Beatles Music:

Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band



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Beatles Music:
Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band



Music
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
by The Beatles

Sgt. Pepper
List Price: $15.98Label: Capitol

Salesrank: 90352

Released: December 5, 1995
Our Price: $99.99
Media: Vinyl

Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band Track Listing:
1. Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
2. With a Little Help from My Friends
3. Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds
4. Getting Better
5. Fixing a Hole
6. She's Leaving Home
7. Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!
8. Within You Without You
9. When I'm Sixty-Four
10. Lovely Rita
11. Good Morning Good Morning
12. Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)
13. Day in the Life
14. Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band Mini-Documentary

Editorial Review:
Digitally remastered digipak edition of this classic 1967 album from The Beatles featuring 'Lucy In The Sky WIth Diamonds', 'With A Little Help From My Friends', 'A Day In The Life', 'Getting Better, 'When I'm Sixty Four' and many more. The album has been remastered at Abbey Road Studios in London utilizing state of the art recording technology alongside vintage studio equipment, carefully maintaining the authenticity and integrity of the original analogue recordings. Within the CD's new packaging, the booklet includes detailed historical notes along with informative recording notes. A newly produced mini-documentary on the making of the album is included as a QuickTime file on each album. The documentary contains archival footage, rare photographs and never-before-heard studio chat from The Beatles, offering a unique and very personal insight into the studio atmosphere. Capitol.

Description of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band:
Before Sgt. Pepper, no one seriously thought of rock music as actual art. That all changed in 1967, though, when John, Paul, George and Ringo (with "A Little Help" from their friend, producer George Martin) created an undeniable work of art which remains, after 30-plus years, one of the most influential albums of all time. From Lennon's evocative word/sound pictures (the trippy "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds," the carnival-like "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite") and McCartney's music hall-styled "When I'm 64," to Harrison's Eastern-leaning "Within You Without You," and the avant-garde mini-suite, "A Day in the Life," Sgt. Pepper was a milestone for both '60s music and popular culture. --Billy Altman

Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band Reviews:
It's Getting Better All the Time...NOT! 4 Star Review
2009-12-21 - Many years ago this album was said to be the greatest album in popular music. Today, it has been left under the shadow of Revolver which is much better album than Pepper. I thought that this album would be almost as good but I was disappointed. The Beatles, was of course one of the greatest bands of its time, and it still is one of the greatest bands that we have ever heard. Though, "Rubber Soul", "Revolver", "White", and even "Help" show so much better music. I'm not saying that this is a bad album but in Beatles's level this is a big disappontment. Well, at first the intro, and after that the songs "With the Little Help from My Friends" which is very peaceful song, and the song that could have been also in the album "Revolver". But the song "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds" also known shortly as LSD is same kind of material you can hear in Pink Floyd's "The Piper at the Gates of Down". I like also Pink Floyd and that's why I love the song. But after that the short songs "Getting Better" and "Fixing a Hole" might be famous songs but I have to say that I don't like them much. They are not unique. The Beatles had already tried same kind of songs (with better results) in Revolver. "She's Leaving Home" is something I had heard first by the Finnish female rock vocalist Maarit Hurmerinta. The song is alright, and very sad and touching. "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!" is something that may be funny but the humour is one of the good elements in this album. "Within You Without You" is a song with some Indian sounds. Quite good but I prefer the original musicians with good style. My friend and I have tried to find the best artists of good old styles. The countries like Albania, Japan, and Bolivia are even better places to find music. Well, this song reminds me of the great musician Sisigin Spiridon which is also known as "dental floss fairy". I recommend also his music if you like that Beatles song. "When I'm Sixty-four" is something we sang in our music lessons in school. It was quite annoying then but nowadays I have to say that I like the song very much. It has good melody and good lyrics. "Lovely Rita" is also very good - it usually plays in my head. "Good Morning Good Morning" is also a very humorous song although not so well-known. The reprise of the title song is better than the original. The last song "A Day in the Life" is a good song but somehow I don't get so much great feelings every time I listen to it - sometime it is good but the bad thing of the last track is that it is too long and the vocals are quite cheesy. But not a bad album - maybe it has some progressive influences but for me it is an album that Beatles didn't like to do with pure hearts.
Stars: Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds, When I'm Sixty-four, With a Little Help from My Friends

