The Beatles through a Glass Onion: Reconsidering the White Album

The Beatles through a Glass Onion: Reconsidering the White Album

by Mark Osteen
The Beatles through a Glass Onion: Reconsidering the White Album

The Beatles through a Glass Onion: Reconsidering the White Album

by Mark Osteen

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Overview

The Beatles, the 1968 double LP more commonly known as the White Album, has always been viewed as an oddity in the group’s oeuvre. Many have found it to be inconsistent, sprawling, and self-indulgent. The Beatles through a Glass Onion is the first-ever scholarly volume to explore this seminal recording at length, bringing together contributions by some of the most eminent scholars of rock music writing today. It marks a reconsideration of this iconic but under-appreciated recording and reaffirms the White Album’s significance in the Beatles’ career and in rock history.

This volume treats the White Album as a whole, with essays scrutinizing it from a wide range of perspectives. These essays place the album within the social and political context of a turbulent historical moment; locate it within the Beatles’ lives and  careers, taking into consideration the complex personal forces at play during the recording sessions; investigate the musical as well as pharmaceutical influences on the record; reveal how it reflects new developments in the Beatles’ songwriting and arranging; revisit the question of its alleged disunity; and finally, track its legacy and the breadth of its influence on later rock, pop, and hip-hop artists.

The Beatles through a Glass Onion features the scholarship of Adam Bradley, Vincent Benitez, Lori Burns, John Covach, Walter Everett, Michael Frontani, Steve Hamelman, Ian Inglis, John Kimsey, Mark Osteen, Russell Reising, Stephen Valdez, Anthony D. Villa, Kenneth Womack, and Alyssa Woods. John Covach’s Afterword summarizes the White Album’s lasting impact and value. The Beatles through a Glass Onion represents a landmark work of rock music scholarship. It will prove to be an essential and enduring contribution to the field.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780472124848
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Publication date: 03/11/2019
Series: Tracking Pop
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 334
File size: 957 KB

About the Author

Mark Osteen is Professor of English and Director of the Center for the Humanities at Loyola University Maryland.

Table of Contents

Contents Acknowledgments Introduction. Part of Everything: The Beatles through a Glass Onion / Mark Osteen Part I. Umbrella: Pretexts and Contexts 1. ". . . Out/In . . .": The Beatles' Image in Transition during the "Year of the Barricades" / Michael R. Frontani 2. Children of Nature: Origins of the Beatles' Tabula Rasa / Walter Everett 3. Beatles Unplugged: The White Album in the Shadow of Rishikesh / John Kimsey 4. Producing an Enigma for the Ages: George Martin within (and without) The Beatles / Kenneth Womack 5. "Where Everything Flows": The Beatles and the Fruits of Psychedelia / Russell Reising Part II. Songs for Everyone: Music, Lyrics, Performances 6. I Call Your Name: Introducing the Cast of the White Album / Ian Inglis 7. The Colors That Made the White Album: The Beatles' Mastery of Orchestration and Arranging / Anthony D. Villa 8. Blisters on His Fingers: Ringo Starr's Performance on The Beatles / Steve Hamelman 9. George Harrison, Songwriter / John Covach Appendix: George Harrison's Songs 10. You Say You Want a Revolution: John Lennon's Contributions to The Beatles / Stephen Valdez 11. "That Was Me" in "Vintage Clothes": Intertextuality and the White Album Songs of Paul McCartney / Vincent P. Benitez Part III. The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill: Adapting the White Album 12. Loaded with Meaning: Adaptations of "Happiness Is a Warm Gun" by U2 and Tori Amos / Alyssa Woods and Lori Burns 13. White, Black, and Grey / Adam Bradley Afterword / John Covach References Contributors Index
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