"Nowhere to Go."

I don't want to live in a world where 363 chose to give a YouTube video of the song 'You Never Give Me Your Money' a thumbs down.



In all the years I've known this song, I've never grown tired of it. It's perhaps the first instance of a Macca mini-suite in the style of 'Uncle Albert / Admiral Halsey' or 'Band on the Run', and is easily more affecting, going from the mournfulness of the first verse to the playfulness of that student-like bridge, to the sound of freedom in the last few verses. It also sparkles with beautiful clarity, from the clean ring of those opening piano chords to the crackling lead guitar fills; it's truly wonderful and a great example of why The Beatles were the best.

One of the most remarkable things about the band was the rate at which they matured and grew, and this song's a perfect case in point when you compare it to what came a couple of years before it; this is not the same band that produced 'From Me To You' or 'Please Please Me'. I never cease to be amazed by it. The line "step on the gas and wipe that tear away" speaks for freedom more than anything I've heard and is just so evocative. For all this and more, this song is a favourite.

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