The Beatles’ Four Best Psychedelic Albums

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These are the four Beatles albums that you need if you like psychedelic music. I’m not going to put them in order (other than alphabetically) because you really need all four of them and I don’t want you to think that you can get away with leaving one of them. them from your list.

Magical mystery tour (1967)

This is probably the Beatles’ most trippy album. Almost every song on the album is bursting with some melting madness of one kind or another, whether it’s an experimental production, unusual song arrangements, and / or unusual writing. . “I am the walrus” and “Strawberry Fields Forever” are arguably John Lennon at his “craziest”. These are the songs he got into with producing “kitchen sink”, the weird lyrics, the unexpected song arrangements. Everything is here. “Flying”, “Blue Jay Way” and the title track “Magical Mystery Tour” are songs designed to melt the spirits and that’s exactly what they do.

Revolver (1966)

What brilliant songs. And what an incredible variety of music in such a compact album. There’s more variety in this 35-minute album than in the band’s entire career. And everything is incredibly well done. And then there’s “Tomorrow Never Knows” which could very well be the most distant song the Beatles have ever recorded.

Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Orchestra (1967)

It is a journey. Of course, the “concept” isn’t really that tight, but I think that’s why it works so well. It’s like you’re in a carnival listening to these different incarnations from the same group. Again, a wild selection of different styles of music, but unlike Revolver, each of the songs seems somehow connected to each other. It’s an amazing thing to make “Within You Without You” and “When I’m 64” make sense together on the same album.

It’s an album that has become so legendary that sometimes I think people don’t really appreciate how great it is. It is not overestimated. It really is that good. If you think otherwise, you might not have gotten out of that stage of wanting to be different just for your own good.

The white album(1968)

I talk about variety a lot in this article because it’s one of the things I love most about The Beatles’ music and it’s one of the things that I think makes listening to their albums so trippy. Well, this is the pinnacle of this strain. There are 30 tracks here and a vast majority of them are completely different from the other 29 songs on the album. In many ways it’s the ultimate Beatles journey and I think it’s their best album (psychedelic or not).

And then there is “Revolution # 9”. It’s hard to be much more psychedelic than that. If you really listen to this track on headphones really carefully, you might scare yourself off and I think that makes the song a very successful piece of sound art.

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Source by Johnny Moon

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