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Beatles for Sale is the fourth studio album by the English rock band the Beatles. It was released on 4 December 1964 in the United Kingdom on EMI's Parlophone label. The album marked a departure from the upbeat tone that had characterised the Beatles' previous work, partly due to the band's exhaustion after a series of tours that had established them as a worldwide phenomenon in 1964. Beatles for Sale was not widely available in the US until 1987, when the Beatles' catalogue was standardised for release on CD. Instead, eight of the album's fourteen tracks, alongside "I'll Be Back", which was cut from the US version of the Hard Day's Night album, and both sides of the single "I Feel Fine" / "She's a Woman", appeared on Capitol Records' concurrent release, Beatles '65, and the remaining six of the album's fourteen tracks, including both sides of the US single "Eight Days a Week" / "I Don't Want to Spoil the Party", appeared on Capitol Records' seventh release, Beatles VI, both issued in North America only.

During the sessions, the band ventured into studio experimentation, such as employing a fade-in and incorporating guitar feedback, and supplemented the basic recordings with percussion instruments such as timpani, African hand drums, and chocalho. The album reflects the twin influences of country music and Bob Dylan, whom the Beatles met in New York in August 1964. Partly as a result of the group's hectic schedule, only eight of the tracks are original compositions, with cover versions of songs by artists such as Carl Perkins, Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly and Little Richard being used to complete the album. The original songs introduced darker musical moods and more introspective lyrics, with John Lennon adopting an autobiographical perspective in "I'm a Loser" and "No Reply". Furthermore, the majority of the songs did not feature themes of love, with only three out of the fourteen tracks mentioning love in a positive light.

Beatles for Sale received favourable reviews in the UK musical press, where it held the number one spot for 11 of the 46 weeks that it spent in the top 20. The album was similarly successful in Australia, where the band's cover of Berry's "Rock and Roll Music" also topped the singles chart. One of the songs omitted from the US version of the album, "Eight Days a Week", became the Beatles' seventh number one in the US when issued as a single there in February 1965. In 2000, the album was voted number 204 in the third edition of Colin Larkin's book All Time Top 1000 Albums. Template:TOC limit

Background

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When Beatles for Sale was being recorded, Beatlemania was at its peak.Template:Sfn In early 1964, the Beatles had made waves with their television appearances in the US, sparking unprecedented demand for their records there. Over June and July, the band played concerts in Denmark, the Netherlands and Hong Kong, toured Australia and New Zealand,Template:Sfn and then returned to Britain for a series of radio and television engagements and to promote their first feature film, A Hard Day's Night.Template:Sfn After performing further concerts in Sweden, they began recording the new album in London in mid August, only to then depart for a month-long tour of North America.Template:Sfn While in New York, the Beatles met American folk singer Bob Dylan, who introduced the band members to cannabis. Through Dylan's example, the Beatles, particularly John Lennon,Template:Sfn were encouraged to write more introspective lyrics than before.Template:Sfn For his part, Dylan said he recognised that the Beatles "were pointing the direction that music had to go",Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and he soon began writing songs that embraced youth culture and recording with a rock backing.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Beatles for Sale was the Beatles' fourth album release in the space of 21 months.Template:Sfn Neil Aspinall, the band's road manager, later reflected: "No band today would come off a long US tour at the end of September, go into the studio and start a new album, still writing songs, and then go on a UK tour, finish the album in five weeks, still touring, and have the album out in time for Christmas. But that's what the Beatles did at the end of 1964. A lot of it was down to naiveté, thinking that this was the way things were done. If the record company needs another album, you go and make one."Template:Sfn Noting the subdued and melancholy tone of much of the album, producer George Martin recalled: "They were rather war weary during Beatles for Sale. One must remember that they'd been battered like mad throughout 1964, and much of 1963. Success is a wonderful thing but it is very, very tiring."Template:Sfn

