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Difference between revisions of "Eight Days a Week (song)"

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{{infobox song
 
{{infobox song
 
| Name      = Eight Days a Week
 
| Name      = Eight Days a Week
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| Released      = 15 February 1965 <small>(US only)</small>  
 
| Released      = 15 February 1965 <small>(US only)</small>  
 
| Format        = [[gramophone record|7"]]
 
| Format        = [[gramophone record|7"]]
| Recorded      = Abbey Road Studios: 16 October 1965
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| Recorded      = Abbey Road Studios: 6 October 1964
 
| Genre          = Rock
 
| Genre          = Rock
 
| Length        = 2:46
 
| Length        = 2:46
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| Producer      = [[George Martin]]
 
| Producer      = [[George Martin]]
 
| Chart position =  
 
| Chart position =  
| Last single   = "[[Help!]]"<br/>(UK-1965) / "[[Yesterday]]"<br/>(US-1965)
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| Last single = "[[I Feel Fine]]"<br />(1964)
| This single   = "Day Tripper"<br/>(1965)
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| This single = "'''Eight Days a Week'''"<br />(US-1965)
| Next single   = "[[Paperback Writer]]" <br/>(UK-1966) / "[[Nowhere Man]]" <br/>(US-1966)
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| Next single = "[[Ticket to Ride]]"<br />(1965)
 
}}
 
}}
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</div>
  
{{cquote|It is a diary form of writing. All that 'I used to be cruel to my woman, I beat her and kept her apart from the things that she loved' was me. I used to be cruel to my woman, and physically... any woman. I was a hitter. I couldn't express myself and I hit. I fought men and I hit women. That is why I am always on about peace, you see. It is the most violent people who go for love and peace. Everything's the opposite. But I sincerely believe in love and peace. I am a violent man who has learned not to be violent and regrets his violence. I will have to be a lot older before I can face in public how I treated women as a youngster.|John Lennon|September 1980}}
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{{cquote|Both of us wrote it. I think we wrote this when we were trying to write the title song for 'Help!' because there was at one time the thought of calling the film, 'Eight Arms To Hold You.'|John Lennon, ''Hit Parader'' interview|April, 1972}}
  
{{cquote|Wrote that at my house in St. John's Wood. All I remember is that I said, 'It's getting better all the time,' and John contributed the legendary line 'It couldn't get much worse.' Which I thought was very good. Against the spirit of that song, which was all super-optimistic... then there's that lovely little sardonic line. Typical John.|Paul McCartney|1984}}
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{{cquote|'Eight Days A Week' was a landmark recording in that it was the first time the Beatles took an unfinished idea into the studio and experimented with different ways of recording it.  
  
{{cquote|John was late for the session. Paul was at the piano demonstrating to me what the song was going to sound like. At the moment he sang, 'I've got to admit it's getting better, getting better all the time,' John came through the door and actually sang, 'It can't get no worse.'|George Martin|''Summer of Love'' 1994 & 2006}}
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Although it was to become the first pop song to feature a faded-up introduction, the session tapes reveal that this was not the original plan. Take one was played straight, no frills, on acoustic guitar. On take two John and Paul introduced a succession of beautifully harmonised "Ooohs," climbing up the scale, to precede the first guitar strum. On take three they merged the first two ideas, "Ooohs" and acoustic guitar. On take four the "Ooohs" were altered to remain on the same pitch throughout rather than climbing the register. Take five incorporated "Ooohs" at the end as well as the beginning. Take six took the shape of the released version but did not have the faded intro or outro. From then on, until the 'best', take 13, the Beatles concentrated on perfecting take six, overdubbing a double-tracked Lennon vocal, for instance. The famous faded intro was added at the remix stage and a new outro was taped as an edit piece on 18 October.|Mark Lewisohn, ''The Beatles Recording Sessions''|1988}}
  
