Then wash it all down with a cup of cold sick.

You need to hear it a few times before you can absorb it" – Derek Johnson. Seen in the Magical Mystery Tour film singing the song, Lennon, apparently, is the walrus; on the track-list of the accompanying soundtrack album, however, underneath "I Am the Walrus" are printed the words " 'No you're not!' Edgar: (4:31) Sit you down father, rest you.

It begins where the disguised Edgar talks to his estranged and maliciously blinded father the Earl of Gloucester (timings given[16]): Gloucester: (2:35) Now, good sir, wh— (Lennon appears to change the channel away from the station here)[16]

Help me spot the 50 Beatles songs. Shotton recalled the rhyme as follows: Yellow matter custard, green slop pie,

"I am the walrus (E chord), "coo coo cachoo" hanging as an imperfect cadence until resolved with the I (A chord) on "Mr. City Policeman". Pollack also notes that the repeated cell is seven bars long, which means that a different chord begins each four-bar phrase. Duck with bag over its head. He said it "suggests a world much like that of 'A Day In The Life,' where the news is bad and John Lennon (now a Walrus, with a drooping moustache) would like to turn us on. Analyzing the strangest Beatle's song", Komm, gib mir deine Hand / Sie liebt dich, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=I_Am_the_Walrus&oldid=980826415, Song recordings produced by George Martin, Short description is different from Wikidata, Pages using infobox song with unknown parameters, Articles with unsourced statements from April 2020, Articles with unsourced statements from August 2020, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. The mono version opens with a four-beat chord, while the stereo mix features six beats on the initial chord. A hybrid version prepared for the 1980 US Rarities LP combines the six-beat opening with the extra bar of music that precedes the words "yellow matter custard" (from the aforementioned US mono single mix). Compositionally, every musical letter of the alphabet is invoked and every chord is a major or a seventh. Not only is it ugly to hear, lacking any cohesion of style or technique, but it is utterly silly and pointless." Eric Burdon, lead singer of the Animals, claimed to be the "Eggman" mentioned in the song's lyric. Lennon returned to the subject in the lyrics of three of his subsequent songs: in the 1968 Beatles song "Glass Onion" he sings, "I told you 'bout the walrus and me, man / You know that we're as close as can be, man / Well here's another clue for you all / The walrus was Paul";[32] in the third verse of "Come Together" he sings the line "he bag production, he got walrus gumboot"; and in his 1970 solo song "God", admits: "I was the walrus, but now I'm John". But that wouldn't have been the same, would it? Musical parts that had previously been mixed were now available as separate elements. "[25], In a highly unfavourable review of Magical Mystery Tour, Rex Reed of HiFi/Stereo Review said that "I Am the Walrus" "defies any kind of description known to civilized man. Oswald: (3:52) Slave, thou hast slain me. Written by John Lennon and credited to Lennon–McCartney, it was released as the B-side to the single "Hello, Goodbye" and on the Magical Mystery Tour EP and album. "I Am the Walrus" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1967 television film Magical Mystery Tour.

Man with bag in the right corner (Get Back?)