Revolver (Beatles)

Approval Rate: 88%

88%Approval ratio

Reviews 50

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    doobiesnhof

    Wed Mar 11 2009

    A classic Beatles masterpiece, Revolver remains as one of their best (if not the best). It includes the songs..."Taxman", "Eleanor Rigby", "Yellow Submarine", "Good Day Sunshine" and "Got To Get You Into My Life" but the whole album sparkles..

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    garydavis9361

    Mon Feb 12 2007

    My favorite Beatles LP. McCartney in particular comes up with some gorgeous tunes such as "Here There and Everywhere" and "For No One". Harrison comes up with "Taxman", his first big hit and Lennon with "Doctor Robert" (on the UK release) and the one-of-a-kind "Tomorrow Never Knows".

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    cougarmike

    Tue Oct 24 2006

    Beatles at their Best. Fab 4 is fabulous on this one. Masterpiece

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    rockerrreds

    Wed Oct 18 2006

    The Beatles working at full throttle,very inventive.

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    meggsknows

    Mon Oct 16 2006

    Much superior to the overrated Sgt.Pepper. In fact the Beatles at their their peak on this album.

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    blackcat2

    Sat Jun 03 2006

    Far better in my opinion than Sgt Pepper.

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    portecrayon

    Thu Jun 01 2006

    Brilliant! First album I ever owned.

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    tossa42e

    Sat Mar 25 2006

    Classic piece of composing. Superior in most aspects to ' Sgt Pepper'.

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    andrewt

    Thu Mar 23 2006

    First of all, you have to put it in perspective . . when this album came out, no other group had the nerve to write and sing anything of this intellectual magnitude. It was earth-shaking. What is so great is that 40 years later these tunes still can move your mind and body. Transcendental!

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    amcbride

    Wed Mar 22 2006

    The greatest album in rock/pop. An astounding achievement.

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    mikepawley

    Mon Jan 16 2006

    Masterpiece that still shines 40 years after the event. This album and Pet Sounds are watersheds in the history of popular music.

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    robbo59

    Sat Nov 12 2005

    Unlike most groups, who lose their identity after the release of their debut albums, The Beatles continued to grow and challenge their genius with each new release. It seems nearly impossilble to believe that this band could expand our universe so completely and so many times over the space of only seventy or so months. But then, there has never been a group like the Beatles. I feel sorry for people who refuse to give these brilliant artists a chance to enrich the fabric of their lives. I can't even imagine living in a world untouched by the music and magic of these four. Just grab a copy of this opus and take John Lennon's advice..."Turn off your mind, relax and float downstream...."

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    canadasucks

    Sat Nov 05 2005

    Kudos to the other reviewers. . .this is one of the best the band produced.

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    magpiescott

    Fri Nov 04 2005

    Beatles magnum opus. Much better than Pepper.

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    cjmyers41

    Mon Oct 03 2005

    Your right, it is the transistional album that takes us to St. Peppers and Magical mystery tour. It is great to hear it develop.

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    iamfromhelltoo

    Fri Aug 12 2005

    the crossover album into the psychedelic age a great album to listen to

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    devesde3

    Thu May 19 2005

    Together with Sgt. Peppers, Rubber Soul & Abbey Road one of their best albums.

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    leesburg

    Mon May 02 2005

    Best album of all time- all classics

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    irishgit

    Thu Mar 31 2005

    Pretty solid. Not my personal favorite, but worth listening to.

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    tallncuteguy

    Sat Jan 22 2005

    Amazing album.

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    frogger20190

    Mon Jul 26 2004

    The greatest album of all time (as VH-1 dubbed it a few years ago?) No. Not even the Beatles' best (my vote goes to the White Album). But this has its share of classics (like all Beatles albums). And John's She Said She Said and Tomorrow Never Knows....well, it was a sign of things to come. I can probably die without hearing Eleanor Rigby or Good Day Sunshine again, but who's complaining.

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    heybulldog

    Fri Jun 25 2004

    Rubber Soul influences Pet Sounds influences Revolver influences Smile influences Sgt. Pepper... These were the years of revolutionary progress in rock music. Brian Wilson and Lennon/ Mc Cartney were having a pivoting role in it, bands like the Rolling Stones could do nothing more than follow. Revolver is one of these great albums. Just ask a techno act like the Chemical Brothers what a song like Tomorrow never knows still means to them today!

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    classictvfan47

    Thu Jun 03 2004

    A largely unremarkable Beatles' album that lacks the charm of Please Please Me or Sargeant Peppers. The only two good songs, really, are Yellow Submarine and Good Day Sunshine. Taxman isn't remarkable and Elanor Rigby is just too depressing.

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    tiger3952

    Thu Apr 22 2004

    This is my favorite album, and it often is at the top of best-album polls. Revolver is a treat from start to finish. Each song has a unique sound and style that represents the individuality of each member of the Beatles. It's like a musical box of chocolates. LOL

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    fritoz1447

    Wed Dec 17 2003

    Best Beatles album, accept maybe The White Album.

