George brought the song, documented with the title "Not
Known," into the studio for the first time on February 13th, 1967. The Beatles
reportedly entered EMI Studio Two at 7 pm, the first order of business pointed
to extensive work in creating the mono mix for their nearly completed
masterpiece "A Day In The Life."
At approximately midnight, the group took to laying down the
rhythm track to George's song. Nine attempts were made, which reportedly
consisted of George on Hammond organ, Paul on bass and Ringo on drums. Only
four of these attempts made it through to the end of the song, 'take three'
being considered best.
Engineer Geoff Emerick, in his book “Here, There And
Everywhere,” recalls the events and attitudes of this session: “Unfortunately,
George's songwriting wasn't quite as impressive (as John and Paul's). His first
attempt at contributing a song to the 'Sgt. Pepper' album was...a weak track
that we all winced at. It was called 'Only A Northern Song,' and it had minimal
musical content that seemed to go nowhere. What's more, the lyrics seemed to
reflect both his creative frustration and his annoyance with the way the pie
was being sliced financially...It seemed like such an inappropriate song to be
bringing to what was generally a happy, upbeat album.”
Emerick continues: “Everyone in the control room shared my
opinion. In our private conversations, George Martin simply said, 'I'm
disappointed that George didn't come up with something better,' but I knew what
he really meant; he was always on his guard because he didn't ever want
disparaging comments to be reported back. The other Beatles were clearly
underwhelmed too. John was so uninspired, in fact, that he decided not to
participate in the backing track at all. Still, Paul, Ringo, and George ambled
through quite a few takes...it took a long time because nobody could really get
into it, not even George himself. I think he was actually a bit embarrassed
about the song...None of the takes they did that night were particularly good.”
Nonetheless, because of the lateness of the hour, overdubs would be left for
the next session, this one ending at 3:30 am.
Later that day, February 14th, 1967, they re-entered EMI
Studio Two sometime after 7 pm for more work on the song, documented as “Only A
Northern Song.” Before adding overdubs, a reduction mix needed to be done to
open up two new tracks on the four-track tape. Three reduction mixes were made,
takes 10 through 12, the final one being considered the best at the time. Onto
this reduction mix, George recorded his first lead vocal, double-tracking it
afterward. The lyrics George sang on this day differ noticeably from the
eventually released record but can be heard on the version contained on
“Anthology 2.” “Shortly afterward,” Geoff Emerick relates, “an unhappy Paul
said, 'Look, let's knock it on the head for the night,' and they ended the
session early.” Three mono remixes were made for demo purposes only, the first
being a false start and the other two complete.
And from here, the song sat on the shelf in EMI Studios for
what may have been considered back then to be an indefinite time, maybe
forever. Why is that? Geoff Emerick continues: “There was no more mention of
resuming work on the song until after the mixes of 'Pepper' were done and they
were looking for material to give to the 'Yellow Submarine' film project. It
wouldn't surprise me if John and Paul had simply told George to go back to the
drawing board and come up with something better.”
History shows that, exactly a month later, George premiered
a new composition, the excellent “Within You Without You,” in the recording
studio, and enthusiastically accepted by the other band members. This track
made the grade and fit in perfectly on the “Sgt. Pepper” album. But, as Geoff
Emerick noted above, attention didn't return to “Only A Northern Song” until
the entire “Sgt. Pepper” album was nearly fully mixed and ready to go.
George Martin, rather unkindly, describes how decisions
surfaced as to what songs he and The Beatles chose for inclusion on the “Yellow
Submarine” film project. In his book “All You Need Is Ears,” he relates:
“(Brian) Epstein had contracted not only for the film to use about a dozen of
the Beatles' old songs but also for them to write four brand new titles. Their
reaction was, 'O.K., we've got to supply them with these bloody songs, but
we're not going to fall over backwards providing them. We'll let them have them
whenever we feel like it, and we'll give them whatever we think is all right.'
The result was that, as we recorded songs for future albums, they would try out
some little bit of nonsense...and as long as it worked moderately well, they
would say: 'Right, that's good enough for the film. Let them have that.' So the
film scraped the bottom of the Beatle music barrel as far as new material was
concerned.” According to the above, it was with this attitude that “Only A
Northern Song” was chosen around this time to fill a spot on the “Yellow
Submarine” soundtrack.
