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Author Topic: 1966  (Read 9646 times)
TMinthePM
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« on: January 31, 2016, 05:48:42 AM »

This just appeared in The Guardian:

http://www.theguardian.com/music/2016/jan/31/three-albums-1966-beatles-revolver-bob-dylan-blonde-on-blonde-beach-boys-pet-sounds

Posing a question I have sometimes mulled over myself, wondering if it had really been that great or was it just the memory of hormones kicking in?

It almost seems I've spent a lifetime reacting to that year.
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JK
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« Reply #1 on: January 31, 2016, 05:59:34 AM »

This just appeared in The Guardian:

http://www.theguardian.com/music/2016/jan/31/three-albums-1966-beatles-revolver-bob-dylan-blonde-on-blonde-beach-boys-pet-sounds

Posing a question I have sometimes mulled over myself, wondering if it had really been that great or was it just the memory of hormones kicking in?

It almost seems I've spent a lifetime reacting to that year.

Yes indeed! If I had to choose just one year, it would be 1966. It combined many, many great 45s with some truly great albums. And it was a year full of promise. All highly subjective, of course...
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« Reply #2 on: January 31, 2016, 07:04:40 AM »

This just appeared in The Guardian:

http://www.theguardian.com/music/2016/jan/31/three-albums-1966-beatles-revolver-bob-dylan-blonde-on-blonde-beach-boys-pet-sounds

Posing a question I have sometimes mulled over myself, wondering if it had really been that great or was it just the memory of hormones kicking in?

It almost seems I've spent a lifetime reacting to that year.
Thanks, TM - I really enjoyed that. But I would add 1967 to that.   Wink
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SteveMC
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« Reply #3 on: January 31, 2016, 07:32:06 AM »

Throw in Rubber Soul from Dec 65 and I'm good.
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« Reply #4 on: January 31, 2016, 07:47:08 AM »

Throw in Rubber Soul from Dec 65 and I'm good.
Oh, yeah!  LOL
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Custom Machine
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« Reply #5 on: January 31, 2016, 09:27:44 AM »


Thanks, TM - I really enjoyed that. But I would add 1967 to that.   Wink


Agreed.
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Lee Marshall
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« Reply #6 on: January 31, 2016, 10:26:01 AM »

1966 was a sensational year for the evolution of music...and Rock.  Sure the 3 lps already feted are worthy of the praise...and then some  100%.  No question.  No contrary BS.  

BUT...let us also stop to consider that '66 gave us the first Rollimg Stones' lp featuring ALL Keith/Mick material...Aftermath.  One of their best lps ever.  [even if it spelt the beginning of the demise of poor Brian Jones]  We got the first Buffalo Springfield album...the initial Mamas and Papas lp If You Can Believe Your Eyes and Ears...There was the Bluesbreakers record with John Mayall and Eric Clapton [and some guy named John McVie]...The WHO/A Quick One, 5th Dimension by the Byrds, Fresh Cream by some supergroup, Sunshine Superman from Donovan, Daydream and Hum/Lovin Spoonful and a couple from Simon and Garfunkel...Sounds of Silence and Parsley Sage Rosemary and Thyme.

Yup...66 was and is a difficult year to outdistance.  Oh and...let's not foget Good Vibrations...one of the most important singles ever recorded was also a 1966 gem.

We should be so lucky 50 years later.

But we're not.
« Last Edit: January 31, 2016, 10:30:05 AM by Add Some » Logged

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« Reply #7 on: January 31, 2016, 10:34:08 AM »

Let's see a picture of Lee from 1966! Grin
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« Reply #8 on: January 31, 2016, 11:16:07 AM »

Let's see a picture of Lee from 1966! Grin

Good gawd NO!!!!  My parents might have barely accepted the 'Lee look' back in '66 [the typical Beatles circa '65 look] but at 14 I thought I looked like a real DINK!!!  I wanted it longer and shaggier.  Brian and Dennis had neat hair.  Mike Al and Carl...not so much.  I moved out of the house at the end of '67.  Needed to live under a roof with different rules and regulations.  So I moved in with me, myself and I. 

