By Justin Gerber on May 31st, 2009 in
I was raised on The Beatles. My father had their American releases on record, and my family had the pleasure of listening to selections from those albums and singles on mix tapes. We would listen to those tapes on during long trips or merely short trips to the grocery store in me ol’ city of residence, Phoenix. The sun would set as we’d drive through the mountainous regions of Squaw Peak, and I’d be treated to the smooth voice of an African-American man reminiscing that “Once there was a way, to get back home,” just before getting home…
I wasn’t delusional. The song was most certainly “Golden Slumbers”, but the man singing was not McCartney. It was jazz-guitar God, George Benson. His “Golden Slumbers” was part of a melody that opened up his tribute album to The Beatles’ swan song, Abbey Road, entitled, The Other Side of Abbey Road. Cover songs were staples of the 1960s, and are still prevalent today (Kelly Osbourne’s “Changes”), but cover albums? You’d think I was joking, but you’d be wrong. Dead wrong.
For the uninitiated, George Benson was (and still is) an incredible jazz guitarist. His voice is not to be heard on many of his albums, despite its quality. On The Other Side of Abbey Road, there are dozens of musicians playing a variety of instruments, including a then-unknown Herbie Hancock on keyboards. For all the music heard throughout, Benson delivers only vocals and guitar. But what music he creates.
What made this album even more unique was when it was released. It didn’t come out as part of any random We-Remember-The-Beatles tribute, or to commemorate a Ringo birthday. It was released in October of 1969, just three weeks after Abbey Road was released to the public. It doesn’t cover every song off that album, but its five tracks do cover 10 songs over a course of half an hour. Here is a track-by-track dusting off of The Other Side of Abbey Road:
“Her Majesty” does not magically appear at the end, so five tracks are what we get. Though nearly impossible to find at local record stores, the album is available through iTunes. For a Beatles completist, this album comes highly recommended, but for those with a negative view of jazz need not bother. Regardless, George Benson’s The Other Side of Abbey Road still sounds great 40 years after its release, just like The Beatles’ final record. If you like this, search out the Benson-compositions, “Affirmation” and “Breezin’”.