- The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill
Song infobox
Name = The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill
Artist =The Beatles
Album =
Released =22 November 1968
track_no = 6 of disc 1
Recorded =Abbey Road Studios 8 October 1968
Genre =Folk rock
Length = 3:05
Writer =Lennon/McCartney
Label =Apple Records
Producer =George Martin
Tracks = Side one
#"Back in the U.S.S.R. "
#"Dear Prudence "
#"Glass Onion "
#"Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da "
#"Wild Honey Pie "
#"The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill "
#"While My Guitar Gently Weeps "
#"Happiness Is a Warm Gun "Side two
#- "
Martha My Dear "
#"I'm So Tired "
#"Blackbird"
#"Piggies "
#"Rocky Raccoon "
#"Don't Pass Me By "
#"Why Don't We Do It in the Road? "
#"I Will"
#"Julia"Side three
#"Birthday"
#"Yer Blues "
#"Mother Nature's Son "
#"Everybody's Got Something to Hide Except Me and My Monkey "
#"Sexy Sadie"
#"Helter Skelter"
#"Long, Long, Long "Side four
#- "Revolution 1"
#"Honey Pie "
#"Savoy Truffle "
#"Cry Baby Cry "
#"Revolution 9 "
#"Good Night""The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill" is aBeatles song from the double LP "The Beatles" (also known as "The White Album").The song opens with a
flamenco guitar solo (actually created by a rarely used preset button on a Mellotron keyboard, here functioning as somewhat of a primitive sampler; on some CD reissues, this solo closes the previous track,Wild Honey Pie ), followed by the chorus, sung by all four Beatles, Ringo's then-wife Maureen, andYoko Ono (providing the only female lead vocal on a Beatles recording, for a single line).John Lennon , who wrote the song, is the primary lead singer.Recording
The song was recorded at Abbey Road on
8 October 1968 and was completed including all overdubs in this one session. The Beatles also started and completed the Lennon-composed 'I'm So Tired ' during the same recording session.Inspiration
This song mocks the actions of a young American named Richard A. Cooke III, known as Rik who was visiting his mother, Nancy Cooke de Herrera, at the
ashram ofMaharishi Mahesh Yogi inRishikesh at the same time that the Beatles were staying with the Maharishi. According to his mother, both she and her son maintained friendly relations with all of the Beatles except for Lennon, who by Cooke de Herrera's account was "a genius" but distant and contemptuous of the wealthy American Cooke de Herrera and her clean-cut, college-attending son. According to Nancy's life account,Beyond Gurus , the genesis of the song occurred when she, Rik, and several others, including native guides, set out upon elephants to hunt for a tiger (allegedly presented by their Indian guide as a traditional act). The pack of elephants was attacked by a tiger, which was shot by Rik. Rik was initially proud of his quick reaction and posed for a photograph with his prize. However, Rik's reaction to the slaying was mixed, as he has not hunted since. Nancy claims that all present recognised the necessity of Rik's action, but that John Lennon's reaction was scornful and sarcastic, asking Rik: "But wouldn't you call that slightly life-destructive?" The song was written by Lennon as mocking what he saw as Rik's bravado and unenlightened attitude. [cite web |url=http://www.upv.es/~ecabrera/white.html |title=Only Some Northern Songs in The Beatles]Lennon later told his version of the story in a "
Playboy " interview, stating that: " [Bungalow Bill] was written about a guy in Maharishi's meditation camp who took a short break to go shoot a few poor tigers, and then came back to commune with God. There used to be a character calledJungle Jim , and I combined him with Buffalo Bill. It's sort of a teenage social-comment song and a bit of a joke."cite book |first=David |last=Sheff |title=All We Are Saying: The Last Major Interview with John Lennon and Yoko Ono |year=2000 |pages=199 |publisher=St. Martin's Press |location=New York |isbn=0-312-25464-4]Mia Farrow , who was also at the ashram during the period supports Lennon's story in her autobiography; she writes, "Then a self-important, middle-aged American woman arrived, moving a mountain of luggage into the brand-new private bungalow next to Maharishi's along with her son, a bland young man named Bill. People fled this newcomer, and no one was sorry when she left the ashram after a short time to go tiger hunting, unaware that their presence had inspired a new Beatles' song - 'Bungalow Bill.'"cite book |last=Farrow |first=Mia |title= What Falls Away|year=1997 |publisher=Doubleday |pages=139|isbn=0-385-47187-4]Personnel
*
John Lennon – vocal, acoustic guitar, organ
*George Harrison – acoustic guitar, backing vocal
*Paul McCartney – bass, backing vocal
*Ringo Starr – drums, backing vocal, tambourine
*Chris Thomas – mellotron
*Yoko Ono – vocal, backing vocal
*Maureen Starkey – backing vocal:Credits perIan MacDonald cite book |first=Ian |last=MacDonald |authorlink=Ian MacDonald |title=Revolution in the Head: The Beatles' Records and the Sixties |year=2005 |pages=324-325 |edition=Second Revised Edition |publisher=Pimlico (Rand) |location=London |isbn=1-844-13828-3]Notes
References
*Nancy Cooke de Herrera, "Beyond Gurus: A Woman of Many Worlds", Blue Dolphin Publishing, 1992.
*Steve Turner, "A Hard Day's Write", Collins, 1999.External links
* [http://www.stevesbeatles.com/songs/the_continuing_story_of_bungalow_bill.asp Song lyrics]
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