Description
Book SynopsisThe Beatles brought colour, joy, freedom and love to a grey, post-war world. But the most successful group in popular music history also harboured hidden, sometimes darker worlds and influences that are often downplayed by their biographers. In their career, the Fab Four were to cross paths with many spiritual movements, religious groups, esoteric philosophies and mystical teachings. Inevitably, their thinking was affected by the ideas they encountered. These ideas in turn helped shape their music and – given their vast popularity – the public consciousness. Behind the Wall of Illusion examines the spiritual inspirations that the Beatles brought to the changing cultural landscape of the 1960s. --- From the popularization of the new religion of rock ‘n’ roll, Beatlemania (the ‘new Cult of Dionysus’) and John Lennon’s explosive statement that the Beatles were ‘bigger than Jesus’, Sean MacLeod takes us on a tour of Indian ashrams, questionable gurus and hallucinatory drugs. He also studies the secreted ‘clues’ in the Beatles’ album covers and films; the growing rumours that Paul had been killed in a car crash and covertly replaced; and the tragic assassination of John Lennon and the unknown perpetrators behind the crime. This is an indispensable book for any lover of the Beatles.
Table of ContentsChapter 1, In the Beginning...: The Birth of the Beatles – Chapter 2, A Shot of Rhythm and Blues: The New Religion of Rock ‘n’ Roll – Chapter 3, Yeah Yeah Yeah: Beatlemania and the Cult of Dionysus – Chapter 4, Nothing Is Real: Esoteric Beatles – Chapter 5, Christ You Know it Ain’t Easy: Bigger than Jesus – Chapter 6, I’d Love to Turn You On: LSD and the Mystic Tradition – Chapter 7, Here’s Another Clue for You All: Album Covers, Films and Videos – Chapter 8, He Blew His Mind Out in a Car: Paul is Dead – Chapter 9, Ja Guru Deva: India and Spiritual Regeneration – Chapter 10, The Dream Is Over: Assassinations, Murder and Mind Control – Conclusion, And in the End... The Beatles Legacy – Notes – Bibliography