Very good, with wonderful moments, but IMHO other albums better 4 Star Review
2009-12-20 - I appreciate "Sgt. Pepper" as a landmark achievement in pop music. At it's best, it does deserve to be mentioned as one of the best rock albums put together. However, on balance, I take exception to the claim that it's the best Beatles album ever. It's not quite as flexible as "Rubber Soul" or "Abbey Road," both of which have more variance in their styles. Admittedly, I appreciate the Beatles more for their high level of pop craftsmanship than for their Eastern-tinged songwriting. Among my favorites on this disc are "Getting Better," "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite," and the extremely creative title track. "When I'm Sixty-Four" is reminiscent of Sinatra, of all people and is also a fine addition to the album. This is a very good Beatles disc and is interesting as a solid conceptual album but in my opinion "Abbey Road" is the ultimate artistic masterwork of the Fab Four.

It Depends 3 Star Review
2009-12-19 - I have been a fan of The Beatles for many years and enjoy Sgt. Pepper to a certain degree. I enjoy other Beatle albums more. My enjoyment of Pepper is tempered slightly by the gap between the legend of the alleged months it took to record, the layers and layers of multi-tracking musical "innovations" that are proclaimed to have been achieved on Pepper and what I actually hear on this release. I find pre-Pepper Beatle albums superior partially because they did not have half a year to work on them. They contain more immediacy and zip to them because they were working on stricter deadlines.

There are some nice songs on the album. The title track, With a Little Help, Lucy in the Sky, A Day in the Life and When I'm Sixty-Four are good ones in my opinion. All the songs for the most part are the same tempo, though, which makes the album drag. Many of the songs seem phoned in, and in most cases simply competent rather than outstanding. I find the album flows well until running into the syrupy track She's Leaving Home which I rate as a misfire attempt at another Yesterday and Eleanor Rigby, in that it is a strings-only socially conscious ditty that to my ears simply doesn't work and disrupts the flow of the album. Within You and Without You is interesting, and on some occasions I find it enjoyable and other times find it tedious and want it to be over with. My non-Beatle fan friends loath it. Getting Better, Fixing a Hole, Being for the Benefit, Lovely Rita and Good Morning Good Morning are simply pedestrian filler songs that offer, to my ears, nothing musically or lyrically interesting.

As many have pointed out, this album is often rated highly because of the impact it had at the time of release. And others have pointed out the album has not aged well. I agree with both of these points of view. So the question is, should someone who does not posses this album but is thinking about getting it, do so?

Beatle fans of any age should acquire this album at some point.

If you are under thirty and not a Beatle fan, I would not recommend it. As time goes by, and musical styles and means of expression evolve, I would think may young people of today would find this album mundane and uninteresting. I find it slightly mundane and uninteresting. I would liken the idea of Pepper to young people today to my thoughts on listening to Glenn Miller or Frank Sinatra when I was fifteen. (I'm in my mid-forties.) That was "old people" music with cobwebs and dust on them. Though this album has significance to a large percentage of perhaps the 40 + demographic, young people, particularly those of perhaps 25 and younger think of this album and The Beatles for that matter, as positively pre-historic. I would qualify this, however, because of the release of The Beatles Rock Band game. It is possible that presenting The Beatles music in the context of a video game could generate interest in the 25 and under crowd.

If you are over thirty, and not a Beatle fan but want something safe and non-threatening to listen to, you should give Pepper a shot. It's pleasant enough and does have it's historical significance.

As for the quality of the remastered Pepper I find, with a side-by-side comparison with the earlier generation Pepper CD little to no difference. I am no audiophile so I am basing this simply on what I am hearing. It is perhaps a little louder. I don't here any more pop in the drums or a significant improvement in the quality of the bass as many have reported. If you already have Pepper as part of a comprehensive CD collection but are not a Beatle fan(atic) I would advise you to save your money. If you are a Beatle fan you will probably end up purchasing the remastered Pepper and most if not all the remasters anyway.


