Look Up by Ringo Starr: Album Review

Reviewed by Jordan Frazer

If you look at Ringo Starr’s vocal contributions to The Beatles’ albums, it’s no wonder that he cited country music as his favourite genre in his recent interview on Jimmy Kimmel Live: ‘…we got a three month job and we all changed our names. I thought…Ringo – cowboy’.

Ringo’s always just wanted to be a cowboy. And Nashville loves him like a son. He was on the show to promote Look Up – his first full LP since 2019. Recorded mostly in Nashville, Tennessee and released (in hard copy and digitally) on 10th January 2025, Look Up contains 11 new original songs, is produced by country powerhouse T Bone Burnett and features musical collaborators Molly Tuttle, Billy Strings, Lucius, Larkin Poe and Alison Krauss. Oh, and it’s also Ringo’s first ever No.1 album.

Track by track
‘I’m on the train to Liverpool…I have Ringo Starr’s new record as my companion…As each track concluded, I found myself sending a short message to my brother T Bone Burnett…’ Adopted-Scouser, Elvis Costello’s liner notes to Look Up provide a real-time, track-by-track reaction to the 11 songs. It’s a style of review that matches the immediacy of the record. A record from everyone’s favourite adopted-cowboy. And so, when tasked with reviewing it myself, that’s what I did

1. Breathless
The boy from the Dingle’s drums lead you straight in, and there’s no doubt you’re in Nashville. Stylistically, it leans a little too-heavy into the blues and so is not the strongest opener, but the ambience it creates forgives those compositional shortcomings: it’s like you’ve been dragged off the street into an eternal barn dance, Ringo on the stage, backed by his band of virtuoso outlaws. ‘Breathless’ establishes
the performance themes of the album: attractive arrangements, played with feeling, never over produced, a live sound: quintessentially Country & Western.
A busy acoustic guitar, like something from a J.S. Bach fugue, transports you deeper into hillbilly territory, before a backwards electric guitar and the jolt of the under-used lyric ‘beguiled’ remind you you’re listening to Ringo, the drummer from The Beatles.

2.Look Up
The title track brings you Molly Tuttle’s first named appearance. The first female winner of the International Bluegrass Music Association’s Guitar Player of the Year (2017), her involvement was always going to add something special, and her ethereal harmony lines dance atop Ringo’s plaintive delivery to elevate the song to the heights of its lyrics. Opening with a guitar tone not unlike the ending of ‘Strawberry Fields Forever’ – a psychedelic lens on countrified rock which evokes Gene Clark’s 1974
album No Other – it’s the least cowboy song in the collection. But it’s POP-TASTIC. And it’s got cosmic lyrics to boot: ‘the future never comes and the past has passed, look up’. It’s a sentiment that traces a line through Ringo’s back catalogue (see 2008’s Liverpool 8), but it’s better-distilled here – you really believe him. A song which takes on a greater significance in the aftermath of the LA fires: ‘there’s a burning fire leading through the haze’. You might’ve been reserving judgement so far, playing your cards close to your chest? Two tracks in, you’re settled. You’ve confidence in the band, in the playing, in the integrity of the songs…and you’ve confidence in the molasses-rich tones of the man with the microphone. It’s gonna be all aces from here
on in.

3.Time On My Hands
A piano thud and bright acoustic strum make you think of Ringo’s best: ‘Photograph’, before they dissolve into Paul Franklin’s gorgeous and rueful steel-guitar which weaves its way in and out of the arrangement like bourbon from a bottle leaving an indelible, forlorn imprint behind. It’s cinematic Wild West-regret: your most cowboy song yet… but it’s also where Ringo sounds his most Scouse, on words like ‘learned’ and ‘burned’.

4.Never Let Me Go
Oh no! You were too quick on the draw! THIS is your most cowboy song yet! You’ll find the verse a little plodding and the song doesn’t really develop, but the Johnny Cash-like repetitive trance of its chorus will have you side-stepping in the most mesmerising line dance routine your mind can muster. On an album that (up to now) sounds almost-always authentically-American, the harmonica playing is all
British-invasion: it could be Mick Jagger and Keith Relf exchanging blows down The Marquee Club circa 1964. And if you’re anything like me, ‘Never Let Me Go’ will have your favourite vocal moment on the album: there’s something hat-tippingly perfect about Ringo’s delivery of the line ‘reckless lies and sad farewells’.

