there is this kind of chemistry that's
created through endless television or music programming or advertising
that drones away on these things-with crap music, with murder movies,
and that whole thing with Robert De Niro pointing a big gun at everyone
on the big posters [for the film "Ronin"] that you see everywhere
now in London. And so it's like my son Dhani was saying, that "Who
gives a shit about bombing Bosnia!" becomes the attitude on a campus,
because they're all so desensitized.
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It's like the music and
entertainment business has gotten into the arms business.
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Yeah! And it was both pathetic and very funny at the time, but a
couple of years ago I was in Los Angeles, and I had the television on,
and for the local weather we went to some guy at the beach. And in the
shot of him live with the beach in the background you could just see the
pollution was just dreadful, and he just goes, "Yes, well, it's another
beautiful day down here at Santa Monica!" And I thought, "What are you
talking about? It stinks!"
But that's how it is, that's the desensitizing. Maybe in another few
hundred years people will be living in sewers with rats crawling all
over them, and they'll be thinking, "This is great, life is good."
Mahatma Gandhi said, "Create and preserve the image of your choice," and
the image we seem to have chosen is one of greed and
butchery.