Classic Albums. Hosted by Stevie Nix
Not all albums stand the test of time, but plenty do and Australian music critic Stevie Nix will bring one to you each week. He'll cover all eras and most genres and tell you why each record is so revered and, equally, why it deserves to be. And he only uses six songs to do it.
Classic Albums. Hosted by Stevie Nix
Abbey Road by The Beatles
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Released in 1969, Abbey Road is often spoken about as a farewell, though it wasn’t presented that way at the time. What it really represents is a final act of collective will: four musicians whose relationships were badly strained deciding to make one last album properly, with care, discipline and a shared sense of purpose. The remarkable thing is how completely that decision paid off. Abbey Road doesn’t sound like a band in collapse; it sounds like a band in total control - and what gives it its emotional weight is the tension between unity and separation. You can hear four distinct songwriting voices pulling in different directions, each already imagining a future beyond the group.
Featured songs:
Come Together
Something
Oh! Darling
I Want You [She's So Heavy]
You Never Give Me Your Money
Here Comes The Sun