Since today would have been the 84th birthday of John Lennon, I want to take a minute to recommend a book called Revolution In The Head.
First published in 1994 and subsequently revised two more times, Revolution In The Head is both a chronological history of the songs that the Beatles recorded and a cultural history of the 60s. By examining the recording of each song, Ian MacDonald not only describes how each song reflects (or doesn’t reflect) what was happening in the group at the time but also how the Beatles’s changing sound reflected what was happening in the world at the time. Author Ian MacDonald was clearly a Beatles fan but, more importantly, he was not an apologist and, in the book, he’s just as quick to criticize as he is to praise. While he praises the majority of the band’s recordings, there’s more than a few that he totally dismisses. It’s a well-researched and passionately argued book, one that makes interesting reading for both fans of the group and history nerds like myself.
As for the Beatles themselves, they come across as fully developed people. MacDonald neither idealizes nor demonizes the group and instead focuses on the idea of them as working musicians who usually collaborated well together as a group but sometimes feared and resented that they were losing their individual identities. Neither Lennon nor Paul McCartney are presented as being saints and MacDonald doesn’t shy away from showing how frayed their relationship had become by the time the group split up. (They’re portrayed as developing a classic love/hate relationship with each other.) But both are also presented as being talented artists who were capable of creating beautiful music that would survive the test of time. For all the conflict and for all the times that Lennon complained about McCartney’s commercial sensibilities and for all the times that McCartney complained that Lennon was not committed to keeping the Beatles going, they were still capable of creating songs like Eleanor Rigby and A Day In The Life.
A lot of Beatles fans will probably disagree with MacDonald’s opinions. He’s surprisingly dismissive of a lot of George Harrison’s songs, including the wonderful While My Guitar Gently Weeps. But that’s okay! There’s nothing wrong with having differing opinions. It’s actually a good thing.

This guy definitely doesn’t pull any punches with his assessments!
I figured you would appreciate the historical/cultural perspectives and scope 🙂.
Great book and review!
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