Taxman


"Taxman" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles and released as the opening track on their 1966 album Revolver. Written by the group's lead guitarist George Harrison, its lyrics attack the higher level of progressive tax imposed by the Labour government of Harold Wilson.

Composition and recording

Harrison said, Taxman' was when I first realized that even though we had started earning money, we were actually giving most of it away in taxes. It was and still is typical." As their earnings placed them in the top tax bracket in the United Kingdom, the Beatles were liable to a 95% supertax introduced by Harold Wilson's Labour government. In a 1984 interview with Playboy magazine, Paul McCartney explained: "George wrote that and I played guitar on it. He wrote it in anger at finding out what the taxman did. He had never known before then what he'll do with your money."
John Lennon recalled, in a 1980 interview with Playboy magazine: "I remember the day he called to ask for help on 'Taxman', one of his first songs. I threw in a few one-liners to help the song along, because that's what he asked for. He came to me because he couldn't go to Paul, because Paul wouldn't have helped him at that period. I didn't want to do it ... I just sort of bit my tongue and said OK. It had been John and Paul for so long, he'd been left out because he hadn't been a songwriter up until then." "Taxman", however, was the sixth song written by Harrison to be included on an album issued by the group.
The backing vocals' references to "Mr Wilson" and "Mr Heath", suggested by Lennon, refer respectively to Harold Wilson and Edward Heath; the former was the leader of the Labour Party and the latter the leader of the Conservative Party, the two largest parties in British politics. Wilson, then Prime Minister, had nominated all four of the Beatles as Members of the Order of the British Empire just the previous year. The chanted names replaced two refrains of "Anybody got a bit of money?" heard in take 11, an earlier version that was subsequently released on Anthology 2 in 1996.
Recording began on 20 April, but this was left unused and ten new takes occurred on 21 April, the four tracks being filled that day with drums and bass, Harrison's distorted rhythm guitar, followed by overdubs of McCartney's lead guitar, Harrison's lead vocal and Lennon and McCartney's backing vocals. The ending was created on 21 June.
As the lead track on Revolver, "Taxman" represents the only time a UK-issued Beatles studio album opened with a Harrison song or lead vocal.
The mono and stereo versions differ the time entries for the cowbell between the second verse and refrain.

Musical characteristics

The song is in the key of D major and in 4/4 time. The recording begins before the actual song with coughing and counting that McCartney described as sounds that were on the tape, and that Lennon "thought would like to hear". The counting, sounding like a half-speed 'tape-effect' version of the brisk 'live-effect' "one-two-three-four" that opened their first LP record, has been described as an "elaborate conceptual joke" with hints of "self-mockery".
The chords stress the flat VII scale degree and frequently involve a major/minor I chord in the harmony, which consequently evokes either Mixolydian or Dorian modes. There is one flat-III near the end, but unusually no V chord. The song is also notable musically for its use of both a 5th-string voicing of the dominant seventh sharp ninth chord to embellish the tonic D7 chord at the end of each two-line verse, and a 6th-string form to create a complementary "jarring dissonance" with the lyrics in the subdominant G chord at 1:29 on "Cause I'm the taxman, yeah – I'm the taxman". This also accentuates the comic comparison between this "civil servant superhero" and the hero of the popular 1966 television series Batman. McCartney's bass line has been considered to imitate Motown bassist James Jamerson in its active lines and glissandi. In the third verse McCartney doubles his own pentatonic bass line while outlining the jarring Iflat7 chord in octaves.
Rolling Stone has described the completed track as "skeleton funk – Harrison's choppy fuzz-toned guitar chords moving against an R&B dance beat", with McCartney contributing a "screeching-raga guitar solo". The solo uses what musicologist Alan W. Pollack describes as "fast triplets, exotic modal touches, and a melodic shape which traverses several octaves and ends with a breathtaking upward flourish". Walter Everett considers that the solo is in the same Dorian mode that Harrison had adapted for his sitar part in "Love You To". In 1987, Harrison stated: "I was pleased to have play that bit on 'Taxman'. If you notice, he did like a little Indian bit on it for me." Ian MacDonald writes that, while Harrison was "rightly praised" for his composition, the track benefits from the whole group's creativity. MacDonald highlights McCartney's contributions, saying his guitar solo is "outstanding" and his bass part is "remarkable".