49 years later...my hair is still way down my back.  Another 1/2 year or so and it'll reach my belt.  [and I don't wear my pants up under my friggin arm-pits either. LOL ]

I'm only about 1 inch taller...maybe 1 1/2 than I was in '66.  Weight wise though?  On my best days of recent yore I'm about 55 lps heavier.  Ell Bees are a pisser.  Booze and food are great. Wink
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"Add Some...Music...To Your Day.  I do.  It's the only way to fly.  Well...what was I gonna put here?  An apple a day keeps the doctor away?  Hum me a few bars."   Lee Marshall [2014]

Donald  TRUMP!  ...  Is TOAST.  "What a disaster."  "Overrated?"... ... ..."BIG LEAGUE."  "Lots of people are saying it"  "I will tell you that."   Collusion, Money Laundering, Treason.   B'Bye Dirty Donnie!!!  Adios!!!  Bon Voyage!!!  Toodles!!!  Move yourself...SPANKY!!!  Jail awaits.  It's NO "Witch Hunt". There IS Collusion...and worse.  The Russian Mafia!!  Conspiracies!!  Fraud!!  This racist is goin' down...and soon.  Good Riddance.  And take the kids.
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« Reply #9 on: January 31, 2016, 11:24:40 AM »

Fair enough LOL
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And production aside, I’d so much rather hear a 14 year old David Marks shred some guitar on Chug-a-lug than hear a 51 year old Mike Love sing about bangin some chick in a swimming pool.-rab2591
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« Reply #10 on: January 31, 2016, 12:19:17 PM »

I think it was the captain who in another thread suggested that 1965-67 was more realistic than naming a single year.

I can live with that. It was certainly a fantastic time for pop----particularly 1966. Grin
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« Reply #11 on: January 31, 2016, 12:33:35 PM »

John k picture from that era? Grin
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And production aside, I’d so much rather hear a 14 year old David Marks shred some guitar on Chug-a-lug than hear a 51 year old Mike Love sing about bangin some chick in a swimming pool.-rab2591
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« Reply #12 on: January 31, 2016, 12:52:17 PM »

It seems that drug use by someone with an artistic mind can spawn a brief period of expanded creativity, followed often by a sharp burnout. 

1966-67 was that creative period for many musical artists- it was all happening at once in the music world.
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« Reply #13 on: January 31, 2016, 12:54:38 PM »



"Guess You Had To Be There".   Wink
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SMiLE Brian
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« Reply #14 on: January 31, 2016, 12:56:23 PM »

OSD 1966 army picture? Grin
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And production aside, I’d so much rather hear a 14 year old David Marks shred some guitar on Chug-a-lug than hear a 51 year old Mike Love sing about bangin some chick in a swimming pool.-rab2591
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« Reply #15 on: January 31, 2016, 01:28:46 PM »

I would say 1965-66; in the case of the 3 artists mentioned in the article, that would include Bringing it All Back Home and Highway 61 Revisited along with BOB; Beach Boys Today and Summer Days along with PS (and Party, if you must); and here in the US, Beatles VI, Help!, Rubber Soul, and Revolver (and the butcher album, lol). 65-66, for me, is the point where the music starts to get a little more 'serious', but it was still fun. '67 seems to be the turning point, where groups like the Beach Boys, Paul Revere and the Raiders and the Lovin' Spoonful fall out of favor for being too silly, straight, or ...whatever. Or if you're the Kinks, you don't get heard anymore because you've been banned from entire countries!
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« Reply #16 on: January 31, 2016, 01:43:20 PM »

1966 was the last year that pop music was a cohesive whole, with Dylan, the Supremes, James Brown, the Beach Boys and Andy Williams all co-existing within the same milieu.

