Paul McCartney says its time an experimental Beatles track saw the light of day.
McCartney says he wants to release Carnival of Light, a 14-minute experimental track the Fab Four recorded in 1967 but never released.
The band played the recording for an audience just once, at an electronic music festival in London. It reportedly includes distorted guitar, organ sounds, gargling and shouts of Barcelona! and Are you all right? from McCartney and John Lennon.
McCartney said during a recording session at Abbey Road studios he asked the other members of the band to just wander round all of the stuff and bang it, shout, play it. It doesnt need to make any sense.
I like it because its The Beatles free, going off piste, he told the BBC in a radio interview to be broadcast Thursday. Extracts of the interview were published last week in The Observer newspaper.
McCartney said he still had a master tape of the piece and the time has come for it to get its moment.
McCartney, usually regarded as the most melodically minded Beatle, told the BBC he had a long-standing interest in avant-garde music. He said Carnival of Light was inspired by experimental composers John Cage and Karlheinz Stockhausen.
He said he had wanted to include the track on the Beatles Anthology compilation, but was vetoed by his bandmates.
McCartney would need permission from Ringo Starr and the widows of Lennon and George Harrison to release the track.
McCartney says he wants to release Carnival of Light, a 14-minute experimental track the Fab Four recorded in 1967 but never released.
The band played the recording for an audience just once, at an electronic music festival in London. It reportedly includes distorted guitar, organ sounds, gargling and shouts of Barcelona! and Are you all right? from McCartney and John Lennon.
McCartney said during a recording session at Abbey Road studios he asked the other members of the band to just wander round all of the stuff and bang it, shout, play it. It doesnt need to make any sense.
I like it because its The Beatles free, going off piste, he told the BBC in a radio interview to be broadcast Thursday. Extracts of the interview were published last week in The Observer newspaper.
McCartney said he still had a master tape of the piece and the time has come for it to get its moment.
McCartney, usually regarded as the most melodically minded Beatle, told the BBC he had a long-standing interest in avant-garde music. He said Carnival of Light was inspired by experimental composers John Cage and Karlheinz Stockhausen.
He said he had wanted to include the track on the Beatles Anthology compilation, but was vetoed by his bandmates.
McCartney would need permission from Ringo Starr and the widows of Lennon and George Harrison to release the track.


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