And Your Bird Can Sing

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"And Your Bird Can Sing" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles. It was released on their 1966 album Revolver, apart from in the United States and Canada, where it instead appeared on Yesterday and Today. The song was written mainly by John Lennon and credited to Lennon–McCartney. The recording features an extended dual-guitar melody, played by George Harrison and Paul McCartney, which anticipated the harmonised guitar arrangements commonly used by Southern rock, hard rock and heavy metal bands.

Lennon was later dismissive of "And Your Bird Can Sing", referring to it as "another of my throwaways ... fancy paper around an empty box".<ref name="Sheff2010">Template:Cite book</ref> The song's working title was "You Don't Get Me". Its oblique lyrics and Lennon's failure to reveal their meaning have encouraged several interpretations. One popular theory is that Lennon was addressing Frank Sinatra in response to a hagiographic article on the singer in Esquire magazine; another contends that the song was directed at Mick Jagger with reference to Marianne Faithfull.

The Beatles first recorded the track in the style of the Byrds. This discarded version was released on the 1996 outtakes compilation Anthology 2 and includes the sound of Lennon and McCartney laughing their way through a vocal overdub and unable to sing. This version of the song was included (without the laughing overdub) on the second disc of the 2022 Super Deluxe Edition of Revolver.

Background and inspiration

Aside from dismissing it as a substandard work, John Lennon never discussed "And Your Bird Can Sing".Template:Sfn His first wife Cynthia recalled that the song was inspired by her presenting Lennon with a clockwork bird inside a gilded cage, wrapped in gift paper, apart from the wind-up mechanism. She wound up the bird as she handed the present to Lennon so that it sang, leaving him with "an expression of sheer disbelief on his face" as he removed the wrapping paper. According to author Kenneth Womack, Lennon viewed the caged imitation bird as a metaphor for his marriage and a reflection of Cynthia's inability to understand him.Template:Sfn The song's working title was "You Don't Get Me".Template:Sfn

One of the most popular interpretations of Lennon's lyrics is as a riposte to Frank Sinatra (pictured performing in a 1966 TV special with his daughter Nancy).<ref name="Fontenot/About" />

The lack of an explanation from Lennon himself has led others to speculate on its meaning;Template:Sfn music journalist Robert Fontenot states that the lyrics are among "the most speculated-upon of any Beatles track".<ref name="Fontenot/About" /> In his 2007 book Can't Buy Me Love, Jonathan Gould says that Lennon wrote "And Your Bird Can Sing" about Frank Sinatra after reading a hagiographic article on the singer in Esquire magazine.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Written by Gay Talese, the article detailed Sinatra's wealth and power, describing him as "the fully emancipated male ... the man who can have anything he wants", and repeatedly mentioned his use of the word "bird" to mean a penis.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn Talese quoted a press release for Sinatra's upcoming TV special, which stated it was a show for those who were "tired of kid singers wearing mops of hair thick enough to hide a crate of melons", and he said Sinatra aimed to "communicate his talent to some rock-and-rollers – in a sense, he was battling The Beatles".Template:Sfn Gould adds that while Lennon would have been amused to read about Sinatra having an assistant dedicated to maintaining his 60 "remarkably convincing" hairpieces, Lennon was piqued at the recognition afforded Sinatra, at the Beatles' expense, in the recent 1966 Grammy Awards.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Refn

Singer Marianne Faithfull said the song was addressed to Mick Jagger and written about her since she was Jagger's girlfriend (or "bird" in English slang) at the time.Template:Sfn That interpretation was proposed by journalist Richard Simpson,Template:Sfn and others have cited it as an example of the perceived rivalry between the Beatles and Jagger's band, the Rolling Stones.Template:Sfn According to Beatles biographer Steve Turner, Faithfull's interpretation is incorrect since she was not in a relationship with Jagger until later in 1966.Template:Sfn Some writers have speculated that Lennon's lyrics were directed at Paul McCartney.<ref name="Fontenot/About" /> According to Rolling Stone, and supported by Womack, the line "You say you've seen seven wonders" could be a reference to a comment McCartney made in 1964 when the Beatles were smoking cannabis with Bob Dylan in New York.<ref name=rollingstone>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>Template:Sfn Under the effects of the drug, McCartney declared that he knew the answer to the questions of existence and told Beatles roadie Mal Evans to write down any statements he made on the subject. McCartney was later dismayed to discover that, rather than the ingenious declarations he recalled, his realisations amounted to the phrase "There are seven levels."Template:Sfn

Photographer Robert Whitaker based his photo "Birdcage" on the song's lyrics.<ref name="Hunt/MojoSpecial" /> The photo shows George Harrison's head and shoulders inside a birdcageTemplate:Sfn with the cage door open.<ref name="Hunt/MojoSpecial">Template:Cite book</ref> The cage was among the props assembled by Whitaker for the 25 March 1966 shoot that produced another photo – featuring the Beatles in butchers' coats and covered in dismembered dolls and raw meatTemplate:Sfn – that was selected for the cover of the US LP Yesterday and Today.Template:Sfn

