What is it with Sergeant Peppers?

Written by Mark Boudreau
Published January 05, 2004

MSN has listed their 10 most influential albums since Elvis and I gotta admit Eric Alterman made some pretty good choices but what is it about "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" that always gets critics in a tizzy? Was it really that influential?

Critics keep saying it was rock's first concept album but John Lennon himself has stated that the concept of re-visiting the places of their youth, which originally was the inspiration to do the album, ended after their release of the "Strawberry fields/Penny Lane" double "A" side in early '67. And the concept of being an album by the Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band ends after the first song (although it is revisited in the "reprise"). Does anybody listen to this album anymore? It certainly hasn't aged as well as most of the other Beatles albums and apart from "A Day in the Life" the rest of it is so/so by Beatles standards.

I personally think that "Revolver [UK]" was more influential than "Peppers." That album, and "Tomorrow Never Knows" specifically were arguably responsible for kick starting the whole psychedelic movement as Roger McGuinn of The Byrds has stated that that was the song that influenced his band to take a left turn towards "Eight Miles High."

I mean if you're looking at influential British pop/rock/psychedelia, Pink Floyd, the Who, the Yardbirds and the Kinks all came up with some pretty incredible albums at that time with my vote going for Pink Floyd's first album "The Piper at the Gates of Dawn" as the psychedelic masterpiece of the time. If you add in the two singles Pink Floyd released that weren't on the album ("Arnold Layne" and "See Emily Play") I think those stand up better and better represent the times than "Sergeant Pepper's" does today.

In some ways I think that the main reason "Peppers" is still idolized by the critics today is simply because it was made by the Beatles and to some that is all that needs to be said. While I cannot deny the influence of "Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" I still have a hard time agreeing that it is tied with "Rubber Soul [UK]" as the most influential album of all time. To each his own I suppose.

Later.

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What is it with Sergeant Peppers?
Published: January 05, 2004
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Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: Classic Rock and Oldies, Music: Rock
Writer: Mark Boudreau
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Comments

#1 — January 5, 2004 @ 11:07AM — Zudfunck [URL]

Guess ya had to be there Dude! It was a magic and transforming time when that Album hit! Life hasn't been the same since.

#2 — January 5, 2004 @ 11:49AM — Eric Olsen

I think Sgt Peppers is somewhat overrated as an album, but its influence can't really be questioned.

#3 — January 5, 2004 @ 12:30PM — Mark Saleski [URL]

i used to think Sgt. Peppers was overrated...but then i saw that Sgt. Peppers movie (icky) and changed my mind.

#4 — January 6, 2004 @ 03:30AM — Al Barger [URL]

For one thing, you may want to try separating out influential versus best. Those are two different things.

#5 — January 6, 2004 @ 06:45AM — BB [URL]

Comment #1: Right on Man!

#2 Overrated? Come on Eric you gotta be kidding!

#4 Couldn't have said it better myself Al. (I will follow..)

To think that S.P. was made on a 4 track is mind boggling. Like Don McLean said it was the day that music died as we knew it. We stopped dancing and started listening. Phenomenal.

#6 — January 6, 2004 @ 08:15AM — Eric Olsen

I didn't question the influence, but I will say as a collection of songs, it's not their best, which leaves it "somewhat" overrated as I said. it is not a major issue - I'm not saying it sucks.

#7 — January 7, 2004 @ 18:48PM — Rodney Welch [URL]

I can't believe that Alterman had the balls to take Brian Eno's shopworn quote about the Velver Underground -- few people bought their first record, but everyone who did started a band -- and pass it off as his own.

#8 — January 26, 2004 @ 09:16AM — Stephanie

pants

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