Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Early 1970

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1971 single by Ringo Starr
"Early 1970"
Picture sleeve (reverse)
Single byRingo Starr
A-side"It Don't Come Easy"
Released9 April 1971 (1971-04-09)
RecordedOctober 1970
StudioEMI, London
GenreRock
Length2:21
LabelApple
SongwriterRichard Starkey
ProducerRingo Starr
Ringo Starr singles chronology
"Beaucoups of Blues"
(1970)
"It Don't Come Easy" / "Early 1970"
(1971)
"Back Off Boogaloo"
(1972)

"Early 1970" is a song by the English rock musicianRingo Starr that was released as theB-side of his April 1971 single "It Don't Come Easy". A rare example of Starr's songwriting at the time, it was inspired by thebreak-up ofthe Beatles and documents his relationship with his three former bandmates. The lyrics to the verses comment in turn onPaul McCartney,John Lennon andGeorge Harrison as individuals, and the likelihood of each of them making music with Starr again. In the final verse, Starr offers a self-deprecating picture of his musical abilities and expresses the hope that all four will play together in the future. Commentators have variously described "Early 1970" as "a rough draft of a peace treaty"[1] and "a disarming open letter" from Starr to Lennon, McCartney and Harrison.[2]

The song's working title was "When Four Nights Come to Town". Starr recorded the basic track in London in October 1970, midway through the sessions for Lennon'sJohn Lennon/Plastic Ono Band album, and then completed the recording with Harrison.Apple Corps managerAllen Klein suggested that the three former Beatles invite McCartney to contribute, to weaken the latter's case for the band's legal dissolution, but this did not take place.

Background and inspiration

[edit]

It was a relief once we finally said we would split up ... I sat in the garden for a while wondering what the hell to do with my life. After you've said it's over and go home, you think: "Oh, God – that's it, then. Now what do you do?" It was quite a dramatic period for me – ortraumatic, actually.[3]

– Ringo Starr recalling his reaction toJohn Lennon saying he was leaving the Beatles

Asthe Beatles' drummer, and only a nascent songwriter,Ringo Starr felt lost when the bandbroke up.[4][5] Although the official announcement came on 10 April 1970,[6] the group's demise was initiated byJohn Lennon's statement during a September 1969 band meeting that he wanted a "divorce" from his fellow Beatles.[7] In a February 1970 interview inLook magazine, midway through sessions for his first solo album,Sentimental Journey,[8] Starr explained his disorientation: "I keep looking around and thinking where are they? What are they doing? When will they come back and talk to me?"[9] Beatles historianBruce Spizer writes that these sentiments "form the basis" of Starr's composition "Early 1970".[9]

Discussing the song in a 2001 interview, Starr said it reflected how he could count on Lennon andGeorge Harrison's musical support after the break-up, but not onPaul McCartney's.[10] A rift had grown between Starr and McCartney in March 1970 due to McCartney's refusal to have his owndebut solo album held back inApple Records' release schedule to allow forSentimental Journey and the Beatles'Let It Be album,[11] and thereby avoid saturating the market with Beatles product.[12] The two musicians had a heated exchange at McCartney'sSt John's Wood home on 31 March. The confrontation had what Beatles biographerPeter Doggett terms a "grievous effect" on Starr and McCartney's friendship,[13] and contributed to the latter announcing his departure from the band.[14] In the same 2001 interview, Starr recalled that "Early 1970" was also informed by McCartney's subsequent attempts to be released from the band's Apple record label and the acrimony this created.[10]

Composition

[edit]

The song's working title was variously "When I Come to Town (Four Nights in Moscow)"[15] and "When Four Nights Come to Town".[1] Spizer describes "Early 1970" as a "country-flavored" track.[9] It followed Starr's full immersion in the country music genre on hisBeaucoups of Blues album,[16] a project that resulted from meeting Nashville session musician and producerPete Drake when they both worked on Harrison'sAll Things Must Pass in June 1970.[17][18]

