Wednesday, July 15, 2020
Why Ill Never Get Tired of Reading Books About The Beatles
Why Ill Never Get Tired of Reading Books About The Beatles There comes a point, one might assume, when everything worth writing regarding a particular subject has been written. For some topics, a lengthy magazine article may be enough. For others, even a shelfâs worth of lengthy tomes wouldnât suffice. In the past few months, Iâve read a couple of books â" Rob Sheffieldâs Dreaming the Beatles and Andrew Blaunerâs In Their Lives â" that have made something abundantly clear: no matter how many books have been written about The Beatles, Iâll always want more. Now, this isnât to say that I want writers to simply recite facts about the bandâs well-worn trek from Liverpool to Hamburg to America to global fame and musical revolution. Itâs not The Beatlesâ story that I have an endless need to read about; itâs all the ways in which the band and their music changed the lives of its listeners that keeps me turning pages, which is exactly why Dreaming the Beatles and In Their Lives worked so well for me. Dreaming the Beatles is a single listenerâs personal history, chronicling his decades spent listening to and loving the Fab Four. The Beatles he writes about are his Beatles, which, of all things, he first encountered watching the Help! movie as a kid. In Their Lives takes a similar approach, but relies on 28 different writers professing their adoration of the band through essays about (at least in some sense) a single Beatles tune. Jane Smiley, for example, writes about the youthful thrills of âI Want to Hold Your Hand,â Touré tackles the drama of âThe Ballad of John and Yoko,â and Rick Moody uses âThe Endâ to explore his parentsâ dissolving marriage, the dream of the 60s, and The Beatlesâ last hurrah. This individual focus, where all the bits of Beatles history and criticism are filtered through the writersâ individual encounters with the band, is exactly the right approach to a Beatles book in 2018 for two reasons. One, there are so many straight biographies of the band that, barring some new bit of revelatory research, itâs unlikely to offer anything new to those of us whoâve already devoured thousands of pages of Beatles lore. I mean, Bob Spitzâs recent biography (titled The Beatles, natch) starts with the four membersâ grandparents, for Pete (Best)âs sake. Exhaustive doesnât really begin to cover it. The other thing, though, is that The Beatles are one of those cultural touchstones shared by literally billions of people, so just as Sheffield and Smiley and Touré and Moody (and, somehow, David Duchovny) have their Beatles, we have ours. This makes reading these books a little like talking with someone who once lived in the same house you grew up in: the rooms and hallways and all the little quirks and noises are the same, but your lives and memories are necessarily different artifacts. Itâs fascinating to compare notes. I thoroughly enjoyed both Dreaming the Beatles and In Their Lives, of course, though Sheffieldâs book is the one that has really stuck with me. In fact, Dreaming the Beatles may rank behind only The Beatles Anthology in terms of pure Beatles-nut enjoyment. But where the latter (which is written as an oral history and includes material from interviews with the band, their longtime producer George Martin, and other important figures from the Beatles-verse) feels like youâve been granted an audience with the band and are listening to them recount old memories over tea, Sheffieldâs book feels like a late night campfire conversation with a fellow obsessive where you take turn playing your favoriteâs deep cuts and argue passionately about how underrated âBabyâs In Blackâ or âGot to Get You Into My Lifeâ is. (And yes, Iâve got a lot of metaphors to describe reading about The Beatles. What of it?) Because I literally never tire of those kinds of arguments, I hope that we see more books like Dreaming the Beatles as the years roll by. Weâve had the histories (Shout! by Philip Norman, The Anthology, the Spitz book), the firsthand accounts by the bandâs associates (All You Need is Ears by George Martin, Here, There and Everywhere: My Life Recording The Beatles by Geoff Emerick), works of cultural criticism (Beatles 66 by Steve Turner, Revolution in the Head by Ian McDonald, Cant Buy Me Love: The Beatles, Britain, and America) and even extensive catalogues of the bandâs recordings and gear (The Complete Beatles Recording Sessions by Mark Lewisohn). Beatles fanatics like me will find something to love about all of these, of course, but we may have passed the point when anything more can be wrung from attempts to report on the who, what, where, when, and why of The Beatles. Which is totally fine. As long as there are fans of The Beatles (read: forever) and those fans are willing and able to share their thoughts and make their arguments and re-live their formative Beatles experiences, thereâll be Beatles books I want to read. Sign up for True Story to receive nonfiction news, new releases, and must-read forthcoming titles.
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