![]() ![]() The other main attraction of the book is Davies’ unrivalled access to the group. But when the lyrics, like those for “ The Word” and “ Baby You’re A Rich Man”, include multicoloured doodlings by a presumably stoned author, they’re like the primitivist equivalent of illuminated manuscripts. Less interesting are those neatly penned after the fact: the one for “ Why Don’t We Do It In The Road”, all two lines of it, is dated 2010. The most interesting, in this respect, is surely “In My Life”, which reveals discarded lines from Lennon’s original poem, a reminiscent travelogue across Liverpool featuring various significant locations, including Penny Lane. He has managed to track down handwritten versions for 100 of the band’s 182 lyrics, and it’s undeniably fascinating to observe these scribbled seeds, particularly when they contain alterations, crossings-out and abandoned verses. Which makes Davies’ idea of locating and reprinting as many such original “manuscripts” the key attraction of The Beatles Lyrics. Find yourself a handwritten Lennon and McCartney song-in-progress sketched on the back of an envelope, and baby, you’re a rich man: John’s original lyric to “ A Day In The Life” was auctioned at Sotheby’s in 2010 for $1.2m (£730,000). But recently, the burgeoning trade in pop ephemera has magnified the value of all Beatles lyrics.
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