Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Son of Beatles’ producer dives into the messy ‘White Album’

- Mark Kennedy

NEW YORK - Hardcore fans of the Beatles like to pore over every detail of the band and endlessly dissect their songs. Then there’s Giles Martin, who manages to time-travel to meet the Fab Four.

Martin is the son of legendary Beatles producer George Martin. And, lately, he’s been returning to the treasure trove of original recording sessions to remix key albums by John, Paul, George and Ringo.

“It’s really nervewrack­ing because it’s a legacy of music which is really important,” the soft-spoken Martin said. “What I do is make sure I provide the fans — and people who don’t even know the Beatles — with music that’s worth listening to and is interestin­g.”

Martin last year remixed “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” and this year resurfaces with a fascinatin­g and exhaustive look at “The Beatles,” better known as the “White Album,” which contains such classics as “Back in the U.S.S.R.,” “Blackbird” and “ObLa-Di, Ob-La-Da.” It coincides with celebratio­ns for the album’s 50th birthday.

Besides punchier, remixed versions of the 30 songs on the original double album, the anniversar­y package includes 27 acoustic demos of material the Beatles made at Harrison’s house before going into the studio and 50 studio outtakes, including the unreleased “Not Guilty,” a studio jam of “Blue Moon” and early versions of “Let It Be,” ”Lady Madonna” and “Across the Universe,” which would appear on other albums.

Martin was tapped by the surviving Beatles and the wives of Harrison and Lennon to rummage around in Abbey Road Studios in London and re-listen to everything, including abandoned songs and rehearsals.

That meant going through 107 takes of “Sexy Sadie,” dozens of versions of both “I’m So Tired” and “Long, Long, Long” and a 13-minute “Helter Skelter.” It meant hearing the Beatles discuss songs, joke and even order lunch. (You can hear Harrison at one point from the studio order a “cheese, lettuce, Marmite sandwich.”)

Among the gems in the box set is an unrecorded Lennon song called “Child of Nature” that will later morph into his solo hit “Jealous Guy” and a very cool “Good Night” stripped of the orchestrat­ions it got on the “White Album.”

You can hear “Happiness Is a Warm Gun” start out life as quite gentle before ending up on the “White Album” like a template for Frank Zappa.

The Beatles worked through the summer of 1968, often in exhausting all-night sessions. Martin says the multiple takes for many songs may be because the band had largely stopped performing live.

“I think the most revealing thing for me working on the ‘White Album’ is just how creative they were, all of the time,” Martin said. “It’s almost like the studio couldn’t handle the level of demand that they wanted to do and the amount of songs they wanted to record.”

The accepted wisdom when it comes to the “White Album” is that it was a rocky time for the band, which was disintegra­ting. Starr quit and walked out for an 11-day period. Critics have called the record a brilliant mess with each member often delivering solo songs. But Martin disagrees.

“The revealing thing for me is you go back and listen to the tapes and what we have on the tapes is a cohesive unit playing together and working on songs together,” said Martin.

“Listen to the sessions — they were very warm. And that’s the surprising thing. I think we thought the ‘White Album’ was this disparate, angry record — and it has certainly elements of that — but, in essence, the four of them made an album together they wanted to make.”

 ?? RICK WOOD, MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Candy Cane Lane’s holiday displays open Nov. 23 in West Allis. Money raised goes to Midwest Athletes Against Childhood Cancer.
RICK WOOD, MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Candy Cane Lane’s holiday displays open Nov. 23 in West Allis. Money raised goes to Midwest Athletes Against Childhood Cancer.
 ??  ?? Giles Martin
Giles Martin

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