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Tarfumes.com - Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band

Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
List Price: $18.98
Our Price: $9.99
Your Save: $ 8.99 ( 47% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Capitol
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5

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Binding: Audio CD
Brand: Beatles
EAN: 0077774644228
Label: Capitol
Manufacturer: Capitol
Number Of Discs: 1
Publication Date: 1987
Publisher: Capitol
Studio: Capitol

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Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Pop music about life
Comment: Today pop music is an art. It's about being catchy, poignant, concise, poetic, and using production techniques to your advantage. A lot of that began with Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, but that's not necessarily why you should buy the album. You should buy it because it does it better most any other pop album out there.

It's an album about characters and people. It's about finding the extraordinary in the ordinary; taking simple emotions and amplifying them; taking human behavior and picking out the absurd and grotesque.

One of the first things I noticed upon revisiting this gem is how simple everything is. The songs are easy to listen to and they flow really well. But underneath the simplicity there's always a little something extra: "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds", which begins as a mellow psychedelic waltz, bursts into sparkling ebullient choruses suitable for marching band; "When I'm Sixty-Four" sounds like a simple lullaby for children, but the chorus and bridges reveal an air of cynicism that's surprisingly moving; on "Lovely Rita", even an ordinary meter maid becomes the subject of a dreamy albeit a bit sarcastic fantasy; "Good Morning" is an enthusiastic ode to the daily grind, revealing the hallowness of daily routine while increasing tempo to dizzying speeds.

Except for "Within You Without You", all the songs are concrete and straightforward studies about people, with individual elements and stereotypes isolated, magnified, and splayed before you for display. "Fixing A Hole" presents the lonely introspection of a man living by himself and locking himself and his mind from society; on "She's Leaving Home" we experience the frozen melancholy of two parents who awake to find their daughter gone.

But nothing's quite as it seems on Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. As isolated human emotions bubble up in the melodies, it's clear that some characters in the human race aren't completely sincere. There's an underbelly to human beings. Some aren't to be trusted. "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite" presents a detached salesman of freaks and outcasts pitching his product in metered rhyme to the tune of exotic swirling carnival music. On another tune, an outcast with a bit of a temper optimistically proclaims that things are "Getting Better", while on the side revealing fragmented bits of his past, such as breaking rules in school and beating his wife.

However the music is so tightly constructed that you can listen to the entire album without noticing the mystery and neurosis of human nature. The music is that good, it just feels so natural, so right. But listen a little closer and you really will see how nothing is as it seems.

Only at the end of the album does a minute or two of symphonic dissonance jerk your mind from the pleasant superficialities of the melodies, beats and life in general. The last song, "A Day in the Life", is a meditation about a jaded yet heartfelt man who recounts the morning post's headlines: Some are disturbing (a politician blew his mind), others political (the English won another war), and others just business as usual (there are four thousand potholes in Blackburn, they all had to be counted) - all events are sung with equal emotion and import, as if they really weren't important at all. Daydreams and non-sequiturs in the song hint at feelings of escapism - but the song's world is bleak and apathetic. Concludes the singer - and the whole album - "I'd love to turn you on", followed by a cacophonous and insurmountable chaos of strings.

That's the message embedded throughout this album - there's people and places as normal, but there's also a veil of truth and mystery behind it all. The Beatles would love turn you onto it.

But it's not even The Beatles who are delivering this message, it's Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - a make-shift ensemble whose band-members suspiciously resemble those of The Beatles. Once again, nothing's quite as it seems.

So when you buy this album - which I highly recommend - enjoy it for what it is: Great pop music, it's some of the best out there. Tap your fingers, dance a bit, feel your heartstrings pulled, and bob your head back and forth. But remember to look a little deeper: Think about the world. Think about what it means to be human, and what it means to be a person in this hackneyed world of ours. Look inward and think about who you are. Look outward and think about life.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Super Sgt. Pepper
Comment: Winning a Survey in England by a landslide as the Best Album Ever, this Beatles album does not disappoint. What a joy to hear all those songs again! These guys are Fab!

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: A Fading Landmark
Comment: Formed in the early 1960s and continuing for a little less than a decade, The Beatles were and remain arguably the single most popular and single most influential rock band of the modern era. In 1967 the group released SGT. PEPPER'S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND. It exploded to the top of the music charts and remains their most widely-known title to this day, the answer the "average" person will give when asked to name a Beatles album. As such, it has a way of showing up in the top ten of critic's polls.

