2007

The B List: 10 Best Beatles Album Covers

Unfortunately my 9-5 is demanding some much-needed attention today, so this week’s edition of The B List is gonna be short and sweet.

The Beatles weren’t content revolutionizing music; they also changed the level of creativity put into album covers. Each member of the band attended art school, and the Beatles realized the importance of packaging. Once Revolver and Sgt. Peppers were released, every other band tried to top them, with little success.

So today, let’s take a look at the 10 best Beatles album covers:

10. The White Album (1968):

Read on for the rest of this week’s B List as we reveal the best nine covers…

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Aesop Rock Gears Up For None Shall Pass

Responsible for all but revolutionizing the entire face of underground hip-hop in the early portion of this decade with a slew of potent and influential releases such as 2000’s Float

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moe.ments of brilliance. moe.ments of boredom.

moe. is the little band that could. Many people predicted the group’s demise back in the mid ’90s when it was rotating drummers faster than Spinal Tap, and again when the boys lost their record deal with Sony a few years later.

But moe. continues to fuck the face of its loudest critics, selling out large shows, hosting sold-out festivals and pulling big-time gigs. Just last week moe. became the second group to play the brand-spanking new Highline Ballroom in New York’s increasingly glamorous Meatpacking District. The band played to five capacity crowds, and as usual, left their most ardent supporters satisfied and their critics stupified.

Photos of 5/5/07 by Nathan Ingraham

To give a little background on myself, I fall somewhere in the middle ground between fluffer and hater. My relationship with moe. began in 1995 when I saw an interesting post about the band on rec.music.phish and headed to a church in New Brunswick to check them out. I became hooked on their songs from the moment they started St. Augustine. Over the next few years I saw dozens of shows, and I loved them all. But something happened around that time, a weird situation when the band put an emphasis on jamming more then depending on the songs themselves. For many bands, I’d be happy as a pig in slop to see a 30-minute version of a song, but with moe., I just got bored. The band is full of capable musicians, but I’ve always felt many of their jams meander.

Let’s return to the present and talk about the show Ace and I caught last Thursday night at the Highline. It was moe.’s second night of five, and the place was buzzing with energy as the band started. Timmy Tucker opened the show, the song that most symbolizes my biggest issue with the band. Timmy is a fun tune, but after a 10-minute Chuck Garvey solo I’m a little impatient when Al Schnier starts a 10-minute solo of his own. Within 20 minutes I had remembered what I liked and disliked about this band.

Read on for more of Nate’s great pics and the rest of Scotty’s review…

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Pullin’ ‘Tubes: Good Times, Bad Times

We’ve already shown you the pictures, but now we’ve got some videos from YazzFest rolling into our Hidden Track Headquarters. Well…not really, we’re just digging through YouTube like the rest of you

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