KINFAUNS TO CHAOS




Beatles:
From Kinfauns to Chaos
Assembled from the finest quality master tapes available, From Kinfauns To Chaos
documents an ending and a beginning: the end of the Beatles as a cohesive
assemblage, and the beginning John and Yoko as a collective unit.
Disc One is the most complete, best sounding version to date of the May,1968
"White Album" demos recorded at George's "Kinfauns" bungalow. Disc Two
highlights a June, 1968 mixing session for the "slow" version of "Revolution
#1", featuring special (and constant) guest Yoko Ono. Get ready for a wacky,
wild ride with the Fab Four (Plus One)!
Track Names for Disc 1
KINFAUNS - 16 Claremont Drive Esher, Surrrey Late May 1968
01 - Julia (recorded in a higher key and features the version in a different
order)
02 - Blackbird (features a double tracked vocal, no break, natural bird sounds
and a slightly slower pace than the studio version)
03 - Rocky Raccoon (this early version is significantly shorter lacking the
opening and closing verses)
04 - Back in The U.S.S.R. (lacks the final verse "show me round your snow peaked
mountians...)
05 - Honey Pie (this version also appeared on Anthology 3 in excellent stereo,
but missing the final verse)
06 - Mother Nature's Son (lacks the picked intro of the finished version)
07- Ob-La-Di Ob-La-Da (Paul occasionally loses time when he double tracked this
vocal, but this is an otherwise spirited take. Not suprisingly this version is
closer in feel to the Sessions version than the finished take)
08 - Junk (appeared on Anthology 3 in stereo, but lacking some guitar bits and
vocals heard here)
09 - Dear Prudence (John lets out a "whoops!" as he flubs his double track vocal
and finishes with a spoken outro)
10 - Sexy Sadie (features an undeveloped ending)
11 - Cry Baby Cry (lacks the "cry baby cry" intro and has a different ending)
12 - Child Of Nature (earliest incarnation of "Jealous Guy" - an early highlight
of the Lost Lennon tapes radio series)
13 - The Continuing Story Of Bungalow Bill (animal noises courtesy of the other
Beatles)
14 - I'm So Tired (with an extra spoken passage: "When I hold you in your
arms...")
15 - Yer Blues (some early lyrics of note here: John is only "insecure" here and
not "suicidal" like Dylan's Mr. Jones)
16 - Everybody's Got Something To Hide Except Me And My Monkey (lyrically the
same but otherwise completely different in feel)
17 - What's The New Mary Jane (what's noteworthy is that there's a demo for this
song at all)
18 - Revolution (lacks the "you say you'll change the Constitution" verse)
19 - While My Guitar Gently Weeps (featuring alternate early lyrics)
20 - Circles (George dug this one up 14 years later for his Gone Troppo LP)
21 - Sour Milk Sea (George gave this to Jackie Lomax to record for one of
Apple's first releases)
22 - Not Guilty (George only waited 11 years to get back to this one on his
George Harrison LP)
23 - Piggies (piggies "cut their porkchops" instead of "eat their bacon" here)
Track Names for Disc 2
CHAOS - EMI Studios, NO 3 Abbey Road London NW8
Tues. June 6, 1968
01 - Revolution #1 (take 20) playback #1
02 - Revolution #1 (take 20) playback #2
03 - Unfinished Jam #1
04 - Unfinished Jam #2
05 - Revolution #2 (take 1)
06 - Revolution #2 (take 2) / Unfinished Jam #3
07 - Revolution #2 (take 3)
08 - Unfinished Jam #4 / Revolution #1 (take 20) playback #3
09 - Unfinished Jam #5
10 - Revolution #1 (take 20) guitar and organ overdub (take 1)
11 - Revolution #1 (take 20) guitar and organ overdub (take 2)
12 - Revolution #1 (take 20) guitar and organ overdub (take 3)
13 - Unfinished Jam #6
14 - Revolution #1 (take 20) playback #4
15 - Dialogue
16 - Revolution #1 (take 20) guitar overdub
17 - Dialogue
18 - Revolution #1 (take 20) RM1 ("take your knickers off and let's go")
FROM KINFAUNS ... TO CHAOS
From Kinfauns…
In many ways, the Beatles’ trip to India in March of 1968 to study
Transcendental Meditation with the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi can be seen as the true
turning point of the group being a group. After completing sessions for a
stopgap single, "Lady Madonna"/"Inner Light" in early February, they left for
Rishikesh united in their desire for enlightenment, but came back fragmented and
somewhat disillusioned. Ringo left the meditation compound after two weeks,
blaming bad food, but not before stating that the experience had been "just like
Butlin’s", the holiday camp where he used to play with Rory Storm and the
Hurricanes in the early ‘60’s. Paul flew off after a month, claiming he’d
"gotten as much as he needed". John and George brought up the rear after John
had gotten wind of some possible misbehavior by the Yogi regarding one or more
of the women who accompanied the Beatles on their trip. This deterioration of
the trip was an ominous foreboding of the remainder of the Beatles’ career:
still a group in theory, but not a group in practice.
During the period the four were there, however, the three songwriting Beatles’
muses were working overtime, fueled by more "down time" than they had enjoyed in
over five years and the bucolic atmosphere in which they were living. The songs
flowed as they hadn’t in years…but in their composition the tunes were truly
solo efforts, each reflecting John’s, Paul’s, and George’s own interests
musically, philosophically and spiritually. Between the three composers, almost
forty songs were written, most of which would end up on the Beatles’ next
eponymously-titled LP. Others were left for the last two Beatles album projects,
Get Back/Let It Be and Abbey Road. Additional tunes were used for future solo
projects, in either complete or similar form compared to the 1968 versions, with
one in particular, George’s "Circles", not seeing the light of day until
fourteen years after its composition!
