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Laura Stavropoulos
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
The Beatles Sgt Pepper

Sgt. Pepper occupies a unique space in The Beatles’ catalogue and people’s collective memory. No matter your musical inclinations, there’s no denying the album’s towering influence both on music and the culture at large. History can be divided as pre-Pepper and post-Pepper.


For those who weren’t there to experience it first-hand during its release, Sgt. Pepper is reduced to the familiar. What was once considered wildy experimental and profoundly new is categorized as “classic rock.” And yet, Sgt. Pepper is what made rock a “respectable” form of art and its repercussions can be heard in the decades that followed. Sgt. Pepper could have only been birthed in 1967, and to understand why, one must recognize the important symbiotic relationship between culture and music. As we celebrate the anniversary of its release, here are just a few of the circumstances that led to The Beatles’ most lauded achievement.

Listen to Sgt. Pepper now.

1: The 60s Counterculture​


The spirit of the counterculture was already afoot long before Sgt. Pepper came into the picture. Dylan had delivered his epic double-album Blonde On Blonde, while Brian Wilson was cooking up Pet Sounds with The Beach Boys.

Seemingly every artist was creatively firing on all engines and the tremendous pace of releases was remarkable in just the span of a year. Both stateside and in the UK, there seemed to be an open cultural exchange, as artists would inspire one another and, in turn, create something entirely new. As John Lennon pointed out, The Beatles didn’t create the counterculture, but they were certainly its most visible symbol. “That bit about we changed everybody’s hairstyles? But something influenced us… whatever’s in the air,” said Lennon. “We were part of whatever the 60s was.

It was happening itself. We were the ones chosen to represent what was going on in the street.” While Sgt. Pepper may not have captured the anti-establishment nature of 60s culture, it certainly defined its openness, both in terms of music, visual art, and lyrical imagery. From the vaudevillian “Being For The Benefit Of Mr. Kite!” to the spoken word on “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” and a full orchestra on “A Day In The Life,” they blurred the line between avant-garde art and pop music.

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2. California Psychedelic Band Names​


Enamored by what was happening in the West Coast scene, specifically San Francisco, Paul McCartney had noticed that the latest wave of band names were getting progressively longer and more imaginative. No longer was it The Beatles, The Byrds, or The Kinks, it was suddenly Lothar And The Hand People, Big Brother And The Holding Company, or Lennon’s suggestion, “Fred And His Incredible Shrinking Grateful Airplanes.” As the band bandied about parody aliases, it also gave birth to the idea of leaving the “The Beatles” behind and carving out a new identity for themselves.

3: Adoption Of Alter Egos​


By this point, the Beatles had reached stratospheric levels of popularity and Beatlemania had overshadowed the band’s actual music. The band wanted to freedom to grow beyond their mop-topped image, and this led to an exploration of alter egos. As McCartney later remembered, “I thought it would be nice to lose our identities, to submerge ourselves in the persona of a fake group,” and thus Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band was born. This idea of fluid identity is one that strongly resonated with the youth of the counterculture. No longer did their background have to determine their whole future, one could simply reinvent themselves.

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4: The Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds


Both George Martin and Paul McCartney have gone on record singing the praises The Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds and what an influential force it was for Sgt. Pepper. Martin said if Brian Wilson and The Beach Boys had not created their classic album, “Sgt. Pepper never would have happened,” while McCartney said, “The music invention on that album was, like, ‘Wow!’ That was the big thing for me. I just thought, Oh dear me, this is the album of all time. What the hell are we going to do?” While Pet Sounds was in permanent rotation during the recording sessions, it also wouldn’t have ever existed without Brian Wilson being inspired by The Beatles’ Rubber Soul. And so the cycle continued.

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5: Frank Zappa And The Mothers of Invention’s Freak Out!


