Our Favorite Albums #7
7. The Beatles – The Beatles (The White Album) [1968]
Nominated by Leith of The Light Fandango, Andy Chatfield of Center for the Arts Radio Hour, DJ Lukey G of The Guest List, DJ Jagged Little Thrill of What the Funk & Word on the Street, and DJ McKenzie of Splitting Hairs & The Beatles: A Week in the Life.
Most of the songs for The Beatles were written during a Transcendental Meditation course with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi in Rishikesh, India, between February and April 1968. The retreat involved long periods of meditation, conceived by the band as a spiritual respite from all worldly endeavours – a chance, in John Lennon’s words, to “get away from everything”. Lennon and Paul McCartney quickly re-engaged themselves in songwriting, often meeting “clandestinely in the afternoons in each other’s rooms” to review their new work. “Regardless of what I was supposed to be doing,” Lennon later recalled, “I did write some of my best songs there.” Author Ian MacDonald said Sgt Pepper was “shaped by LSD”, but the Beatles took no drugs with them to India aside from marijuana, and their clear minds helped the group with their songwriting. The stay in Rishikesh proved especially fruitful for George Harrison as a songwriter, coinciding with his re-engagement with the guitar after two years studying the sitar.
During the recording sessions for The Beatles, each member of the band began to increasingly assert themselves as individual artists who frequently found themselves at odds. McCartney described the sessions as a turning point for the group because “there was a lot of friction during that album. We were just about to break up, and that was tense in itself”; Lennon said, “the break-up of the Beatles can be heard on that album”. (wikipedia.org)