Songwriting and musical styles

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Although prolific, the songwriting partnership of Lennon and Paul McCartney was unable to keep up with the demand for new material.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn To make up for the shortfall in output, the Beatles resorted to including several cover versions on the album.Template:Sfn This had been their approach for their first two albums – Please Please Me and With the Beatles – but had been abandoned for A Hard Day's Night.Template:Sfn McCartney said of the combination on Beatles for Sale: "Basically it was our stage show, with some new [original] songs."Template:Refn

The album features eight Lennon–McCartney compositions.Template:Sfn In addition, the pair wrote both sides of the non-album single, "I Feel Fine" backed with "She's a Woman",Template:Sfn which accompanied the LP's release.Template:Sfn At this stage in their partnership, Lennon and McCartney rarely wrote together as before, but each would often contribute key parts to songs for which the other was the primary author.Template:Sfn Nevertheless, Lennon's level of contribution to Beatles for Sale outweighed McCartney's,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn a situation that, as on A Hard Day's Night, author Ian MacDonald attributes to McCartney's commitment being temporarily sidetracked by his relationship with English actress Jane Asher.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn

At the time, Lennon said of the album: "You could call our new one a Beatles country and western LP."Template:Sfn Music critic Tim Riley views the album as a "country excursion",Template:Sfn while MacDonald describes it as being "dominated by the [country-and-western] idiom".Template:Sfn The impetus for this new direction came partly from the band's exposure to US country radio stations while on tour;<ref name="Quantick/BBC">Template:Cite web</ref> in addition, it was a genre that Ringo Starr had long championed.Template:Sfn Lennon's "I'm a Loser" was the first Beatles song to directly reflect Dylan's influence.Template:Sfn Author Jonathan Gould highlights the influence of blues and country-derived rockabilly on the album's original compositions and in the inclusion of songs by Carl Perkins and Buddy Holly. He also comments that Dylan's acoustic folk sound was a style that the Beatles tended to identify as country music.Template:Sfn

McCartney later said that Beatles for Sale inaugurated a more mature phase for the band, whereby: "We got more and more free to get into ourselves. Our student selves rather than 'we must please the girls and make money' …"Template:Sfn According to author Peter Doggett, this period coincided with Lennon and McCartney being feted by London society, from which the pair found inspiration among a network of non-mainstream writers, poets, comedians, film-makers and other arts-related individuals. Doggett says that their social milieu in 1964 represented "new territory for pop" and a challenge to British class delineation as the Beatles introduced an "arty middle-class" sensibility to pop music.Template:Sfn

Recording

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The sessions for Beatles for Sale began at EMI Studios on 11 August, one month after the release of A Hard Day's Night. The majority of the recording sessions took place during a three-week period beginning on 29 September, following the band's return from the US tour. Much of the production was done on "days off" from performances in the UK, and much of the songwriting was completed in the studio.

George Harrison recalled that the band had become more sophisticated about recording techniques: "Our records were progressing. We'd started out like anyone spending their first time in a studio – nervous and naive and looking for success. By this time we'd had loads of hits and were becoming more relaxed with ourselves, and more comfortable in the studio …"Template:Sfn The band continued to develop their sound through the use of four-track recording, which EMI had introduced in 1963. They were also allowed greater freedom to experiment by the record company and by George Martin, who was gradually relinquishing his position of authority over the Beatles, as their label boss, throughout 1964, and was increasingly open to their non-standard musical ideas.Template:Sfn The sessions resulted in the first use of a fade-in on a pop song, at the start of "Eight Days a Week",Template:Sfn and the first time that guitar feedback had been incorporated in a pop recording, on "I Feel Fine".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The band introduced new instrumentation into their basic sound, as a way to illustrate the more nuanced style adopted by Lennon in his lyric writing.Template:Sfn This was especially evident in the range of percussion instruments, which, mainly played by Starr, included the band's first use of timpani, African hand drumsTemplate:Sfn and chocalho.Template:Sfn According to MacDonald, the Beatles adopted a "less-is-more" approach in their arrangements; he cites "No Reply" as an example of the group beginning to "master the studio", whereby doubling basic parts and the use of reverb lent the performance "depth and space".Template:Sfn As he had done since With the Beatles, Harrison continued to vary his guitar sounds, favouring a Gretsch Tennessean guitar for the first time, in addition to using his twelve-string Rickenbacker 360/12.Template:Sfn Author André Millard describes this period as one in which the recording studio changed its identity from the Beatles' perspective, from a formal workplace into a "workshop" and "laboratory".Template:Sfn

