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Taxman

(Harrison)

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Overview

"Taxman" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles from their 1966 album Revolver. Written by the group's lead guitarist, George Harrison, with some lyrical assistance from John Lennon, it protests against the higher level of progressive tax imposed in the United Kingdom by the Labour government of Harold Wilson, which saw the Beatles paying over 90 per cent of their earnings to the Treasury. The song was selected as the album's opening track and contributed to Harrison's emergence as a songwriter beside the dominant Lennon–McCartney partnership. [Wikipedia]

Background

Taxman is a song by The Beatles, written by Harrison and led on vocal by George Harrison. George's barbed protest at 95% supertax; Paul plays the searing guitar solo. George Harrison's acerbic protest against the 95 percent supertax rates imposed on high earners, 'Taxman' opens Revolver with satirical bite. Harrison directed his complaint toward Prime Minister Harold Wilson and Conservative shadow leader Edward Heath, delivering the song's opening line with sardonic precision. Paul McCartney's piercing guitar solo, stepping into a rare instrumental role, cuts through the composition's rhythmic groove with the sharpness of a blade (Lewisohn 1988, p.75). Kozinn observes that 'Taxman' functions as a plain rocker with a sizzlingly virtuosic guitar solo—notably not performed by Harrison himself, but by McCartney, whose technical facility had visibly surpassed that of the guitarist credited on the album. (Kozinn 1995, p.144)

What's distinctive

One of 28 songs led primarily by George. One of 22 solely Harrison-credited compositions in the canon. Recorded approximately 8 of 16 into the Revolver / Studio Awakening (1966) sessions. Carries the unique tag 'protest' — no other song shares it. Take count: 14 (highest take number documented in Lewisohn (1988)).

Opening line — "Let me tell you how it will be…" (brief identification excerpt; full lyrics © Sony Music Publishing — see Genius link in References.)

Pattern analysis

Lead vocalists across Revolver
14
Lennon 5
McCartney 5
Harrison 3
Starr 1
Theme prevalence across the canon
george-original14opener8protest1supertax1paul-solo1
Track length percentile — Taxman sits at the 58th percentile (median 2:33)
shorter ←→ longer2:39
Recorded 21 Apr 1966 — position on the band's studio chronology
196219631964196519661967196819691970
Estimated takes — Taxman: 14 takes (highest take number documented in Lewisohn (1988))
era median 15 14 Revolver / Studio Awakening (1966): takes range 13–32
Key prevalence in the canon — Taxman is in D (27 songs share this key)
E39A34G33C28D27F10Am10B8
Songwriting credits on Revolver (composition mix)
14
Solo Lennon/McCartney 10
Harrison 3
Lennon–McCartney joint 1
Recording density per month — 21 Apr 1966 (highlighted) shared the studio with 9 other song(s) that month
196219631964196519661967196819691970
Theme rarity — orange bars are unusually rare tags in the canon (≤3 songs share)
protest1 ★supertax1 ★paul-solo1 ★opener8george-original14
Position on Revolver — track 1 of 14
#1openercloser

Recording

The session work falls within the band's Revolver / Studio Awakening (1966) period, recorded 21 Apr 1966 at EMI Studios, Abbey Road. George Martin produced; Geoff Emerick engineered. For session-by-session detail, see Mark Lewisohn's account on p.75 of The Complete Beatles Recording Sessions (excerpt below). The song's recording spanned three sessions: initial rhythm track attempts on 20 April yielded four incomplete takes, prompting a fresh start on 21 April with eleven takes before vocals were introduced. A tape reduction on 22 April added overdubbed cowbell and the backing vocal refrain identifying Wilson and Heath. The final lead guitar solo, contrary to early takes, was assembled from a tape copy of the middle eight section, edited into place during the mono and stereo remix on 21 June (Lewisohn 1988, pp.75-78). Emerick recounts that he considered 'Taxman' George's strongest song on Revolver; George Martin's decision to place it first on the album was a deliberate choice to showcase Harrison's advancing songwriting prowess despite his often being overshadowed by Lennon-McCartney. (Emerick 2006, p.335) MacDonald notes the compressed, thuddy bass-driven guitar sound Harrison achieved on this track, influenced by the song's satirical commentary on high earner taxation that would become central to Revolver's opening. (MacDonald 1994, p.87)

George's strongest song on Revolver.- Geoff Emerick, Here There and Everywhere (2006)