Paul had been out of the country visiting the US as of April
3rd, 1967, but was returning for more studio work on April 20th. In preparation
for this, George Martin and engineers Geoff Emerick and Richard Lush prepared
another mono mix of the song on April 19th, 1967, in the control room of EMI
Studio Two. This mix, remix four, was for demo purposes and was used to cut
acetate discs for the band, reminding them what had been accomplished on the
song so far back in February.
The next day, April 20th, 1967, with Paul back in London,
The Beatles returned to EMI Studio Two at around 7 pm or so, the session
lasting until 2:15 am the following morning, to primarily work on “Only A
Northern Song” in preparation of its inclusion for the “Yellow Submarine” film.
The process they used in finishing the song on this day is quite curious and
unconventional. They first returned to the original four-track tape that they
recorded the rhythm track on and wiped some of the elements from that
recording, most noteworthy being Paul's bass, which he apparently thought could
redo better. Paul re-recorded his bass, and then the group took to recording
various other voices, tape noises, and strange sound effects to give the song a
hypnotic psychedelic feel. Reportedly it was John that played both the random
piano and glockenspiel sounds heard on the finished track. “I remember playing
a silly trumpet,” Paul relates in the “Beatles Anthology” book. “My dad used to
play. I can't, but I can mess around a lot – and that song gave me the perfect
framework. It was very tongue in cheek.”
Afterward, a decision was made for George to record new lead
vocals, and then double-track them, onto the 2nd generation tape, 'take 11,'
probably because all of the tracks of the original four-track tape were used up
with the various sound effects they just recorded. If we remember, George
already recorded double-tracked vocals onto 'take 12' back on February 14th,
but they decided not to use them. The idea was that they would have two
different recordings of the song, one with the extravagant sound effects and
the other with George's lead vocals, but both with the same rhythm track
recorded on February 13th, which they figured could be synced together to form
the finished product.
This, unfortunately, was easier said than done with the
technology of the time. The next day, April 21st, 1967, the same production
team of Martin, Emerick, and Lush took to creating the mono mix of the song in
the control room of EMI Studio Two, undoubtedly with The Beatles present.
Syncing up both takes 3, and 11 became quite a difficult task, eleven tries
being needed to get it done satisfactorily. 'Take 6,' as it turned out, became
the 'keeper.' One thing that was decided soon after was that it deemed
impossible at the time to create a stereo version with their current
technology.
But only the mono mix was needed for the actual movie
itself. On November 15th, 1967, Engineers Geoff Emerick and Richard Lush made a
tape copy of 'remix mono 6' in the control room of EMI Studio Two for the
producers of the “Yellow Submarine” film, along with the other two new Beatles
songs that would be appearing in the movie, namely “It's All Too Much” and “All
Together Now.” The last of the four new songs, “Hey Bulldog,” had yet to be
recorded.
In preparation for the actual “Yellow Submarine” soundtrack
album, engineers Geoff Emerick and Graham Kirkby met in the control room of EMI
Studio Three on October 29th, 1968 to create stereo mixes of some of the new
Beatles songs, as well as “All You Need Is Love,” that would contain a place
therein. A mock stereo version of “Only A Northern Song” was here created from
the mono mix, treble frequency on one channel and bass on the other, for stereo
record release, this being standard practice for many American releases of
Beatles songs in the past when the stereo mixes weren't readily available.
Sometime in 1995 or 1996, George Martin and Geoff Emerick
returned to the original tapes of “Only A Northern Song” to create a mix that
showed a glimpse of the making of this song. Using the original rhythm track of
'take three' as recorded on February 13th, but with the new bass as recorded on
April 20th, they superimposed George's original double-tracked vocals from
February 14th that were never heard before, all of this being “slightly speeded
up,” as Mark Lewisohn's liner noted indicate. This newly created stereo mix
appeared on the 1996 compilation album “Anthology 2.”
