The other great trove on his iPod was the Beatles. He included songs from seven of their
albums:
A Hard Day’s Night, Abbey Road, Help!, Let It Be, Magical Mystery Tour, Meet the
Beatles!
and
Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
. The solo albums missed the cut. The Rolling
Stones clocked in next, with six albums:
Emotional Rescue, Flashpoint, Jump Back, Some Girls,
Sticky Fingers
, and
Tattoo You
. In the case of the Dylan and the Beatles albums, most were
included in their entirety. But true to his belief that albums can and should be disaggregated, those
of the Stones and most other artists on his iPod included only three or four cuts. His onetime
girlfriend Joan Baez was amply represented by selections from four albums, including two
different versions of “Love Is Just a Four-Letter Word.”
His iPod selections were those of a kid from the seventies with his heart in the sixties. There
were Aretha, B. B. King, Buddy Holly, Buffalo Springfield, Don McLean, Donovan, the Doors,
Janis Joplin, Jefferson Airplane, Jimi Hendrix, Johnny Cash, John Mellencamp, Simon and
Garfunkel, and even The Monkees (“I’m a Believer”) and Sam the Sham (“Wooly Bully”). Only
about a quarter of the songs were from more contemporary artists, such as 10,000 Maniacs, Alicia
Keys, Black Eyed Peas, Coldplay, Dido, Green Day, John Mayer (a friend of both his and Apple),
Moby (likewise), U2, Seal, and Talking Heads. As for classical music, there were a few recordings
of Bach, including the Brandenburg Concertos, and three albums by Yo-Yo Ma.
Jobs told Sheryl Crow in May 2003 that he was downloading some Eminem tracks, admitting,
“He’s starting to grow on me.” James Vincent subsequently took him to an Eminem concert. Even
so, the rapper missed making it onto Jobs’s iPod. As Jobs said to Vincent after the concert, “I don’
t know . . .” He later told me, “I respect Eminem as an artist, but I just don’t want to listen to his
music, and I can’t relate to his values the way I can to Dylan’s.”
His favorites did not change over the years. When the iPad 2 came out in March 2011, he
transferred his favorite music to it. One afternoon we sat in his living room as he scrolled through
the songs on his new iPad and, with a mellow nostalgia, tapped on ones he wanted to hear.
We went through the usual Dylan and Beatles favorites, then he became more reflective and
tapped on a Gregorian chant, “Spiritus Domini,” performed by Benedictine monks. For a minute
or so he zoned out, almost in a trance. “That’s really beautiful,” he murmured. He followed with
Bach’s Second Brandenburg Concerto and a fugue from
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