If Brian Wilson helped steer the pop side of things, Frank Zappa would push The Beatles to become more experimental. Frank Zappa’s And The Mothers of Invention’s 1966 debut album, Freak Out!, was also the first of its kind, incorporating neoclassical orchestration with improvisational jazz and countercultural politics, and aiming to turn the LP format into a conceptual statement. Both Pet Sounds and Freak Out! had proven that rock could be a studio producer’s medium as well as performance art. If Freak Out! was the manifesto for the freak culture in LA, then Sgt. Pepper would be the highbrow endorsement of San Francisco’s hippie subculture.

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6: Stop Being A Touring Band​


Before they decided to adopt an alter ego, The Beatles decided they were done with touring altogether. Forget inconvenience, touring had become physically dangerous for the band, both due to zealous fans and some not-so favorable audiences who didn’t take kindly to John Lennon’s seemingly blasphemous comments on Christianity. Their performance at Candlestick Park in San Francisco, on August 29, 1966, would be the last concert they would ever play, bar a famous Apple rooftop performance in 1969.

Each member escaped in his own way, and when they reconvened in November 1966, they decided to make the shift from working band to a more conceptual “idea.” If their songs didn’t require vocal and instrumental parts to be democratically divvied up among them, then the group were free to play to each other’s strengths and tinker in the studio until they could achieve something close to perfection. Ringo summed up the band’s thinking in the Anthology book, saying, “After deciding not to tour I don’t think we cared a damn. We’d been having more fun in the studio, as you can hear from Revolver and Rubber Soul. Instead of being pulled out of the studio to go on the road, we could now spend time there and relax.”

7: Studio Experimentation And George Martin​


During their sessions at Abbey Road, The Beatles were closing the Beatlemania chapter of their career and beginning a new chapter: the “studio years.” For years, most of rock and pop music was written in a way that it could be performed live. As for the recording process, the rule of thumb was to recreate and capture a “live performance” on record as well. But Martin and the boys wanted to flip that conceit on its head. As Martin said, “We were putting something down on tape that could only be done on tape.” He was more than just a producer; he was the architect of The Beatles’ sound and exposed the group to the more avant-garde type recordings and ideas that expanded their field of vision.

8: Technical Limitations​


It’s remarkable how much Martin and the band were able to accomplish using the studio technology of the times – that’s partly what makes Sgt. Pepper so impressive. Like all great ideas, with adversity comes ingenuity. While multi-track recording was industry standard by 1967, eight-track tape recorders were more commonplace in the US and were not widely available in the UK until late 1967. Much of the album’s psychedelic sound effects were created through inventive splicing and attaching microphones to nearly every object in the room, as well as repurposing headphones as microphones and other tricks of ingenuity.

9: India​


The Beatles, like the rest of the Western world, had become infatuated with Indian musical traditions, spirituality, and culture. Its influence was felt since “Norwegian Wood,” on Rubber Soul, and especially on Revolver, with George Harrison’s “Love You To.” Harrison’s interest in Indian music would blossom into a lifelong passion. Before the Sgt. Pepper sessions began, Harrison flew to Bombay to take sitar lessons from Ravi Shankar, culminating in his Eastern-tinged, “Within You Without You” and the timbral backgrounds of “Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds.”

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10: Ignored Industry Trends​


By 1966, The Beatles had already amassed an enormous string of hits, with Revolver selling 1,187,869 copies by December 31, 1966, in the US alone. Their success had put them in the unique position to experiment with new approaches to songwriting and instrumentation. With each record, they had expanded what the acceptable definition of “rock music” was, and their ability to reach fans across all genres allowed them to play with different styles and instruments while retaining mainstream appeal. Without having to answer to the passing whims of popular music, The Beatles could eschew making dance music or radio-friendly singles. Instead, they raised rock to a higher standard, paving the way for the soon-to-emerge progressive rock and art-rock of the future.

Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band can be bought here.

