Jump to content

Hey Bulldog

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Hey Bulldog"
Sheet music cover
Songbythe Beatles
from the albumYellow Submarine
Released13 January 1969(1969-01-13)
Recorded11 February 1968
StudioEMI,London
Genre
Length3:09
LabelApple
Songwriter(s)Lennon–McCartney
Producer(s)George Martin
Promotional film
"Hey Bulldog"onYouTube

"Hey Bulldog"is a song by the Englishrockbandthe Beatlesreleased on their 1969 soundtrack albumYellow Submarine.Credited toLennon–McCartney,but written primarily byJohn Lennon,it was finished in the recording studio by both Lennon andPaul McCartney.[1]The song was recorded during the filming of the "Lady Madonna"promotional film, and, with" Lady Madonna ", is one of the few Beatles songs based on a pianoriff.

It had a working title of "She Can Talk To Me". For many years, "Hey Bulldog" was a relatively obscure and overlooked song in the Beatles' catalogue; it has since been reappraised.[2]

Background and composition

[edit]

John Lennonbegan composing "Hey Bulldog", originally "Hey Bullfrog",[3]afterUnited Artistsrequested another song bythe BeatlesforYellow Submarine,the upcomingsoundtrack albumfor theiranimated film of the same name.[4][5]Demorecordings made in the winter of 1967–68 at hisKenwood estateinWeybridgeinclude the melody that later became the song'schorus,as well as a section working out the "she can talk to me" passage.[6]

The finished composition of "Hey Bulldog" is incommon time(4
4
) and employs a shifting key,[7]changing betweenB major,A majorandB minor.[8]Commentators have variously described the song ashard rock,[9][10]blues-based rock,[11]psychedelic rock,[12]pop rock,[13]acid rock[14]or a simplerocknumber.[15][16]In a beginning reminiscent of the Beatles' cover ofBarrett Strong's "Money (That's What I Want)",[17]the song's opening pianoriffis played inoctavesbefore being doubled in a higher register by two guitars and a lower bass register.[18]The song includes twobridgesand two middleverses,with the bridge closer in style to a refrain. The song's introductory riff repeats throughout the song, appearing at the end of the refrain and the outro, as well as further influencing the refrain.[7]The song's lyrics utilize heavyword play,[7]which Lennon later said "[mean] nothing".[5]

Recording

[edit]

The Beatleswent toEMI's Studio Three on 11 February 1968 to record a promotional film for "Lady Madonna",[4]but decided upon arrival to record a new song instead.[19]Lennon suggested his half-completed idea "Hey Bullfrog",[4]which he andPaul McCartneyfinished while in the studio.[3]McCartney later recalled misreading Lennon's handwritten lyrics, changing "measured out in news" to "measured out in you", which Lennon preferred to the original.[20][21]

There's a little rap at the end between John and I, we went into a crazy little thing at the end. We always tried to make every song different because we figured, why write something like the last one? We've done that.[22]

Paul McCartneyon "Hey Bulldog", 1997

George Martinproducedthe session, assisted bybalance engineerGeoff Emerick.[19]The camera crew remained in the studio with the band as they recorded the basic track,[23]featuring piano, drums, tambourine, bass guitar[19]and rhythm guitar.[23]As the band neared the end of the basic track for "Hey Bulldog", McCartney attempted to make Lennon laugh by barking like a dog.[21][note 1]Lennon changed the song's name to "Hey Bulldog",[4]though the title phrase does not appear until the outro.[7]

After the band had recorded ten takes, the last attempt was marked "best".[19]The camera crew left as the band continued working on the song with variousoverdubsonto take ten,[23]including off-beat drums fromRingo Starr,a distortedGibson SGfromGeorge Harrisonfor the song's intro,double trackedvocals from Lennon and a harmony vocal from McCartney.[4]Borrowing Harrison's SG, Lennon recorded a lead guitar solo.[25][note 2]

That was a really fun song. We were all into sound texture in those days and during the mi xing we put ADT (automatic double tracking) on one of the "What did he say? Woof woof" bits near the end of the song. It came out really well.[19]

Balance engineerGeoff Emerickon "Hey Bulldog", 1988

After the band finished adding overdubs, Martin and Emerick mixed the song formonotwice. While the Beatles would oftenad liboffhandedly at the end of recordings, their other songs faded out before this became audible.[19]Martin and Emerick decided to instead leave the dog barks, shouts and screams in the final recording,[19]at one point adding heavycompressionto some of Lennon's dialogue and dog noises.[27]They raised the song in pitch slightly, running the playback fast. With the mono version intended for use in the animated film, Emerick returned to Studio Three on 29 October 1968 to mix the song forstereo,this version being included on the original soundtrack LP.[23]

Release

[edit]

Apple releasedYellow Submarinein the US on 13 January 1969, with "Hey Bulldog" sequenced as the fourth track, between "All Together Now"and"It's All Too Much".[28]Release in the UK followed four days later.[29]Emerick praised McCartney's bass playing on the recording, describing it as his most inventive since that ofSgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.[26]

During these sessions, a film crew photographed the Beatles recording the song atEMI's Abbey Roadstudios for a promotional film to be released during their scheduled four-monthretreat to India(which was later edited together as a promotional film for the single "Lady Madonna").[30]