5.I Live For Your Love
Molly Tuttle’s haunting harmony returns: a ghost of the past to the lyric message of living in the present. A major-led melody with minor inflections, like a doe-eyed glare across a dancehall. Slow, but very sure of itself. Simple. Effective. Beautiful. Doesn’t outstay its welcome. A neat closer to Side A on the vinyl copy.

6.Come Back
Hold your horses. THIS IS THE COWBOY SONG. Like a Spaghetti-Western re-imagining of his solo scene in A Hard Day’s Night, you can’t help but picture Ringo trotting his way down-river. The very thought of it – that you’re listening to the same man, 60 years on, in such strong voice and with peace and love in his heart – is reason enough to buy this record. It’s almost bluegrass, with a tempting
chromatic riff and some exemplar whistling (courtesy of the man himself, so important to the song that ‘whistling’ is listed before ‘lead vocals’ on Ringo’s credits for this one). It’s surrealist lyric ‘one un-cloudy day’ could be straight from The Goon Show playbook of his youth, or a call back to some of that wartime scouse wisdom we’re always hearing Ringo remembering of Merseyside.

7.Can You Hear Me Call
You’re over halfway now and this is a well-placed second track on Side B, because it’s probably the skipper on the album (if you have to elect one). A nice-enough duet with a literal call and response. There are almost 53 years between the two protagonists of this love story, but it doesn’t feel uncomfortable. Tom Jones and Cerys Matthews this is not! The guitar motif will remind you of ‘Sunshine Life For Me (Sail Away Raymond)’ from 1973’s Ringo album. A nice touch, and worth a listen if only for the nostalgia of that. Why’s the title missing a question mark? Don’t worry about it, you’re in Nashville.

8.Rosetta
…the irresistible groove is heavy and boundless, with overdriven guitars making a dirty descent into  verse one. ‘The sun’s low in the sky’. It’s redolent of early-Led Zeppelin and it’s another line dancer. But where ‘Never Let Me Go’ was sunrise,
‘Rosetta’ is the first suggestion of sunset over Tennessee. ‘We could always stop the clock’ – the sound of liquor, smoke and of time standing still as the saloon doors are slammed and Ringo rides out of town. But in this story of two old lovers, the star-spangled lyrics reveal that it’s her who’s abandoned him. ‘Rosetta, where you been so long?’ This might just be your favourite, musically anyway.

9.You Want Some
Another missing question mark from a title? No, it’s clever. It’s not a gun-slinging challenge, it’s a statement. Ringo is telling you that you want some: he’s ‘…got love to give. Baby, that’s a-better than none. You want some.’ He only asks you ‘do you want some?’ at the end, and I’ll tell you what, if you know what’s good for you, you do want some. You might find this one a bit plodding as well, but it’s not cumbersome and he sings it well. The ending will bring to mind ‘You And Me (Babe)’ – the closer of Ringo (1973) – and, for that reason, it feels like it should be the last song, bringing down the jalousies on a fine album. Possibly a little out of place at Track 9, but when you hear where it’s going next, you’ll realise that it was an ending of sorts.

10.String Theory
The title alone takes you on a trip somewhere else to end Ringo’s long player. A little slice of psychedelia for our age of anxiety. ‘Everything dreams and radiates beams’. It’s all connected. You just feel safe. And Ringo is hip and wise to it. A nice drop on ‘Everything cries’ shows a vulnerable side to an otherwise uplifting and anthemic song and the musicianship is enchanting: a chiming, Byrds-like cacophony, plucking its own 12-string theory which will be hard to disprove. A great cosmic segue into the lasting remarks of the album’s conclusion.