The four verses focus on each of the Beatles in turn,[19] providing whatBeatles Forever authorNicholas Schaffner describes as "a disarming open letter" to Lennon, McCartney and Harrison.[2] The lyrics gauge Starr's relationships with his bandmates according to how likely each one was to make music with him in the future.[20][21] In author Andrew Grant Jackson's view, the verses suggest a group dynamic similar to the opening scene of the Beatles' 1964 filmA Hard Day's Night, when Starr, Lennon and Harrison are seen sharing a laugh and enjoying each other's company, while McCartney is removed and remote.[22][nb 1]

In the first verse, Starr addresses his strained relationship with McCartney.[1] The lyrics depict McCartney as full of "charm"[23] and engrossed in his domestic life[2] – on his Scottish farm with his wifeLinda Eastman and their newborn daughterMary.[24] Starr concludes the verse by singing, "And when he comes to town I wonder if he'll play with me."[9]

In verse two, he refers to Lennon and his wifeYoko Ono's 1969bed-ins for peace[1] and, in the line "They screamed and they cried, now they're free", to their recent experiences onArthur Janov'sprimal therapy course.[9] The latter treatment inspired the couple's 1970 solo albums,John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band andYoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band,[25] both of which feature Starr on drums.[26] The verse ends with Starr asserting of Lennon: "And when he comes to town, I know he's gonna play with me."[9]

In the third verse, Starr describes Harrison as "a long-haired, cross-legged guitar picker"[23] whose wife, former modelPattie Boyd, picks daisies for his vegetarian meals.[9] Author Robert Rodriguez writes that Harrison's workload following the September 1969 release of the Beatles'Abbey Road album displayed the same "workaholic tendencies" traditionally associated with McCartney;[27] these projects usually involved Starr,[28] and Starr depicts Harrison as the bandmate most likely to continue working with him.[2][19][nb 2] He closes the verse by describing Harrison as "always in town playing for you with me",[9] so much so that the guitarist rarely sees his recently purchasedFriar Park estate.[1]

In the song's autobiographical final verse, Starr refers to his own musical shortcomings:[2][32]

I play guitar – A, D, E
I don't play bass, 'cause that's too hard for me
I play the piano if it's inC ...

He concludes the song by declaring, "And when I go to town I wanna see all three" – a statement that music journalistBob Woffinden takes as being an admission by Starr that he "clearly needed the support" of Lennon, McCartney and Harrison.[19]

Recording

[edit]

At that point, I felt that when John comes to town, I know he's gonna play with me, and if George comes to town, I know he'll play with me, and if Paul comes to town, I "wonder" if he's gonna play. We were going through that Apple nonsense, where Paul was suing the three of us. And he was angry, and we were angry, and I was wondering when that would stop.[10]

– Ringo Starr, 2001

Starr taped the basic track for the song, as "When I Come to Town (Four Knights in Moscow)", at EMI Studios (nowAbbey Road Studios) on 3 October 1970,[15] during a lull in the sessions forJohn Lennon/Plastic Ono Band.[1][22][nb 3] In their bookEight Arms to Hold You, authors Chip Madinger and Mark Easter comment on the difficulty in ascertaining reliable information on the song's recording;[15] Spizer similarly cites "[f]ading memories" as a hindrance to identifying the precise line-up of musicians.[9] Starr biographerAlan Clayson states that Lennon produced this initial session,[35] while Doggett writes of Lennon merely participating in the recording, along with Starr and bassistKlaus Voormann.[1][nb 4] Starr subsequently completed the track with Harrison,[1] who finished his production of the drummer's "It Don't Come Easy" at this time.[15][nb 5]