{{cquote|I would go to Paul's house at four o'clock in the afternoon and I would have tea with him, muck around and go for a walk. I remember once, I was walking around Primrose Hill with Paul and his dog Martha one spring morning. It was the first spring-like morning of that year, and as we got to the top of the hill, the sun came up. He turned to me and said 'It's getting better,' meaning that spring was here. Then, he started laughing and I asked him what he was laughing about, and he said it reminded him of something that the reserve drummer, [[Jimmy Nicol]], they had used in 1964 when Ringo fell ill, used to say at the end of every concert. John and Paul would ask him how things were going and he would always say, 'Oh, it's getting better.' John used to take the piss out of him, and it became a joke phrase. Then, in his little studio in his house, Paul began working out a tune on his guitar. At seven o'clock this evening, John came round to the house and they'd give each other the other bits of songs they'd written. Now and again, they'd have written whole songs but mostly it was half a song and the other one would help finish it. So, Paul played that song, explained it to John, and they recorded the first part of it the next evening.|Hunter Davies, The Beatles' Biographer|1968 }}
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{{cquote|The problem with what to do about the ragged intro still remained, however, and as they were pondering what to do about it, [[Norman Smith|Norman]] came up with the brilliant suggestion of simply fading in the song, instead of having everything come crashing in at full volume. Innovative for its time, this also aided in the record's success because it made it easy for radio disk jockeys to crossfade the start of "Eight Days A Week" with another single.|Geoff Emerick, ''Here, There and Everywhere''|2006}}
  
{{cquote|I was standing next to John, discussing some finer point of the arrangement to 'Getting Better' when he suddenly looked up at me. 'George,' he said slowly, 'I'm not feeling too good. I'm not focusing on me.'  [...] 'What you need is a breath of fresh air. I know the way up on to the roof.' When we had clambered out on to the flat roof of Studio Two, we found it was a beautiful clear night. John took a deep breath, and, with a bit of a lurch, took a couple of steps towards the edge of the building. I grabbed hold of his arm: it was a good 50 feet to the ground. [...] 'Wow,' he intoned. 'Look at that! Isn't that amazing?' I followed his gaze. The stars did look good, and there seemed to be a good many of them &#151; but they didn't look that good. It was very unlike John to be over the top in that way. [...] He was wired &#151; pin-sharp and quivering, resonating away like a human tuning fork. No sooner had John uttered his immortal words about the stars than George and Paul came bursting out on to the roof. They had come tearing up from the studio as soon as they found out where we were. They knew why John was feeling unwell. [...] It was very simple. John was tripping on LSD. He had taken it by mistake, they said &#151; he had meant to take an amphetamine tablet.|George Martin, ''Summer of Love''|1994 & 2006}}
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{{cquote|I showed up at John's house one day. I had driven out from London and, because I had lost my licence because of a speeding offence, I was being driven out there and we were pulling up in John's drive and I was talking to the driver and asked him, 'What kind of a week have you had? Have you been working hard?' He then said to me, 'I've been working eight days a week, Paul!' After hearing that, I literally fell into John's place, thinking, 'That's good!'|Paul McCartney, ''The Beatles: Off the Record'' by Keith Badman|2000}}
  
