Steve Baur is too young to remember the debut of The Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show or John脮s Lennon脮s 脪We脮re-more-popular-than-Jesus鈥 crack of 40 years ago.
But as a kid with a really nice older sister, The Beatles have been "speaking words of wisdom鈥 to the future Dr. Rock 脭n脮 Roll ever since he can remember.
Back in the late 1970s in Los Angeles, local radio station KHJ tantalized with a contest promising the full Beatles library. 脪I脮d listen to the radio all day long. It was one of these things, 脭Be the eighth caller to win!脮 and I tried and tried and tried,鈥 recalls Dr. Baur, 40, assistant professor of popular music at 麻豆传媒. 脪One day, I had to go out and my sister Kathy told me, 脭I脮ll win those records for you, Steve!脮 And she did. I loved those albums and so did my brother, Michael.鈥
Baur脮s Beatles Bites:Fave album: 脪The one I come back to the most is Rubber Soul (1965)鈥 Fave Beatle: 脪Ringo!鈥 Baur bears the calluses of a rock 脭n脮 roll drummer. Why they matter: 脪The Beatles are part of the moment when rock 脭n脮 roll took a serious stand and tried to use music as a tool for change.鈥 |
脪The Beatles transformed popular music into art and used that art to address serious topics,鈥 says Dr. Baur. Some examples? The Beatles ponder love of community and togetherness in songs like All You Need is Love and I Am the Walrus; consumer culture (Money Can脮t Buy Me Love); social activism (Revolution); and existentialism (Across the Universe). The Beatles also exposed many to Eastern philosophy, singing 脪Turn off your mind, relax and float down stream,鈥 in Tomorrow Never Knows.听
脪In some ways, they were typical hippies singing about peace, love and justice. But the fact they did that so simply doesn脮t mean they weren脮t tackling profound topics脡 They were trying to bang heads against walls and saying, 脭think!脮鈥