THE WHITE ALBUM ![]()
One student came up with the name, the Holy Ghost Reception Committee #9 – the numeral I figure came from the Ed Wood cult classic horror film Plan 9 from Outer Space, but I'm just guessing. (Their first album predates The Beatles – the so-called White Album – that included the avant garde track "Revolution 9", so that wasn't it).
(August 2014)
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Paul McCartney has said that the origin of "Mother Mary" is not Mary the Mother of Jesus, but rather his own mother, Mary Mohin McCartney, who had died of cancer when he was 14. McCartney had a dream about his mother during the tumultuous period when the double-LP The Beatles – a/k/a the White Album – was being recorded; he recalled (as quoted in Wikipedia): "'It was great to visit with her again. I felt very blessed to have that dream. So that got me writing "Let it Be".' He also said in a later interview about the dream that his mother had told him, 'It will be all right, just let it be.' When asked if the song referred to the Virgin Mary, however, McCartney has typically answered the question by assuring his fans that they can interpret the song however they would like."
In addition to "Mother Mary" – a term frequently used by believers to refer to Mary – Wikipedia notes that "let it be" is also a part of the response by Mary to the Annunciation by the Angel Gabriel: “Behold, I am the servant of the Lord; let it be to me according to your word” (Luke 1:38).
(September 2014)
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But it was on The Beatles (“the White Album”) where George Harrison really shone both as a performer and as a songwriter. By contrast, much of the Lennon/McCartney material were story songs about animals – Harrison also wrote one of these, "Piggies" – and throwaways like "Why Don't We Do it in the Road".
(June 2015)
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