Recording was completed on 26 October,Template:Sfn partway through the band's four-week tour of the UK.Template:Sfn On 18 October, the Beatles had rushed back to London from Hull,Template:Sfn to record the A-side of their forthcoming single, "I Feel Fine", and three of the album's cover tunes (in a total of five takes).Template:Sfn In an interview published the day before this session, Lennon admitted that the need for new original songs was "becoming a hell of a problem".Template:Sfn The band participated in several mixing and editing sessions before completing the project on 4 November.

Songs

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Original compositions

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"No Reply"

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"No Reply" is about a young man who is unable to contact his apparently unfaithful girlfriend, although he knows she is home.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Beatles music publisher Dick James was pleased with the song, saying Lennon had provided "a complete story".Template:Sfn Reviewer David Rowley said that its lyrics "read like a picture story from a girl's comic" and evoked a picture "of walking down a street and seeing a girl silhouetted in a window, not answering the telephone".Template:Sfn Sequenced as the first track on Beatles for Sale, the song served as an uncharacteristic album opener, given its dramatic and resentful mood.Template:Sfn

MacDonald attributes effectiveness to the acoustic guitar backing and the treatment given to Martin's piano part, which is rendered as "a darkly reverbed presence" rather than a distinct instrument.Template:Sfn The vocals on the song are "massively haloed in echo", contributing to a mid-section providing "among the most exciting thirty seconds" of all the Beatles' recordings.Template:Sfn

"I'm a Loser"

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Music critic Richie Unterberger singles out "I'm a Loser" as "one of the very first Beatles compositions with lyrics addressing more serious points than young love".Template:Sfn Rowley considered it to be an "obvious copy of Bob Dylan", as when Lennon refers to the listener as a "friend", Dylan does the same on "Blowin' in the Wind".Template:Refn He also said its intention was to "openly subvert the simple true love themes of their earlier work".Template:Sfn In Riley's view, "I'm a Loser" inaugurates a theme in Lennon's writing, in which his songs serve as "personal responses to fame".Template:SfnTemplate:Refn

"Baby's in Black"

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As the third track on the album, "Baby's in Black" conveys the same sad and resentful outlook of the two preceding songs.<ref name="Erlewine/AM" /> Unterberger views it as "a love lament for a grieving girl that was perhaps more morose than any previous Beatles song".Template:Sfn It was the first song recorded for the albumTemplate:Sfn and features a two-part harmony sung by Lennon and McCartney. McCartney recalled: "'Baby's in Black' we did because we liked waltz-time ... And I think also John and I wanted to do something bluesy, a bit darker, more grown-up, rather than just straight pop."Template:Sfn Beatles historian Mark Lewisohn cites the band's dedication to achieving a discordant twanging sound for Harrison's lead guitar part, and Martin's objection to the song opening with this sound, as an example of the Beatles breaking free of their producer's control for the first time.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn To achieve the desired swelling effect, Lennon knelt on the studio floor and altered the volume control on Harrison's Gretsch as he played.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn

"I'll Follow the Sun"

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"I'll Follow the Sun" was a reworking of an old song. McCartney recalled in a 1988 interview: "I wrote that in my front parlour in Forthlin Road. I was about 16 ... We had this R&B image in Liverpool, a rock and roll/R&B/hardish image with the leather. So I think songs like 'I'll Follow the Sun', ballads like that, got pushed back to later."Template:Sfn Author Mark Hertsgaard cites its inclusion as a reflection of the shortage of original material available to the band, since McCartney acknowledged that the song "wouldn't have been considered good enough" for their previous releases.Template:Sfn Martin nevertheless later named it as his favourite song on Beatles for Sale.<ref>Beatles For Sale mini-documentary, 2009 CD re-issue</ref>

