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John Lennon compared a Beatles song to disco

John Lennon compared a Beatles song to disco

A disco ball

Music

The Beatles wrote songs in many genres, but disco wasn’t one of them. Interestingly, two members of the Fab For wrote disco songs after the band broke up.

The Beatles made songs in many different genres, but disco was not one of them. Nevertheless, John Lennon compared one of the songs by The White Album to disco music. Interestingly, two members of Fab For made disco songs after the band broke up. In addition, another band member revealed that he was a big fan of a disco hit.

John Lennon compared a Beatles blues song to disco songs

During a 1980 interview from the book All we say: The last big interview with John Lennon and Yoko OnoJohn talked about his band’s song “Revolution 1.” “Well, the slow version of ‘Revolution’ on the album went on forever and I took the fade-out part, which they sometimes do with disco records these days, and just put all that stuff on top,” he said. “It’s got the basic rhythm of the original ‘Revolution’ plus about 20 loops that we put on, stuff from the EMI archives.

“We cut up classical music and made loops of different sizes, and then I got a tape with a test engineer saying, ‘Number nine, number nine, number nine,'” he said. “All these different bits of sound and noise were put together. There were about ten machines with people holding pencils on the loops – some were just a few inches long, some a meter long. I fed them all in and mixed them live. I did a few mixes until I got one I liked. Yoko was there the whole time and she decided which loops to use.”

2 members of the Beatles have made songs in this genre

Of course, “Revolution 1” doesn’t sound much like a disco song. It’s more of a blues number than anything else. However, the “Imagine” singer simply said that “Revolution 1” was created in a similar way to disco songs.

Although the Beatles were not a disco group, some of the former Beatles tried their hand at the genre. Ringo Starr released a flop disco album called Ringo the Fourth. Paul McCartney released two successful disco songs: “Silly Love Songs” and his Michael Jackson duet “Say Say Say.” Neither of these songs is a classic. However, Paul did not embarrass himself by making disco the way Ringo did.

John was not a “disco fan,” but he seemed to like the genre. In an interview with Rolling Stone in 1975, he talked about the new music he liked. The “Whatever Get You Thru the Night” singer chose “Shame, Shame, Shame” by Shirley & Company as a personal favorite. Although the tune is not so well remembered today, it was an international hit.

Not all rockers like disco

To this day, many rockers condemn disco. For them, disco music is frivolous and too commercial. By definition, it cannot reach the same artistic level as rock. This attitude is becoming increasingly rare, but it is not quite dead yet.

Meanwhile, Ringo, Paul and John were all willing to experiment with the genre, or at least respect it. Rock ‘n’ roll is many things. At the very least, the rock ‘n’ roll community should be able to recognize the value of different styles of music.