57 Years Ago, the Beatles Delivered What Is Arguably Their Best Album of All Time
By 1968, The Beatles had revolutionized music, but were also already a band in flux. They had already stopped touring for 2 years, after their last gig at Candlestick Park, San Francisco, in August 1966. It was a complete game-changer for the band as they found sanctuary in the studio following the controversial move. The Beatles were simply tired of not being able to hear themselves, so they let their musical imaginations run wild in the safety of a tranquil studio. Their creativity was liberated, and on November 22, 1968, The Beatles released the album that captured them at perhaps their most fearless and fluid. The Beatles, or The White Album, is a self-assured expression of a band that ruled the music industry through its many styles and genres. But nearly sixty years later, could it be considered to be The Beatles’ best work? The Studio Had Become The Beatles’ Stage
When The Beatles decided to stop touring, it became the catalyst for the next stage of their evolution. Part of the reason the band called it quits on concerts is that the arrangements in their music were too intricate and complex to recreate on stage. On their last tour, they had played nothing from their latest release, Revolver, because it just wouldn’t translate on stage. Revolver’s iconic sound relies on reversed guitar tracks, heavy reverb, and complex tape loops to construct a deep sense of dimension. In The Beatles’ touring frustration, they couldn’t hear themselves over screaming crowds, let alone experiment sonically.
Source: Fiona MacPherson-Amador/collider.com