Thursday, January 17, 2013

100 DAYS OF THE BEATLES – TOP 100 SONGS – 83




NUMBER 83: "I'm So Tired" (Lennon  November 25, 1968)
The BEATLES (a.k.a. The White Album) CD VERSION  CD 1, Track 10 (2:05)

YouTube Video

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (sans footnotes/references) 

"I'm So Tired" is a song by The Beatles from their double-disc album The Beatles (also known as The White Album). It was written and sung by John Lennon, though credited to Lennon–McCartney.

Composition

Lennon wrote the song at a Transcendental Meditation camp when he could not sleep. The Beatles had gone on a retreat to study with the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi in Rishikesh, India. After three weeks of constant meditation and lectures, Lennon missed his soon-to-be wife, Yoko Ono, and was plagued by insomnia that inspired the song. One of dozens of songs the Beatles wrote in India, "I'm So Tired" detailed Lennon's fragile state of mind. It was also an open letter to Ono, whose postcards to Lennon in India were a lifeline. "I got so excited about her letters," he said. "I started thinking of her as a woman, and not just an intellectual woman." Lennon later said of it: "One of my favorite tracks. I just like the sound of it, and I sing it well".

The theme of insomnia complements Lennon's earlier song "I'm Only Sleeping" on the Revolver album.

The song is in the key of A-major and features Lennon singing the main tune in a slow, flowing fashion while the rest of the band sings the chorus, which is repeated twice and yelled at the end of the second time.

Recording

An early demo of the song was recorded at George Harrison's Esher home, in May 1968. It was basically identical to the released version, in terms of verse, but it does include a spoken section reminiscent of a similar section in "Happiness Is A Warm Gun". It goes as such: “When I hold you, in your arms, When you show me, each one of your charms, I wonder should I get up, and go to the funny farm. No, no, no!

This section was probably improvised at the time, as it was never used again. The song was recorded on 8 October 1968 and was completed including all overdubs in this one session. The Beatles also started and completed "The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill" during the same recording session. The chorus of the monaural mix of the song features louder backing vocals from Paul McCartney than the stereo mix.

"Paul is dead" conspiracy

At the very end of the song, what seems to be nonsensical mumbling can be heard in the background. The mumbling, if played backward can be heard as something along the lines of "Paul is a dead man. Miss him. Miss him. Miss him." This only adds to the many supposed references to the "Paul is dead" conspiracy scattered throughout the White Album.

Personnel

John Lennon – lead vocal, acoustic guitar, lead guitar, organ
Paul McCartney – bass guitar, electric piano, backing vocal
George Harrison – lead guitar
Ringo Starr – drums



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