11.Thankful
Alison Krauss makes an appearance just in time for sundown: the one track on the album penned by Ringo. And it’s autobiographical, but it’s not on the nose. It doesn’t mention meeting John, Paul and George or Rory Storm or the Maharishi. ‘I had it all, then I started to fall’. If you’ve ever read-up on Ringo’s struggles with substance abuse and depression, or you’ve had similar struggles yourself, this will resonate – it’s the sound of an almost 85-year old man, decades younger than his years in both
voice and appearance, happy with his lot, and ‘thankful’ for his fortune. Not his wealth, but his good fortune: his second chances at life and his loved ones. He’s singing to Barbara. ‘I needed a friend to help me along…now I have good days…and it’s a beautiful day here in California’. You might think the lyric ‘thankful you are here’ would’ve been better as ‘thankful you are near’ so as to avoid the repetition-rhyme from the previous line. That’s until you hear the pay-off. The album’s final
thought: ‘You are here’ – a mantra from the meditative mindset he’s carried with him for over 50 years. And it’s a perfect tonic from the world we’re in right now.

The Vinyl Package
The Lost Highway vinyl edition is smart. A monochrome gatefold, bookended with candid snaps of a youthful Ringo in various Western get-up, hallmark CND badges and mentions of peace and love opens to an elegant typeface in white and gold. The text is keen to remind us of T Bone Burnett’s involvement. And I suppose it’s warranted, because he wrote most of the material, played on a lot of it and produced
it all. He doesn’t steal Ringo’s thunder, though.

Just like the music behind the titles, the colour is all inside. A glossy lyric sheet unfolds to an A2 poster with another photograph of Ringo, this one posed: two fingers of peace held to the camera and a smile across his mouth that you’ll be sharing by now. The stars, on his shirt and all-over the album, suggest a better version of America than the one we have. It’s a hopeful image in so many ways.
And, importantly, Ringo’s collaborators are given due credit and a message of thanks: ‘I want to thank everyone who played on this record. Well done T Bone! Peace & Love.’

Ringo’s Round-up
Anytime I drop the needle on a new Fab release, there’s a knot where my stomach resided only seconds earlier – equal parts excitement and nerves. I just want it to be good. I don’t need anything ground breaking; Revolver’s still got that covered. I don’t need anything aspirational; Sgt. Pepper stands alone. I don’t need anything as expansive as All Things Must Pass or as eclectic as Ram or as political as Some Time In New York City or as glitzy as Sentimental Journey. I just want something that doesn’t affect the legitimacy of the existing canon. Something passable. I had the same feeling with McCartney III. And, strangely, Look Up elicited a similar response in me which is growing stronger with every spin.

The lyrics aren’t ground-breaking, the musical ideas aren’t exactly aspirational, the song structure isn’t eclectic, the running time at 36:57 isn’t expansive, other than the inescapable notion of America, it’s not a political album, and the artwork – although tasteful – isn’t particularly glitzy. But all of that’s also its biggest draw. It’s unfussy, confident, tasteful and relevant. It maintains a stylistic identity which holds, without resorting to parody. The lack of fade-outs, consistent use of instrumentation and just the right amount of imperfection make Look Up feel like a live band playing a set from start to finish: a running order with a sunrise-to-sunset arc, ending on Ringo’s heartfelt and positive message, wrought from a lifetime of experience.

The Beatles Handbook rating: 5 Stars
Essential tracks:
Look Up
Time On My Hands
Never Let Me Go
Rosetta
Thankful

P.S. as I was tidying up this article for publication, I was listening to Look Up on Spotify. After spending so long with the hard copy, I don’t remember a time when I’ve missed the tactility of vinyl as much. But streaming it offered a nugget of validation the vinyl could never: when the album finished playing and my Spotify algorithm side-stepped to a shuffle befitting what I’d just listened to, its first choice was ‘Loser’s Lounge’ from 1970’s Beaucoups of Blues. And it could’ve been cut from the same roll of studio tape. From Nashville to Nashville, 55 years apart, what a
vote of confidence. A gold star for Mr Starkey. 

