Tag Archives: hold

#584: The Beatles – I Want to Hold Your Hand


Been almost a month since I was last here…. I’m sorry. Can’t say I’ve tried to keep to my earlier statement of doing a blog at least every Sunday. The posts will arrive in due time. Just been suffering from a lack of motivation. Not in a bad way, it’s just work. Weekends have really been reserved for laying down and sleeping.

Recently I decided to listen to all the songs on my phone in alphabetical order during my morning/evening commutes. Only because the shuffle system on iPhones is very poor. In doing so I’ve only properly realised how many songs by The Beatles (that I personally enjoy) begin with the letter ‘I’. There’s a lot of them to come in this ‘I’ series. ‘I Want to Hold Your Hand’ was the hit that made the four lads huge in the USA, and pretty much everywhere else.

There are some days when I listen to this thing and think it’s just too sappy. The lyrics are too simple and on the nose…. A song like this would never be taken seriously in today’s musical climate. Though the majority it’s just like….. fuck that. This song’s great for all of those reasons. John Lennon and Paul McCartney sing their chests out on this one, singing in unison and in perfect harmony…. The musicality between the four of them is just wild and thrilling but tight and controlled. It rocks without trying too hard. It’s just a good pop song, it can’t be denied.

Again, when it comes to The Beatles and YouTube – it’s very hard to find their official stuff because their record label always takes their music down when you try and upload it. There is an actual video for it; it’s not up just yet. Still, below’s the performance taken from the Ed Sullivan show when John, Paul, George and Ringo appeared on American television for the first time and owned it.

My iPod #535: The Raconteurs – Hold Up

As every year passes I feel that the chances of The Raconteurs releasing another album become slimmer. Though I wouldn’t be sad if Consolers of the Lonely was the last album the band released. For me it seemed like such a step up from Broken Boy Soldiers; the production gives the band a bigger sound working hand in hand with the memorable hooks, melodies and brilliant guitar playing that is delivered on almost every track. This is a rock album and there hasn’t really been one of the same calibre released since 2008. The band are currently on hiatus, but I’m in no rush for new material anytime soon.

I would categorise “Hold Up” as being the ‘party track’ of the album. The title phrase is repeated twenty-two times during the whole song; the majority of the time it is yelled out for the song’s choruses. Though it is repetitive, it doesn’t suffer from becoming boring or less thrilling the more times you listen to it. The song’s narrative sees Jack White fed up with ‘these modern times’ and he succeeds in getting with a lady that will help him get through them. I do guarantee that it will take you a couple of listens to gather what he is singing about though, just because the chorus has already embedded itself into your mind.

My iPod #534: John Lennon – Hold On

John Lennon’s solo album John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band opens with “Mother”, a five and a half minute track that ends with him screaming his vocals to shreds as he pleads for his parents to come back into his life. For the first song of what was his first album since leaving The Beatles, it is heavy to say the least. “Hold On” follows it to make the listener feel a bit happier about themselves for a short time with Lennon singing about how everything is going to be alright for him, his wife and the whole world.

Featuring only Lennon on tremolo-filtered guitar, Klaus Voormann on bass and Ringo Starr on drums, the song is a relaxing listen – perfect to chill out to on those warm sunny days when everything is in its right place. The laid-back vibes underpin the track’s message of optimism and reassurance. John randomly imitates the Cookie Monster from Sesame Street in it too.

These good feelings only lasts for less than two minutes. John doesn’t get much positive than this for the rest of the album. You have to enjoy it while it lasts.

My iPod #533: The Rutles – Hold My Hand

“Hold My Hand” is a song written by Neil Innes which featured in the mockumentary All You Need Is Cash, a television film that traces the career of the fictitious rock band The Rutles. The music and events depicted within parallel those of The Beatles, and as “I Want to Hold Your Hand” was the track that propelled the group to stardom so was “Hold My Hand” for Ron Nasty, Stig McQuickly, Stig O’Hara and Barry Wom. The film is a hilarious watch, recommended for any Beatles fan. Or Monty Python for that matter.

A love song about a man who feels the woman he has feelings for isn’t right for the guy she’s going out with, it is arranged using the styles of a few of The Beatles’ early numbers. One can hear similarities to “Eight Days a Week“, “All My Loving“, “I Want to Hold Your Hand” and “She Loves You“, just to name a few. Though Innes brilliantly fuses all the elements together to make a number just as playful, catchy and ironically original. Very nice.

My iPod #532: Brakes – Hold Me in the River

The Brighton based band Brakes released their second album The Beatific Visions in 2006, one year and a few months after raising the roof with the impressive debut of Give Blood.  The Beatific Visions reinforced the rough rock ‘n’ roll delivered in songs under/just above two minutes that was established with Give Blood, albeit with crisper and cleaner production.

“Hold Me in the River” starts it all off and was released as the album’s first single. The track takes fourteen seconds to warm up before breaking into its riff which acts as the main instrumental refrain. Lacking a chorus, “Hold Me” consists only of two verses sung by an ever-eccentric Eamon Hamilton who sings about, what I can only guess, being ready to take on anything that comes his way.

A very confident opener, it is something to get you ‘settled’ in for the ten tracks that are to come.