The Beatlesâ most controversial song sparked the first rock-politics debate and pioneered a guitar sound so extreme, fans thought their records were defective 🎸💥
Politics and Fuzz Guitar 🤯
âRevolutionâ is one of the most controversial songs the Beatles ever released, and thatâs saying something for a band that once claimed to be bigger than Jesus (sorta).
âRevolutionâ was John Lennonâs attempt to weigh in on the political chaos of 1968âand boy, did he pick a hell of a year to do it. The result? A song so divisive that it pissed off literally everyone: the far left thought heâd betrayed them, the far right thought he was a communist pinko, and casual listeners returned their copies to record stores thinking the guitar distortion was a manufacturing defect. 😂
Three Songs, One Controversy
Hereâs where it gets weird: there are actually THREE versions of âRevolution,â all recorded during the White Album sessions:
âRevolution 1â – The slow, bluesy version that ended up on the White Album
âRevolution 9â – The eight-minute avant-garde sound collage that nobodyâs parents understood. Or hardly anyone, really.
âRevolutionâ – The fast, hard-rocking single version that weâre talking about now
The slower âRevolution 1â and the avant-garde âRevolution 9â both came from the same original 10-minute recording that Lennon literally chopped into two pieces. The fast single version was recorded separately weeks later.â🎸
âDude, We Should Probably Say Something About All Thisâ
Lennon wrote âRevolutionâ while the Beatles were in Rishikesh, India, supposedly meditating with the Maharishi. The world was literally on fire in early 1968: massive protests against the Vietnam War, 25,000 demonstrators clashing violently with police at the American embassy in London, the Prague Spring, student uprisings in France. Young people were carrying pictures of Chairman Mao and talking about actual, burn-it-down revolution.
And Lennon, sitting up in the hills of India, thought: âItâs about time we spoke about it.â
Heâd been influenced by his Transcendental Meditation experiences (hence the repeated âitâs gonna be alrightâ refrainâGodâs got this, apparently) and by his burgeoning relationship with Yoko Ono, who was pushing him toward sexual politics as an alternative to hardcore Maoist ideology.
The song was basically Lennon saying: âYeah, change is good, but maybe letâs see your plan first? And if it involves violence and destruction… count me out.â 🤷♂️
The Most Important Line in the Song
Those lyrics about Chairman Maoâ
âBut if you go carrying pictures of Chairman Mao / You ainât gonna make it with anyone anyhowâ
âwere added in the studio, and Lennon later told the video director that this was the most important lyric in the entire song.
He was directly calling out the student radicals who were literally waving Maoâs Little Red Book around at protests. It was a âyeah, thatâs not gonna work, guysâ moment. The Maoist idea of cultural revolutionâpurging society of its non-progressive elementsâwas hot among activists, and Lennon was basically saying âhard pass.â
More on this in a minute, because Lennonâs feelings about this line get… complicated. 😬
Paul and George Were Like, âNopeâ 🚫
Lennon wanted âRevolution 1â (the slow version) to be their next single. McCartney and Harrison shut that down immediately. Too slow, they said. Too controversial, McCartney added.
Lennon was stubborn. He persisted, then the band agreed to remake it faster and LOUDER. The result was what music journalist Ian Fortnam called one of the Beatlesâ two âproto-metal experimentsâ of 1968 (the other being âHelter Skelterâ).
That Guitar Sound Though 🎸🔥
Letâs talk about that âstartling machine-gun fuzz guitar riffâ (as critic Richie Unterberger called it). The Beatles ripped it off from Pee Wee Craytonâs âDo Unto Othersâ and played it on what McCartney described as âa bit of a cheap Gibsonââa hollow-body with a laminated maple top.
The distortion was engineer Geoff Emerick going absolutely rogue. He ran the guitar signal directly into the mixing console through two microphone preamps in series, pushing them just below the point where the console would literally overheat and catch fire.
Emerick later joked: âIf I was the studio manager and saw this going on, Iâd fire myself.â 😂
The sound was so radical, so unprecedented, that when the single came out, some fans literally returned their copies to record stores. Shop assistants had to explain over and over: âItâs SUPPOSED to sound like that. Weâve checked with EMI.â
Pete Shelley of the Buzzcocks said hearing this distortion was his âeureka momentââthe moment he decided he wanted to be in a band.
But McCartney Still Won 🏆
Despite all of Lennonâs efforts, his perhaps desperate attempt to reassert leadership of the band, McCartneyâs âHey Judeâ got the singleâs A-side. âRevolutionâ was demoted to the B-side.
