In the annals of the history of popular music, perhaps no band has been more influential than The Beatles. You can't find many contemporary songwriters that don't claim at least some Beatles influence. If you want to learn how to write a great song, listen to The Beatles. Nowhere Man, Eleanor Rigby, She's Leaving Home, Come Together, Hey Jude, Octopus' Garden, Help!, Ticket to Ride, Cry Baby Cry, Helter Skelter, While My Guitar Gently Weeps, Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da, Across the Universe, Yesterday, The Long and Winding Road, Strawberry Fields, Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds, Here, There and Everywhere--the list goes on, and on, and on.
There have been some admittedly great covers of Beatles tunes in the past.
The Carpenters' version of
Ticket to Ride and
Help! come to mind, and
Aerosmith recorded a pretty decent cover of
Come Together for the '70s film
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. But there is no substitute for the real thing. The Beatles were a monumental band and their recordings rank among the best contemporary music ever put to tape.
That being said,
Julie Taymor presided over a film project that produced perhaps the best cover versions of Beatles songs ever recorded. The film,
Across the Universe
, is this month's Songtalk Recommendation. In the same process as the
Abba-based
Mamma Mia!, the story was created around pre-existing music, only with Beatles songs instead of Abba songs. And like Mama Mia!, sometimes the story gets a little thin, but the music is so consistently good that you don't care. It's a wonderful introduction to some of the Beatles' greatest hits for the non-initiated (not-yet Beatles fan). If you doubt how great these songs are, check out this film, or
the soundtrack
.
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