Legacy

Music journalist Rob Chapman cites "Taxman" as an example of the Beatles' widespread influence on rock music's developments during the 1960s. He says that Harrison's guitar riff in the song "runs like an unbroken thread through the development of English psychedelia" and is also present "as a trace element in many a mod-pop mutation". In the show Love, the guitar solo was sampled in the piece "Drive My Car"/"The Word"/"What You're Doing".
"Taxman" was included in Harrison's concert repertoire during his solo career; on his tour of Japan in 1991 with Eric Clapton, "Taxman" was on the set list. "It's a song that goes regardless if it's the sixties, seventies, eighties or nineties," Harrison declared. "There's always a taxman." Harrison added more lyrics on that tour, such as "If you're overweight, I'll tax your fat."
In the United States, radio disc jockeys and TV news reporters annually feature the song in the days leading up to 15 April, the date by which US income tax returns must usually be filed. Some post offices have even been known to sardonically play the song on in-house audio systems for the long lines of last-minute tax filers. In 2002 tax preparation service H&R Block used a slower-paced cover version of the song in television commercials.
In 1998, the song was played over a PBS promo where actor Jonathan Pond spoke about having a tax party.
In 2006, Virginia State Senator and future Republican gubernatorial candidate Ken Cuccinelli introduced an amendment to make "Taxman" the state song of Virginia, stating that taxes were an important part of Virginia history. He gave the example of Patrick Henry's strong opposition to British taxation during the American Revolution. The measure did not pass.
"Taxman" was ranked 48th in Mojos list of "The 101 Greatest Beatles Songs", compiled in 2006 by a panel of critics and musicians. In his commentary for the magazine, singer Joe Brown cited the track as a "brilliant example" of how, just as Harrison's guitar playing was often crucial in Lennon and McCartney's compositions, he was never selfish in his musicianship but was instead motivated to "get the best for the song" each time. Brown added: "everyone chipping in with guitar parts and harmonies. It's all very... compact. There's no fat at all on it. And, very funny." On a similar list compiled by Rolling Stone in 2010, the song appeared at number 55, where the editors described it as "a crucial link between the guitar-driven clang of the Beatles' 1963–65 sound and the emerging splendor of the group's experiments in psychedelia". In 2018, the music staff of Time Out London ranked "Taxman" at number 7 on their list of the best Beatles songs.

Personnel

According to Ian MacDonald, except where noted:
  • George Harrison – lead vocals, lead guitar
  • John Lennon – backing vocals, rhythm guitar
  • Paul McCartney – backing vocals, bass guitar, lead guitar
  • Ringo Starr – drums, cowbell, tambourine

    Other versions

  • The song has also been played and recorded by Junior Parker, Les Claypool, Black Oak Arkansas, Bill Wyman, the Music Machine, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Nickel Creek, Les Fradkin, Rootjoose, Garrison Starr, Rockwell, Mutual Admiration Society, Pat Travers, Franz Ferdinand, Power Station and Saga.
  • Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers played the song in tribute to Harrison at 2002's Concert For George.
  • Tok tok tok played the song on their Beatles tribute album from 2010, Revolution 69.
  • Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble recorded a version in 1986, but it was never released until the 1995 Greatest Hits album as the beginning track.
  • "Weird Al" Yankovic recorded a parody of this song in late 1981 called "Pac-Man", during the height of the game's popularity. It was released on the compilations Dr. Demento's Basement Tapes No. 4 and
  • Beatallica recorded a parody called "Sandman", which also was a parody of a popular Metallica song, "Enter Sandman".
  • The Jam released "Start!" in 1980, which uses the bassline.
  • Ride's song "Seagull", from the album Nowhere, borrows McCartney's bassline.
  • The main guitar riff of 31 Minutos's song "Equilibrio Espiritual" is based in this song.
  • Cheap Trick's "Taxman, Mr Thief", from their 1977 eponymous debut, is an homage to the Beatles' song, dealing in similar lyrical themes.