Published at 3:30 AM on December 5, 2008

By Steve LaBate

The Coolest Beatles Songs You Might Have Missed

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"I've Just Seen a Face" 
This gorgeous, unadorned acoustic number—also from the Help! soundtrack—is my all-time favorite Beatles song. It genuinely captures the kind of happiness you can know only after experiencing deep longing and sadness. Every time I listen to it, the purity of Paul McCartney's vocal and the simple poetry of his lyrics wash over me, transporting me to a romanticized time nearly two decades before I was born; a more innocent time, when life was as wholesome, uncluttered and satisfying as the 12-string-guitar plucks George Harrison scatters atop all those Beatles-pretty chords. Of course, I know this time never really existed (watching a few episodes of Mad Men will cure you pretty damn quickly of any naivete about the early '60s). Still, that place of innocence does exist, if only inside of McCartney's song. I remember being baffled when I learned that he'd written the tune when he was just 16. How could a 16-year-old write something so affecting, so perfect, so... optimistic? The more I thought about it, the more it made sense.
 

"I'm Only Sleeping" 
From the chime of the opening strum, this song perfectly embodies its subject matter; I don't think there's a better example of a piece of music sounding and feeling exactly like what it's about. It's as if you could take the lyrics away and just have John Lennon lazily mumble indecipherable phrases in the same cadence and pitch, and everyone would still get the transmission, straight through their third eye.
 

"Rain" 
This song was originally released as the B-side to 1966 single "Paperback Writer." Both were recorded during the Revolver sessions but left off the album. The two tracks, taken together, are all the proof you'll ever need of Paul McCartney's mind-boggling bass chops and distinct, if erratic, style. "Rain" also features some of Ringo Starr's most inventive drumming, a purposefully draggy feel, ringing guitars, classic three-part Beatles harmonies and a chorus so monumental it seems to sharply bend the space-time continuum (an interesting contrast, considering Lennon's admission that the song was merely about how people are always bitching about the weather). You can almost feel the lysergic acid dripping off of this one, especially with the trippy backward vocals during the last verse. "Rain" is one of the first tracks to ever use this now-common technique. And many consider the short film below that accompanies the song to be the very first music video, planting the seeds for the MTV generation. (And here's another cool clip of The Beatles premiering "Rain" on The Ed Sullivan Show.)


 
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*For more great Beatles tracks you might have missed, check next Friday's List of the Day blog.

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