The recording technology of 1999, however, allowed for a
true stereo version of the original song, all psychedelic effects included, to
be created. The engineering team of Peter Cobbin, Paul Hicks, Mirek Stiles,
Allan Rouse, Peter Mew, and Steve Rooke, all took to syncing up both master
tapes and creating an excellent stereo mix of “Only A Northern Song” for
inclusion on the 1999 released album “Yellow Submarine Songtrack.”
Interestingly, some of the sound effect elements of “Only A
Northern Song” appear in the George and Giles Martin created mash-up of the track
“Glass Onion,” as appears on the 2006 released album “Love.” This innovative
track, along with the rest of the album, was created sometime between 2004 and
2006 from all of the original master tapes, the results used for the incredible
Cirque du Soleil show “Beatles Love.”
An interesting footnote to the story of the recording of
“Only A Northern Song” is a popular quote from Al Brodax, the producer of the
“Yellow Submarine” film. Brodax gives this interesting but mistaken story of
the writing and recording of the song. He states: “When Apple began to occupy
The Beatles' attention, they had little time for the cartoon feature. The
songwriting for 'Yellow Submarine' was a last-minute effort. At two o'clock in
the morning, in EMI's studio, with the London Symphony Orchestra patiently
waiting to go home, we were still one song short for the film. George told me
to sit tight while he knocked out another tune. After an hour or two, he
returned to the studio with the final song. 'Here, Al,' he said, 'it's only a
northern song.'”
This event had been indicated to have happened in the spring
of 1968 when The Beatles were in India. Also, “Only A Northern Song” was the
first to be recorded for the film soundtrack, not the last. Engineer Geoff
Emerick, in his book “Here, There And Everywhere,” does recount how Al Brodax
had been coming to the studio "during the summer of 1967" to observe
the group's mannerisms in order to incorporate them into the making of the
animated movie, so the above quote may easily be a juxtaposition of different
events and details, the result of a fading memory.
Song Structure and Style
A good portion of Beatles songs are made up of verses and
choruses, and "Only A Northern Song" falls into this category. It is
also customary for an instrumental section in a song, or solo section, to
actually mirror a verse or a chorus with an instrument, such as a guitar,
playing a melody line in the place of a vocalist.
This is the case here, too, except there is no solo
instrument playing a melody line in the instrumental section. Instead, The
Beatles decided to assemble a random cacophony to fill in the void left from
the absence of George's vocal. This cacophony includes a blaring trumpet
playing random out of tune notes, a glockenspiel, piano doodling, random organ
notes, jumbled indiscernible voices, a tambourine, and various other percussion
instruments. Being inspired by their recent infatuation with “musique concrete”
recording artists such as Karlheinz Stockhausen and John Cage, The Beatles
continued their random “Carnival Of Light” experiment of January 5th of that
year (see the recording history of “Penny Lane”) to create a psychedelic sound
creation for, not one, but five sections of “Only A Northern Song” in
preparation for its inclusion in the “Yellow Submarine” film.
The structure of the song parses out as 'verse/ verse/
chorus/ instrumental verse/ chorus/ verse/ instrumental chorus/ instrumental
verse/ instrumental chorus/ instrumental verse' (or aababababa), the final
instrumental verse fading out at the seventh measure. The song is primarily in
4/4 time but with some exceptions, as we'll outline below.
George, however, introduces the song with a three-measure
introduction on organ, Ringo joining in on the third measure with a drum fill
and Paul on thumping bass as a segue into the body of the song. The first verse
is nine measures long, as are all of the verses, the seventh measure being the
only one in 6/4 time. The instrumentation for the first six measures is George
on double-tracked lead vocals and organ, Ringo on drums, and Paul on bass.
Just after George sings the line “you may think the chords
are going wrong,” which is accompanied by a slight drum fill from Ringo, a very
dissonant chord is heard for measures five and six, Ian MacDonald's book
“Revolution In The Head” identifying it as “Bm7 over A with the bass holding E
(Bm7/11).” The effect George is going for is, of course, “it doesn't really
matter what chord I play”...even Bm7/11.
