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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
National
Callum Crumlish & Aaron Curran

'Legendary' songwriter changed the way the Beatles made music

The Beatles changed their songwriting styles and techniques a lot throughout the 1960s.

John Lennon once revealed how discovering the music of Bob Dylan in 1964 had a particular effect on his writing, The Express reports. He said in Anthology: "In Paris in 1964 was the first time I ever heard Dylan at all. Paul [McCartney] got the record [The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan] from a French DJ. For three weeks in Paris, we didn’t stop playing it. We all went potty about Dylan."

The following year, in 1965, Lennon released You've Got to Hide Your Love Away on the Beatles' fifth studio album, Help!

READ MORE: American Beatles fan on 'culture shocks' he faced in Liverpool

Reminiscing about this track, he said: "It’s one of those that you sing a bit sadly to yourself. 'Here I stand, head in hand...' I’d started thinking about my own emotions." He added: "I don’t know when exactly it started, [songs] like I’m A Loser or Hide Your Love Away, those kind of things. Instead of projecting myself into a situation, I would try to express what I felt about myself, which I’d done in my books."

Lennon continued: "I think it was Dylan who helped me realise that – not by any discussion or anything, but by hearing his work."

Years later, the star looked back on I'm a Loser, a song he described as "me in my Dylan period".

He noted it showed his style of thinking at the time as: "Part of me suspects I’m a loser and part of me thinks I’m God Almighty." On You've Got To Hide Your Love Away, Lennon said: "That’s me in my Dylan period again. I am like a chameleon, influenced by whatever is going on."

Lennon said he wasn't the only singer who was influenced by other artists, however. He explained: "If Elvis can do it, I can do it. If the Everly Brothers can do it, me and Paul can. Same with Dylan."

Paul McCartney later pointed out the song was being sung in the same style as Dylan. He said: "That was John doing a Dylan… heavily influenced by Bob. If you listen, he’s singing it like Bob." McCartney was also a passionate fan of Dylan in those early years of the Fab Four.

Macca even called Dylan "our idol". Thinking about meeting the Like A Rolling Stone singer, he said: "It was a great honour to meet him, we had a crazy party that night we met. I thought I had gotten the meaning of life, that night."

Dylan reportedly offered the band cannabis at that meeting - their first-ever experience with the drug - and it went down a treat with the young rockers. McCartney said of the experience: "I could feel myself climbing a spiral walkway as I was talking to Dylan. I felt like I was figuring it all out, the meaning of life."

George Harrison also praised Dylan hugely after they built a strong friendship.

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