In addition to his drum part, Starr played rhythm acoustic guitar on "Early 1970".[21][39] According to Voormann's recollection, Starroverdubbed the openingdobro part and, in verse four, brief snatches of the various instruments on which he admits his musical limitations: the three guitar chords he names, awalking bass line, and a pianovamp following the third line of the verse.[9] Harrison played rhythm and lead electric guitar,[39] and aslide guitar part of which Madinger and Easter write: "George's distinctive slide solo after his 'section' of the song confirms his solidarity with Ringo, if nothing else."[15] Harrison also joined Starr on piano for the verse-four fill, playing the C chord high up the keyboard.[9] A piano enters during the verse dedicated to Lennon; in Jackson's view, its energetic quality signals the easy relationship Starr enjoyed with him.[22] Although Harrison's friendGary Wright overdubbed piano on "It Don't Come Easy" that same month,[40] no one is credited for the main piano part on "Early 1970".[39]

Allen Klein, the manager of Starr, Harrison and Lennon, suggested inviting McCartney to participate in the recording of the song, thinking that his involvement would undermine any legal moves McCartney might make to quit the Beatles.[41][42] No such collaboration took place,[43] and McCartney filed a suit in London'sHigh Court on 31 December to dissolve the band's business partnership.[44]

Release

[edit]

Starr chose "Early 1970" as theB-side of his first solo single in the UK, the lead side of which was "It Don't Come Easy".[40] The single was issued by Apple Records on 9 April 1971,[45] four weeks after the High Court had ruled in McCartney's favour.[46] Writing in early March, Alan Smith of theNME deplored the hostility that had come to light in the court proceedings and recent interviews, highlighting newspaper headlines such as "Paul was a spoilt child, says Ringo", although he acknowledged that Starr "still feels it would be possible for the Beatles to resolve their differences".[47][nb 6] According to Doggett, whereas "Early 1970" had been "a rough draft of a peace treaty" originally, amid the unpleasantness surrounding the lawsuit, it "seem[ed] like a false memory of a mythic past, itsArcadia tangled with weeds".[52]

"It Don't Come Easy" was an unexpected commercial success and outsold some of the singles released around that time by the other former Beatles.[53] Schaffner recalled that for ardent fans, the "real intrigue lay in the B-side" and its insights into the Beatles' private world.[2] During May, all four were in the Cannes area of theSouth of France.[54] While attendingMick Jagger's wedding in St Tropez, Starr had an awkward reunion with McCartney, their first meeting in over a year.[25][55] Although Starr later toldMelody Maker that they "both knew that everything was OK" and merely "had to getwarm together",[55] he was also vocal in dismissing McCartney's new album,Ram, and its predecessor.[25][56][nb 7]

"Early 1970" received a second commercial release in November 1975, when included on Starr's Apple compilationBlast from Your Past.[59][60] For the CD reissue of Starr's 1973 albumRingo in 1991, the original ten-song album was expanded with the addition of three bonus tracks,[61] one of which was "Early 1970".[62] The song also appeared onPhotograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr, issued in 2007.[63]

Critical reception

[edit]

In his single review forRecord Mirror,Peter Jones predicted a top-five hit for the A-side and said that "Early 1970" offered "pertinent comments on how the Beatles as individuals are getting on", adding, "Don't miss this side."[64]Village Voice criticRobert Christgau, reflecting on the solo Beatles following Starr's appearance at Harrison'sConcert for Bangladesh shows in August 1971, wrote that the song showed him to be "the ultimate Beatle fan". He cited it as typical of Starr's demeanour, in that he was content to defer to his more ambitious colleagues, having joined the band as a replacement drummer, and of how he served as the people's "representative" for fans mourning the group's break-up.[65][nb 8]

Writing in 1973 – by which time the four ex-Beatles had united against Klein[66]Alan Betrock ofPhonograph Record commented on the former bandmates' "backward glances" in their music since the break-up. He concluded that "Ringo's little-known B-side 'Early 1970' was probably the sharpest commentary on their whole lot."[67] ReviewingBlast from Your Past for theNME, however, Bob Woffinden dismissed the track as "a period curiosity, interesting at the time, but of little substance".[68]

