
The Rubber Soul Project Review:
During the
long-lasting period of UN sanctions, many citizens of Yugoslavia learned how to
manufacture products that had earlier been only imported. Thus Rastko Ciric,
Professor of Illustration at the School of Applied Arts, University of Arts in
Belgrade, and an old Beatles fan, suffering from the lack pf foreign records and
licensed music titles, decided to act on his own. In 1993, he chose 15 titles of
previously unreleased Beatles songs and – composed them himself! He did that to
the
lyrics of Goran Skrobonja, horror fiction author and Beatles fan himself, and
they used the only information available as a starting point: titles of the
songs, for some of them the time of their origin and the name of the Beatles
album for which they were intended. Working on the words and music, the two
Belgrade artists tried to create these imaginary songs as close to the Beatles
style as possible. In 1995, with a little help of their friends, professional
musicians and Beatles fans too, they recorded the album called 'The Rubber Soul
Project', using old instruments and old music equipment from the Sixties. Along
with the title song, other titles include: 'All Together On The Wireless
Machine', 'Little Eddie', 'Four Nights In Moscow', 'Home', 'I Should Like To
Live Up A Tree', 'Shirley’s Wild Accordion', 'Colliding Circles', 'What’s The
New Mary Jane', 'Heather', 'When I Come To Town', 'Bound By Love', 'Indian Rope
Trick', 'Thinking Of Linking' and 'Watching Rainbows'. Mr. Skrobonja also wrote
a horror/SF novella entitled 'Rubber Soul' and it is included in the CD package
recently issued by the record company PGP RTS from Belgrade.
The
appearance of this album coincided with the release of archive tracks elsewhere
and created a big confusion in the local music scene. People wonder whether
these are original recordings or just a skillful forgery. One copy of the CD was
sent to Mr. Paul McCartney, who is the only person that can give the most
authentic comment. Certain record companies in London are interested in this
material (the rights to which belong to London based company AD&Sons Ltd. and
there is a possibility that ¤'The Rubber Soul Project' will be released in Great
Britain and other European countries. Anyhow, although this is NOT a
Beatles record, it is a MUST for all Beatles fans.
--BILLBOARD Magazine 'Global Music Pulse'