Bring Back the Beatles

Rate It! Avg: 1.5 (12 ratings)
Bring Back the Beatles album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 52:26

Write a Review 2 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Ugh...

JamesPino

I don't know what this is supposed to be, but it certainly is terrible. It's a disgrace that he used The Beatles in the title.

user avatar

After all these years...

jugaluck

After all of these years, David Peel still sucks. Undoubtably the worst musician to make a record since Tiny Tim (At least Tiny Tim did not take himself seriously). Although I must say that he seems to have improved since the early 70's "Have a Marijuana" (he couldn't get any worse). One of the songs from that album "I Like Marijuana" is dressed up with bass, guitar, and a beat but still missing a vocalist that can carry a tune. Listen to the samples, then imagine that this is the band at your favorite haunt. Yeah...I'm outta here.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

Bring Back the Beatles was as close to a commercial album as David Peel had ever generated up to that time. Where his previous satirical barbs at musical figures were incidental to his broader political messages, on this album he shifts his aim somewhat — his two-pronged message expresses an appreciation, even a level of respect, for the Liverpool group, but is also includes an implicit vicious swipe at the efforts in the mid-’70s to remarket and repackage their music. Not quite everything here directly concerns the Beatles, and if Peel isn’t quite as animated as he is when going after a political target, his songwriting ability isn’t restricted at all, and in the relatively lush production he manages to come up with some surprisingly good (and excruciatingly funny) pop songs, including “Coconut Grove”; he also turns in a rocking version of John Lennon’s “Imagine,” reimagined as a punk piece. “The Wonderful World of Abbey Road” shows Peel acknowledging their psychedelic period, especially “Penny Lane,” but he also works in a deconstruction of “With a Little Help from My Friends” and some fresh barbs aimed at Paul McCartney. – Bruce Eder

more »