At face value, the Beatles’ 1966 B-side track “Dr. Robert” might have seemed like an anonymous ode to popular doctors of the day that gave their parents magical cure-all tonics of vitamins, amphetamines, and painkillers.
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However, if public speculation is true, the song’s origins are more likely rooted in one dentist, in particular, and his groovy coffee cups full of LSD-laced brew.
“Dr. Robert” Was The Beatles’ “Dr. Feelgood”
Sneakily tucked away on the backside of the Beatles’ mid-60s record ‘Revolver’ was “Dr. Robert,” a jaunty tune about a medical practitioner who you can call day or night, he’ll be there any time at all. The title character is a man you must believe, helping anyone in need. According to the Beatles, No one can succeed like Dr. Robert.
But who was Dr. Robert? Given the pre-1970s prevalence of doctors who administered their patients (especially the famous ones) punchy concoctions of hard drugs, there has been ample public speculation as to which specific doctor the Beatles were singing about. Based on the lyrics alone, one of the most reasonable guesses would be John Riley, a London-based dentist known for his charisma and high-profile clientele.
Riley not only helped the Liverpoolers straighten and beautify their teeth for the spotlight. He was also the first to administer the psychoactive drug LSD to John Lennon, George Harrison, and their respective partners, Cynthia Lennon and Pattie Boyd.
A Dinner Party With a Dentist Turns Disastrous
According to Craig Brown’s book One Two Three Four: The Beatles in Time, half of the Fab Four first experimented with LSD against their will at a dinner party hosted by Dr. John Riley and his girlfriend, Cyndy. As the evening was winding down, Cyndy served the guests hot coffee. After the musicians and their partners obliged and started to say their goodbyes, Riley allegedly replied, “You can’t leave.”
“What are you talking about?” One partygoer replied. “You’ve just had LSD,” the dentist replied. “No, we haven’t.” “Yes, you have,” Riley insisted. “It was in the coffee” (via The Guardian). Boyd recalled Lennon flying into a rage over their coffee being laced with a drug which, at the time of the party in the spring of 1965, was still relatively novel. Nevertheless, they had taken their dose, and all they could do was wait it out.
When their psychedelic trips finally waned eight hours later, Harrison decided he would no longer be using Dr. Riley for his dental services. However, the effects of the LSD proved to be long-lasting. “It was if I had never tasted, talked, seen, thought, or heard properly before,” he later recalled. “For the first time in my whole life, I wasn’t conscious of ego.”
Why The Beatles’ “Dr. Robert” Was Likely About Dr. Riley
The true origins of The Beatles’ “Dr. Robert” are murky at best. John Lennon, the driving compositional force, once claimed the track was an autobiographical ode to his role as the band’s drug supplier while on tour. Others speculated the track wasn’t about a medical professional at all, claiming it was actually about Bob Dylan (born Robert Zimmerman), who first introduced the band to marijuana.
Still, the events of that fateful night in Dr. Riley’s London home paint a different story. If you’re down, he’ll pick you up. Take a drink from his special cup, Lennon sings, seemingly alluding to the LSD-laced coffee he, his bandmate, and their partners drank. You’re a new and better man, he insists in the second verse. He helps you to understand—a fresh perspective bolstered by an initial acid trip, perhaps.
The Beatles’ relationship with Riley effectively ended that night in 1965. Harrison would later call himself and his fellow partygoers “innocent victims of [a] wicked dentist” in an interview for The Beatles Anthology. Lennon’s ex-wife, Cynthia, apparently never forgave the drug-loving dentist. “When you go for dinner with your dentist, you don’t imagine a professional man would do something like that,” she later told Steve Turner, author of The Fab Four: The Gospel According To The Beatles (via Independent).
(Photo by Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
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