"Eight Days a Week"

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"Eight Days a Week" marked the first time the Beatles brought a partly formed song into the studio and completed the writing process as they recorded it.Template:Sfn Two recording sessions, totalling nearly seven hours, on 6 October were devoted to the song, during which Lennon and McCartney experimented with various techniques before settling on a final structure and arrangement. Each of the first six takes featured a strikingly different approach to the beginning and end sections of the song; the eventual chiming guitar-based introduction was recorded during a different session and edited in later. The song's opening fade-in served as a counterpoint to pop songs that close with a fade out.<ref name="Unterberger/EightDays">Template:Cite web</ref> Hertsgaard writes that the surprise provided by the fade-in was heightened for LP listeners due to the track being sequenced at the start of side two.Template:Sfn Lennon was later highly dismissive of "Eight Days a Week", referring to it in a 1980 interview as "lousy".<ref name="Unterberger/EightDays" />

"Every Little Thing"

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The dark theme of the album was balanced by "Every Little Thing", which Unterberger describes as a "celebration of what a wonderful girl the guy has".Template:Sfn McCartney said of the song: "'Every Little Thing', like most of the stuff I did, was my attempt at the next single ... but it became an album filler rather than the great almighty single. It didn't have quite what was required."Template:Sfn Musicologist Walter Everett says the chorus's incorporation of "leaden" parallel fifth harmonies, supported by Starr's timpani, was the inspiration for a proto-heavy metal version of the song recorded by the English progressive rock band Yes in 1969.Template:Sfn

"I Don't Want to Spoil the Party"

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Lennon's "I Don't Want to Spoil the Party" returns to the sombre mood established by the opening three tracks.<ref name="Erlewine/AM" /> MacDonald considers the performance to be the album's "most overt exercise in country-and-western", aided by the tight snare sound, Harrison's rockabilly-style guitar solo, and the despondent minor-third harmony part. MacDonald likens the effect to "I'm a Loser", in that Lennon's confessional tone is again couched in "a protective shell of pastiche".Template:Sfn

"What You're Doing"

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The lyrics of "What You're Doing" concern McCartney's relationship with Jane AsherTemplate:Sfn and demonstrate an aggrieved tone that was uncharacteristic of his writing.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn Author Simon Philo identifies the song's combination of musical arrangement, "sonic texture" and lyrics as an early example of the influence of cannabis on McCartney, who said the drug made him start "really thinking for the first time".Template:Sfn The recording features a syncopated drum pattern and a jangly Rickenbacker guitar riff,Template:Sfn as well as an instrumental coda that McCartney introduces by playing high up on the neck of his Höfner bass.Template:Sfn A satisfactory arrangement proved elusive until the band remade the track on the final day of the Beatles for Sale sessions.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn While highlighting the studio techniques used to achieve the completed recording, MacDonald considers "What You're Doing" to be a possible rival to "I Feel Fine" as the Beatles' "first sound experiment".Template:SfnTemplate:Refn

Cover versions

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Several of the album's cover versions had been staples of the Beatles' live shows in Hamburg and at The Cavern Club in Liverpool during the early 1960s.Template:Sfn These songs included Chuck Berry's "Rock and Roll Music", sung by Lennon, Buddy Holly's "Words of Love", sung by Lennon and McCartney with Harrison, and two by Carl Perkins: "Everybody's Trying to Be My Baby", sung by Harrison, and "Honey Don't", sung by Starr.Template:Refn "Mr. Moonlight", which was originally recorded by Dr. Feelgood and the Interns, was Lennon's "beloved obscurity", according to Erlewine,<ref name="Erlewine/AM" /> and the subject of a remake towards the end of the Beatles for Sale sessions. A cover of Little Willie John's "Leave My Kitten Alone" was taped on 14 August, during the same session as the discarded version of "Mr. Moonlight", but was omitted from the album.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Refn