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    mdfc06a9

    Thu Nov 20 2003

    the beatles were revolutionary in the 60s and without them many of todays top bands would not exist. they made experimental music, clever lyrics and most importantly wrote classic songs. they were true originals. Revolver was the first of many beatles' all time greats and all three songwriters were on top form. Harrison churned out three songs, (his most on any one beatle disk), including the incredible love you too using far out eastern instruments and the simple and essential rocker taxman, McCartney probably had the biggest range for the album, ballads like here, there and everywhere and for no one were beatiful and melodious, the sheer joy of got to get you into my life and the sunny optimsm of good day sunshine cannot help but infect the listener. Lennon was being far out and experimental and thus supplied the albums more interesting and deep side. the groundbreaking tommorow never knows must have sounded out-of-this-world back in 1966, elsewhere john was writing great songs (dr... Read more

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    iluvqueen

    Sat Sep 20 2003

    I hate Beatles music.

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    usafreedom

    Mon Jun 23 2003

    My personal favorite of the Beatles Albums. It has a bright, alive sound that continues to inspire. Psychedelic, but intelligent and coherant at the same time. There hasn't been another album like it since. PEACE.

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    bluejplumber

    Tue Jun 10 2003

    one of the top 3 albums from the greatest rock band of all time.....and just a note, the reviewers who rated this album one star are clearly the same the same user (are they are through some bizzare coincidence all beegees fans and right wingers)

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    getback

    Thu May 08 2003

    a shining moment in pop history

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    allesa12

    Sat Apr 26 2003

    A true rock and roll and 20th century music masterpiece. Even the "childish" songs as Yellow Submarine are so well crafted that they reach the level of genius. Eleanor Rigby and Tomorrow Never Knows alone are the philosophal stone of rock and roll bringing together Dylan´s lyrical influence, the Beach Boys´ sound effects experimentation and the outstanding Beatle melody and harmony in a truly organical way. More intriguing and dark than Sgt Pepper, more unified than the White Album and more direct than Abbey Road, Revolver is a classic that shows rock evolving into a true and complete art form.

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    scieron

    Tue Apr 22 2003

    I was around when Revolver was first released in 1966. I thought at the time that it was a groundbreaking album, the like of which I had never heard. I still listen to it & my feelings are still the same. The Beatles were the most influential rock & roll bands of all time & historically, that is beyond dispute. The fact that this discussion is going on, nearly 40 years later, proves that. Is the same thing happening about the Monkees??

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    the_big_boss

    Sun Apr 13 2003

    omg how can ANYONE not love this album??? ARE YOU DEAF? this is what real music sounds like!

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    crimson_and_cl_over

    Sat Feb 22 2003

    the Beatles are the best

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    thirtythreethi_rd

    Sat Jan 04 2003

    This was the first Beatles album I ever bought and listened to. I did it my second year of college, and the very first time I ever heard "Eleanor Rigby," I knew that this was the greatest band of the 20h century, and I would be in for a huge treat. I fell in love with the entire album, and the Beatles motivated me to study music. I wrote my undergraduate thesis on the Beatles from 1964-1966, during their time of greatest growth. This album should be treated with the highest respect, and if you believe it deserves any less, you really need to educate yourself on the methods of making quality, eternal music.

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    demonrealm

    Thu Dec 26 2002

    The first of many 5-star Beatle albums. SO many excellent songs to choose from.

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    sexpistol

    Mon Nov 18 2002

    This album takes time to sink in. Once it does, you realize that if any other band yesterday or today came out with a record like this, they would instantly influence their time and place... and record industry executives just wouldn't understand the record's success. Revolver blends so many of the Beatles earlier style together with later developing styles. Its really the missing link. Many people don't understand this record. Its not made for your average Joe or the conformist pop rock audience. Revolver is not only a transormation for the Beatles, but also one for the technicians who recorded this record... they were experimenting just as much (like in "Tomorrow Never Knows"). Their playing with 2-way stereo and the way the drums are recorded in Revolver is just one of a kind. George starts out the record with Taxman and Ringo and Paul (drum&bass) create such a cool little vibe that even Beck has ripped off this beat in his New Pollution. The strings in Eleanor Rigby sounds so aut... Read more

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    jason1972

    Wed Oct 16 2002

    Taxman, Elanor Rigby, Here There Everywhere, Good Day Sunshine, Got To Get You Into My Life make this LP a surefire classic.

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    couchpotato

    Thu Sep 26 2002

    Even after Sgt. Pepper, this is still considered THE modern-pop masterpiece, and also considered one of the greatest albums ever made. (And I agree fully.) I used to hate the Beatles too before I really listened to them, now I think they were really brilliant songwriters. Even the worst producer on EARTH wouldn't stop this kind of genius from shining through.

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    magarson

    Thu Jun 20 2002

    One of the best of the best.

