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It’s Global Beatles Day: four ways to celebrate the Fab Four plus Cream’s Top 4 psychedelic Beatles songs

Unbenownst to me, and surprisingly since I’m a massive fan of the Beatles – but today is Global Beatles Day, celebrated each year on June 25, apparently.

The day honours the timeless influence of the Beatles on music, culture and social change. Inspired by their message of peace and love, the date commemorates their performance of All You Need Is Love on the BBC’s Our World broadcast in 1967 – the first live global television link. I’m guessing June 25 is the date this went live… I just checked, and yep, it is. Which means next year’s Global Beatles Day will mark 70 years of celebrating!

From Liverpool to the world, the Fab Four reshaped pop music with innovation, lyrical depth and undeniable charm. Today, fans across generations mark the occasion by revisiting their iconic catalogue and reflecting on the band’s enduring legacy.

Global Beatles Day is more than nostalgia – it’s a celebration of creativity, unity and the universal language of music that continues to inspire decades on.

Centuries on from today, I’m pretty certain The Beatles’ music will still be played. And that is what I call credibility and genius.

Antonino Tati

 

FOUR WAYS TO CELEBRATE GLOBAL BEATLES DAY:

  1. Host a listening party – Spin classic albums like Abbey Road or Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.
  2. Watch Beatles films – Revisit A Hard Day’s Night or Let It Be.
  3. Dress the part – Channel your favourite Beatle era, from mop tops to psychedelic flair.
  4. Share the love – Post your favourite songs or lyrics and spread The Beatles’ message of peace and joy.

 

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CREAM’S TOP 4 PSYCHEDELIC SONGS BY THE BEATLES:

01. Tomorrow Never Knows (1966)

Built on hypnotic drum loops and droning sitar-like sounds, this Revolver closer feels like stepping inside a dream. John Lennon’s detached vocal, inspired by The Tibetan Book of the Dead, floats through a swirl of tape loops and backwards effects. It’s less a song, more a sonic meditation – arguably one of the earliest examples of full-blown psychedelic studio experimentation in pop.

02. Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds (1967)

Dreamlike and surreal, this track from Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band drifts through kaleidoscopic imagery – “tangerine trees” and “marmalade skies.” John Lennon channels childlike wonder with a trippy edge, while the shifting tempo and shimmering organ add to its hallucinatory feel.

03. I Am The Walrus (1967)

A chaotic collage of nonsense lyrics, orchestral swells and radio noise, this track from Magical Mystery Tour is peak psychedelic absurdity. John Lennon deliberately embraced surrealism here, blending Lewis Carroll-style wordplay with experimental production that feels delightfully disorienting.

04. Within You Without You (1967)

Led by George Harrison, this spiritual, Indian-influenced piece brings a more introspective kind of psychedelia. Featuring sitar, tabla and philosophical lyrics about ego and unity, it reflects the band’s exploration of Eastern thought—less kaleidoscope, more cosmic consciousness.

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