Still, it was a massively popular B-side. It hit #12 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the US (while âHey Judeâ was crushing it at #1), and it actually topped the charts in Australia and New Zealand. Not too shabby for a B-side that people thought was defective. 📀
The Music Video: Authenticity Over Everything 📹
The promo film is significant for a few reasons. First, it showed that the Beatles could still absolutely rock, two years after theyâd stopped performing live. They sang live over the singleâs backing track, combining elements from both versionsâthe âshoo-bee-doo-wopâ vocals from âRevolution 1â and Lennon singing the ambiguous âcount me outâinâ line.
But the real story is how the video captured Lennonâs transformation. Gone was the mop-top. Now he was a âserious longhairâ with shoulder-length center-parted hair, playing his Epiphone Casino guitar that heâd recently stripped from its sunburst pattern to plain white. As Ian MacDonald wrote, this âdeglamourised franknessâ became a key part of Lennonâs new image. ✨
Director Michael Lindsay-Hogg recalled that before filming, Lennon looked roughâworn down, exhausted. Lindsay-Hogg suggested some stage makeup to make him look healthier. Lennonâs response? No. âBecause Iâm John Lennon.â
And significantly, they chose to premiere the âRevolutionâ video on The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour rather than mainstream shows like Ed Sullivan. The Smothers Brothers were constantly censored by CBS for their anti-establishment views and Vietnam War commentary. Lennon wanted to make sure his political message reached the RIGHT audienceâthe countercultural crowd who would actually care. 🎭 (The âHey Judeâ video had aired on the Smothers show the week prior.)
Time Magazine vs. The Far Left (Everyoneâs Mad!) 😤
The single dropped on August 26, 1968 in the U.S. Two days later, police and National Guardsmen were filmed clubbing Vietnam War protesters at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago. Talk about timing.
Time magazine, the mainstream, establishment publicationâdevoted an entire article to âRevolution,â the first time in the magazineâs history theyâd done that for a pop song. They called it âexhilarating hard rockâ with a message that would âsurprise some, disappoint others, and move many: cool it.â ✌️
The far left? They lost their minds. Ramparts called it a âbetrayal.â The Berkeley Barb compared it to âthe hawk plank adopted this week in the Chicago convention of the Democratic Death Party.â Britainâs Black Dwarf said it showed the Beatles were âthe consciousness of the enemies of the revolution.â The New Left Review called it âa lamentable petty bourgeois cry of fear.â
They were shocked by Lennonâs sarcasm, his insistence that things would be âall right,â and especially his demand to âsee the planâ before signing up for revolution. The radicals didnât WANT a planâthey wanted to liberate minds and let everyone participate in decision-making as personal expression. Lennon asking for a structured approach was seen as hopelessly square. 🙄
Meanwhile, the far left held up the Rolling Stonesâ âStreet Fighting Manâ (released around the same time) as the GOOD exampleâeven though Mick Jaggerâs lyrics were just as ambiguous. But perception is everything.
Even the Far Right Got Confused 🤦♂️
Arch-conservative William F. Buckley Jr. wrote approvingly of âRevolutionâ… and then the John Birch Societyâs magazine rebuked him for it. They warned that the song wasnât actually denouncing revolutionâit was telling Maoists not to blow it through impatience and was actually espousing a Lenin-inspired âMoscow line.â
Nobody could agree on what this song meant. Ellen Willis of The New Yorker had perhaps the most savage take: âIt takes a lot of chutzpah for a multimillionaire to assure the rest of us, âYou know itâs gonna be all rightâ … Deep within John Lennon thereâs a fusty old Tory struggling to get out.â 💀
Ouch.
The âCount Me OutâInâ Ambiguity 🤔
Hereâs a detail that matters: On the single version, Lennon unequivocally sang âcount me out.â But on âRevolution 1â (the album version recorded first), he sang âcount me outâIN.â He literally recorded both because he was genuinely undecided about his feelings on destructive revolution.
When âRevolution 1â came out three months after the single, some student radicalsânot understanding the recording chronologyâthought Lennon had CHANGED his mind and was now partly on board with revolution. They welcomed it as a retraction. 📼
Lennon wasnât flip-flopping; he was just being honest about his uncertainty. But nobody was in the mood for nuance in 1968.