In 1967 the idea of a "concept" album was still fresh and new; the idea of mixing non-standard noise into songs to create music was very much an oddity; and the combination of baroque brass and electric guitar was very much out of the blue--not to mention the extremely eccletic way in which the band draws on everything from psychedelia to English musical hall. It was startling, innovative stuff. But there is sometimes a difference between "the most innovative" and "the best"--and over the years SGT. PEPPER'S reputation has begun to fade.

The album opens with three knock-outs that remain as fresh today as they were in 1967: the opening "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band," a memorable mixture; "With A Little Help From My Friends," quite possibly the best cut from the recording and certainly the best of Ringo Starr's vocals; and the ultra-psychedelic "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds." But thereafter the cuts become increasingly throw-away. "Getting Better" is nice enough, but it's pretty much McCarthy in likeable ya-ya mode, no better nor worse than a dozen other similar songs. "Fixing A Hole" is uninspired, and "She's Leaving Home" is an expertly written and performed mediocrity.

The line up reaches the bottom with two non-entities: "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite," a carny-barker sales pitch without redeeming value, and "Within You Without You," which might best be described as George Harrison at his most self-indulgent. The band begins to crank up again with "Lovely Rita"--perhaps not a stand out in terms of The Beatles' overall work, but charming, amusing, and memorable nonetheless. "Good Morning Good Morning" is a sonic collage that either works or not, depending on your point of view--and then there is a rally with a reprise of "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" and the plantive, distinctly disconcerting "A Day In The Life."

When all is said and done, SGT. PEPPER'S really is a sort of hit-and-miss affair, at its best remarkably fine, at its worst dismissable in an eye-rolling sort of way. Much of the album's success was due to its timing: it was the perfect release for 1967. Unfortunately, it hasn't been 1967 for quite a long time now, and too many of the cuts simply haven't held up well enough for the album to continue to be regarded as "the best." Recommended, but it you're just beginning to explore The Beatles, this isn't really the place to start.

GFT, Amazon Reviewer

Customer Rating: Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5
Summary: The real opus like lament
Comment: This alBUM and the beatles in general are way too over-rated! How can you people say this album is perfect without it having ONE GOOD METAL GUITAR PART! you people need to learn what GOOD music is.
I suggest: Dragon Force, Megadeth, and Death Cab for Cutie.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: The Beatles Sgt. Peppers 1967
Comment: On June 1st 1967 this monumentum album was realesed. It was one of the first psychedelic albums too hit the shelves besides a few others. They spent 129 days recording this album. This album changed the way rock music was and changed the beatles entirely.
1. Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band, a great opener to the album. It has a good beat too it and is a great song, 5/5 stars
2. With A Little Help From My Freinds, another great song and is really upbeat and contains the lyrics, Oh i get high with a little help from my freinds. All in all a great song, 5/5 stars
3. Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds, a great psychedellic song containing very cool lyrics(The girl with kalidescope eyes follow her down...) Anyways great song and good organ in it and a nice beat, 5/5 stars
4. Getting Better, another good song though its not one of my faviortes on this album but still its a good song and deserves inleast, 4/5 stars
5. Fixing A Hole, another great psychedellic song. The guitar riff in this is extremely acid rock how its distorted and the drums all come in and everything. Although it may be short(2:39) it still is a great song, 5/5 stars
6. She's Leaving Home, another great song. Unlike some of the other songs on this album this one tells a story about a girl who runs away from home and when you listen too it you actullay see it happening in your head. Extremely good song, 5/5 stars
7. Being For The Benefit Of Mr. Kite!, this is a cool song. It's kind of like carnival music the beat and then the organ in it is carnival style. John Lennon got the idea for the song from and antique poster of a carnival, 5/5 stars
8. Within You Or Without You, a great sitar song. George Harrison wrote this song. A very indian styled song and there is a cool sitar solo in it. The lyrics are really indian flavored also and this is a great song, 5/5 stars
9. When I'm 64, a great upbeat song but is not psychedelic at all and dosent really fit with this album should of been realesed on an earilier album. Still though its a great song, 5/5 stars
10. Lovely Rita, another great song. The beat is really good and the lyrics are really good, 5/5 stars
11. Good Morning, Good Morning, another great song and this one has a cool beat to it what else is there too say, 5/5 stars
12. Sgt. Peppers(Reprise), cool version of this song, this version is the fast version and the lyrics are nice and simple all in all a great song but only a minute long, 5/5 stars
13. A Day In The Life, an extremely great song and the lyrics are really meaningful. Defenent;ay one of the highlight tracks on the whole album and in the end of the song has tons of weird noises, 5/5 stars
All in all this album maybe one of the greatest rock albums ever created and if you dont have this CD you need to buy it immediatly


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