About: Revolution 1   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

enter brief synopsis here

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Revolution 1
rdfs:comment
  • enter brief synopsis here
  • "You say you want a revolution" was not just a rhetorical question. In 1968, a revolution swept across the United States. "Yippies" took over the country, and created a new society.
  • It is a slower and longer version of the song and has more melody and beat than the other. "Revolution 1" was recorded between 30 May and 4 June 1968, about 6 weeks before "Revolution," but released nearly three months later than the single. Lennon wanted the initial version to be released as a single but the other band members said it was too slow for a single. The original version, re-titled "Revolution 1" to distinguish it from the single version, was released on The Beatles in late November 1968.
comic issue
  • Revolution #1
BriefSynopsis
  • enter brief synopsis here
dcterms:subject
Appearing
  • Featured Characters Featured Vehicles & Equipment Featured Locations
dbkwik:gijoe/prope...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:music/prope...iPageUsesTemplate
Album
  • The Beatles (The White Album)
Series
Footnotes
  • *Coming soon
Publication date
  • September 2016
Penciller
  • Fico Ossio
Solos
Preceded By
Pages
  • 22(xsd:integer)
Letterer
  • Tom B. Long
Synopsis
  • enter full summary here
Released
  • 1968(xsd:integer)
By
Continuity
Colorist
  • Sebastian Cheng
Publisher
Writer
  • John Barber & Cullen Bunn
Followed By
abstract
  • enter brief synopsis here
  • "You say you want a revolution" was not just a rhetorical question. In 1968, a revolution swept across the United States. "Yippies" took over the country, and created a new society.
  • It is a slower and longer version of the song and has more melody and beat than the other. "Revolution 1" was recorded between 30 May and 4 June 1968, about 6 weeks before "Revolution," but released nearly three months later than the single. Lennon wanted the initial version to be released as a single but the other band members said it was too slow for a single. Lennon, slightly irritated, resolved to remake the song in a version as loud and raucous as anything the Beatles had released, and he led the band through the faster recording which ended up backing "Hey Jude". Searching for a highly distorted and 'dirty'-sounding guitar sound, they plugged the guitars directly into the recording console, overloading the channel, and the resulting highly distorted tone satisfied Lennon and became the distinctive sound of the released version. The original version, re-titled "Revolution 1" to distinguish it from the single version, was released on The Beatles in late November 1968.
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