{{cquote|There is a particular point in 'Getting Better' (it occurs before the line 'Me used to be angry young man...') where we all hit a bottom note, a suspended heavy pedal note, which is made up of guitars, tamboura and me thumping the strings of the pianette. This gave us a drone effect that worked really well against the excellent falsetto backing vocals that were now a strong characteristic of the Beatles' sound.|George Martin, ''Summer of Love''|1994 & 2006}}
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{{cquote|   I remember writing that with John, at his place in Weybridge, from something said by the chauffeur who drove me out there. John had moved out of London. to the suburbs. I usually drove myself there, but the chauffeur drove me out that day and I said, 'How've you been?' - 'Oh, working hard,' he said, 'working eight days a week.' I had never heard anyone use that expression, so when I arrived at John's house I said, 'Hey, this fella just said, "eight days a week".' John said, 'Right - "Ooh I need your love, babe..." and we wrote it. We were always quick to write. We would write on the spot. I would show up, looking for some sort of inspiration. I'd either get it there, with John, or I'd hear someone say something.
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John and I were always looking for titles. Once you've got a good title, if someone says, 'What's your new song?' and you have a title that interests people, you are halfway there. Of course, the song has to be good. If you've called it 'I Am On My Way To A Party With You, Babe', they might say, 'OK...' But if you've called it 'Eight Days A Week', they say, 'Oh yes, that's good!'|Paul McCartney, ''The Beatles Anthology'', p. 159|2000}}
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{{cquote|Neither of us had heard that expression before so we had that chauffeur to credit for that.  It was like a little blessing from the gods.  I didn't have any idea for it other than the title, and we just knocked it off together, just filling in from the title.  So that one came quickly.|Paul McCartney, ''Many Years From Now''|1997}}
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{{cquote|Linda McCartney: Ringo also said, 'Eight days a week.' Paul: Yeah, he said it as though he were an overworked chauffeur: [Heavy accent] 'Eight days a week.' When we heard it, we said, 'Really? Bing! Got it!'|Paul McCartney, ''Playboy'' magazine interview|1984}}
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{{cquote|'Eight Days A Week' was the running title for ''Help!'' before they came up with "Help!" It was Paul's effort at getting a single for the movie. That luckily turned to "Help!" which I wrote, bam! bam!, like that and got the single. 'Eight Days A Week' was never a good song. We struggled to record it and struggled to make it into a song. It was [Paul's] initial effort, but I think we both worked on it. I'm not sure. But it was lousy anyway.|John Lennon, ''The Playboy Interviews'', David Scheff|1980}}
  
 
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*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eight_Days_A_Week Wikipedia entry]
 
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eight_Days_A_Week Wikipedia entry]
 
*[http://www.icce.rug.nl/~soundscapes/DATABASES/AWP/edaw.shtml Alan W. Pollack's Musicological Analysis!]
 
*[http://www.icce.rug.nl/~soundscapes/DATABASES/AWP/edaw.shtml Alan W. Pollack's Musicological Analysis!]
'''Listen + Lyrics:'''
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* [http://www.beatlesebooks.com/eight-days-a-week "Eight Days A Week" History]
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{{#ev:youtube|Jk0dBZ1meio}}
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{{#ev:youtube|YtuybFrq7Rw}}
  
[[Category:Songs]][[Category:Singles]][[Category:John Lennon]][[Category:Beatles for Sale]]
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[[Category:Songs]][[Category:Singles]][[Category:Songs by Lennon & McCartney]][[Category:Beatles for Sale]]

Latest revision as of 07:21, 9 August 2011

"Eight Days a Week"
Song by The Beatles
Album Beatles for Sale
Released 4 December 1964
Recorded 6 October 1964
EMI Studios, London
Genre Rock
Length 2:44
Label Parlophone
PMC 1240 (mono)
PCS 3062 (stereo)
CDP 7 46438 2
Writer Lennon/McCartney
Producer George Martin
Beatles for Sale track listing
“Eight Days a Week”
“Eight Days a Week” cover
Single by The Beatles
B-side "I Don't Want to Spoil the Party"
Released 15 February 1965 (US only)
Format 7"
Recorded Abbey Road Studios: 6 October 1964
Genre Rock
Length 2:46
Label Parlophone (UK)
Capitol (US)
Writer(s) Lennon/McCartney
Producer George Martin
The Beatles singles chronology
"I Feel Fine"
(1964)
"Eight Days a Week"
(US-1965)
"Ticket to Ride"
(1965)
Both of us wrote it. I think we wrote this when we were trying to write the title song for 'Help!' because there was at one time the thought of calling the film, 'Eight Arms To Hold You.'