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Last reply · posted in 🎬 Movies & TV
I think that terminator is one of the most popular movies out there and there are many people who like terminator movies. Some people claim that earlier movies of terminator were much better. So, do you like terminator movies?
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Last reply · posted in 🖥️ PC & Hardware
like seriously i keep accidentally leaving my mug on top of my tower and its always lukewarm by the time i remember it ... wouldnt it be genius if cases came with a little heated pad or something for your coffee?? ngl obvs itd need safeties so you dont fry your pc but cmon thats the dream!! id pay extra for that feature tbh

also unrelated but does anyone know if those rtx 5000 series rumors are true??? i heard they might drop by q4 and im torn between upgrading now or waiting lol anyway back to coffee warmers lets make this happen people!!!
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Last reply · posted in ☕ General Discussion
mine was this pack of "smart" sticky notes that are supposedly reusable but i have no idea how to actually reuse them without ruining the adhesive?? now theyre just sitting on my desk looking sad lol... also yesterday i bought a book about obscure 17th century marine chronometers because of course i did... like i dont even know why i thought i needed that but here we are what about you guys?? anything you bought recently that made you go “why did i think this was necessary”?? haha
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Aragon
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Last reply · posted in 🎹 Pop Music
It feels like more songs are barely over two minutes long these days.

Do you prefer quick, catchy tracks or longer songs that have room to build?
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· posted in 🖥️ PC & Hardware
rainy days are cozy but what do you actually do?? i always end up trying to do too many things at once and getting distracted by random articles about dwarf planets or some obscure 2000s band no one remembers lol. vote!!
What’s the best way to spend a rainy day?
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· posted in 📻 Listener Requests
yknow the ones. where it’s just you, the road, and maybe a gas station or two blinking in the distance. not sad necessarily but it feels like the world’s holding its breath i’m thinking stuff with reverb-heavy guitar or synths that kinda drone on like they’re stretching into forever. bonus if it’s got faint echoes of voices in the background like someone’s whispering secrets you cant quite catch i’ve been stuck on **lonejustice** by moonrunners lately — anyone got recs in that vibe? (also if you say anything country im gonna laugh and ignore you, sorry not sorry.)
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like, i dont need a robodog that just sits there looking vaguely sad when i forget to charge it for three days. lowkey im talking about one that can remind me im late for work, knows when im stressed and plays calming whale sounds (lol, yeah im into that), and maybe even roleplays as a hype squad when im trying to finish a side project?! theres gotta be a way to program that... right? imagine a little robo-kitten that climbs on your keyboard but instead of being annoying it auto-saves your half-baked draft first or better yet, it tells you **exactly** where you left off because lets face it, i cant keep track of anything anymore... idk maybe this is too much to ask but between space launches and indie bands dropping albums named after pulsar coordinates (look up psr b1919+21, its wild), i feel like we should be farther along with this tech by now. anyone else feel this way or am i just overcomplicating my life again???
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Max Pilley
Last reply · posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
taylor_swift_2024.jpg


Disney created a “decoy version” of Toy Story 5 to keep Taylor Swift’s involvement a secret, even from the cast and crew.


Yesterday (June 5), Swift shared ‘I Knew It, I Knew You’, a song she wrote and produced alongside Jack Antonoff specifically for the film. The track is written from the perspective of cowgirl Jessie, and it sees Swift going back to her country roots.

The film is released on June 19, but Swift’s involvement was only officially confirmed in recent days, despite the project having been in production for multiple years. It had, however, been the subject of rampant speculation among Swifties in recent months, something that Swift fuelled when she posted a cryptic countdown on her website in May.

Now, Thomas Jordan, who worked as a VFX supervisor on the film, has revealed that even many of those working on the film did not know that Swift had contributed a song.

Speaking at a SXSW London panel, he said only “a very small group” knew about ‘I Knew It, I Knew You’, with Disney and Pixar showing press and staffers a version of the finished film without the song.


“The crew that made Toy Story 5 did not know about this secret until last week,” Jordan said (via Variety), explaining that a “decoy version” was used in early previews.

