TheFonz said:
Talk_Dude said:
Personally, I'm more inclined to believe what a bona-fide musical genius, Sir George Martin, said about the growth of the Beatles' skills and talents as composers of music than someone who can't tell the difference between tunes and lyrics.
I'd also like to know how "social issues" lead to lyrics like "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite" or the title track, "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band".
You need to dig a little deeper into those history books, my friend. In the early '70s the U.S. government labeled John Lennon a "political activist" for protesting the Vietnam war. He lived in New York at the time and the government wanted to deport him (Google "Lennon FBI files"). That sounds a bit silly today, but 40 years ago it was some pretty serious stuff. You'd be a fool if you thought Lennon's activism didn't reflect in his earlier writings with the Beatles (does "Revolution" ring a bell?). As for the drug culture, it was prevalent in pop music in the late '60s. Just get a copy of the Billboard charts. ( Maybe you should play "With A Little Help From My Friends" and "Lucy In The Sky" one more time.)
In the early 1070's, the US Government was being run by a bunch of paranoids who'd label almost anybody a "political activist", which doesn't proved much. Besides, We're talking about Sgt Pepper, which was recorded between December, 1966 and June, 1967, before many people in the UK (which, in case you hadn't noticed, was where the Beatles lived) started to pay much attention to the Vietnam war. Maybe you weren't aware of this, but the UK wasn't involved in Vietnam.
As for the song, "Revolution", Lennon repeatedly said it was an anti-revolution song, with lyrics like "But when you talk about destruction, Don't you know that you can count me out." Lennon said he wrote it in response to people who kept trying to get him to become politically involved, with the response being his turning down their invitation. What do you think, "You tell me it's the institution, Well you know, You better free your mind instead" means? According to Lennon himself, it meant that real change had to come from within, not through political activism.
As for the alleged drug references in Beatles lyrics, the usual idiots back then were all trying to prove that anything slightly surreal was a drug reference. That was proven to be mostly a pile of crap, but the diehards still like to cling to the old myths. Of course, the contemporary response to the political content of the Beatles' output was also mixed. Many on the left denounced the Beatles as sell-outs because they said that both versions of Revolution were counter-revolutionary. At the same time, the John Birch Society condemned the Beatles as communists.
Frankly, I think you should stick to sticking your thumbs up and saying "AAAA".