- published: 15 Jun 2012
- views: 609988
"Revolution 9" is a recorded composition that appeared on the Beatles' 1968 eponymous LP release (popularly known as The White Album). The sound collage, credited to Lennon–McCartney, was created primarily by John Lennon with assistance from George Harrison and Yoko Ono. Lennon said he was trying to paint a picture of a revolution using sound. The composition was influenced by the avant-garde style of Ono as well as the musique concrète works of composers such as Edgard Varèse and Karlheinz Stockhausen (whom Paul McCartney was listening to in 1966, and inspired McCartney's ideas for "Tomorrow Never Knows" on The Beatles' album Revolver).
The recording began as an extended ending to the album version of "Revolution." Lennon then combined the unused coda with numerous overdubbed vocals, speech, sound effects, and short tape loops of speech and musical performances, some of which were reversed. These were further manipulated with echo, distortion, stereo panning, and fading. At over eight minutes, it is the longest track that the Beatles officially released.
The Beatles Revolution 9 Number 9 for 9 Minutes
Revolution 9 Backmask ~ Played Backwards ~ The Beatles
Revolution 9 (fragments)
The Beatles Revolution #9
The Beatles - Revolution 9 (vinyl LP - first 40 seconds backwards)
To they guy who wanted me to make another Beatles video.
"Satan Look At Me Satan, Dawning The Dawning" The Beatles are affiliated with the Illuminati!! Secret Satanic message revealed when played backwards!!!
This is not the full-length track. This is video spam for Brittany Venti's Hitbox stream. 😜
The Beatles "Revolution 9" from the vinyl LP 'The Beatles' better known as "The White Album" issued in 1968, Apple records. Of all the infamous "Paul is dead" rumor clues, this arguably the most popular of the ones found on the records -- where "numer nine ... number nine ..." played backwards is heard to be "turn me on dead man ... turn me on dead man ..." so here's that clue for you all ... from side 4, track 5 of the White Album, the first 40 seconds being played in reverse -- you get to hear that bizarre piano passage as it normally sounded (which this morning, Nov 17, 2010, one day after iTunes starts to sell the Beatles, I found out that "bizarre piano passage" was from Robert Schumann '12 Etudes, Op. 13', for anyone who ever wondered) ... then 'turn me on dead man' ... Get more Be...
[Instrumental]