“Turns out, Taylor Swift is a huge Toy Story fan like many of us,” Jordan added. “She actually saw an early version of the film, she requested to see it before it was finished and she wrote the song and then asked us if we wanted it. And we said, ‘Uh, yes! Yes we do.’ That was in February, so we’ve had to keep it a secret ever since then.”

After the song was finally announced, Swift wrote: “I’ve always dreamed of getting to write for these characters who I’ve adored since I was a five year old kid watching the first Toy Story movie. I fell instantly in love with Toy Story 5 when I was lucky enough to see it in its early stages, and I wrote this song as soon as I got home from the screening. Sometimes you just know, right?”



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She added a video of herself as a child dressed as Jessie, noting: “Writing this song felt like a musical departure and coming home at the same time.

“Creating something for Jessie was a new challenge and also felt like second nature all at once. And being a @toystory kid from the age of five til now… is an adventure I plan to be on, to infinity and beyond.”

The film will pick up after Woody left to stay with Bo Peep at the end of the last movie. Jessie is now the leader of Bonnie’s room, with Buzz Lightyear her second-in-command, but Bonnie is now enamoured with her new favourite toy, a frog-like tablet named Lilypad.

Bad Bunny is another music superstar involved in the project, after it was recently revealed that he will be the voice of a talking pizza slice, ‘Pizza With Sunglasses’, who is described as a forgotten toy living in an abandoned backyard shed.

The post Disney created “decoy version” of ‘Toy Story 5’ to keep Taylor Swift’s involvement a secret appeared first on NME.

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travel woes gotchu feeling scammed or lazy? what tops the list of most avoidable screw-ups? honestly argue it out in replies if none of these fit your vibe.
WHICH IS THE WORST TRAVEL MISTAKE?
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Max Pilley
Last reply · posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
Nicolas Cage in Spider-Noir


Spider-Noir is streaming in full now, but does Nicolas Cage’s Ben Reilly become The Spider again? Find out below.


The show is based on the Marvel Comics character Spider-Man Noir and follows Reilly, an aging private investigator and superhero in 1930s New York who grapples with his past in the aftermath of a personal tragedy.

It is set within the world of Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse, with Cage reprising his role from the 2018 film, and all eight episodes of the show are streaming now on MGM+ in the US and on Amazon Prime Video internationally.

It was developed by Oren Uziel, previously known for 22 Jump Street and The Cloverfield Paradox, and it also starred Brendan Gleeson, Lamorne Morris, Li Jun Li, Karen Rodriguez, Abraham Poppola and Jack Huston.

Watch the trailer here:


NME gave the show a three-star review, noting: “In the end, Spider-Noir may face an uphill battle for ratings – how much crossover do the modern Marvel blockbuster and pre-war crime fiction fandoms have? – but there’s a lot of fun to be had here. Much more than with any other recent Spider-Man spin-off, that’s for sure.”

The ending of Spider-Noir explained: does Ben become The Spider again?​


Throughout the season, Cage’s Ben Reilly was resisting re-embracing his superhero alter ego, choosing to run from his past following the death of his girlfriend.

At the start of the finale, Brendan Gleeson’s Silvermane and his gang have captured him and his secret identity is on the verge of being exposed. Cat Hardy (Li Jun Li) reveals that she had betrayed Silvermane, however, while Robbie Robbertson (Lamorne Morris) disguises himself as The Spider to protect Ben.

Cat kills Silvermane as his mob empire collapses, while Ben faces off with the superpowered Dirk Leyden, in his persona of Megawatt, eventually throwing him into the path of an oncoming train and killing him.

Ben finally has access to the last dose of the antidote, which could let him escape the burden of The Spider for good, but instead he gives it to Flint Marko, saving him and allowing him to be with Cat.

By giving up his own chance at freedom, Ben accepts the responsibility that he had previously been resisting, and embraces his role and destiny as The Spider.

The post The ending of ‘Spider-Noir’ explained: does Ben become The Spider again? appeared first on NME.

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