The more I listen to the Beatles’ “Abbey Road” album, the more I ask myself why I avoided listening to the Beatles.
I think that part of the answer we can find in my other post, entitled “The problem with Queen songs.” I believe that I unconsciously avoided listening to the Beatles because I heard their songs too frequently on Polish radio stations. Quite a similar issue happened with the Queen’s tunes. Still, once I listened to the entire “Abbey Road” album, from the first to the last song, I discovered the Beatles for myself, probably for the first time in my life. I already had similar cases with David Bowie’s “Station to Station” album or Jethro Tull’s “Thick as a Brick” album. In my last text, I encouraged you, my Dear Friend, to listen to the entire “Abbey Road” album. Today, I want to reconfirm myself. I write this text while listening to the “Polythene Pam” song. I do it and shake my head to the song’s rhythm.
It is merely fantastic.
Still, probably if I would listen to the single “Polythene Pam” without others tunes from “Abbey Road,” the effect would not be as magnificent as it is today (I wrote this text on the 7th of February, 2022). The more I hear “Abbey Road,” the more I hear David Bowie’s songs from one of the best albums ever recorded (“The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars”).
If you want to rediscover classic rock albums, my Dear Friend, and if you need to become more familiar with the albums mentioned above, sit down, relax, close your eyes and turn on the albums mentioned above. It can be Bowie, Jethro Tull, or the “Abbey Road.” While listening to all these albums, my soul is flying high in the sky, and I enjoy my life in its entirety. Do not avoid, my Dear Friend, listening to the Beatles and their “Abbey Road” album.