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From "Paul Myers" <pulmyears@gmail.com>
Subject Aimee Mann's Sgt Pepper editorial in Sunday NY Times.
Date Sun, 3 Jun 2007 19:15:37 -0400

[Part 1 text/plain WINDOWS-1252 (4.6 kilobytes)] (View Text in a separate window)

Don't know if anyone on the list caught this or mentioned it already...Aimee
Mann wrote an op-ed about the anniversary of Sgt. Pepper's LHCB in Sunday's
New York Times.


The New York Times
June 3, 2007
Op-Ed Contributor
 P.S. I Loved You  By AIMEE MANN

Los Angeles

MY big brother was always the one to bring new music into the house. Until I
heard the Beatles playing on his stereo in the basement, my favorite music
had been Glen Campbell singing "Galveston" or my father playing "Won't You
Come Home, Bill Bailey" on the piano.

I was young enough to giggle when my brother changed the words of "P.S. I
Love You" to...something more puerile, and four years later, young enough to
think that "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" was really a band, and
not the name of a Beatles record. In those intervening years, a
transformation had taken place, and both the sound and the look of the
Beatles had completely changed. Also, I was a little slow on the uptake, and
didn't notice the name "Beatles" spelled out in flowers on the cover.

Is it a testament to the quality, or purity, or beauty, or timelessness of
that record (released 40 years ago this weekend) that it appealed so
thoroughly to an 8-year-old, one who had virtually no contact with pop
culture? I could not have been more out of tune with the zeitgeist — it
would be two more years before I discovered radio, and even then I would
have only the vaguest notion of what was out there. I bought my first LP
solely on the basis of the cover (one of the reasons today I try to take
extra care with the packaging of my CDs). It was pure dumb luck that it
turned out to be Elton John's "Madman Across the Water," still one of my
favorite albums of all time.

But the favorite is, and was, and must remain "Sgt. Pepper's." I had a love
affair like no other with that record. My brother had bought it, of course,
and when I heard it, I braved his wrath and smuggled it out to my friend's
house so I could play it over and over. You'd have had to know my brother
back then to fully understand how daring that was.

In a way, that record seemed made for children: the fun false mustaches that
came with the package, the bright shiny outfits, the cheery melodies, the
jaunty horns. The band itself seemed almost irrelevant — scruffy mustachioed
men in costumes, lost in a sea of collaged faces. I ignored them.

My ignorance extended to the opening song, which I took at face value as a
real live introduction of the singer Billy Shears, who, whoever he was,
became my favorite, with his dopey baritone, in humble gratitude for his
pals — bless them, it all was so innocent, those marmalade skies and winking
meter maids (whatever they were). The darkest moments were with the runaway
girl — although a throwaway line in "Getting Better" ("I was cruel to my
woman, I beat her...") gave me pause. He beat her? What the heck? But hey —
things were getting better all the time, so ... I shrugged and let it go.

And then things took a weird turn: a nightmare cacophony of strings, someone
blowing his mind out in a car — what was that? Did he get shot in the head?
What were the holes in Albert Hall? Things had gotten creepy and dark, and
it lost me. I started skipping that last song.

I can't listen to "Sgt. Pepper's" anymore. As a musician, I'm burnt out on
it — its influence has been so vast and profound. As a lyricist, I find that
my ear has become more attuned to the likes of Fiona Apple and Elliot Smith,
and though the words of "Sgt. Pepper's" are full of vivid images — Rita's
bag slung over her shoulder, Mr. Kite sailing through a hogshead of fire,
the runaway girl with her handkerchief — there's an emotional depth that's
missing. I'm ashamed to say it, but sometimes John Lennon's melodies feel a
bit underwritten, while Paul McCartney's relentless cheerfulness is
depressing. The very jauntiness I used to love as a girl feels as if it's
covering up a sadder subtext. And what's bleaker than a brave face?

The whole experience is uncomfortable, like realizing you can beat your own
father at chess or arm-wrestling. I don't want to go back and find that the
carcass has been picked clean. Because I know without a doubt that "Sgt.
Pepper's" changed the course of my life. If the magic is gone, it's only
because first loves can't be repeated. When I was 8, I'd never heard
anything like it, and I can honestly say that if I live to be 100, I'll
never hear anything like it again.

Aimee Mann is a singer and songwriter Copyright
2007<http://www.nytimes.com/ref/membercenter/help/copyright.html>
The New York Times Company <http://www.nytco.com/>

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