Just about every song in the Fab Fourโs discography has touched the heart of at least one fan through the years. And there are plenty of songs by The Beatles that fans would kill to be able to hear again for the very first time. Letโs look at a few of our favorites!
1. โBlue Jay Wayโ
This 1967 Magical Mystery Tour track isnโt the bandโs most well-known track by any means. Itโs a deep cut of sorts, if you would consider anything The Beatles recorded to be a deep cut.
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โBlue Jay Wayโ almost feels like a homage by the band for the band. It has all of the go-to stylistic and artistic choices that the Fab Four popularized, bouncing from tape speed to tape speed and offering a generous dose of their unique use of phasing and flanging. George Harrisonโs voice is otherworldly on this one.
2. โTomorrow Never Knowsโ
This writer personally heard this song for the first time decades after it was released, and the memory of it is still quite fresh. Even in the 1990s, few songs matched the energy, psychedelic nature, and overall musical power of โTomorrow Never Knowsโ from the 1966 record Revolver.
It was the first song to be recorded for the album. From its droning bass to its notably new overall style, The Beatles had not written and recorded a song quite like it during their career.
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3. โStrawberry Fields Foreverโ
โStrawberry Fields Foreverโ is by far one of the most popular Beatles songs of all time, and many fans (especially from back in the day) would give anything to hear it for the first time again.
Another excellent Magical Mystery Tour track, โStrawberry Fields Foreverโ is one of the bandโs most beautiful and heartwarming tunes with excellently written melodies, and its intensity doesnโt take away from its message.
4. โBlackbirdโ
This White Album classic from 1968 is one of Paul McCartneyโs best pieces of written work. It was a gift of sorts to black Americans, particularly women, who were struggling with the civil rights movement in the American South at the time.
Today, itโs still considered a soft and inspiring piece of work that soothes even the weariest of souls. Hearing it again for the first time would be quite an experience, though likely a tear-jerking one.
5. โRevolution 9โ
Another White Album go-to, โRevolution 9โ finds itself between โoldishโ and โnewishโ Beatles. It wasnโt particularly experimental, but it is an extremely detailed piece of work. Itโs like a musical collage, in a way.
โRevolution 9โ boasts elements that are cut and pasted together just so, and the result isnโt messy. Rather, itโs a cohesive final product with its own story to tell.
Photo by David Redfern/Redferns
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