Lyrically, George explains to the listeners that they
shouldn't be alarmed by the strange-sounding chord because “he just wrote it
like that,” the unnamed composer insisting on including that strange chord. Of
course, George himself was the composer, but, in his recent rewrite of the
lyrics, he decided to distance himself from the song entirely. Intimating this
was the work of either Lennon or McCartney. George's first draft for the lyrics
included lines such as “I just wrote them myself,” but decided maybe he wasn't
too keen on claiming authorship, thinking maybe he wasn't too proud of this
composition after all. The cacophony, trumpet, and percussion to the fore
appears first at the end of the seventh measure and continues through to the
end of the verse, albeit a subdued cacophony as compared to what is yet to
come.
The second verse is identical to the first in structure and
the elements contained therein. However, the cacophony begins to kick in with a
little more force and is heard throughout the entire verse this time,
percussive sounds being heard as early as the second measure and blaring
trumpets as early as measure five. Actually, two trumpets are heard
simultaneously in measures eight and nine, indicating Paul was having quite a
bit of fun with the instrument and used it again when overdubbing for the sound
collage while John switched from glockenspiel to piano. Ringo puts in a simple
drum fill in the final measure as a nice transition to the first chorus that
follows.
The first chorus is eight measures long as is the case with
all the choruses, and features the same elements as in the verses but features
the fast progression of chords that George unleashes on organ to demonstrate
what he sings about, namely “it doesn't really matter what chords I play.” The
seventh measure, during the words “only a northern song,” is in 3/4 time while
the rest of the chorus is in the standard 4/4 time. The sound collage is slight
in the first six measures but, when the lyrics introduce the accented song's
title, the arrangement goes into a typical “Beatles break,” where the sound
effects overdubs go into full effect, the blistering trumpet at full force.
Ringo is left to keep the time signature at 4/4 during the break in the seventh
measure, him coming at the proper time with a somewhat elaborate drum fill to
usher in the next section of the song.
Next comes an instrumental verse that features the same
rhythm track instrumentation while the sound effects overdubs go into
overdrive; trumpets blaring, random piano and organ notes flying, glockenspiel
ringing out, obscure voices voicing and percussion ringing. Another chorus follows with different lyrics
but similar instrumentation. The lyrics focus on outward appearances this time
instead of musical composition, “what clothes I wear” and “if my hair is brown”
being the subject matter, George inadvertently harmonizing on the word “brown”
by accident during double-tracking. The cacophony is also in full swing in this
chorus, while Ringo puts in another noteworthy drum fill to bring in the final
vocal verse that follows.
This verse, nearly identical to all previous verses, directs
our attention lyrically to the nonexistent harmonies which, he explains, may
appear “dark and out of key,” but how could they be since “there's nobody
there” anyway. Also, the sound collage is continuing to run rampant in this
verse, somewhat simulating a circus parade gone berserk while Ringo puts in
another transitional drum break in the final measure… followed by another
chorus, done instrumental for the most
part. The sound effects are the main focus here, being the icing on top of the
rapid-fire chord changes cake heard in previous choruses. This time, instead of
George repeating the song's title, he reminds us, “I told you there's no one
there,” Paul not being bothered to put down his trumpet to provide any harmony to
his song as he was prone to do in the earlier Beatle days. Instead his trumpet hits his highest
discordant notes yet while Ringo puts in yet another ending drum fill.
Then comes a barely recognizable instrumental verse, chorus,
and then additional verse which is taken up primarily by the sound effects,
panned at this point to outshine the rhythm track that languishes underneath
it. John's voice comes to the fore in the chorus along with rapid-fire organ
notes in a morse code style, while George's voice is heard, presumably saying,
“Take it, Eddie” in the first measure of the final verse. During the fade-out
in the final instrumental verse, during measure five, the sound collage
suddenly drops out entirely to reveal just the rhythm track of George on organ,
Ringo on drums, and Paul on overdubbed bass, this lasting through till measure
seven when the fade is complete.
The original rhythm track recording may have been laborious
to record, John not even wanting to participate, but when it was later decided
to contribute the track to the “Yellow Submarine” film, the sound effect
overdubs took place with much enthusiasm by all Beatles, John included. George
especially should be credited with very proficient organ playing, thumb rolls
aplenty, for a lead guitarist. Interestingly, no guitars are heard whatsoever
on the song, something quite unusual, but not unheard of, for a Beatles track.
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