It's The Beatles!!---You Already Know It's Fabulous!! 5 Star Review
2009-12-18 - This marks the 4th and final incarnation of this classic album
that I will buy in my lifetime!
From vinyl (early 80's) to first generation CD (early 90's)
to 2nd generation (first digitized) CD (mid 90's) to 09/09/09...
I bought each of these new limited edition (stereo) remasters,
from "Rubber Soul" to "Let It Be", which is my favorite era of The Beatles'
stellar paradigm-changing mid to late 60's musical output!
As soon as I unwrapped them, I listened to each CD intently 1x, then smoked a
phat joint along with a strong daquiri, then listened down
to them all 3x more!! (-: Brilliantly remastered!

Flawless material to start with, but this go round I felt as if "the lads"
had actually set up camp in my music room and were giving me, just me, their best work in 3-D!!
Every breathe, syllable, finger cymbal, crash & high-hat, snare, toms, guitar lick,
bass riff, string arrangement and every other part is vivid, warm, pure and timeless!
There is no need for me to buy anymore Beatles material after this!
It can't be captured any better! (-:
I like the new fold out packaging, the booklets, rare vintage photos, the original-style
Parlophone logo on the discs, and I enjoyed the little mini-docs about each
album viewable via computer, Playstation 3 or XBOX too.
I was an 18 yr old kid in 1982 when I bought my first Beatles albums on vinyl,
age 26 in 1990 when I bought their first CD versions, age 30 when I bought the first
digital remasters in 1994 at the time of the The Beatles Anthology with
"Free As A Bird", which I now own on DVD.
Now at age 45 in 2009, this is the final frontier and I'm satisfied.
SUMMATION: Great music, great band, timeless, seamless & forever without peer! (-:

Sgt Pepper Defined a Generation: The Quintessential 1960's Album that Elevated Popular Music Into High Art 5 Star Review
2009-12-16 - It's one thing to contribute art and/or entertainment that is popular at a particular time, but these come and go at will, often replaced by work that is just updated offerings of the former. The vast majority of top-40 pop tunes come under this category where the next decade's songs are simply updated versions of the last decade with a different beat. The next level of aspiration is to create contributions that transcend popularity within its era, in other words, something that withstands the test of time--works that express something that can't be replicated. Artists as diverse as JS Bach, Mark Twain, Vincent Van Gogh and Led Zeppelin fall under this category. Among these elite artists, how many artists can boast creating works that not only transcend the test of time but literally define a generation and an era? Very few. F. Scott Fitzgerald's "The Great Gatsby" is one. Mark Twain's "The Gilded Age" may be another, and Jack Kerouac's "On the Road" may be yet another. And in music, the Beatles' "Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" may the musical equivalent of a Kerouac or Fitzgerald. Pepper not only defined a generation, it may have helped invent it. Even the album cover's rhetoric speaks of a shift in the sensibility of the pre-boomer and boomer generations. The Fab Four were no longer sporting short haircuts, jackets and thin ties singing about holding a girl's hand. They gave themselves facial hair while decked out in 19th-century satin uniforms, and they are no longer singing about innocent teenage love. Much of The Beatles' earlier work was single-dimensional aimed to please young teenagers at proms. Now, their work had grown into a deeper subtlety that became an anthem and a symbol for the 1960's generation.

The music of "Sgt Pepper" includes a range of subjects that would have been unthinkable only a few years earlier when they appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show for the first time: psychadelics, relationships, intraspections, and social issues. Some of the songs are of such an abstract nature, such as "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds", and "The Benefit of Mr Kite", that they could not be pigeon-holed within the boundaries of acceptable popular culture; they were giving voice to the 1960's subculture or counterculture that had begun around 1965. The definitive answer as to how these songs are to be intrepretted is nonexistent which is the highest aspiration of art. I don't think even the Beatles knew exactly what their music was saying, and that's the beauty of Sgt Pepper. They were saying something that may have transcended their artistic objectives.

There were a few musical artists of the mid-1960's who were stunned with the release of Sgt Pepper. Here was a band who had made millions with their early records who ventured outside of the arena of simple popular culture. They did the unthinkable. They took rock 'n' roll and pushed into high art and high culture. "Pepper" did win album of the year at the Grammys of 1968, but none of its individual songs won any awards. ("Up, up and away" won best song, but who listens to that anymore?) Before Pepper, most of the counter-culture music was simply ignored by the Grammy Awards. But now they had to take a listen.










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