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My 13 Favorite Middle Period Beatles Songs

From Rubber Soul to Magical Mystery Tour

Alec Joseph Ott's avatar
Alec Joseph Ott
Mar 05, 2023
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My 13 Favorite Middle Period Beatles Songs
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In my first article on the Beatles I provided a list of my favorite “early” Beatles songs. These were tracks from their first album released on 1963 until their Help! album, which came out in 1965.

God of the Desert Books
My 13 Favorite Early Beatles Songs
Editor’s Note: Check out the ongoing discussions about music at GOTD and associate editor Mike Kilgore’s daily music series: What's in your wallet... er... music library? Who Is Generation X's Greatest Black Musician? Here's My Vote Generation X's Greatest Black Musician? Rihanna, In My Humble Opinion…
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2 years ago · 3 likes · 1 comment · Alec Joseph Ott

While some may disagree with my groupings, I define their middle period as being as those albums coming after Help!, starting with Rubber Soul and ending with Magical Mystery Tour.

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It is amazing to see that this group came out with a new album twice a year on average, as exemplified by their release of British-based albums:

  • 1963: Please Please Me and With the Beatles

  • 1964: Beatles for Sale and A Hard Day's Night

  • 1965: Help! and Rubber Soul

  • 1966: Revolver

  • 1967: Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and Magical Mystery Tour

  • 1968: The Beatles (the two-disk set, "The White Album")

  • 1969: Yellow Submarine and Abbey Road

  • 1970: Let It Be

It’s even more dramatic when you scan the American releases, which admittedly were catching up at first:

  • 1964: Meet the Beatles!, The Beatles' Second Album, A Hard Day's Night, Something New, and Beatles '65

  • 1965: The Early Beatles, Beatles VI, Help!, and Rubber Soul

  • 1966: Yesterday and Today and Revolver

  • 1967: Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and Magical Mystery Tour

  • 1968: The Beatles (the two-disk set, "The White Album")

  • 1969: Yellow Submarine and Abbey Road

  • 1970: Let It Be and Hey Jude

And the above lists do not even include their singles and some releases, like the soundtrack version of A Hard Day’s Night.

The Beatles’ middle period is often characterized by critics as their move beyond songs simply about relationships with girls. This is certainly true, but for me as I was reviewing their albums as a young man, I saw that after Help!, they did not feel the need to print their group name on the cover, at least explicitly. In fact, when I was looking for my next Beatles record to buy, I wasn’t absolutely sure if Magical Mystery Tour was really their album. (I later spotted the name spelled out with star-shaped characters.) All I saw were these strange characters dressed in crude animal costumes. Sgt. Peppers followed the same pattern by spelling out their name in a depicted flower arrangement. Revolver and Rubber Soul were more obvious; their photos where right there on the cover, but still, no name on the cover.

Another difference, which really came in towards the end of their early days, was that they no longer covered other artists’ music. They certainly had no issue with recording other artists’ songs—their concert set lists contained a large percentage of these songs—"Twist and Shout,” “Dizzy Miss Lizzy,” “Long Tall Sally,” “Roll Over Beethoven,” just to name a few. Yet, with two of the most gifted songwriters of the 20th century, Lennon and McCartney, in one group, the Beatles’ own output was dramatic. If that were not enough, the group also included the song-writing talents of George Harrison. George’s own song writing abilities, while overshadowed only by John and Paul, compare quite favorably with any of the Beatles contemporaries, and the quality of his work only got better with each new album.

Another notable difference in this period is the artists’ experimentation with psychedelic drugs, such as LSD. Rubber Soul and Revolver are the first to have this characterization. To me this is more evident in Lennon’s output than McCartney’s, at least in Rubber Soul and Revolver. The song most obviously influenced by John’s experimentation was his “Tomorrow Never Knows.” It’s a strange journey indeed.

That journey continued for Lennon in Sgt. Peppers with “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds.” Paul’s most obvious drug-influenced output come in his contribution to “A Day In The Life,” where he writes of taking a smoke and going off into a dream.

Sgt. Peppers is widely considered to be the Beatles’ greatest artistic achievement and was certainly one of the first “concept” albums, where the music is provided in a collection with a central theme. Magical Mystery Tour follows that example, but the concept, while offering a general magical quality about it, is less clear.

As I mentioned in my previous post on the early Beatles, I like the Beatles albums in their entirety. If pressed to give my list of favorites of their “middle stage” songs, I give the following list:

Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)

If I Needed Someone

Girl

In My Life

She Said She Said

Good Day Sunshine

Got To Get You Into My Life

Fixing a Hole

Lovely Rita

A Day in the Life

Magical Mystery Tour

Your Mother Should Know

I Am The Walrus

I’ll come back again with a survey of their last albums.

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Editor’s Note: Check out the ongoing discussions about music at GOTD and associate editor Mike Kilgore’s daily morning music series inspired by it:

  1. What's in your wallet... er... music library?

  2. Who Is Generation X's Greatest Black Musician? Here's My Vote

  3. Generation X's Greatest Black Musician? Rihanna, In My Humble Opinion.

  4. Rihanna is an Xer-Leaning Millennial! Try Again, Mike!

  5. I Didn't Do My Due Diligence, or How I Have to Pick a Favorite Black Gen X Musician For Real This Time.

  6. Why Rap & Country Are So Challenging and Why I Much Prefer Tupac Shakur to Will Smith

  7. Music. The GotD Frontier

  8. As a Gen-Xer, the 1980s is My Favorite Musical Decade

  9. These 2 Hypnotic Sitar Albums Saved Me Last Night as the PTSD Demons Struck Back

  10. The Thousand Year Charm Offensive of Frank Zappa

  11. 6 Songs That Give Me a Burst of Great Memories

  12. Take a Bite Out of 'Burnt Weeny Sandwich'

  13. 6 More Songs Filled with Good Memories

  14. 'It Just Shocked Me, How Anything Could Be So Beautiful...'

  15. My 13 Favorite Early Beatles Songs

  16. From Jazz to Pop: Why I Love American Music

  17. My Pick for the Finest Album of the Twentieth Century

Check out “Mike’s Music Morning,” born from these debates:

  1. The Inaugural "Mike's Music Morning" post

  2. How Many Licks Does it Take to Get to the Center of My Music Collection?

  3. Welcome back, my friends, to the show that never ends.

  4. What music evokes an emotional response for you? What song really twangs your heartstrangs?

  5. What Reminds You of Mardi Gras? For Me, it's Always Music and Food

  6. Would you like a little slink with your Wednesday?

  7. Who Is Your Favorite Film Composer? Here are 6 of My Favorites

  8. How Could I Have Forgotten Ennio Morricone's Greatness? My 7 Favorites from the Italian Master

  9. Which is Better? David Lee Roth "Van Halen" or "Van Hagar"??? I want an "Eruption" of comments here, people.

  10. My Top Ten Heavy Metal Songs

  11. What Are Your Favorite Covers? Here Are a Few Great Ones From Unexpected Places

  12. What's Your Favorite AC/DC Track?

  13. How Do We Deserve People Like Dave Grohl??? Today, on a Very Special Episode of MMM...

  14. What's Your Favorite Queen Song? How About Bowie?

  15. ♪♫ "Ticking away the moments that make up a dull day" ♫♪

  16. A Love Letter to the Music of "Cowboy Bebop"

God of the Desert Books is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

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