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Beatles for Sale

LP by The Beatles • 4 December 1964 • Parlophone PMC 1240

Beatlemania (1962–1964) — Mod sharpness — sharp suits, sharper hooks.

★ Extended editorial essay (5 sections)

Essay sections

Where they were

Recorded under the pressure of unbroken touring during the four months between August and October 1964, Beatles for Sale is the album of a band beginning to wear thin. The iconography reflects it: Robert Freeman's autumnal Hyde Park photograph shows four exhausted faces in scarves and overcoats. Pulling six covers back in to fill out the LP — the first time since the debut — was a quiet admission that the original-material reservoir had run low.

Recording

Sessions snatched between American tour, UK tour and Christmas-show rehearsals. Most tracks cut in two-or-three-take sittings. Norman Smith remained the engineer. The introduction of Bob Dylan to the band's listening rotation that summer (Dylan having met them in New York on 28 August 1964 and turned them on to marijuana the same evening) was already audible: I'm a Loser and No Reply borrow Dylan's narrative-confessional voice, while You Like Me Too Much hints at the country lilt that would define Help! and Rubber Soul.

Contents Preface 4 The Paul McCartney Interview 6 1962 Recording sessions for: `Love Me Do', `Please Please Me' 19631967 16 Recording sessions for: `Penny Lane', 92 Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, Yellow Submarine, `All You Need Is Love', Magical Mystery Tour, `Hello, Goodbye' Recording sessions for: Please…— Mark Lewisohn, The Complete Beatles Recording Sessions, p.3

The songs

No Reply opens with what Dick James (their music publisher) called the first 'complete' Lennon song: a narrative arc in three verses with a satisfying resolution. Eight Days a Week is famous for being the first commercial pop record to fade IN as well as out. I'll Follow the Sun, the earliest McCartney song on the LP (written aged sixteen in Forthlin Road), is a wisp of foreshadowing for the Yesterday/Michelle balladry to come.

Reception

Released 4 December 1964; UK number one over Christmas, displacing A Hard Day's Night. In the US, Capitol broke the LP into two truncated releases (Beatles '65 and Beatles VI) which together outsold the UK original.

Legacy

Beatles for Sale is sometimes called the band's first artistic step backward — but it is also the first record where they sound tired enough to be honest. The Dylan-influenced confessions on side one are the seed-bed for the introspection that would flower across Rubber Soul and Help!, and the LP marks the last time covers would meaningfully populate a Beatles original release.

What's distinctive

14 tracks; average length 2:23. Lennon dominates the lead vocals (9/14). Lead writing credit: Lennon–McCartney (6 of 14).

Tracklist

Side A

Side B

Pattern analysis

Lead vocalists across Beatles for Sale
14
Lennon 9
McCartney 3
Harrison 1
Starr 1
Songwriters credited on Beatles for Sale
Lennon–McCartney6covers6McCartney2
Track lengths (seconds)
Honey Don't175Eight Days a Week163Mr. Moonlight155I Don't Want to S153I'm a Loser151Rock and Roll Music150Kansas City / Hey-Hey-150What You're Doing150Everybody's Tryin143No Reply135

Era technical context

MicrophonesNeumann U47, U48; AKG D19 (drums); STC 4038 (overheads)
OutboardEMI RS124 compressor (Altec 436B mod), EMT 140 plate reverb, STEED tape echo
GuitarsRickenbacker 325 (Lennon), Gretsch Country Gent / Tennessean (Harrison), Höfner 500/1 violin bass (McCartney), Ludwig Oyster Black Pearl kit (Starr)
AmplifiersVox AC30 (TB & non-Top-Boost variants)

References & external databases

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