Illustration by Carolyn Figel

Monty Python Was the Beatles of Comedy and Vice Versa

Fifty years ago, were the Fab Four reincarnated as Monty Python? George Harrison thought so — and he may have been onto something

Darryn King
GEN
Published in
8 min readSep 26, 2019

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OnOn September 26, 1969, 50 years ago today, the Beatles released their final album, Abbey Road. It featured music inspired by Chuck Berry and Fleetwood Mac and Beethoven, a bizarre new instrument called the Moog synthesizer, insect sounds and wind chimes and a clanging anvil, faux-Spanish nonsense lyrics, rolling waves of white noise, and characters including a homicidal medical student and a gardening octopus.

A little more than a week later, on Sunday, October 5, Monty Python’s Flying Circus premiered on BBC1. It featured a scraggly man emerging out of the English Channel, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart presenting famous deaths, Pablo Picasso on a bike and Toulouse-Lautrec on a tricycle, a goose-stepping Nazi, and Adolf Hitler regaling a rally with a corny joke. At least one Beatle was watching intently.

Mostly, though, it’s fun to think about the Beatles working on “Something” on the same day the Pythons were filming a man getting hit over the head with a raw chicken.

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