
Rubber Soul is a Rock album by The Beatles, originally released in 1965. On Gatefold: 957 pressings tracked, owned by 180 collectors.
Sound DNA
- Rock
- Classic Rock
- warm
- wistful
- psychedelic
About
It wasn’t just that <i>Rubber Soul</i> was sonically groundbreaking (it was), or that Lennon and McCartney’s songwriting had reached new heights of maturity and ambiguity (okay), but that it was the first Beatles album where each song seemed to exist unto itself and yet worked in alchemical harmony with everything around it: the emergence of the pop album as creative kaleidoscope. McCartney had told the <i>New Musical Express</i> that the band was banking on comedy being the next big thing after protest music—a reflection, possibly, of the existential irreverence one feels on acid, their growing insularity from (and reluctance toward) the culture at large, a philosophical commitment to enjoying the ride, or some giddy mix of all three. Whatever the case, <i>Rubber Soul</i> is a deeply funny album: the gender play of “Drive My Car” (and the <i>beep-beep</i> backing vocals), the cabaret of “Michelle” (because nothing warms up the object of one’s desire like French), the way Lennon sucks deeply through his teeth before oozing the chorus to “Girl.” Even the album’s most earnest songs (“Nowhere Man,” “In My Life”) were touched by a nursery-rhyme gentleness that made their themes (psychic alienation, the astonishing continuity of past and present) go down easily. As for “Norwegian Wood,” what can you really do with the suggestion that the narrator burns the girl’s house down but shrug in uncertainty? This is how the album unfolds: colorful, dreamy, and delirious on the surface, with shadows swimming underneath. The overall feeling is one of liberation: In getting a little chemical-assisted distance from their egos, the band was able to explore style in ways that felt fluid and radical, changing costumes from song to song instead of locking themselves continuously into being The Beatles—a channel-changing approach that only became more pronounced as their career wound on (especially on the White Album and <i>Abbey Road</i>), not to mention set a new precedent for the diversity of modes and expressions pop artists were suddenly allowed to explore. As for the title, McCartney had remembered something an old bluesman said about Mick Jagger—that he was “plastic soul.” In the original iteration, it was a diss; in The Beatles’ version, it was a statement of liberation: In embracing artifice, you free yourself from the confines of the real.
via Apple Music
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Tracklist
Side A
- A1Drive My Car
- A2Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)
- A3You Won't See Me
- A4Nowhere Man
- A5Think For Yourself
- A6The Word
- A7Michelle
Side B
- B1What Goes On?
- B2Girl
- B3I'm Looking Through You
- B4In My Life
- B5Wait
- B6If I Needed Someone
- B7Run For Your Life
Credits
Performers
- Paul McCartneyPIANO BASS BACKING VOCALS
- George HarrisonSITAR BACKING VOCALS VOCALS
- Mal EvansORGAN ELECTRIC ORGAN KEYBOARDS
- Ringo StarrORGAN LEAD VOCALS DRUMS
- George MartinPIANO TAMBOURINE
- John LennonBACKING VOCALS VOCALS LEAD VOCALS
- The BeatlesVOCALS
- Geroge MartinPIANO
- Paul CobboldHARMONY VOCALS
- John Paul JonesHARMONY VOCALS
- Johnny SandlinLEAD VOCALS
- Richard StarkeyLEAD VOCALS
180 collectors on Gatefold own this · 957 pressings tracked on Gatefold