Written by Jordan Frazer. Follow him on Twitter at @TheStylusMethod and find out more about the band at Bandcamp

The Beatles Albums Ranked

1 Revolver

Revolver

Most songwriters would give their right arm for just one of the melodies, riffs or chord sequences on Revolver. The playing is terrific too. From the looping bass, taut guitar stabs and crisp drumming of the opening ‘Taxman’, to the hallucinatory ‘Tomorrow Never Knows’ with that legendary, defining Ringo drum pattern, The Beatles sound like the tightest band on the planet.  And they don’t just hit the back of the net with rock, pop and psychedelia; whatever they turn their hand to on the album is pure gold, from the heart-breaking pathos of ‘Eleanor Rigby’ with its haunting double string quartet arrangement, to the achingly tender ‘Here, There and Everywhere’, arguably McCartney’s most beautiful love song. With every track a banger (and no, I’m not excluding ‘Yellow Submarine’ which has the hookiest chorus ever written), it’s unquestionably the highpoint of The Beatles recording career. An awe-inspiring achievement, especially when you consider it was released only eight months after Rubber Soul and that many of the tracks wouldn’t even make a top 20 of The Beatles best known songs.

Beatles Handbook rating: 5 Stars

Essential tracks
Eleanor Rigby
Here, There and Everywhere
And Your Bird Can Sing
Got To Get You Into My Life
Tomorrow Never Knows

Buy this album: Revolver

2 Help!

Help

For any other band, Help! would be a greatest hits album. But because this is The Beatles, it’s just another shift in the mop tops’ factory of greatness. With what must be the most impactful beginning of any pop album, ‘Help!’ makes for a direct, startling opening statement, vulnerable and yet uplifting as though by simply making the request, Lennon has made himself feel better. With only one track tipping the three minute mark (Ticket To Ride at a hardly epic 3m9s), the band rattle though 14 perfect slices of guitar pop.  Every track is a cracker, including the Ringo-sung ‘Act Naturally’.  As astonishingly excellent as the film it soundtracks is appallingly bad. 

Beatles Handbook rating: 5 Stars

Essential tracks
Help!
The Night Before
You’ve Got to Hide Your Love Away
You’re Going to Lose That Girl
Ticket To Ride

Buy this album: Help!

3 Rubber Soul

Rubber Soul
It’s amazing what you can do with some tight guitar riffs, even tighter vocal harmonies, passing piano chords and a killer hook line. ‘Beep, beep, beep, yeah’ indeed. It’s incredible to think that, a little more than two years earlier, the same four lads were banging, thrashing and crooning their way through a disparate rag bag of rudimentary rockers and schmaltzy ballads. And ‘Drive My Car’ is just one of any number of sophisticated, mature, memorable and melodic songs on what isn’t even their best album. It may be a music mag all-time-best-list staple but it can’t quite keep pace in terms of quality with Help!  or Revolver, but make no mistake, this is a band close to the very height of their powers sounding both assured, thrilling and moving by turns.

Beatles Handbook rating: 4 Stars

Essential tracks
Drive My Car
Norwegian Wood
Nowhere Man
The Word
Girl
I’m Looking Through You
In My Life

Buy this album: Rubber Soul

4 A Hard Day’s Night

Hard Days Night
As Luke Haines recently noted in his column in Record Collector, “the opening chord of ‘A Hard Day’s Night’… singlehandedly seemed to usher in a new era”.  It certainly ushered in a new era for the mop tops themselves with what might be considered by contemporary listeners as their first ‘proper’ album. Most of the Hamburg hard edges have been sanded off and chugging rock’n’roll for the most part replaced by sophisticated song writing with ace melodies and harmonies. Lennon dominates, taking lead vocals on nine out of the thirteen tracks and, according to beatlesarchive.net, writing ten, but McCartney still manages to make a big impression with his three contributions; the hauntingly beautiful ‘And I Love Her’ (the signature opening guitar motive courtesy of Harrison),  the instantly catchy ‘Things We Said Today’ and of course the timeless classic ‘Can’t Buy Me Love’.  Harrison is given ‘I’m Happy Just To Dance With You’ to sing, one of the weaker numbers that wouldn’t have been out of place on Please Please Me or With The Beatles but it’s still a pleasant enough sub-two minute listen. A great album that soundtracks the band’s finest moment on film.