Lennon Gets Stung (And Fights Back) 💌
The criticism got under Lennonâs skin. A student radical named John Hoyland from Keele University wrote an open letter in Black Dwarf magazine, saying âRevolutionâ was âno more revolutionaryâ than the radio soap opera Mrs. Daleâs Diary. He told Lennon that to change the world, âweâve got to understand whatâs wrong with the world. And thenâdestroy it. Ruthlessly.â
Lennon met with two students at his home in Surrey before responding. He argued that destructive approaches just make way for destructive ruling powers (citing the French and Russian revolutions), and that the far leftâs âextremer than thouâ snobbery prevented them from forming a united movement. He warned that if radicals like Hoyland led a revolution, âI and the Rolling Stones would probably be the first ones theyâll shoot.â
Plot Twist: âI Made a Mistakeâ 😳
It gets crazier still: Lennon, after campaigning for peace throughout 1969 and undergoing primal therapy in 1970, talking to activist Tariq Ali, said: âI made a mistake, you know. The mistake was that it was anti-revolution.â
He wrote âPower to the Peopleâ as an apology, singing:
âYou say you want a revolution / We better get it on right away.â
After moving to New York in 1971, he and Yoko fully embraced radical politics with Chicago Seven defendants Jerry Rubin and Abbie Hoffman.
And about that Chairman Mao line heâd been so proud of? By 1972, Lennon said: âI should have never said that about Chairman Mao.â
Double Plot Twist: âActually, I Was Rightâ ✅
But wait, thereâs more! By 1972, after Nixonâs reelection, Lennon abandoned radical politics entirely and denounced revolutionaries as useless. And in the final interview he gave before his murder in December 1980, Lennon completely reaffirmed the pacifist message of âRevolution.â He said he still wanted to âsee the planâ for any proposed revolution.
Ian MacDonald, writing in 1994, basically said history proved Lennon right: âTiananmen Square, the ignominious collapse of Soviet communism, and the fact that most of his radical persecutors of 1968-70 now work in advertising have belatedly served to confirm his original instincts.â 💯
So Lennon went from: âHereâs my political statementâ â âI made a mistake, Iâm too conservativeâ â âActually, no, I was right all along.â Quite a journey.
The Nike Fiasco (Or: How to Make Fans Hate You) 👟💰
Fast forward to 1987. âRevolutionâ became the first Beatles recording ever licensed for a television commercial. Nike paid $500,000 for one yearâs use, split between Capitol-EMI and Michael Jackson (who owned the song publishing through ATV Music).
Yoko Ono approved it, saying it was âmaking Johnâs music accessible to a new generation.â But the three surviving Beatles were furious and filed a lawsuit through Apple Corps.
George Harrison summed it up perfectly:
âIf itâs allowed to happen, every Beatles song ever recorded is going to be advertising womenâs underwear and sausages. Weâve got to put a stop to it in order to set a precedent. Otherwise itâs going to be a free-for-all… Itâs one thing when youâre dead, but weâre still around! They donât have any respect for the fact that we wrote and recorded those songs, and it was our lives.â 😡
Fans were outraged too. They were incensed at both Jackson and Ono for allowing the Beatlesâ work to be commercially exploited. Ono claimed McCartney had agreed to the deal; McCartney denied it. The whole thing was settled out of court in 1989 with terms kept secret.
But hereâs the kicker: TheStreet.com included the Nike âRevolutionâ campaign in its list of the 100 key business events of the 20th century because it helped âcommodify dissent.â The ultimate ironyâa song about questioning revolution became a tool to sell revolution as a lifestyle brand. You canât make this stuff up. 🎯
Where It Stands Today 🏆
Looking back, âRevolutionâ is recognized as one of the Beatlesâ greatest rockers. Mojo placed it at #16 on their â101 Greatest Beatles Songsâ list. Rolling Stone ranked it #13 in a similar list.
It was the first song to spark serious debate about the connection between politics and rock music. It pioneered guitar distortion techniques that influenced punk and metal. It captured a moment of profound political division that still resonates todayâthe question of whether change should be gradual and planned or immediate and destructive.
And it showed John Lennon at his most honest and conflicted, willing to take heat from all sides rather than give easy answers. Even when he temporarily lost faith in his own message, he ultimately came back around to his original instinct: âchange the world, yes, but show me your plan first.â
That message aged pretty well, all things considered. Even if it took Tiananmen Square and the collapse of the Soviet Union to prove it. 🌍
The Bottom Line: âRevolutionâ is a masterclass in how to piss everyone off while creating something musically groundbreaking. Itâs Lennon at his most thoughtful and his most defiant, wrapped in a guitar sound so distorted that people thought their records were broken. Nearly sixty years later, weâre still arguing about what it meansâwhich is probably exactly what Lennon would have wanted. ✊🎸