Among Beatles biographers, Alan Clayson opines that the commercial success of "It Don't Come Easy" gave Starr "instant self-esteem" at a time of uncertainty, but the B-side would have "gone in one ear and out the other" had it not been for the song's subject matter.[69] Chris Ingham, writing inThe Rough Guide to the Beatles, highlights it as one of the more tempered responses to the break-up relative to the "musical sniping" in Harrison's "Wah-Wah", McCartney's "Too Many People" and especially Lennon's "How Do You Sleep?" He describes "Early 1970" as a song with "affectionate, comic" verses that "accentuated the human aspect of losing the old gang".[70] Robert Rodriguez deems the track "utterly charming" with a "delicious slide guitar part", and adds: "'Early 1970' was the perfect tonic for beleaguered Beatles fans wondering if the band would ever, if not get back together, at least achieve some civility."[20] Bruce Spizer similarly views it as a "charming delight".[71][nb 9]

Personnel

[edit]

According to Bruce Spizer (except where noted):[9]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Jackson adds: "Now the loner was instituting legal proceedings to allow him to leave the gang permanently."[22]
  2. ^Their shared activities included sessions for American singerLeon Russell[29] and for Harrison-produced albums by Apple artistsBilly Preston[30] andDoris Troy.[31]
  3. ^Some commentators suggest that the mention of "cookie" in the lyrics to Lennon'sPlastic Ono Band track "Hold On" led to Starr including the word in his "Early 1970" verse about Lennon.[33][34]
  4. ^Neither Madinger and Easter nor Spizer acknowledge Lennon on the recording, for which Starr is credited as sole producer.[36]
  5. ^Harrison was at Abbey Road carrying out final mixing onAll Things Must Pass[37] while Lennon and Starr were recordingPlastic Ono Band.[38]
  6. ^Amid this media speculation, rumours claimed that Lennon, Harrison and Starr were to form a band with Voormann, named the Ladders.[48][49] Lennon told an interviewer that it was "90 per cent" likely that he, Harrison and Starr would record together again, "but maybe not as the Beatles".[50] The rumour gained in intensity when Voormann moved into Friar Park to escape the press.[51]
  7. ^In the sameMelody Maker interview, Starr said that his recent session work forB.B. King andHowlin' Wolf meant no more to him than playing with Lennon or Harrison.[57] He praised Lennon's individuality as a rhythm guitarist and described Harrison as "the best rock guitarist around".[58]
  8. ^Christgau nevertheless predicted that, just as fans struggled with the wider social implications of the break-up, Starr's position was the most vulnerable. He concluded: "since Ringo is all of us, we'd better figure out what there is for us now that we can't be Beatle fans any longer."[65]
  9. ^In 2017, while promoting the expanded edition of Harrison's 1980 autobiographyI, Me, Mine, his widowOlivia Harrison discussed the discovery of an unreleased song he wrote for Starr in the early 1970s, titled "Hey Ringo".[72] In the song's lyrics, Harrison states that Starr's drumming provided an essential, complementary quality to his own playing, with lines such as "Hey Ringo, now I want you to know / That without you my guitar plays far too slow".[73]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghDoggett, p. 145.
