Here Comes the Sun by The Beatles.
After
days of sodden skies, rains, and flooding the Sun has come mostly back
and promises to linger for a couple of days or so. You can probably guess what that means. Yep, a visit from the four lads from Liverpool on their penultimate studio album Abbey
Road in 1969. No song posted in this
series probably has needed less introduction,
but here goes anyway.
The album cover from Abbey Road might feature the most iconic image in rock and roll. |
Abbey Road, named for the EMI recording studio used by Apple
Records, came together during a period when The Beatles were undergoing stress with the different aspirations
of its member John Lennon, Paul
McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr. Their former producer George Martin, sometimes called the Fifth Beatle, was called back to work on the album and reluctantly
agreed only if the boys adhered to disciplined and cooperative work.
Were Harrison and Lennon channeling old West gunfighters or Hasidic Jews in this promotional photo shoot for the Abbey Road album? |
Harrison wrote Here
Comes the Sun while idling away time in his best friend Eric Clapton’s garden and played acoustical guitar and was lead
singer on the track. McCartney
provided backing vocals and played bass with on drums. Lennon was recuperating from a car
accident and did not perform on the track.
He may also have been perturbed by the close collaboration between Harrison
and McCartney who had objected to Yoko
Ono’s presence at the recording sessions.
Martin added an orchestral
arrangement in collaboration with Harrison, who overdubbed a Moog
synthesizer immediately before the final
mix.
Here Comes the Sun was the lead song on Side B of the album and was never
released as a single. Many critics
considered it to be the best cut on
what easily became a classic album.
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