—John Lennon, Hit Parader interview, April, 1972

'Eight Days A Week' was a landmark recording in that it was the first time the Beatles took an unfinished idea into the studio and experimented with different ways of recording it.

Although it was to become the first pop song to feature a faded-up introduction, the session tapes reveal that this was not the original plan. Take one was played straight, no frills, on acoustic guitar. On take two John and Paul introduced a succession of beautifully harmonised "Ooohs," climbing up the scale, to precede the first guitar strum. On take three they merged the first two ideas, "Ooohs" and acoustic guitar. On take four the "Ooohs" were altered to remain on the same pitch throughout rather than climbing the register. Take five incorporated "Ooohs" at the end as well as the beginning. Take six took the shape of the released version but did not have the faded intro or outro. From then on, until the 'best', take 13, the Beatles concentrated on perfecting take six, overdubbing a double-tracked Lennon vocal, for instance. The famous faded intro was added at the remix stage and a new outro was taped as an edit piece on 18 October.

—Mark Lewisohn, The Beatles Recording Sessions, 1988

The problem with what to do about the ragged intro still remained, however, and as they were pondering what to do about it, Norman came up with the brilliant suggestion of simply fading in the song, instead of having everything come crashing in at full volume. Innovative for its time, this also aided in the record's success because it made it easy for radio disk jockeys to crossfade the start of "Eight Days A Week" with another single.

—Geoff Emerick, Here, There and Everywhere, 2006

I showed up at John's house one day. I had driven out from London and, because I had lost my licence because of a speeding offence, I was being driven out there and we were pulling up in John's drive and I was talking to the driver and asked him, 'What kind of a week have you had? Have you been working hard?' He then said to me, 'I've been working eight days a week, Paul!' After hearing that, I literally fell into John's place, thinking, 'That's good!'

—Paul McCartney, The Beatles: Off the Record by Keith Badman, 2000


I remember writing that with John, at his place in Weybridge, from something said by the chauffeur who drove me out there. John had moved out of London. to the suburbs. I usually drove myself there, but the chauffeur drove me out that day and I said, 'How've you been?' - 'Oh, working hard,' he said, 'working eight days a week.' I had never heard anyone use that expression, so when I arrived at John's house I said, 'Hey, this fella just said, "eight days a week".' John said, 'Right - "Ooh I need your love, babe..." and we wrote it. We were always quick to write. We would write on the spot. I would show up, looking for some sort of inspiration. I'd either get it there, with John, or I'd hear someone say something.

John and I were always looking for titles. Once you've got a good title, if someone says, 'What's your new song?' and you have a title that interests people, you are halfway there. Of course, the song has to be good. If you've called it 'I Am On My Way To A Party With You, Babe', they might say, 'OK...' But if you've called it 'Eight Days A Week', they say, 'Oh yes, that's good!'

—Paul McCartney, The Beatles Anthology, p. 159, 2000

Neither of us had heard that expression before so we had that chauffeur to credit for that. It was like a little blessing from the gods. I didn't have any idea for it other than the title, and we just knocked it off together, just filling in from the title. So that one came quickly.

—Paul McCartney, Many Years From Now, 1997

Linda McCartney: Ringo also said, 'Eight days a week.' Paul: Yeah, he said it as though he were an overworked chauffeur: [Heavy accent] 'Eight days a week.' When we heard it, we said, 'Really? Bing! Got it!'

—Paul McCartney, Playboy magazine interview, 1984

'Eight Days A Week' was the running title for Help! before they came up with "Help!" It was Paul's effort at getting a single for the movie. That luckily turned to "Help!" which I wrote, bam! bam!, like that and got the single. 'Eight Days A Week' was never a good song. We struggled to record it and struggled to make it into a song. It was [Paul's] initial effort, but I think we both worked on it. I'm not sure. But it was lousy anyway.

—John Lennon, The Playboy Interviews, David Scheff, 1980

 

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