Showing posts with label 1963. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1963. Show all posts

Monday, September 01, 2025

Big Night Out - Full Show Featuring The Beatles (September 1, 1963)

On September 1, 1963, The Beatles made an appearance on ABC Television's "Big Night Out" at Didsbury Studio Centre in Manchester. The day began with rehearsals, and in the evening, the band was filmed miming to three songs: "From Me To You," "She Loves You," and "Twist And Shout."

Hosted by Mike and Bernie Winters, the show featured additional guests such as Billy Dainty, Patsy Ann Noble, and Lionel Blair. Filmed in front of a studio audience of 600 people, the episode aired from 7:40 to 8:30 pm on September 7, 1963, across most of the ITV network.

Didsbury Studios, located in the former Capitol Cinema building, served as the filming location for the show from 1956 to 1969. After the closure of Didsbury Studios due to ABC's merger with Rediffusion, the building was later utilized by Yorkshire Television and Manchester Polytechnic. However, it was eventually demolished and replaced with an apartment block in the 1990s. This appearance on "Big Night Out" added to The Beatles' growing television presence during the height of Beatlemania.

 


Saturday, April 05, 2025

The Beatles - Live at EMI House, Manchester Square, London (April 5, 1963)

On April 5, 1963, The Beatles received their first silver disc for selling over 250,000 copies of their single "Please Please Me." The award was presented during a ceremony at EMI House in central London. The group performed privately for record company executives during the event, with their producer George Martin also in attendance. A video of the performance was later uploaded to YouTube in January 2022, capturing this significant moment in The Beatles' early career.


 

Friday, April 04, 2025

The Beatles Live at Stowe School, Buckingham & Outside BBC Paris Studio, London - Color Home Movie (April 4, 1963)

The Beatles recorded a session for the BBC radio show Side by Side at the BBC's Paris Studio in London. The recording took place between 11 am and 2 pm and featured performances of several songs, including "Too Much Monkey Business," "Love Me Do," "Boys," "I'll Be On My Way," and "From Me To You." The episode aired later that day at 5 pm on the BBC Light Programme. Although "I'll Be On My Way" wasn't initially released, it eventually appeared on the 1994 Live At The BBC collection.

During the recording session, Dezo Hoffmann and his assistant David Magnus captured some photos outside the studio. Some of these photos were later used on Apple's Live At The BBC album cover, albeit with significant alterations. Additionally, an 8mm color film was shot during the photo session outside the studio, which was later featured in the 1994 Baby It's You promo video.

The Beatles also performed at Stowe School in Buckinghamshire, an event organized by a pupil who contacted their manager, Brian Epstein. The concert took place in the school's Roxburgh Hall, where the audience, consisting of boys from the school, notably remained composed without the typical hysteria associated with Beatles performances.

A recording of the event surfaced in 2023, thanks to John Bloomfield, then a 15-year-old schoolboy who served as the show's stage manager. The recording, almost complete, was made by Bloomfield using his own equipment, capturing 22 tracks of the performance before running out during a reprise of "I Saw Her Standing There." The setlist includes well-known Beatles songs such as "Love Me Do," "Twist And Shout," and "Please Please Me."

BBC Radio 4's Front Row covered the discovery of this recording, with journalist Samira Ahmed leading the investigation. Ahmed's report, aired in April 2023, shed light on the significance of the recording and efforts to preserve it in a national cultural institution, rather than allowing it to remain in private hands. Discussions were underway to clean up the recording, buoyed by the success of Peter Jackson's audio restoration work on The Beatles' "Get Back" series.

The story offers a glimpse into a lesser-known Beatles performance and underscores the ongoing efforts to preserve and celebrate their musical legacy.

 



 

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

The Beatles at Allerton Golf Course & Sefton Park - Dezo Hoffmann Color Home Movie (March 25, 1963)

On March 25, 1963, The Beatles took a break from their busy schedule on the Montez/Roe tour to spend a day in Liverpool. It wasn't exactly a day off, as they were accompanied by photographer Dezo Hoffmann, capturing moments throughout the day.

They kicked off the day at the iconic Cavern Club, likely reminiscing about their early days performing there. Afterwards, they visited Horne Brothers hairdressers on Lord Street, where they all got haircuts and Ringo had his hair styled into the famous Beatle cut.

Next, they piled into Paul's Ford Consul 315 and headed to Allerton Golf Course, where they filmed some footage with Dezo's movie camera, capturing playful moments of them leaping into the air.

The day concluded at Paul McCartney's family home at 20 Forthlin Road, where they likely relaxed and spent time together.

Interestingly, the chairs from the barbershop they visited that day were later auctioned by Bonhams in June 2009, a testament to the enduring fascination with all things related to The Beatles.