A medley of "Kansas City" and "Hey, Hey, Hey, Hey" was sequenced as the final song on side one of the LP.Template:Sfn In McCartney's description, his performance on the track required "a great deal of nerve to just jump up and scream like an idiot"; his efforts were egged on by Lennon, who "would go, 'Come on! You can sing it better than that, man! Come on, come on! Really throw it!'" The medley was inspired by Little Richard, who similarly combined Leiber and Stoller's "Kansas City" with his own composition, "Hey, Hey, Hey, Hey!"Template:SfnTemplate:Refn Riley considers that, although McCartney's presence on Beatles for Sale appears relatively slight next to Lennon's, his performance of "Kansas City" goes some way to readdressing the balance.Template:Sfn Hertsgaard says that the irony evident in Harrison's delivery of "Everybody's Trying to Be My Baby" "allows the Beatles to close the album with a not-so-veiled comment on the oddities of living inside Beatlemania".Template:Sfn

Artwork

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The downbeat mood of Beatles for Sale was reflected in the album cover,Template:Sfn which shows the unsmiling, weary-looking BeatlesTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn in an autumn scene in London's Hyde Park.Template:Sfn The cover photograph was taken by Robert Freeman, who recalled that the concept was briefly discussed with Brian Epstein and the Beatles beforehand, namely that he produce a colour image of the group shot at "an outside location towards sunset".Template:Sfn Music journalist Lois Wilson describes the result as "the very antithesis of the early-'60s pop star".Template:Sfn The cover carried no band logo or artist credit, and the album title was rendered in minuscule type compared with standard LP artwork of the time.Template:Sfn

Beatles for Sale was presented in a gatefold sleeve – a rare design feature for a contemporary pop LPTemplate:Sfn and the first of the Beatles' UK releases to be packaged in this way.Template:Sfn Part of the inner gatefold spread showed the band members in front of a photo montage of celebrities, including film stars Victor Mature, Jayne Mansfield and Ian Carmichael, all of whom the Beatles had met during 1964.Template:Sfn This inner gatefold image anticipated Peter Blake's revolutionary cover design for the Beatles' 1967 album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

According to music journalist Neil Spencer, the album's title was an apt comment on the band's unprecedented commercial value as entertainers, given the wealth of Beatles-related merchandise introduced over the previous year.Template:Sfn The sleeve notes for Beatles for Sale were written by Derek Taylor,Template:Sfn who, until a recent falling out with Epstein, had been the band's press officer throughout their rise to international stardom.Template:Sfn In his text, Taylor focused on what the Beatles phenomenon would mean to people of the future:Template:Sfn

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Release

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File:Beatles ad 1965 just the beatles crop.jpg
The Beatles pictured after the 7th Annual Grammy Awards in April 1965, where their wins included the award for Best New Artist

Beatles for Sale was released in the United Kingdom on EMI's Parlophone label on 4 December 1964.Template:Sfn On 14 November, four days after completing their UK tour, the Beatles filmed mimed performances of "I'm a Loser" and "Rock and Roll Music", along with both sides of the "I Feel Fine" single, for broadcast on a special edition of the TV show Thank Your Lucky Stars.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The band also promoted the two records with a BBC Light Programme session, for which they recorded live versions of "I'm a Loser", "Honey Don't", "Everybody's Trying to Be My Baby" and "I'll Follow the Sun", and an appearance on Ready Steady Go!, where Beatles for Sale was represented by mimed performances of "Baby's in Black" and "Kansas City / Hey, Hey, Hey, Hey".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The group included "I'm a Loser", "Everybody's Trying to Be My Baby", "Baby's in Black", "Honey Don't" and "Rock and Roll Music"Template:Sfn in the set list for their Another Beatles' Christmas Show presentation, held at London's Hammersmith Odeon from 24 December until 16 January 1965.Template:Sfn