  2. ^abcdefSchaffner, p. 140.
  3. ^The Beatles, p. 348.
  4. ^Woffinden, p. 44.
  5. ^Ingham, p. 170.
  6. ^Badman, p. 4.
  7. ^Doggett, pp. 103–04.
  8. ^Miles, pp. 369, 370.
  9. ^abcdefghijklSpizer, p. 294.
  10. ^abcWhite, Timothy (26 May 2001)."Music to My Ears: Ringo's All Starrs Play and Act Naturally".Billboard. p. 4. Retrieved29 March 2021.
  11. ^Clayson, p. 206.
  12. ^Doggett, pp. 120, 122.
  13. ^Doggett, pp. 121–22.
  14. ^Woffinden, pp. 32–33.
  15. ^abcdeMadinger & Easter, p. 498.
  16. ^Spizer, pp. 287, 294.
  17. ^Clayson, pp. 207–08.
  18. ^Schaffner, pp. 139–40.
  19. ^abcWoffinden, p. 45.
  20. ^abRodriguez, pp. 29–30.
  21. ^abClayson, p. 220.
  22. ^abcdeJackson, p. 46.
  23. ^abRodriguez, p. 29.
  24. ^O'Dell, pp. 122–23.
  25. ^abcClayson, p. 217.
  26. ^Castleman & Podrazik, pp. 171, 183.
  27. ^Rodriguez, p. 1.
  28. ^Clayson, pp. 202–05.
  29. ^O'Dell, pp. 106–07.
  30. ^Davis, Andy (2010).Encouraging Words (CD booklet).Billy Preston. Apple Records.
  31. ^Leng, p. 61.
  32. ^Rodriguez, p. 30.
  33. ^Madinger & Easter, pp. 37, 498.
  34. ^Spizer, pp. 34, 294.
  35. ^Clayson, p. 218.
  36. ^Castleman & Podrazik, pp. 100, 210.
  37. ^Badman, p. 14.
  38. ^Hertsgaard, p. 308.
  39. ^abcdCastleman & Podrazik, p. 210.
  40. ^abSpizer, pp. 293–94.
  41. ^Doggett, p. 149.
  42. ^Jackson, pp. 46–47.
  43. ^Jackson, p. 47.
  44. ^Badman, p. 19.
  45. ^Castleman & Podrazik, p. 100.
  46. ^Badman, p. 32.
  47. ^Smith, Alan (6 March 1971). "The Beatles: It's Open Warfare".NME. Available atRock's Backpages (subscription required).
  48. ^Clayson, pp. 216–17.
  49. ^Ingham, p. 310.
  50. ^Doggett, p. 164.
  51. ^Badman, pp. 32–33.
  52. ^Doggett, pp. 145, 163–64.
  53. ^Ingham, p. 177.
  54. ^Badman, p. 35.
  55. ^abDoggett, p. 166.
  56. ^Badman, p. 39.
  57. ^Clayson, pp. 204, 392.
  58. ^Watts, Michael (31 July 1971). "Ringo".Melody Maker. p. 15.
  59. ^Schaffner, p. 182.
  60. ^Ingham, p. 180.
  61. ^Madinger & Easter, pp. 507, 645.
  62. ^Ruhlmann, William."Ringo StarrRingo".AllMusic. Retrieved30 January 2014.
  63. ^Erlewine, Stephen Thomas."Ringo StarrPhotograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr".AllMusic. Retrieved30 January 2014.
  64. ^Jones, Peter (17 April 1971). "Mirrorpick".Record Mirror. p. 18.
  65. ^abChristgau, Robert (September 1971)."Living Without the Beatles".The Village Voice – viarobertchristgau.com.
  66. ^Rodriguez, p. 137.
  67. ^Betrock, Alan (December 1973). "Ringo Starr:Ringo".Phonograph Record. Available atRock's Backpages (subscription required).
  68. ^Woffinden, Bob (3 January 1976). "Ringo Starr:Blast from Your Past".NME. Available atRock's Backpages (subscription required).
  69. ^Clayson, pp. 219–20.
  70. ^Ingham, p. 77.
  71. ^Spizer, p. 298.
  72. ^Gensler, Andy (3 April 2017)."Olivia Harrison Reveals Ringo Recently Stumbled Upon a Lost George Harrison Song".Billboard. Archived fromthe original on 3 April 2017. Retrieved5 April 2021.
  73. ^Daly, Rhian (17 June 2017)."A lost George Harrison song written for Ringo Starr has been found in a piano bench".NME. Retrieved1 April 2021.

Sources

[edit]
Studio albums
Live albums
Compilations
Singles
Other songs
EPs
Books
Related
Authority control databasesEdit this at Wikidata
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Early_1970&oldid=1247952824"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp