The Beatles just released the coolest, weirdest piece of music I've heard all year
- A 50th-anniversary re-release of "The White Album" contains a trance-like, 13-minute version of the Beatles' "Helter Skelter."
- Even longtime fans of the band, which broke up in 1970, will have their expectations reset by the band at its most avant-garde.
- It's one of the most interesting pieces of music I've heard all year.
As with most children of the late 1960s and early 1970s, I grew up with the Beatles as a sort of force of nature, but because the group broke up in 1970, I experienced the whole thing secondhand. It's fair to say, however, that I was a Beatles obsessive; my senior-year thesis in high school was about the Fab Four.
In my later years, I've been back and forth with the band. The older I get, the more I like the gritty stuff and the very early songs, inspired by American rock-n-roll. The pop songs and the epic productions of the group's second, studio-focused period in the late 1960s now turn me off a bit.
Friday brings something special: a extended, 50th anniversary re-release of the so-called "White Album," which first appeared in November of 1968 on double vinyl and has become widely regarded as a document of the Beatles' cracking apart. In many ways, it was the final "true" Beatles album, followed by the goofy soundtrack for the film "Yellow Submarine" and the out-of-order releases of "Abbey Road" and "Let It Be."
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By the end of the sixties, the group's various combative, creative urges - and in retrospect, the creativity was sort of ridiculous - had become unmanageable, and they weren't limited to the oft-debated souring of the John Lennon-Paul McCartney partnership; George Harrison and Ringo Starr were also suffering.
And yet, as the re-release of "The Beatles/The White Album" proves, the guys could make monumental magic. The remixed re-issue contains a massive amount of new music, much of it loose, outtakes rather than polished performances.
Then there's the 13-minute version of the Beatles' most disturbing song, "Helter Skelter," made infamous by its association with Charles Manson and the Tate-LaBianca murders of 1969.
Composed by McCartney as a response to the aggressive sonic experiments of Pete Townshend and The Who, "Helter Skelter" originally came in once cut down at about four-and-a-half minutes and has been scrutinized ever since the needle first hit wax as a prototype of punk, heavy metal, noise, and the Beatles' influence on indie rock.
There had always been tales of an extended version of the song, clocking in at almost half and hour. The 13-minute take that's on the re-release sounds like the Beatles giving rude birth to the Velvet Underground and Sonic Youth. Ringo thumps an interrupted kick-snare drone, Paul seems to stick with single bass pulse, Lennon scratches brute chords, and Harrison provides icepick fills with what sounds like a Telecaster going through a small amp turned up. McCartney's singing is restrained and borderline sickly. There's an edge of total exhaustion. It just dies at the end in a fade-out of George string bends, the weary culmination of a long, smoggy nightmare.
A disturbing and brilliant version of an already disturbing and brilliant tune
It's trancelike. It's deeply troubling. It about a million miles from "Love Me Do." As with the Rolling Stones when they go back to the wellspring of the blues, it demonstrate that the avant-garde Beatles - channeling the darkness that was gathering at the end of the 1960s and, to my ear, referencing extended, textural tunes from the period, such as "East-West, "also a 13-minute jam by guitarist Mike Bloomfield and the Paul Butterfield Blues Band - were the group at its finest.
The Beatles evidently wrapped this "Helter Skelter" take in the bleak, wee hours of the morning. It's the kind of thing that's hypnotic yet shattering to listen to. I can only imagine what it was like to actually make the music, especially given that it was tough to record very long takes back then on analog tape.
For me, it's exquisite. And yes, a completely new Beatles song, so different from the familiar version of "Helter Skelter" as to set a new standard. A strange gift from a distant past, recorded when I was a year old. The Beatles were so good that we take their contribution to culture for granted. But almost 50 years after they called it quits, they can still shake us up like nobody else.