The album began its 46-week run on the UK charts on 12 December, and a week later displaced A Hard Day's Night from the top position.Template:Sfn After seven weeks at number 1, Beatles for Sale was displaced by the Rolling Stones' The Rolling Stones No. 2 but it returned to the top on 27 February 1965 for a week. After being again displaced by The Rolling Stones No. 2, Beatles for Sale overtook it for a second time on 1 May, remaining there for another three weeks.<ref name="OCC/Albums">Template:Cite web</ref> It was then displaced by The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, which was superseded a week later by Bringing It All Back Home,<ref name="OCC/Albums" /> Dylan's first "electric" album.Template:Sfn From the start of 1965 until mid-May, Beatles for Sale remained in the top three chart positions.<ref name="Mawer 1965">Template:Cite web</ref> Eight of the album's tracks were later issued on two four-song EPs:Template:Sfn Beatles for Sale and Beatles for Sale No. 2, released in April and June 1965, respectively.Template:Sfn In the UK, Beatles for Sale was the top-selling album of 1964<ref name="Mawer 1964">Template:Cite web</ref> and the second-highest seller of 1965.<ref name="Mawer 1965" />

The concurrent Beatles release in the United States, Beatles '65, included eight songs from Beatles for Sale, omitting the tracks "Kansas City / Hey, Hey, Hey, Hey!", "Eight Days a Week" (a number one hit single in the US in early 1965),Template:Refn "What You're Doing", "Words of Love", "Every Little Thing" and "I Don't Want to Spoil the Party". It instead included "I'll Be Back", which was one of the songs cut from the US version of A Hard Day's Night, and "I Feel Fine" and "She's a Woman".Template:Sfn The six omitted tracks received an LP release in America on Beatles VI in 1965. Beatles '65 was released eleven days after Beatles for Sale and became the fastest-selling album of the year in the United States.

The cover of the Australian release of the LP featured individual photographs of the Beatles taken at one of the group's Sydney concerts in June 1964.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Issued as a single in Australia, "Rock and Roll Music" was a number 1 hit there for four weeks.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The song also topped singles charts in Norway<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and Sweden.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

CD release

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On 26 February 1987, Beatles for Sale was officially released on compact disc (catalogue number CDP 7 46438 2), as were the band's first three albums.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The following month, Beatles for Sale re-entered the UK albums charts, peaking at number 45.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Having been available previously only as an import in the US, the album was also issued on LP and cassette there on 21 July 1987.

Even though Beatles for Sale was recorded on four-track tape, the first CD version was available only in mono.Template:Sfn The album was digitally remastered and issued on CD in stereo for the first time on 9 September 2009.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Critical reception and legacy

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Template:Album ratings The album received favourable reviews in the UK musical press.Template:Sfn Writing in the NME, Derek Johnson said that it was "worth every penny asked", adding: "It's rip-roaring, infectious stuff, with the accent on beat throughout." Chris Welch of Melody Maker found the music "honest" and inventive, and predicted: "Beatles For Sale is going to sell, sell, sell. It is easily up to standard and will knock out pop fans, rock fans, R&B and Beatles fans …"Template:Sfn

In a more recent assessment, Q found the album title to hold a "hint of cynicism" in depicting the Beatles as a "product" to be sold. AllMusic editor Stephen Thomas Erlewine said that "the weariness of Beatles for Sale comes as something of a shock" after "the joyous A Hard Day's Night". He also cited it as "the group's most uneven album" yet added that its best moments find them "moving from Merseybeat to the sophisticated pop/rock they developed in mid-career".<ref name="Erlewine/AM" />