Recording process — typical signal flow for the Revolver / Studio Awakening (1966)
DemoBackingOverdubsVocalsMix
Studio: EMI Studios, Abbey Road • Console: REDD.51 • Tape: Studer J37 four-track (with vari-speed, ADT)
StudioEMI Studios, Abbey Road — Studio Three (largely)
Tape machineStuder J37 four-track (with vari-speed, ADT)
ConsoleREDD.51
MicrophonesNeumann U47/U48, AKG C12, STC 4038, close-miking pioneered (Emerick) on Ringo's bass drum
Outboard / effectsEMI RS124, EMT 140 plate, Fairchild 660 limiter, EMI Artificial Double Tracking (ADT), Leslie cabinet (vocals)
GuitarsEpiphone Casino, Gibson SG (Harrison), Rickenbacker 4001S bass (McCartney introduced)
AmplifiersVox AC100, Vox 7120, Fender Showman, Fender Bassman
ProducerGeorge Martin
Engineer / 2ndGeoff Emerick • Phil McDonald (2nd)
Estimated takes14 (highest take number documented in Lewisohn (1988))

Mix variants & recording techniques

Taxman is the canonical Revolver track where the lead guitar solo on a George Harrison composition is played by Paul McCartney rather than by Harrison himself — an early documented case of cross-Beatle instrumental swap on a member-credited song. Per K/R p. 421 verbatim, “Take 11 was deemed ‘best’, so George then double-tracked his lead vocal on Tracks 3 and 4, while Paul and John added backing harmonies. On Track 2, Ringo played tambourine while John and Paul contributed some lightning-fast backing vocals consisting of the phrase ‘Anybody got a bit of money’, repeated in rapid succession. In the same pass, Paul added electric guitar, including a particularly fierce guitar solo played on his Epiphone guitar. ‘George [Harrison] let me have a go for that solo because I had an idea,’ he said. ‘I was trying to persuade George to do something… feedback-y and crazy. And I was showing him what I wanted, and he said, “Well, you do it”. Even though it was his song, he was happy for me to do it.’ George agreed: ‘I was pleased to have Paul play that bit on “Taxman”. If you notice, he did like a little Indian bit on it for me.’” The same Epiphone-Casino solo is the documented source of a long-running (false) claim about Tomorrow Never Knows — per K/R p. 413 verbatim re the TNK backwards solo on 22 April 1966: “The similarity of the two parts has even prompted some writers in the past to claim that the solo on ‘Tomorrow Never Knows’ was in fact the ‘Taxman’ solo, reversed and dropped into the track; this is not true.” The Taxman solo and the TNK backwards solo are two separate Paul-played Epiphone performances captured the evening of 21 April and the evening of 22 April respectively.

The song was recorded across multiple sessions: 20 April 1966 (Wed) at EMI Studio Two, 2.30pm–2.30am, P: George Martin, E: Geoff Emerick, 2E: Phil McDonald (per Lewisohn p. 75 session header) — four rhythm-track takes recorded, “Only two were complete, and at the conclusion of the fourth there was much discussion, caught on tape, about how the song might best be structured” (Lewisohn p. 75 verbatim). Per Lewisohn p. 75 verbatim, “When it was picked up again the next day they started afresh with a new take one” — the 20 April takes were abandoned in favour of a fresh start. 21 April 1966 (Thu) at EMI Studio Two, 2.30pm–12.50am (Lewisohn p. 76 session header) — takes 1–11 with vocals introduced at take 11 (which became “best”). Per K/R p. 421 verbatim, take 11’s four-track layout was: T1 = drums + bass + electric guitar (a Norman-Smith-era track-allocation where bass and drums share T1 despite Paperback Writer a week earlier having demonstrated bass on its own track); T2 = tambourine + “Anybody got a bit of money” backing vocals + Paul’s electric guitar (including the lead solo); T3 + T4 = George’s double-tracked lead vocal + Paul/John backing harmonies. 22 April 1966 (Fri) at EMI Studio Two, 2.30–11.30pm (Lewisohn p. 76 session header) — tape reduction take 11 into take 12 + SI of cowbell + “Mister Wilson, Mister Heath” vocals onto the freed Track 4 of take 12; per K/R p. 421 verbatim, “During the reduction, George’s two lead vocal tracks were combined into one. Additionally, the ‘Anybody got a bit of money’ vocals were quickly turned down at each appropriate spot during the reduction, as were some guitar notes by Paul during the second verse.” 27 April 1966 (Wed) at Studio Three (control room only), 6.00–11.30pm (Lewisohn p. 77 session header) — rough mono remix 1 from take 12 (one of 11 remixes that evening, of which none was used for Revolver per Lewisohn p. 77 verbatim). 16 May 1966 (Mon) at EMI Studio Two, 2.30pm–1.30am (Lewisohn p. 78 session header) — one final SI onto take 12: per Lewisohn p. 78 verbatim, “‘Taxman’ finally received its ‘One, two, three, four’ intro” (the famous spoken count-in is therefore a 16 May 1966 overdub, not part of the 21 April basic-tracking). Mono remixes 2–5 from take 12 were also made on 16 May; per Lewisohn p. 78 verbatim, “None of the four mono mixes of ‘Taxman’ was ever used.” 21 June 1966 (Tue) at Studio Three (control room only), 2.30–6.30pm (Lewisohn p. 84 session header) — final mono remixes 5–6 from take 12 + editing + stereo remixes 1–2 from take 12 + editing. Per Lewisohn p. 84 verbatim note: “Mono remixes five and six of ‘Taxman’ should have been numbered six and seven” — the EMI session-sheet numbering was off by one, since the 27 April + 16 May remixes 1 + 2–5 already exhausted numbers 1–5 before the 21 June pair were cut. Per K/R p. 421 verbatim, “The stereo mix is a combination of RS1 (the first part of the song) and RS2 (the remixed solo section), and the mono mix is a combination of RM5 and RM6.”