After John and Paul returned from the activities in New York to publicly launch
their new company, Apple, in mid-May of 1968, the Beatles did something as a
group that they had never done prior to this period. The four gathered at
George’s house, "Kinfauns", in Esher, Surrey around the third week of May to
record group demos for almost thirty of the songs they had penned in Rishikesh.
While the individual Beatles had all recorded home demos before, the group
generally rehearsed their songs at EMI either after having heard the solo demos,
or simply after having the writer(s) in question show the others the chord
changes, etc., in person. However, never before (and never again) did they join
together to undertake something of this rudimentary nature. Recorded on George’s
four track equipment, the tracks were mixed to mono by George, and John, Paul
and Ringo each received copies of this reduction tape.
George held onto the "Kinfauns" masters, and in 1996 was able to claim ownership
of them in the credits of the third edition of the Beatles Anthology CD series.
Geoff Emerick newly mixed some of these songs to stereo at the time of
Anthology’s production, but John’s copy of the original mono tape reduction is
the source for CD One of this set. While bits of this tape have been heard on
The Lost Lennon Tapes (both the radio and Bag records LP series), as well as
previous, inferior CD issues, this is the first time that this copy of John’s
tape has been heard in it entirety, in crisp, glorious mono.
The "Esher Tapes" represent one last great gasp of the Beatles working as a
unit, displaying the joy and spontaneity for which they had once been revered.
The previous year’s activities had severely curtailed such looseness in the
recording process, what with the technical marvels of the "Strawberry Fields
Forever/Penny Lane" 45, Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, and the other
fabs’ psychedelic wonders of 1967. Here were the four Beatles, playing and
singing with abandon in a wonderfully loose atmosphere. Much of the recording
actually echoes the 1965 Beach Boys Party! LP in terms of the taping’s laid back
approach (not to mention the fact that, as on Party!, one can hear conversations
occurring in the background throughout most of the tape!). Never again would the
fab four sound this happy; the upcoming sessions for The Beatles would cement
that fact.
…To Chaos
Another important occurrence during the trip to India was that while John was in
Rishikesh, he began to seriously consider pursuing a relationship with the woman
who had been a shadowy presence in his life during the previous year and a half:
avant garde artiste Yoko Ono. She sent him letters constantly during the trip,
often simply featuring cryptic, monosyllabic phrases. John was entranced, and
when he returned to the UK, he began his pursuit of Yoko, consummating the
relationship in mid-May of 1968.
An immediate result of John’s newfound love was that Yoko became a constant
presence at all Beatles-related activities from June 1968 on. From film
premieres (Yellow Submarine on July 17th), to photo sessions (the multiple
location "mad day" photo session on July 28th, though she was not pictured in
the photos), to recording sessions (the upcoming "White Album" dates), Ms. Ono
was present and accounted for at all of these events. One such happening was the
mixing session on June 4th 1968 for the "White Album" version of "Revolution",
"Revolution #1", which was recorded on May 31st. Disc Two of this collection
features the unedited, offline recording of this EMI mixing date, made on John’s
portable tape recorder.
The thought of hearing this tape sounds extremely tantalizing, particularly when
one is aware that this original, "slow" rendering of the Lennon classic (the
first track to be worked on for The Beatles) was originally over ten minutes in
length. However, Paul and the others objected strongly to the idea that this
version should be issued as a single, as John had intended. Macca’s gripe was
primarily that the middle section featured Yoko adding her own unique vocal
stylings to the proceedings, not to mention the fact that ten minute singles
weren’t a particularly commercial concept then or now (not that any of this
mattered to John or Yoko). In the end, John capitulated and the "Revolution #1"
single idea was scrapped. However, the ten minute version was mixed down, and
this Lennon archive tape captures the mixing session. Due to this offline
nature, we hear music we’ve never heard before but, unfortunately, on top of the
tune we also hear Yoko pontificating on any matter that crosses her mind. If
this happened occasionally, it would be bad enough; however, the motor mouth
antics occur throughout the entire tape, as the fabs play on in the background.
This makes for a taxing listening experience at best, but one can argue that
it’s no worse than listening to something like "12 Bar Original"; at least this
tape is interesting to hear more than once! Many musical items of note come to
the fore, once the listener can tune out the jabbering.
The final six minutes of "Revolution #1" (which went unused on the "White
Album", but are heard here) were used as a foundation on which to build the "musique
concrete" "Revolution #9", utilizing tape loops, live "vocal performances" and
other recorded oddities to build a dense collage of sound. While John (or more
specifically Yoko) may have even pushed for this "take" to be a single, this was
happily not to be. In the end, the band recorded a faster, far superior version
of "Revolution" in July of 1968, for placement on the B-side of the Beatles’
first single on their own Apple label, Paul’s seven minute opus, "Hey Jude". The
shortened "Revolution #1" and the nine minute "Revolution #9: would both end up
on the fourth side of the double LP "White Album".
Despite the fact that this archive tape is not something a person would pull out
often for his or her listening pleasure, it is still a fascinating document of
the disintegration of a band, and the genesis of a dysfunctional relationship.
While it is admirable that John found what he wanted in a personal sense with
Yoko, it is also unfortunate he could not separate his romantic life from his
art. He would have, of course, disagreed wholeheartedly with that sentiment, but
it can be argued that in a purely musical sense, John was "held back" during the
period from mid-1968 to late 1969, writing only a few songs that were among his
best. One listen to this "Revolution #1" mixing tape gives ample evidence as to
why this was the case. Once he got back in touch with his own muse, particularly
after kicking his heroin addiction in mid-1969, the compositional fire returned
with songs like "Instant Karma (We All Shine On)" and those which would end up
on his first solo LP. Tellingly, these were not written for the Beatles.