Tom Ewing of Pitchfork said, "Lennon's anger and the band's rediscovery of rock 'n' roll mean For Sale's reputation as the group's meanest album is deserved".<ref name="Pitchfork"/> Neil McCormick of The Daily Telegraph commented that "if this is a low point, they still sound fantastic", adding that "the Beatlemania pop songs are of a high standard, even if they are becoming slightly generic."<ref name="McCormick">Template:Cite news</ref> Writing in The Rolling Stone Album Guide, Rob Sheffield said that the album contains some poor cover versions yet "I'm a Loser" and "What You're Doing" indicate that the band were continuing to progress. He added: "The harmonies of 'Baby's in Black,' the hair-raising 'I still loooove her' climax of 'I Don't Want to Spoil the Party,' the eager hand claps in 'Eight Days a Week' – it all makes 'Mr. Moonlight' easy to forgive."Template:Sfn In his review for BBC Music, David Quantick highlights Lennon's "brilliant, throat-ripping version" of "Rock and Roll Music" and describes the album as "joyous, inventive and exciting", despite the Beatles' fatigue, and a "transitional" work that showed the group developing their studio craft.<ref name="Quantick/BBC" />

"I'm a Loser" served as a precursor to the 1965 folk-rock explosion,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> which was led by the Byrds and defined by a combination of Dylanesque lyrics and Beatles-style harmonies.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn According to The Encyclopedia of Country Music, "I Don't Want to Spoil the Party" can be seen "with hindsight" as an early example of country rock, anticipating the Byrds' work in that style, particularly their 1968 album Sweetheart of the Rodeo.Template:Sfn In a February 1970 interview following a recording session with Starr and Harrison, Stephen Stills, then part of the supergroup Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, said he first began listening to the Beatles around the time of Beatles for Sale, adding: "that's still where I'm at, incidentally, and so is everybody else – and maybe at that time they were at their biggest and most isolated, and thus at their closest."<ref>Template:Cite magazine Available at Rock's Backpages Template:Webarchive (subscription required).</ref>

Beatles for Sale was ranked the 71st-best album in the 1987 edition of Paul Gambaccini's book Critic's Choice,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> based on submissions from an international panel of 81 critics and broadcasters.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 2000, it was voted number 204 in the third edition of Colin Larkin's book All Time Top 1000 Albums.<ref name="Larkin">Template:Cite book</ref>

Track listing

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Template:Track listing Template:Track listing

Personnel

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According to Ian MacDonald:Template:Sfn

The Beatles

  • John Lennon – lead, harmony and backing vocals; acoustic and electric rhythm guitars; harmonica, piano, tambourine, handclaps
  • Paul McCartney – lead, harmony and backing vocals; bass and acoustic guitars; piano, Hammond organ; handclaps
  • George Harrison – harmony and backing vocals; lead (6- and 12-string) and acoustic guitars; African drum, handclaps; lead vocals on "Everybody's Trying to Be My Baby"
  • Ringo Starr – drums, tambourine, maracas, timpani, cowbell, packing case, bongos; lead vocals on "Honey Don't"

Additional musician

Charts

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Chart positions

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Weekly chart performance for Beatles for Sale
Chart (1964–65) Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report)<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> 1
Finland (Suomen virallinen lista)<ref name=Finland>Template:Cite book</ref> 1
Template:Album chart
Italian Albums (HitParadeItalia)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> 1
Template:Album chart
Chart (1987) Peak
position
Template:Album chart
UK Albums Chart<ref name="ukchart87">Template:Cite web</ref> 45
Chart (2009) Peak
position
Template:Album chart
Template:Album chart
Template:Album chart
Template:Album chart
Template:Album chart
Template:Album chart
Template:Album chart
Template:Album chart
Template:Album chart
UK Albums Chart<ref name="ukchart87" /> 56

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Certifications and sales

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See also

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Notes

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References

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Sources

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Template:Wikiquote

Template:Beatles for Sale Template:The Beatles albums Template:UK best-selling albums (by year) 1956–1969 Template:UK Christmas No. 1 albums in the 1960s Template:Authority control