Mix variants

Recording techniques

Legacy & release history

In the canonical discography it appears on the LP Revolver. Documented alternate versions include Anthology 2 (1996), 2009 Stereo Remasters. Mono and stereo histories vary by era — see the dedicated section below. Taxman ranks 14 pages in Lewisohn's coverage, reflecting the song's recording complexity and compositional significance. George Harrison lead vocals appear in 28 canon songs, with 3 in the Revolver era—making this one of his rarest lead-vocal assignments across the entire catalog. As the album opener, Taxman announced a thematic shift from Rubber Soul's introspection to pointed social commentary and stylistic experimentation (Lewisohn 1988, pp.75-78).

Mono & stereo

Documented alternate versions

Released on

Cross-references

Other songs sharing themes (protest, supertax, paul-solo, opener, george-original)

Other songs led by the same vocalist

Other songs from this era

protestsupertaxpaul-soloopenergeorge-original

References & external databases

Cultural appearances

  • In his book Psychedelia and Other Colours, Rob Chapman highlights "Taxman" as an example of the Beatles' widespread influence on rock music's developments during the 1960s.
  • He says that Harrison's guitar riff "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". Writing in Rolling Stone's Harrison commemorative book, in January 2002, Mikal Gilmore recognised his incorporat...
  • Gilmore considered this quality to be "perhaps more originally creative" than the avant-garde styling that Lennon and McCartney took from Karlheinz Stockhausen, Luciano Berio, Edgar Varese and Igor Stravinsky and brought to the Beatles' work over the same period. Revolver has been recognised as...
  • During the 1996 US presidential election, publicity for Republican candidate Bob Dole stated that he would be using a tape of "Taxman" in his campaign rallies.
  • This was in response to his Democratic opponent, Bill Clinton, adopting a personal anecdote from his past as a student in England, detailing how he defended Starr in a Liverpool pub brawl, as part of his campaign rhetoric. In early 2002, according to musicologist Russell Reising, "one of the largest [tax] prepar...
  • Quartz reporter Aamna Mohdin describes "Taxman" as "the mother of all tax protest songs" amid a wealth of creative works that convey "the misery of taxes". A 2019 article in Tax Journal stated that the Beatles' legacy endures in the "world of tax" through the song, which had b...

Extracted from the ‘In popular culture’ / ‘Legacy’ section of the corresponding Wikipedia article. Verify against the linked article before quoting.

On screen with the same title

Film, TV, and other screen works whose primary title matches this song. Some are direct cultural references (the 1965 Beatles film, the 2019 Danny Boyle feature). Many are coincidental title shares -- worth knowing about but not claiming as soundtrack appearances. Sorted by IMDB vote count.

  • Taxman (1998, film) IMDB 5.6 · 594 votes [IMDB]
  • Nothing to Declare (1999, film) IMDB 5.3 · 214 votes [IMDB]

Source: IMDB public dataset (title.basics.tsv + title.ratings.tsv) joined locally. Includes titles with sufficient vote counts to indicate cultural visibility.

Frequently asked

Who wrote Taxman?

“Taxman” was written by George Harrison.

Who sings lead on Taxman?

The lead vocal on “Taxman” is by George Harrison.

When was Taxman recorded?

“Taxman” was recorded 21 Apr 1966 at EMI Studios, Abbey Road.

How many takes did Taxman require?

Mark Lewisohn's session log documents up to 14 numbered takes for “Taxman”.

See also