Beatles Handbook rating: 4 Stars

Essential tracks

A Hard Day’s Night
I should Have Known Better
If I Fell
And I Love Her
Can’t Buy Me Love
Things We Said Today
I’ll Be Back

Buy this album:  Hard Day’s Night 

5 Let It Be

Let It Be

An album that includes songs of the quality of ‘Across The Universe’, ‘Let It Be’, ‘The Long and Winding Road’ and ‘Get Back’ should rate five stars, but it’s actually somewhat of a disappointment.  The inclusion of two sub-one minute tracks (‘Dig It’ and ‘Maggie Mae’), a piece of Lennon juvenilia in the form of ‘One After 909’, and Harrison’s lightweight ‘For You Blue’ gives Let It Be an uneven quality. That’s exacerbated but the inclusion of second division songs (at least in the context of The Beatles catalogue) ‘Dig a Pony’ and ‘I’ve Got a Feeling’, but it’s hardly surprising once you’ve seen the film Get Back and understand the chaotic nature of the rehearsal and recording sessions for the album. McCartney’s touching and wistful ‘Two of Us’ and Harrison’s waltzing ‘I Me Mine’ are the album’s two relatively hidden gems.    

Beatles Handbook rating: 3 stars

Essential tracks
Two of Us
Across The Universe
I Me Mine
Let It Be
The Long and Winding Road
Get Back

Buy this album: Let It Be

6 The Beatles (White Album)

The Beatles White Album
Where to start with The Beatles by The Beatles? An album that sounds like an extended re-issue of itself with bonus tracks that should never have seen the light of day (WTAF is Wild Honey Pie?). Starting at the beginning is actually a very good idea as you get to hear ace rocker ‘Back In The U.S.S.R’., the dreamy psychedelia of ‘Dear Prudence’ and the archly self-referential ‘Glass Onion’. Then the problems start. Oh bloody hell, it’s ‘Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da’, McCartney at his absolute worst, culturally appropriating a story that’s not his to tell over a weird and horrible umpah-meets-cod-reggae backing track. Jesus wept. At least the aforementioned ‘Wild Honey Pie’, the next track up, with its faux avant garde stylings has the decency to last a merciful 53 seconds.

I’m not going parse all 30 tracks of this sprawling mess, but suffice to say that to get to every magnificent song such as Harrison’s ‘While My Guitar Gently Weeps’, Lennon’s ‘Julia’  or McCartney’s ‘Blackbird’ you have to wade through dreck like ‘The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill’ or the more than eight unlistenable minutes of ‘Revolution 9’ (if anyone tries to tell you that, actually, that’s their favourite Beatles song, run). It is however almost worth the slog to end up at one of the loveliest songs the band ever recorded, ‘Good Night’, affectingly sung by Ringo.

Beatles Handbook rating: 3 stars 

Essential tracks
Back In The USSR
Dear Prudence
While My Guitar Gently Weeps
Happiness Is A Warm Gun
Martha My Dear
Helter Skelter
Julia
Mother Nature’s Son
Everybody’s Got Something to Hide
Revolution 1
Cry Baby Cry
Good Night

Buy this album: The Beatles

7 Beatles For Sale

Beatles For Sale
Sorry, I’m not buying. Compared to the giant leap forward that was A Hard Day’s Night, Beatles For Sale is a big step back. But let’s be fair; it was released just 21 weeks after Hard Day and was the fabs fourth album in two years. No wonder they resorted to padding out the 33 minute running time with no less than six cover versions. We are sadly back in Hamburg it seems, but at least Chuck Berry’s ‘Rock’n’Roll’ and Leiber/Stoller/Penniman’s ‘Kansas City’ sound convincingly raucous. The less said about Ringo’s rather painful stab at Carl Perkins’ ‘Honey Don’t’ the better.  Of the originals, ‘Eight Days a Week’ is the obvious stand out but the nakedly vulnerable, confessional lyrics of ‘I’m A Loser’ are striking, ‘Every Little Thing’ is a beautifully constructed pop song full of hooks, and Harrison’s twelve string riff gives ‘What You’re Doing’ a distinctive sound that would be much copied by the likes of The Byrds.

