
Quote:
Considering that Help! functions as the Beatles' fifth album and as the soundtrack to their second film — while filming, they continued to release non-LP singles on a regular basis — it's not entirely surprising that it still has some of the weariness of Beatles for Sale.
Anyone else gonna disagree with it being weary?
I think it sounds remarkably re-energized after Beatles for Sale.
Yes I'm listening to it at 5:30 in the morning, so that might account for some of it. In my mind I always pair Please, Please Me and With The Beatles together. I group Hard Day's Night, Beatles for Sale, and Help together, with Beatles for Sale being the Jan Brady of the Bunch. I group Rubber Soul and Revolver together. Then each of the latter era albums stands on it's own, although i think it's funny that Magical Mystery Tour gets as maligned as it does when I Am The Walrus and Strawberry Fields Forever were culled from the Sgt. Pepper Sessions (for non album singles i think). But we'll talk about Magical Mystery Tour in a while.
What's not to like about Help? I think that while some of it is beatles formula for sure, the formula is carried out with a little more vim and vigor. Maybe what i'm saying is there's less to dislike. Then there's some of it that's inspired. Help might be a perfect pop song, Ticket to Ride is almost it's equal in terms of textbook writing (although at this point their becoming authors of the new textbook on the subject). And you can hate on Yesterday, i'm sure someone will, but that's some good shit right there.
There are some stone cold classics on this album.
From Wiki:
wikipedia.com Wrote:
Meaning of "ticket to ride"
While the song lyrics describe a girl "riding out of the life of the narrator",[4] the inspiration of the title phrase is unclear. McCartney said it was "a British Railways ticket to the town of Ryde on the Isle of Wight",[2] and Lennon said it described cards indicating a clean bill of health carried by Hamburg prostitutes in the 1960s.[4] The Beatles played in Hamburg early in their musical career, and "ride/riding" was slang for having sex.
I'd always heard that it was spelled Ryde, but then censored because that's where teen mothers went to have their kids before they were put up for adoption. You know, that whole convalescing in the country side while the get over rheumatic fever crap. Anyway you listen to it, it's well written. Love the double time at the end.