Arrangement and recording

"And Your Bird Can Sing" contains an extended harmony-lead guitar melody played by Harrison and McCartney.Template:Sfn The latter recalled that he and Harrison wrote the part during the recording sessions.Template:Sfn McCartney also stated that he helped with the lyrics and attributed the song "80–20" to Lennon.Template:Sfn

The Beatles first recorded the song on 20 April 1966Template:Sfn at EMI Studios (subsequently Abbey Road Studios) in London.Template:Sfn The arrangement was markedly similar to the Byrds' sound,Template:Sfn featuring lush vocal harmonies and jangle-style guitars,Template:Sfn with Harrison playing his Rickenbacker 360/12 electric guitar.<ref name=rollingstone/>Template:Sfn While carrying out vocal overdubs on the track, Lennon and McCartney were overcome by hysterical laughter and unable to sing their parts.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Later released on the 1996 Anthology 2 outtakes compilation album, the performance includes the pair giggling, uttering spoken asides, and whistling along with the melody.Template:Sfn In his liner notes for the album, Beatles historian Mark Lewisohn comments that the tapes do not indicate the source of the laughter.<ref>Template:Cite AV media notes</ref>Template:Refn

The group re-recorded the song on 26 April.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Whereas the first version was in the key of D major,Template:Sfn the remake was played in E major,Template:Sfn with the guitarists applying capos to allow for the two-semitone adjustment.<ref name="Guitar world 50 moments" /> Beatles biographer Robert Rodriguez and music critic Richie Unterberger speculate that the remake was motivated by the Beatles' realisation that the 20 April recording was overly derivative of the Byrds and that this aspect had possibly come about through a pun on the word "bird".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The session began with Lennon's tongue-in-cheek introduction, "Okay, boys – quite brisk, moderato, foxtrot",Template:Sfn and the group performing a rhythm track that Lewisohn terms "very heavy", before the mood was lightened in subsequent takes.Template:Sfn The twin lead-guitar approach replaced the Rickenbacker jangle from the first version, and the vocal arrangement was pared down to feature mainly Lennon.Template:Sfn Harrison and McCartney used their Epiphone Casinos for the lead-guitar lines.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In the description of Charles Shaar Murray, the completed track is nevertheless one of the guitar-based songs on Revolver that "glisten" with "cascades of jangle", as the Beatles responded to "what The Byrds had done with the Fabs' own proto-folk-rock sound on A Hard Day's Night".<ref name="CSM/Mojo">Template:Cite book</ref>

The band used Take 10 as their basic track before overdubs.Template:Sfn The latter included McCartney's bass guitar and Ringo Starr adding cymbal and extra hi-hat to augment his drum part.Template:Sfn Since the group liked the stuttering bass notes that McCartney had played at the end of take 6, the latter portion was spliced onto the master to close the recording.Template:Sfn

Release

"And Your Bird Can Sing" was one of the three songs intended for Revolver that the Beatles reluctantly gave to Capitol Records for inclusion on the North American LP Yesterday and Today.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The song was mixed for that purpose on 14 May.Template:Sfn It was sequenced as the opening track on side two of the LP,Template:Sfn which was released on 20 June in the United States after Capitol had been pressured into withdrawing Whitaker's "butcher sleeve" cover.Template:Sfn

The song was remixed on 6 June, towards the end of the Revolver sessions.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn "And Your Bird Can Sing" was sequenced as the second track on side two of the album and issued in the United Kingdom on 5 August.Template:Sfn Its omission from the eleven-song US Revolver ensured that Lennon was under-represented on the LP.Template:Sfn Since the three new songs on Yesterday and Today were all his, Capitol's version of Revolver included just two songs for which he was the principal writer.Template:Sfn

The Beatles did not perform any of the songs from Revolver during their August 1966 US tour.Template:Sfn While acknowledging that several of the tracks would have been impossible to reproduce in concert, Unterberger says that guitar-based songs such as "And Your Bird Can Sing" would have been easy to arrange for live performance. He views its omission as indicative of the band's mindset that touring had become a futile exercise but rues that they did not seek to regain enthusiasm by playing recent material that would have suited their stage act.Template:Sfn Recalling the album's release in his 1977 book The Beatles Forever, Nicholas Schaffner commented that whereas the group's more traditional fans warmed to McCartney's new songs, "Lennon's numbers were a different kettle of fish entirely" due to their oblique lyrics. While he also viewed the music of "And Your Bird Can Sing" as a natural choice for live performance, relative to the more complex recordings on Revolver, he added:

But what was/is one to make of lines like "You say you've seen seven wonders / And your bird is green / But you don't see me ...?" Perhaps John was still under the influence of Bob Dylan, who at the time seemed to take pleasure in confounding dissectors of his "message" with cryptic lyrics that made no sense at all.Template:Sfn

Reception

In 2006, Mojo placed "And Your Bird Can Sing" at number 41 on its list of "The 101 Greatest Beatles Songs". In his commentary on the track, English academic Toby Litt admired its Indian drone quality and the raga influence in the guitar melody. He said that the riff was perhaps "the most baroque that pop music ever came up with", adding: "Slow it down and it could be a Bach chorale."<ref name="Litt/MojoBest">Template:Cite magazine</ref> The following year, Q magazine ranked the song at number 6 on its list "The 20 Greatest Guitar Tracks".Template:Sfn In October 2008, Guitar World magazine ranked Harrison's playing on the song at number 69 on its list of the "100 Greatest Guitar Solos".Template:Sfn<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In his 50th anniversary review for Revolver, Steve Marinucci of Billboard described "And Your Bird Can Sing" as "an incredibly ambitious song, highlighted by a superb guitar solo by George Harrison".<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Thomas Ward of AllMusic describes the song as one of the finest on Revolver. He writes that although Lennon was indifferent to the song and the lyrics were "probably nonsense", it's "wildly entertaining" and complements the vocal performances. Ward further praises Harrison's guitar playing, the "lovely" melody and the "unorthodox, yet ingenious bridge".<ref name="AllMusic review">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Rob Sheffield of Rolling Stone writes that despite Lennon's dislike of it, "And Your Bird Can Sing" is "one of his best songs ever", describing it as "scathing ... yet also empathetic and friendly".<ref name="RS Sheffield">Template:Cite magazine</ref>

Legacy

"And Your Bird Can Sing" was used as the theme song for the Beatles' cartoon series during its third season.<ref name="Fontenot/About">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It was one of the 45 playable tracks included in the 2009 release of the music video game The Beatles: Rock Band.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In addition to the song's lyric being among the most widely and diversely interpreted in the Beatles' discography, the Anthology 2 recording is one of the band's most celebrated outtakes.<ref name="Fontenot/About" />

The use of dual, harmonised lead guitar parts on the track was still in its infancy in 1966. The editors of Guitar World comment that this type of pop-rock arrangement would later be popularised by Southern rock bands such as the Allman Brothers Band and Lynyrd Skynyrd, as well as hard rock and metal acts such as Thin Lizzy, Boston and Iron Maiden.<ref name="Guitar world 50 moments">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> American guitarist Joe Walsh sought to master the solo on "And Your Bird Can Sing", believing that Harrison had played it in a single take.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Walsh, who married the sister of Starr's second wife, Barbara Bach, said he only discovered that it consisted of two parts when discussing with Starr how he had spent years labouring over the solo. Walsh concluded, "I think I’m the only guy who can play it – including George."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

"And Your Bird Can Sing" was included on the Beatles' 2012 iTunes Store compilation Tomorrow Never Knows, which the band's website described as a collection of "the Beatles' most influential rock songs".Template:Sfn In his commentary for Mojo, Litt identified the track as "the birth of all powerpop, from Big Star through Cheap Trick to Fountains of Wayne" and the inspiration for other artists that "use jangle to attack".<ref name="Litt/MojoBest" /> Steve Turner credits Revolver with "open[ing] the doors to psychedelic rock (or acid rock)" and says that the primitive means by which it was recorded (on four-track equipment) inspired the work that artists such as Pink Floyd, Genesis, Yes and the Electric Light Orchestra were able to achieve with advances in studio technology.Template:Sfn In 2002, Genesis drummer and vocalist Phil Collins said it was his favourite Beatles album and highlighted "And Your Bird Can Sing" as "one of the best songs ever written, and it's only a minute and a half long".<ref name="Hodgkinson/Guardian" />Template:Refn

Jim Reid of the Jesus and Mary Chain contributed a recording of the song to Revolver Reloaded,<ref name="Reloaded/Mojo" /> a CD that accompanied MojoTemplate:'s July 2006 issue celebrating the fortieth anniversary of the Beatles' album.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The magazine's editors commented that Reid's version suggests that Phil Spector would have been an ideal choice to produce "arguably the finest UK band of the '80s".<ref name="Reloaded/Mojo">Template:Cite magazine</ref> Among the other artists who have covered "And Your Bird Can Sing" are the Flamin' Groovies, the Charles River Valley Boys, Spanky and Our Gang, the Jam, Guadalcanal Diary, Matthew Sweet and Susanna Hoffs, Les Fradkin, R. Stevie Moore and I Fight Dragons.<ref name="Fontenot/About" />

Personnel

According to Ian MacDonald, except where noted:Template:Sfn

Notes

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References

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