Tag Archives: Beatle

11 Minutes Of Revolution

This week’s TunesDay special comes from the most influential band of the last century and maybe of all time – The Beatles.

The Beatles

The Beatles

Unless you’ve had your head in the sand for the last 50 years you’ve heard their music and specifically today’s song – “Revolution. However, you’ve probably never heard this version. It’s take 20 and extends the version that runs around 4 minutes into nearly 11.  This version surfaced in 2009 and is fascinating.  Have a listen:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnHw-LgVeCY

This cut has been dubbed “Take Your Knickers Off” from Lennon‘s comment to the engineer at the start of the track.  Eventually it was split in two and became “Revolution” numbers 1 and 9 although in this form it’s really neither.  It’s sort of self-indulgent although the last several minutes contain moments of brilliance.  Even Yoko sounds interesting!  After much back and forth about the song, the band decided to re-cut it – faster, louder, and with what are now its signature distorted guitars for the single.  Which is the business point today.

Everyone needs an editor.  Great artists can self-edit up to a point and in the case of The Beatles that editing by committee served them well.  Most of us in business aren’t quite so smart.  We generally try to accomplish things on our own – creating products, ads, reports, or whatever.  That’s a mistake.  No matter how good we think our first drafts are, they need editing.

The best form comes when we give our draft to someone who is most like the intended audience and get a response.  It’s also important to build time into a project timetable to be able to step away from the work for a period and approach it having rested and lost the emotional attachment we all get to birthing a new work.  It’s much easier to cut away material that isn’t right or that might not be your best.

Every great author – even Shakespeare – had an editor.  If their work, as well as Lennon and McCartney‘s, can stand some editing, odds are ours can too.  Heck, you can get an example of that every day right here in this space!  Got it?

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Yeah Yeah Yeah

It’s TunesDay, and today’s story has been a half century in the making.  It was 50 years ago this week that The Beatles were on The Ed Sullivan Show and the world changed.  For those of you who were watching that night (as I was), you know that’s not hyperbole.  It seems kind of quaint now, but here is how that change began:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dwkve8s1dNI

We’d lost a president a few months before.  America was sort of depressed.  Four young men from Liverpool brought us out of our funk and showed the world that performers could also write their own material (something not very common in pop music to that point).  They were just as impactful off the stage.  Their press conferences were filled with laughs but also with pointed jabs at authority, setting the tone for the tumult of the next decade.  50 years ago, the revolution began with pointy boots and a smiling drummer.  Which is, of course something we need to remember in business.

Everything began to change that February night and yet very few businesses were prepared.  How would you like to have been a barber shop and seen those haircuts (or lack thereof)? The record business was one of singles.  Albums were a couple of hit singles and a LOT of filler material.  The Beatles made the entirety of an album important.  Putting aside that almost every cut became a hit, three years later Sgt. Pepper set a new artistic standard that changed the business.   The cultural changes came faster.  Everyone knows someone who saw that broadcast and picked up a guitar – you’re reading someone who did so now.  Their talent was enormous but subtle and it was easy to think “I can do that.”  Sort of how digital business is 50 years later.

As business people our radar needs to be extremely sensitive to change.  When that radar goes off we need to ask a great number of “what if” questions and pay attention to how things are progressing.  The first PC’s were met with shrugged shoulders.  25 years later the PC in our pocket is more powerful than the computers that took man to the moon.  Facebook is 10 years old and there wasn’t a “social media marketing” requirement many businesses are just learning to fulfill now.

I know – the only constant is change.  True enough, and it’s rare when that change happens very loudly and clearly on a winter’s night with drums and guitars.  It hasn’t been quite as obvious since then and won’t be the next time either.  Are you listening closely enough to hear it?

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