Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

‘Sgt. Pepper,’ at 50, gets a remix that brings back 1967

- By Randy Lewis

The Beatles’ “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” album was hailed in some quarters as a groundbrea­king milestone in popular music on its release in June 1967.

Others scoffed at it as an overly ambitious bid for artistic respectabi­lity that abandoned the innocence of the group’s early hits.

In the ensuing five decades, the debate has raged on and is likely to gain renewed fervor with the Friday release of the 50th anniversar­y edition of the album, newly remixed in stereo by Giles Martin, son of the album’s original producer, George Martin.

The raison d’être for the project isn’t simply to serve up a new edition of a classic album that scads of Beatles fans are likely to lap up — although clearly many will.

Rather, it is an attempt to rectify what’s long been perceived as a significan­t though hardly fatal flaw in the original stereo version, created with considerab­ly less time and attention from band members Paul McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr.

It’s hoped that the new iteration will introduce the work to younger audiences and sound more akin to contempora­ry recordings.

“It’s not exactly an album that is unloved,” Giles Martin, 47, said during a recent playback session at Capitol Records’ Studio A in Hollywood for music writers and a couple of dozen executives and employees of Universal Music Enterprise­s, the parent company of Capitol, which is releasing the album in the U.S.

In late 1966 and early 1967 when the Fab Four set to work on “Sgt. Pepper” as the follow-up to “Revolver,” monaural sound was the dominant format for music.

Stereo counterpar­ts often were created hastily for the U.S. and other foreign markets. Because the “Sgt. Pepper” stereo mix was better known in the U.S., Lennon once famously stated, “You haven’t heard ‘Pepper’ until you’ve heard the mono version.”

In part that’s because the group’s vocals are often divorced from the instrument­al accompanim­ent, separated in different channels because that was how the engineers charged with creating the stereo version could get the job done quickly.

Just how quickly? George Martin and the Beatles spent about three weeks mixing the mono version; its stereo counterpar­t was completed in barely two days, according to Giles Martin’s chief collaborat­or on the new edition, Abbey Road Studios senior engineer Sam Okell.

“There is a thing about the mono mix,” Giles Martin said. “There is immersion that comes from the depth they put in there, even though it is just coming out of one speaker. I was trying to create that [in stereo]. No one can say the [1967] stereo mix is not a great sounding record. But there’s a way to get the bestof both worlds.”

WHAT DOES IT ‘SAY TODAY’?

PBS is getting in on the “Sgt. Pepper” 50th with a new documentar­y, “Sgt. Pepper’s Musical Revolution,” premiering June 3 and hosted by composer, music historian and documentar­ian Howard Goodall.

“I know it’s a landmark in terms of pop culture, the Summer of Love, youth

culture, the ’60s,” Mr. Goodall said, “but really what I’m interested in is: What does this music say today? Why has it been treated with such respect for 50 years?”

Mr. Goodall, who like many Beatles fans said he might cite “Revolver” or “Abbey Road” rather than “Sgt. Pepper” as his favorite Beatles album, nonetheles­s unhesitati­ngly calls “Pepper” “their most important album.”

He said, “When someone 20 years old says, ‘Why do people your age think it’s such a big deal?’ I would say that in our modern musical world, the eclecticis­m of ‘Sgt. Pepper,’ the broad expanse of styles, genres and sounds, is not such a big deal.

“But,” he continued, “for those of us who listened to it when it came out … it was a big shock to the system.”

CD, DIGITAL OR VINYL?

“Sgt. Pepper” represents the most elaborate reissue yet of an individual Beatles album. It’s being offered on CD, digital and on vinyl — the last in a half-speed mastered pressing that ups the audio fidelity one more notch and is accompanie­d by a second LP containing alternate mixes of all 13 “Sgt. Pepper” songs as selected by Giles Martin.

A six-disc deluxe set includes the new stereo mix and the mono mix of the album on CD with two more CDs containing dozens of outtakes, alternate versions and studio chatter, plus a Blu-ray and DVD including a 1992 documentar­y on “The Making of Sgt. Pepper” created for the album’s 25th anniversar­y but never released commercial­ly.

It also comes with a 145-page book with artwork, handwritte­n lyric sheets, essays, photos and detailed session informatio­n on each of the “Sgt. Pepper” songs.

Generally, the remix brings new dimension, clarity and presence to the instrument­s and vocals, which are placed more naturally than the original version.

Songs are enhanced with touches such as the dead center placement of Ringo Starr’s lead vocal for “With a Little Help From My Friends.” The background singers’ questions and answers are then split into left and right channels, which sonically surrounds him with his friends.

The gorgeously spacey keyboard introducti­on to “Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds” moves gracefully left, right and in between in sync with the surreal nature of Lennon’s lyric.

Segues between “Good Morning, Good Morning,” “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (reprise)” and “A Day in the Life” also have been reconstitu­ted to reconcile the stereo and mono versions.

‘WHAT’S THE FEEL?’

Rather than resorting to more linear analogies about architectu­re or engineerin­g to describe his impression­s from delving headlong into what the Beatles and his father created, Giles Martin turns to a doctoranal­ogy.

“Like a lot of Beatles stuff,” he said while seated behind the expansive mixing board at Capitol’s premier studio, “it’s a bit like opening up a body, in a way. And you find it’s really healthy. All of the bits and pieces that make up ‘Sgt. Pepper’s’ are there for a reason.”

That said, the interrelat­ionship among all of that body’s moving parts weren’t necessaril­y ideal.

Mr. Martin virtually quotes the Hippocrati­c Oath in laying out one guiding principle he and others observed: “Make sure that you don’t do any harm. You certainly don’t want anything sounding worse than it did.”

Remixing one of the most hailed works in rock music called for more than myriad judgment calls on how much reverb to use, when to up the automatic double tracking (ADT), when and where to split instrument­s or vocals into different channels.

“It’s all about: What’s the feel? Yes, if we weren’t changing the balance or [spatial] position it wouldn’t be a different mix. But at the end of it, the important thing is: Does the song make you feel the same?

“For my father,” Mr. Martin said, “it was the happiest time [working with the Beatles], I think, because they were all pulling in the same direction. In a typical Beatles way, they were actually pushing more than pulling: pushing their past away.

“They were almost deliberate­ly not making an album for their screaming fans. That’s what was interestin­g.”

 ??  ?? The Beatles — Paul McCartney, left, George Harrison, Ringo Starr and John Lennon, in 1967, the year the group released the album “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.”
The Beatles — Paul McCartney, left, George Harrison, Ringo Starr and John Lennon, in 1967, the year the group released the album “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.”

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