Art &Technology
- Pop Art - Blake, Hamilton

The close connections of popular art and so called "High Art" can be seen in the cooperative projects between pop-bands and artists. Richard Hamilton was commissioned to do the cover for the Beatles' "The White Album" and it was his his painter colleague Peter Blake who did the design for the "Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band":

Peter Blake. 1967

Fig.: Cover of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band by Peter Blake, 1967

The cover of Sgt. Pepper's was designed by Peter Blake, and the photos were taken by Michael Cooper at Chelsea Manor Photographic Studios on March 30, 1967.

Peter Blake's
original sketch
for the Sgt. Pepper's Cover

 


Although most of the next two weeks would be taken up by recording the two songs for their next single, Strawberry Fields and Penny Lane, recording for Sgt. Pepper's started on December 8, 1966 with take one of When I'm Sixty-Four. The last track recorded was violins and cellos for Within You Without You on April 3, 1967, and mixing was completed April 20. Almost as an afterthought, the sounds for the Sgt. Pepper's ending groove were recorded the next day.

The original working title of A Day In The Life was "In The Life Of..." A rare session outside of Abbey Road occurred during the time of the Sgt. Pepper sessions at Regent Sound Studio in London for part of Fixing A Hole on February 9, 1967. Also during this period, the long-lost avante-garde Beatles recording called Carnival of Light was recorded on January 5, 1967.

Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band was officially released in both mono and stereo on June 1, 1967, although it was rush released in the UK on May 26. It was actually played on the radio in Britain on the BBC show Where It's At, the week before on May 20, except for A Day In The Life, which had been banned by the BBC the day earlier, on the grounds that it could encourage a permissive attitude towards drugs.



Missing In Action

Several people who were intended to be included on the cover never made it, including Elvis, Hitler and Jesus.

In addition, two people who were included were later removed by photographic retouching.

  

In these pics from alternate shots of the cover photo, you can still see Leo Gorcey, who was removed because he requested a fee, and Ghandi, because EMI felt his inclusion might offend record buyers in India.


Album Variations

Because of the way 8-Tracks cartridges worked, they had to contain 4 segments of similar length. When they were released on 8-Tracks, most LPs had to have their song order scrambled so that the songs fit properly on four programs.

However, when Capitol made the 8-Track of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, not only did they change the track order, but they actually edited a song to be longer so that it would fill up one program.

     Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
Capitol 8XT-2653

Program 1
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
A Little Help From My Friends (sic)
Fixing A Hole
Being For The Benefit of Mr. Kite

Program 2
Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds
Getting Better
She's Leaving Home

Program 3
Within You Without You
A Day In The Life

Program 4
When I'm Sixty-Four
Lovely Rita
Good Morning Good Morning
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)

On the Capitol Sgt. Pepper's 8-Track, about ten seconds of the ending of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise) was edited back onto the end of the track. The Capitol 8-Track is the only place this strange edited version appears.

For those of you who haven't heard this since you sold your '66 Chevy, or for those of you who weren't even born when 8-Tracks were popular, here is a soundclip of the edited version copied from an actual Capitol Sgt. Pepper's 8-Track.

444k Real
Audio File Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)
(Edited Capitol 8-Track Version)


Silly Censorship

In another Sgt. Pepper's related oddity, the official version of the Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band LP made by EMI in South East Asia/Malaysia/Hong Kong was censored of three songs that apparently could have possibly been interpreted as being "drug related".

The songs that were removed were With A Little Help From My Friends, Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds and A Day In The Life. They were replaced on the album with three songs from the Magical Mystery Tour album; The Fool On The Hill, Baby You're A Rich Man and I'm The Walrus (sic).

In addition, making this record a double oddity, the reverse cover of this album, seen above, did not contain the lyrics to the songs normally found on the back of the Sgt. Pepper's album (probably because it wasn't possible for them to redo all the lyrics including the new songs and without the removed songs). Instead it features the same picture as the normal reverse cover, but without lyrics printed over it, probably the only place this picture was ever seen this way.

In 1977, Korea issued its own strange version of Sgt. Pepper's, the front cover of which is shown below, having been removed of all of the famous people that graced the original cover.

Like the Malaysian version, this release also was censored of Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds and A Day In The Life. The blank space in the last column of its rear cover, shown below, and the different picture of the beatles required by the resetting of the type on top of them, are the byproducts of the missing songs.


The Sincerest Form of Flattery

The very distinctive Sgt. Pepper's cover has been copied several times.

Japanese artist Jun Fukamachi released a now very rare electronic version of Sgt. Pepper's in 1977 on Japan's EMI Toshiba label. The cover is a reproduction of the original Sgt. Pepper's photo, except everyone is facing backwards.

Over the years, the very popular animated TV show The Simpsons has included many references to the Beatles.

The title sequence of every episode of The Simpsons ends slightly differently, these are called "the couch gags" because the Simpson family ends up sitting down on the couch in front of the TV in a different way. However, one special "couch gag" didn't end on a couch at all, instead they all gathered in a recreation of the Sgt. Pepper cover to a sustained chord reminiscent of the end of A Day In The Life.

In another homage to the Sgt. Pepper's cover, Geffen records recently released the second collection of music from The Simpsons. This new CD is called The Yellow Album, and it's cover also parodies the Sgt. Pepper's cover. In both of these parodies, all of the people in the background are the residents of the Simpsons' town, Springfield.