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  1. Limitless undying love which shines around me like a million suns, It calls me on and on across the universe" -here it is explained how he is surrounded by words of feeling and hope. encouraged by words of all people around the world.

    • “Jai Guru Deva, Om”
    • The Three Ideas
    • Song’S Title
    • Takeaway
    • Release of “Across The Universe”
    • Writing of “Across The Universe”
    • Recording
    • Lennon Disliked The Song’S Recording
    • Backup Singers on “Across The Universe”
    • Various Renditions of “Across The Universe”

    And Yogi’s influence is found on this song most specifically, from a lyrical perspective, in the chorus with the phrase “jai Guru Deva, om”. The first part of that line is actually in Sanskrit and can be interpreted in different ways. But it is generally considered to be a shoutout to one Guru Dev. Dev was the late-19thcentury monk who schooled Mah...

    One is that the vocalist is like in tune with the universe. Or put differently, he is holistically appreciative of all of the natural forces, so to speak, that exist around him, including the likes of astronomical bodies. Second would be that John Lennon was apparently an advocate of what some may term as the Free Love, which was more or less a com...

    Meanwhile the titular phrase is featured a handful of times in the lyrics, most notably in the second verse. And what it seems to allude to is the vocalist receiving messages, from a “they” or “it”, from “across the universe”. Of course that is a very poetic statement, just as many of the ideas above are also presented. But most basically explained...

    So “Across the Universe” may not be one of those Beatles’ songs that caused the powers-that-be to spaz due to lyrics perceived as being based on getting high or what have you. But out of all Fab Four songs, we have studied thus far, this is perhaps the one with the most straightforward hippy-inspired sentiment.

    This song originally came on 12 December 1969. It was part of a project entitled “No One’s Gonna Change Our World”. Said project is actually a compilation album that features a few acts, perhaps most notable besides the Beatles, the Bee Gees. And by the looks of things, neither “Across the Universe” nor any other tracks from that album were release...

    John Lennon (1940-1980) came up with the first line on this song while lying in bed next to his wife at the time, Cynthia Powell, whom he was married to from 1962 to 1968. And he said in receiving that phrase, which he lyrically fleshed out into the entire “Across the Universe”, he “kept hearing these words over and over, flowing like an endless st...

    This track was recorded in February of 1968. Concurrently the band recorded the following songs: 1. Lady Madonna 2. The Inner Light Both tracks were released shortly that same year, as well as “Hey Bulldog”, a track they put out in 1969. “Across the Universe” was subjected to some additional changes in early 1969. This was after The Beatles had agr...

    Reportedly this is a song that Lennon was never actually pleased with recording-wise. Or more specifically he found the recording of“Across the Universe” wanting and even accused Paul McCartney of ‘subconsciously trying to destroy’ it. He also accused the other musicians involved involved in the project as being unserious when it came to laying dow...

    Relatedly, the original recording of “Across the Universe” features a couple of female backup vocalists. These two individuals, Gaylene Pease and Lizzie Bravo, were not professional singers. They were actually teenaged Beatles’ fans who were hanging out around the studio the group was recording in. In fact the latter actually came all the way from ...

    This song may not be one of the most popular Beatles songs amongst us laymen. However, their musical colleagues seem to be quite fond of it considering some of the covers that have been dropped. For instance, David Bowie came out with a version in 1975. The said version actually featured John Lennon. Later on, Fiona Apple dropped her own rendition ...

  2. 17 de dic. de 2005 · Discuss the deeper meaning of Beatles's song Across the Universe. Read and vote on user submitted song interpretations.

  3. "Across the Universe" is a song by the English rock band the Beatles. It was written by John Lennon and credited to Lennon–McCartney. The song first appeared on the 1969 various artists' charity compilation album No One's Gonna Change Our World and later, in a different form, on their 1970 album Let It Be, the group's final ...

  4. Las palabras 'Jai Guru De Va Om' se repiten, como un mantra que nos invita a reflexionar sobre la inmutabilidad del mundo que nos rodea. Se describen imágenes de luz brillante que nos llaman a través del universo, mientras pensamientos se deslizan como un viento inquieto en nuestra mente.

  5. The Beatles - Across the Universe (Traducción al Español) Lyrics: Las palabras como lluvia infinita fluyen hacia una copa de papel / Sin control serpentean mientras se...

  6. 14 de mar. de 2008 · Although best known as a track on 1970’s Let It Be album, ‘Across The Universe’ was recorded in early 1968 and first released on a World Wildlife Fund album the following year. It was John Lennon’s first composition to be recorded by The Beatles since ‘I Am The Walrus’ five months earlier.