 


Wednesday, October 09, 2024

The Mersey Sound - Full Documentary - Featuring The Beatles (October 9, 1963)

"The Mersey Sound" is a documentary capturing the essence of Mersey Beat, featuring The Beatles during their stay in Southport for a series of six nights at the Odeon Cinema. Produced by Don Haworth, a BBC producer based in Manchester, the documentary aimed to showcase the energy and spirit of the Mersey Beat scene.

Haworth first met The Beatles on July 21, 1963, to discuss his vision for the documentary and secured exclusive access after signing a contract with Brian Epstein on August 6. Filming took place in Southport, Manchester, and Liverpool from August 27 to 30.

On the first day of filming, The Beatles were captured performing at the Little Theatre on Hoghton Street in Southport, sans audience, to ensure usable footage without the distraction of fan frenzy. They performed renditions of "Twist And Shout," "She Loves You," and "Love Me Do" while wearing their signature grey and black collarless suits.

Haworth later incorporated footage of fans from The Beatles' concert at the Odeon Cinema into the documentary. In the final edit, EMI recordings of the songs were dubbed onto the footage instead of the live audio. "The Mersey Sound" provides a glimpse into the early days of Beatlemania and the burgeoning Mersey Beat scene that would soon take the world by storm.

 


Tuesday, September 10, 2024

The Beatles at the Savoy Hotel, London (September 10, 1963)

On September 10, 1963, during a rare break from their hectic schedule, John Lennon and Paul McCartney attended a luncheon at the Savoy Hotel in London hosted by the Variety Club of Great Britain. They were honored with the award for Top Vocal Group of the Year, solidifying The Beatles' growing status as establishment figures. The Variety Club, associated with Variety, the Children's Charity, has long-standing ties to the entertainment industry and aims to raise funds for disadvantaged children.

 


Sunday, August 25, 2024

The Beatles - Live at the ABC Theatre, Blackpool, England (August 25, 1963)

On August 25, 1963, The Beatles performed at the ABC Theatre in Blackpool, Lancashire, marking their sixth concert in the city within a span of two months. This particular performance was part of a series of shows held at either the ABC Theatre or the Queen's Theatre on Sunday nights between July and September 1963.

It was the fourth of five shows that The Beatles played at the ABC Theatre in Blackpool. The concerts were introduced by actor Jack Douglas, adding a touch of showbiz to the events.

Notably, a three-minute silent 8mm film of The Beatles' performance from this concert was auctioned in February 2015. This film, believed to be the earliest known color footage of the group, was shot by Chas McDevitt, a skiffle singer who was also on the bill at the ABC Theatre that night.

This concert was yet another opportunity for fans to experience The Beatles' energetic live performances during the height of Beatlemania, further cementing their reputation as one of the most iconic bands in music history.


 

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

The Beatles on Scene at 6.30 (August 14, 1963)

On August 14, 1963, The Beatles made an appearance on the television program "Scene At 6.30" at Granada TV Centre in Manchester. "Scene At 6.30" was a current affairs magazine show broadcast to England's northern ITV region.

The recording took place in Studio Four, where The Beatles performed two songs. They opted for a more casual look, sporting black polo-necks and jeans, a departure from their usual suited attire. The first song, "Twist And Shout," was broadcast on the same evening, while the second song, "She Loves You," was shown the following Monday.

Following the filming, The Beatles drove back to Llandudno, where they were in the midst of a six-night residency at the Odeon Cinema


 

Sunday, June 23, 2024

Photos of the Beatles on Lucky Stars (Summer Spin) Birmingham (June 23, 1963)

On June 23, 1963, The Beatles headlined a special edition of "Summer Spin," which was the summer version of the popular show "Thank Your Lucky Stars." The episode was dedicated to Mersey Beat groups and was filmed at Alpha Television Studios in Birmingham, England.

Presented by Pete Murray, the show featured The Beatles miming to two songs at the close: "From Me To You" and "I Saw Her Standing There." The broadcast took place on June 29, 1963, from 6:05 to 6:45 pm across most of the UK's ITV network. However, the final 10 minutes of the show overlapped with John Lennon's appearance on the BBC's "Juke Box Jury."

Unfortunately, no recording of this particular program is believed to exist today


 

Saturday, June 22, 2024

John Lennon on Juke Box Jury (June 22, 1963)

On June 22, 1963, John Lennon appeared on the BBC-TV program "Juke Box Jury" at Television Theatre in London. The episode aired a week later on June 29, 1963. "Juke Box Jury" was a weekly show where a panel of celebrities rated newly released records as either 'HIT' or 'MISS' based on their personal opinions.

Lennon's appearance on the show caused a stir as he rated every record as a 'MISS,' prompting criticism from some who viewed him as cynical. During the taping, Lennon gave a scathing review of Elvis Presley's new record "Devil In Disguise," expressing disappointment with Presley's departure from his earlier style.