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    emmyj1943

    Thu Jun 13 2002

    Personally-Revolver is one of my favorite Beatle albums-each Beatle totally shines on this masterpiece. It's a CD that you can listen to over, and over, and over, and still adore! A complete and utter masterpiece. And why must we have some Led Zeppelin album in order to rate a BEATLES album?-who cares about Led Zep-this is a rating of Revolver-an album by the Beatles-definitley NOT Led Zepellin-they could never make a masterpiece like Revolver.

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    percy8fa

    Thu Feb 14 2002

    Don't get me wrong, I love the Beatles, buy the best in Rock & Pop Cd's?! Hardly...Now let's be reasonable people. The best Rock album of all time is indisputably ZepIV. Beatles are overrated sometimes and Zep is underated because of them. I love both bands, but the beatles didn't create pop and rock like some of you may think. I hope this opens some eyes of people (Beatle freaks) who are so narrow minded who can't see past the end of their nose. So go out and buy ZepIV if you don't already have it (and if you don't, you shouldn't be rating!).

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    ghlove

    Sun Jan 20 2002

    The absolute BEST album ever! Nice to see JenSecret and Vicky5 on here again. They've bashed everything Beatles all over this site and are obviously frustrated BeeGee fans AND the same pitiful person. Read their comments, guys. She's just a very sad girl. We should feel badly for a person who spends their time spreading hateful things that clearly don't make sense.

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    ellajedlicka21

    Fri Oct 19 2001

    I wouldn't rate it as #1 like the vh1 list did. However, it is in my top 10 and I can see why they did put it as #1. At the time in 1966, not such a psychedelic album had ever been recorded. A song that is overlooked for some crazy reason is "And Your Bird Can Sing." It is such a powerful song. Bill Clinton believes that Elanor Rigby is the most brilliant piece ever, which I can relate to. Taxman is an upbeat, powerful song. I think my personal favorite from the album is Doctor Robert (only on the British version). It is another absoulte masterpiece from the far and away greatest band.

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    lisalorib

    Wed Sep 26 2001

    This album was pivotal for the beatles. Released during a period where they wanted to move away from the mushy pop ballads and into more exprimental , innovative work - pre- sgt pepper. The song "Here, there and Everywhere", has to be one of the most beautiful ballads ever released. "Taxman" is incredible - love George Harrison's vocal work on that song. what an impact the beatles have had on pop culture/music.

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    medgarevers

    Sun Jun 24 2001

    I dig it. "Here, There and Everywhere" is one of those songs that even our best pal Lou couldn't deny is a bad tune. I think I heard somewhere that Lennon said that it is his favourite Beatles song, ever. It seems that on each of these albums, there are a lot of great songs, but they just strike gold on one particular track- on "Rubber Soul" it's "In My Life," on "Sgt. Pepper" it's "A Day in the Life." Lately I've actually been doubting the Beatles' adaquacy as musicians, perhaps because I've listened to the few albums that I have too much, and because I hadn't often stopped to think about what I was listening to. I am unsure as to whether songs like "And Your Bird Can Sing," "For No One," "Good Day Sunshine," or "Taxman" are actually quality, or I just like them. But then again, according to whoever-that- painter is, art isn't great, music isn't great, it just tickles us. Perhaps I shouldn't think so much, but I can't help it. "Eleanor Rigby" is a neat little 2-minute poem with... Read more

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    beatles_fan_4_ever

    Sun Mar 18 2001

    It's a good listen. With me, rating Beatles albums is like picking your favorite child. You love them all but maybe you "like" one a little better than another. Now don't say you don't. ;)

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    georgeluver_liz06

    Fri Feb 09 2001

    Come on People! Calling the Beatles Fag Four????? OOoooh, that's low. If you hate them so much why are you rating them? That really gets on my last nerve. Revolver is probably my favorite. It's the album where George really shows his stuff. Taxman is the work of a genius. Some other great ones too, Love You To, I Want to Tell you. What is this world coming to when Beatles Fans are supposedly out of touch with reality? And the term, the Beatles suck? That is the stupidest, most ignorant term I've ever heard in my life. I too would like to see what the people who gave this album less than 5 stars like, and do you think that in 30 years when they don't even exist, that they'll have a hit album on the the number one spot in the charts for over 2 months. There's no way!!! The Beatles were legendary, there's nothing more to say. And people saying the Beatles sucked and calling them the "fag four" need their ears checked and BADLY have "problems". I LOVE GEORGE!

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    naturallyyou

    Wed Jan 24 2001

    Mongrelpup seems to have a problem with the term fag four. How does that lessen the credibility of a rater? Also, I think Wiggum has lost touch with reality. This whole thing about being revolutionary and groundbreaking is a myth. All they did was make middle of the road pop albums. Nothing more.

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    mongrelpup

    Sat Jan 20 2001

    First of all, I think Fab Four was being used tongue in cheek. Secondly, I can't believe "Fag" isn't on Rate-It-All's list of undesirable terms along with certain hateful terms for blacks, jews, etc. Thirdly, the opinion of someone who'd sincerely use a term like "Fag Four" in a public forum is most likely crap anyway. Last, it's a great cd.