Beatles Handbook rating: 3 stars

Essential tracks
No Reply
I’m A Loser
I’ll Follow The Sun
Eight Days a Week
Every Little Thing
What You’re Doing

Buy this album: Beatles for Sale

 

8 Abbey Road

Abbey Road

The band’s final recordings (although penultimate release; Let It Be appeared eight months later) are sadly a rather scrappy affair. Harrison comes out on top with two stone cold, all time classics in ‘Something’ and ‘Here Comes The Sun’, not only the best songs on the album, but among the best he ever wrote and among the best of the entire Beatles catalogue. Lennon’s strident ‘Come Together’ makes an ear-grabbingly effective opener, especially with Ringo’s rolling drum pattern, one of the most famous in pop history. 

Beyond that, things get rather messy. Apart from inventing three chord punk nearly a decade before the Sex Pistols with ‘Polythene Pam’, there is McCartney’s music hall fetish in the form of ‘Maxwell’s Silver Hammer’, the white man’s doo-wop of ‘Oh! Darling’ and whatever the hell ‘Octopus’s Garden’ is meant to be to contend with. Not to mention a patience-testing 7 minutes 47 seconds of ‘I Want You (She’s So Heavy)’, although the extended instrumental outro is pretty mesmerising. 

There are some stunning moments scattered around, ‘Sun King’ is a rather lovely thing, reminiscent of Fleetwood Mac’s ‘Albatross’, and there are some great melodies on ‘You Never Give Me Your Money’ and ‘Golden Slumbers’, but ultimately the album fails to cohere in the same way as Revolver or Help!.

Beatles Handbook rating: 3 Stars

Essential tracks
Something
Here Comes The Sun
Sun King 
You Never Give Me Your Money
Golden Slumbers

Buy this album: Abbey Road

9 Magical Mystery Tour

Magical Mystery Tour
Not a full studio album as such but a compilation of a double ep soundtrack to a made-for-TV film plus some singles. It might be a bit of a mess thematically (as is the film itself, and that’s putting it mildly) but that’s hardly a rare trait in the Beatles album canon and it does contain some of The Beatles best-known songs.  The original British ep release not only included the rousing title track (a far better signature tune for a concept than St. Pepper’s) but ‘The Fool On The Hill’ one of McCartney’s greatest and most unusual compositions, ‘I Am The Walrus’, Lennon’s most successful stab at musical and lyrical surrealism, and Harrison’s remarkable, woozy and weird ‘Blue Jay Way’ (is there anything in pop or rock that sounds quite like it?).

The collection of non-album A and B sides that make up the rest of the album is almost ridiculous in terms of its quality. ‘Hello, Goodbye’, ‘Strawberry Fields Forever’, ‘Penny Lane’ and ‘All You Need Is Love’ are of course among the cream of the Beatles crop; even ‘Baby, You’re A Rich Man’, the B-side of ‘All You Need Is Love’ is a cracker.

Because it’s status as an album is questionable and having all those non-album singles on it is sort of ‘cheating’ in the context of the band’s other releases which lack that advantage, it appears lower down on this list than it might do.  A great listen, especially for those whose favourite Beatles album would be ‘The Best of The Beatles’.

Beatles Handbook rating: 4 stars

Essential tracks
The Fool On The Hill
I Am The Walrus
Blue Jay Way
Hello, Goodbye
Strawberry Fields Forever
Penny Lane
All You Need Is Love

Buy this album: Magical Mystery Tour 

10 Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band

Sgt Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band
The first Beatles album I bought as a kid, aged 11. I never really liked it and now, more than four decades years later, I still don’t. It sounds to me like a band losing their way; the Sgt Pepper’s conceit merely a way of bringing some sort of cohesion to a very disparate group of songs written by musicians with one eye on the exit door.  You can either view the juxtaposition of ‘Within You Without You’ and ‘When I’m Sixty Four’ as audacious and daring or simply desperate. ‘Lucy In The Sky’ has aged badly into try-hard psychedelia; ‘Fixing a Hole’ is uninspired, lumbering and mundane, ‘She’s Leaving Home’ is a re-tread of the vastly superior ‘Eleanor Rigby’ and ‘Being For The Benefit of Mr. Kite!’ is much less clever and much less listenable than Lennon probably thought it was.  ‘A Day In Life”s haunting refrain is swamped by over production and the unwelcome intrusion of McCartney’s ‘middle eight’. It’s a striking, innovative piece but I’m not sure I’d ever want to listen to it for fun. It’s another album that would make a great EP with ‘With A Little Help From My Friends’ and Ringo’s touchingly performed vocal providing the lead track.