In 1967 the pop world began to split into the FM-radio, album-oriented counter-culture bands, and the AM-radio, singles- oriented artists. Some fantastic music resulted, but something essential -- a common experience?-- was lost forever.
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JK
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« Reply #17 on: January 31, 2016, 02:20:45 PM »

1966 was the last year that pop music was a cohesive whole, with Dylan, the Supremes, James Brown, the Beach Boys and Andy Williams all co-existing within the same milieu.

In 1967 the pop world began to split into the FM-radio, album-oriented counter-culture bands, and the AM-radio, singles- oriented artists. Some fantastic music resulted, but something essential -- a common experience?-- was lost forever.

My feelings too, that something went missing in '67. Maybe '66 raised hopes so high that '67 could only be an anticlimax.
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« Reply #18 on: January 31, 2016, 03:54:11 PM »

I find it odd the author dissed Here, There and Everywhere so much, right after praising Pet Sounds. Here, There and Everywhere was, after all, a deliberate copy of the Beach Boys, Pet Sounds in particular. In fact, a few years ago it dawned on me it was basically an imitation of You Still Believe in Me, though I'm not sure McCartney was fully aware he was copying it so closely.
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« Reply #19 on: January 31, 2016, 05:42:12 PM »

I find it odd the author dissed Here, There and Everywhere so much, right after praising Pet Sounds. Here, There and Everywhere was, after all, a deliberate copy of the Beach Boys, Pet Sounds in particular. In fact, a few years ago it dawned on me it was basically an imitation of You Still Believe in Me, though I'm not sure McCartney was fully aware he was copying it so closely.

Instead of a "deliberate copy", it was most probably a loving tribute or at the least a tip of the hat to Brian Wilson and his writing.  Smiley
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TMinthePM
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« Reply #20 on: January 31, 2016, 09:10:56 PM »

With the Beatles retiring from the road at the end of that summer, yeah, it marked the culmination and end of that breathless rush of excitement, energy and creativity unleashed by their advent on Ed Sullivan early in '64.

Whew, what a run!

One commentator, I can't remember who, remarked the decade seemed to simultaneously speed by while taking a century to complete, so crammed was it with happenings of profound import and transformation - each year having a feel of it's own.

Pet Sounds clearly an extension of while simultaneously a departure from Summer Days, Sgt. Pepper likewise growing out of Revolver.

And yet, there is a ripeness to '67, like a fruit ready to turn, that is not yet evident in '66...I think...well maybe...hmmmm....
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« Reply #21 on: February 01, 2016, 08:50:48 AM »

Here, There and Everywhere is to me more boring than all of Pet Sounds and the rest of Revolver. 1966 was THE year though. Pet Sounds, Revolver, After-Math, A Quick One ... never topped, if you happen to have the same musical taste as me. The best works of the respective artists.
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« Reply #22 on: February 01, 2016, 09:18:06 AM »

Here, There and Everywhere is to me more boring than all of Pet Sounds and the rest of Revolver.
Wow. I've never heard someone agree with me on this. If that's a tribute to Pet Sounds, it really misses the mark.
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« Reply #23 on: February 01, 2016, 09:51:42 AM »

Here, There and Everywhere is to me more boring than all of Pet Sounds and the rest of Revolver.
Wow. I've never heard someone agree with me on this. If that's a tribute to Pet Sounds, it really misses the mark.

It's all opinion, Emily, but I've always believed that HTAE and Sun King were done with Brian Wilson in mind. Listen some time to the ending of Here Comes The Sun. Yes? No?  Huh
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« Reply #24 on: February 01, 2016, 09:58:20 AM »

Here, There and Everywhere is to me more boring than all of Pet Sounds and the rest of Revolver.
Wow. I've never heard someone agree with me on this. If that's a tribute to Pet Sounds, it really misses the mark.

It's all opinion, Emily, but I've always believed that HTAE and Sun King were done with Brian Wilson in mind. Listen some time to the ending of Here Comes The Sun. Yes? No?  Huh

Pure memory here, but didn't McCartney acknowledge (maybe in his bio?) that "Here, There and Everywhere" was a tribute to or modeled on Brian's work?  Certainly, "Back In the USSR" was a light-hearted tribute.
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