Rubber Soul
LP by The Beatles • 3 December 1965 • Parlophone PMC 1267
Rubber Soul (late 1965) — Burnished tone, sitar curls, fish-eye perspective.
★ Extended editorial essay (5 sections)
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Overview
Rubber Soul is the sixth studio album by the English rock band the Beatles. It was released on 3 December 1965 in the United Kingdom on EMI's Parlophone label, accompanied by the non-album double A-side single "We Can Work It Out" / "Day Tripper". The original North American release, issued by Capitol Records, contains ten of the fourteen songs and two tracks withheld from the band's Help! [Wikipedia]
Where they were
Recorded in just over four weeks between mid-October and mid-November 1965 — by the band's own subsequent admission, a deadline-driven sprint to make Christmas — Rubber Soul is the pivot. The Beatles had spent the summer of 1965 reading Dylan, ingesting cannabis and (in Lennon and Harrison's case) experimenting with LSD. The LP that emerged was their first to be conceived as an album, not a sequence of singles plus filler. McCartney later said it was the moment 'we got bored with being The Beatles.'
Release context
Rubber Soul is a Beatles EP issued in the United Kingdom on 3 December 1965 by Parlophone under catalogue number PMC 1267. It sits in the band's Rubber Soul (late 1965) period. It was issued the same day as the parent LP Rubber Soul.
Sessions were produced by George Martin with Norman Smith (his last LP) engineering, working at EMI Studios, Abbey Road. The signal chain ran through the Studer J37 four-track • REDD.51, with vocals captured on Neumann U47, U48. This combination of room, tape format and outboard chain is the same one heard across the band's other releases from the era — meaning the release shares its sonic identity with its parent LP rather than departing from it.
The release features Drive My Car, Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown) ★, You Won't See Me, Nowhere Man, Think for Yourself, The Word, Michelle.
Documented alternate masters and remaster passes can be found via the linked entries above; the editorial position throughout Beatles Answers is that the original UK mono master is the canonical point of reference for any EP from this era, with the 2009 and 50th-anniversary stereo remasters treated as documented variations rather than replacements. Catalogue numbers, label copy and matrix data are taken from EMI/Parlophone primary documentation and cross-checked against Mark Lewisohn's The Complete Beatles Recording Sessions (1988).
Recording
Norman Smith's last LP as the band's engineer (he was about to be promoted to producer at EMI, where one of his first signings would be Pink Floyd). The four-track Studer J37 was now being pushed to its limits with multiple bounced reductions. New instrumental colours appeared everywhere: George's sitar (acquired during the Help! film shoot) on Norwegian Wood; Paul's fuzz bass on Think for Yourself; harmonium on The Word; Mal Evans' single-note Hammond drone on You Won't See Me; the sped-up baroque piano George Martin played on In My Life that listeners always assume is a harpsichord.
The songs
Norwegian Wood opens with the first sitar in Western pop and tells a cryptic story of an affair that ends, possibly, in arson. Drive My Car opens the LP with a bass-line lifted from Otis Redding's Respect. In My Life condenses an entire neighbourhood memoir (originally a literal list of Liverpool places) into two-and-a-half minutes. Michelle smuggled in French-language pop. The Word turned 'love' into doctrine, anticipating All You Need Is Love eighteen months later.
Reception
Released 3 December 1965 — the same day as the Day Tripper / We Can Work It Out double A-side single. Eight weeks at UK number one. The cover photo's stretched perspective happened by accident when designer Robert Freeman dropped his slide-projector to one side. The Beach Boys' Brian Wilson heard Rubber Soul, was floored, and set out to make the LP that became Pet Sounds — which in turn drove The Beatles to make Revolver.
Legacy
Rubber Soul is the first Beatles LP that signals the band's adult creative ambitions in every parameter at once: subject matter (interior monologue, marital cynicism, philosophical exhortation), instrumentation (sitar, fuzz, harmonium, baroque piano), arrangement (no covers, no novelty tracks, no obvious singles) and packaging (no band name on the cover). After it, every serious pop LP began conceiving itself as a unified artistic statement.
What's distinctive
14 tracks; average length 2:33. Lennon dominates the lead vocals (7/14). Lead writing credit: Lennon–McCartney (10 of 14). Includes 2 solely Harrison-credited compositions. 1 marquee song(s) on this release have hand-crafted extended essays. Estimated total takes across the release: 142.Tracklist
Side A
- Drive My Car
- Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown) ★
- You Won't See Me
- Nowhere Man
- Think for Yourself
- The Word
- Michelle
Side B
Pattern analysis
Era technical context
| Microphones | Neumann U47, U48; AKG C12; STC 4038 (drums) |
|---|---|
| Outboard | EMI RS124, EMT 140 plate, fuzzbox prototypes |
| Guitars | Epiphone Casino, Rickenbacker 360-12, Gibson J-160E, sitar (Harrison — first Beatles sitar on 'Norwegian Wood') |
| Amplifiers | Vox AC30, Vox AC50, Fender Showman |
References & external databases
Certifications
- BPI certification: Platinum (British Phonographic Industry)
- RIAA certification: Platinum (Recording Industry Association of America)
Chart positions and certifications sourced from the relevant Wikipedia article infoboxes and citation footnotes.
Awards & recognition
Recognition mentions extracted from the Wikipedia article. Verify against the linked source before quoting.