Beatles Handbook rating: 3 stars 

Essential tracks
With A Little Help From My Friends
Getting Better
Lovely Rita
Good Morning Good Morning

Buy this album: Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band

 

11 Yellow Submarine

Yellow Submarine

A curio in The Beatles album canon. The soundtrack to the animated film contains only four previously unreleased songs, the rest of the running time made up from the title track, which previously appeared on Revolver,  ‘All You Need Is Love’ which was a single and also collected on Magical Mystery Tour, and George Martin’s instrumental orchestral music for the film, none of which will be troubling us here. Unusually, Harrison gets two out of the four new cuts and both are very decent examples of late period Beatles. The inventive and unusual ‘Only A Northern Song’ is built around a loping bassline and random-sounding soundscape of squawling trumpets and backwards tape loops that is much easier on the ear than that description might sound. ‘It’s All Too Much’ is a medium paced stomper with a droning organ riff and busy percussion track supporting a lilting verse melody and catchy chorus hook that all adds up to a distinctive and enjoyable addition to the bands catalogue. ‘Hey Bulldog’s driving piano riff underpins a snarling, menacing Lennon vocal to great effect, but McCartney’s throwaway knees up ‘All Together Now’ irritates rather than amuses. One for Beatles collectors rather than the general listener.

Beatles Handbook rating
3 Stars

Essential tracks
Northern Song
Hey Bulldog
It’s All Too Much

Buy this album: Yellow Submarine

12 Please Please Me

Please Please Me

Released shortly after their return from their extended show band stint in Hamburg, Please Please Me sounds like a historical recording from an ancient civilisation. That the album sounds underwhelming now should come as no surprise; after all, The Beatles had been so busy performing for eight hours a day that they hadn’t quite got around to creating modern pop music.
 
Instead, we get a rather underpowered impersonation of The Beatles’ rock’n’roll heroes (‘I Saw Her Standing There’ sounds pretty energetic until you play ‘Good Golly Miss Molly’ immediately after and Little Richard really blows your hair back) along with some pretty schlocky and sappy love songs.  The title track hints at the greatness to come, as does Lennon’s  plaintive harmonica refrain on ‘There’s A Place’ and the song’s touchingly introspective lyrics. Ringo’s forceful, driving vocal on ‘Boys’ is another highlight.
 
For those that lived through the era, it’s no doubt an essential album and that has to be respected, but if you missed out on those heady days this is a record you can probably live without.


Beatles Handbook rating
2  Stars

Essential tracks
Please Please Me
Do You Want To Know A Secret
Baby It’s You
Boys
There’s A Place

Buy this album: Please Please Me

 

13 With The Beatles

With The Beatles
Released eight months after Please Please Me, the band’s second album sticks pretty much to the debut’s formula with again, eight originals and six covers including Chuck Berry’s ‘Roll Over Beethoven’. It’s a similar mix of rockers and sappy love songs but this time there’s a high quotient of original top pop tunes including the urgent opening track ‘It Won’t Be Long’, the timeless classic ‘All My Loving’ and Harrison’s sombre and relatively overlooked ‘Don’t Bother Me’. But as an album, it still sounds too much like it’s based around a got-to-please-them-all Hamburg set list.

Beatles Handbook rating
2 Star

Essential tracks
It Won’t Be Long 
All My Loving
Not a Second Time
Don’t Bother Me

Buy this album: With The Beatles 

The Essential Beatles Playlist

I Listened to all The Beatles albums in order and these are the tracks I liked