The song was used in a segment of the animated filmYellow Submarine.Initially, it appeared only in some European theatrical prints. It was cut from the American version by the movie's producerAl Brodaxas he and the group felt the film was too long.[31]It was restored for the film's 1999 re-release. To promote the reissue, Apple went back to the original footage shot for the "Lady Madonna"promo film and restructured it for use as a promotional clip for" Hey Bulldog "(as it is possible to identify what they were playing, and therefore possible to synchronise the music with the original footage). The 1999 clip was included in the three-disc versions (titled1+) of the Beatles' 2015 video compilation1.[32]

Personnel

[edit]

According toWalter Everett,[4]except where noted:

Accolades

[edit]

In 2018, the music staff ofTime Out Londonranked "Hey Bulldog" at number 28 on their list of the best Beatles songs.[2]Rolling Stoneranked the song at number 81 in its list of the 100 best Beatles songs.[33]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Earlier in the month, McCartney participated in a recording session at EMI for singerPaul Jones's newApple Recordssingle, "And the Sun Will Shine".Beatles writer John C. Winn suggests that the single'sB-side,anacid rocksong titled "The Dog Presides", likely inspired McCartney with its sound effects of a dog barking.[24]
  2. ^Among Beatles writers and musicologists, Everett,Ian MacDonaldand Winn write Lennon performed the song's guitar solo.[25]In his 2006 memoirHere, There and Everywhere,Emerick instead recalls Harrison as having performed the solo, writing: "Harrison's solo was sparkling... one of the few times that he nailed it right away. His amp was turned up really loud, and he used one of his new fuzz boxes, which made his guitar absolutely scream. "[26]

References

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^"Beatles Songwriting & Recording Database: Yellow Submarine".Beatlesinterviews.org. 17 January 1969.Retrieved21 August2011.
  2. ^abTime Out London Music (24 May 2018)."The 50 Best Beatles songs".Time Out London.Retrieved11 December2018.
  3. ^abMacDonald 2007,p. 277.
  4. ^abcdefEverett 1999,p. 155.
  5. ^abSheff 1981,p. 213, quoted inThe Beatles 2000,p. 292.
  6. ^Winn 2009,p. 150–151.
  7. ^abcdPollack, Alan W.(1998)."Notes on 'Hey Bulldog'".soundscapes.info.Archivedfrom the original on 16 April 2021.Retrieved24 June2021.
  8. ^MacDonald 2007,p. 495.
  9. ^"Mojo".No. 150–153. EMAP Performance Limited. 2006.Retrieved10 January2022.{{cite magazine}}:Cite magazine requires|magazine=(help)
  10. ^R. Staley, Samuel (2020).The Beatles and Economics - Entrepreneurship, Innovation, and the Making of a Cultural Revolution.Taylor & Francis.ISBN9780429776410.Retrieved10 January2022.
  11. ^Inglis 2009,p. 114.
  12. ^DeRogatis 2003,p. 48.
  13. ^O'Grady 1983,p. 149: "Finally, Lennon's" Hey Bulldog, "also recorded in January, 1968, is a rhythm and blues-influenced pop-rock song... "
  14. ^Neaverson 1997,p. 94: "One of Lennon's most powerful acid-rock songs to date ('Hey Bulldog')... "
  15. ^Hertsgaard 1995,p. 229.
  16. ^Spitz 2005,p. 749.
  17. ^Riley 2002,p. 242.
  18. ^Everett 2006,p. 91.
  19. ^abcdefgLewisohn 1988,p. 134.
  20. ^MacDonald 2007,p. 278n1.
  21. ^abCowan 1978,p. 24, quoted inEverett 1999,p. 155.
  22. ^Miles 1998,p. 482.
  23. ^abcdeWinn 2009,p. 157.
  24. ^Winn 2009,p. 152.
  25. ^abcEverett 1999,p. 155: "Lennon's distorted lead guitar solo... ";MacDonald 2007,p. 287: "Lennon:... lead guitar ";Winn 2009,p. 157: "John apparently recorded the biting guitar solo himself: At one point in the footage, he can be seen borrowing George's Gibson SG Standard, and the finished solo has all the trademarks of a Lennon performance in its jaggedness".
  26. ^abEmerick & Massey 2006,pp. 222–223.
  27. ^Everett 2009,p. 345.
  28. ^Miles 2007,pp. 281, 284.
  29. ^Lewisohn 1988,p. 164.
  30. ^Womack, Kenneth (2014).The Beatles Encyclopedia.ABC-CLIO. p. 514.ISBN978-0-3133-9172-9.
  31. ^"Article".Billboard.Vol. 111, no. 37. 11 September 1999. p. 25.
  32. ^Rowe, Matt (18 September 2015)."The Beatles 1 To Be Reissued With New Audio Remixes... And Videos".The Morton Report.Archived fromthe originalon 29 December 2015.Retrieved9 January2016.
  33. ^"81 – 'Hey Bulldog'".Rolling Stone.100 Greatest Beatle Songs.Retrieved17 June2012.

Sources

[edit]
[edit]