After the taping, Lennon was flown by helicopter from Battersea Airport to Abergavenny, where The Beatles were scheduled to perform at the Abergavenny Town Hall Ballroom in Wales.

Unfortunately, the video recording of Lennon's appearance on "Juke Box Jury" no longer exists. However, most of the audio from the show has survived, providing insight into Lennon's candid and sometimes humorous critiques of the featured songs.

This appearance marked a notable moment in Lennon's outspokenness and honesty, further solidifying his reputation as a provocative figure in the music industry.


 

Thursday, May 16, 2024

The Beatles - Live On Pops And Lenny TV Show (May 16, 1963)

On May 16, 1963, The Beatles made their second national BBC television appearance on the children's show Pops And Lenny. They arrived at the Television Theatre in London for a rehearsal at 1:30 pm, and the live broadcast took place from 5:00 to 5:30 pm in front of a studio audience.

During the show, The Beatles performed "From Me To You" and a shortened version of "Please Please Me." Following their performances, they joined host Terry Hall and his puppet companion Lenny the Lion, along with other cast members including The Raindrops, Patsy Ann Noble, and musicians The Bert Hayes Octet, for a brief rendition of the 1929 standard "After You've Gone."

This appearance marked The Beatles' sole performance on Pops And Lenny, adding to their growing list of television appearances as their popularity continued to soar.


 

Saturday, May 04, 2024

The Beatles at Jersey Airport, Saint Peter (August 8, 1963)

On August 8, 1963, following two nights of performances in Jersey, The Beatles embarked on a short 30-mile journey to Guernsey. Instead of taking their equipment with them on the plane, it arrived separately by ferry.

In Guernsey, the group held two concerts at the auditorium in Candie Gardens, St Peter Port. The shows, scheduled for 7 pm and 9:15 pm, were their only performances on the island and were organized by Baron Pontin. Tickets were priced between 10 and 17 shillings and sixpence. Several support acts accompanied The Beatles, including Vic Sutcliffe, Les Dell, the Rob Charles Combo, The Robert Brothers, and Mike Kelly.

After the concerts, John Lennon visited the rented flat of beat poet Royston Ellis. The Beatles had previously backed Ellis during a performance in Liverpool in June 1960. That night, Lennon, Ellis, and Ellis's girlfriend Stephanie experimented with dressing in polythene bags out of curiosity about "kinky sex."

Reflecting on the experience, Ellis later recalled that while they didn't find the experiment particularly exciting, it did inspire Lennon's song "Polythene Pam," which was written in 1968 and featured on The Beatles' Abbey Road album the following year.


 

Monday, April 29, 2024

8mm Film of the Beatles on Ready Steady Go! (October 4th, 1963)

On October 4th, 1963, The Beatles made their debut appearance on Ready, Steady, Go! broadcast on the ITV network.

Shot in Television House on London’s Kingsway, the Beatles mimed to three recorded tracks: 'Twist And Shout', 'I’ll Get You', and 'She Loves You'.

For those fortunate enough to witness the rehearsal, like artist Pete Blake, it was an experience beyond compare. The music resonated with the essence of rock ‘n’ roll, while the personalities of John, Paul, George, and Ringo shone through, leaving an indelible mark on all who were present.

The magnitude of The Beatles' impact extended beyond their musical prowess, as they charmed their way through interviews with Dusty Springfield and host Keith Fordyce, leaving an indelible impression on viewers across the nation.

The performance of 'She Loves You' received a repeat airing on November 8th, and the full set was once again celebrated during a special New Year's show on December 31st, cementing The Beatles' status as cultural icons and heralding the dawn of a new era in music history.


 

Monday, October 06, 2008

On Bass Guitar: Paul McCartney

James Paul McCartney is so often regarded as the Elder Statesman of the Beatles--but the fact is that he didn't see the light of day until June 18, 1942, and is the youngest of the batch. Left-handed bass guitarist, profile songwriter, enthusiastic conversationalist . . . lists his favourite off-stage hobbies as writing things and birdwatching.

Paul is brisk, business-like, alert. He looks taller than the others but is actually precisely the same height as John Lennon and George Harrison. Weighs in at 11 stone 4 lb--an athletic sort of frame, topped by dark brown hair. The eyes, always on the move (from birdwatching!), are hazel in colour, deeply intense.

Razz-a-ma-tazz

Paul's mother, Mary McCartney, is dead. But his father, James, can take credit for some of Paul's interest in music. Some thirty years ago, he led his own group, Jim Mac's Jazz Band.

Says Paul: "Dad always encouraged me to take up music. He likes our sound, I think--but sometimes says we're away from home a bit too much. He put up with my practice sessions for years which shows he's a brave man.

"Would he have liked to be anything but a musician? Sure--he'd have liked to have been clever!"

Sometimes Paul's career seems studded with things back to front--a habit he's got out of. And of pedalling his bicycle back to front, on the theory that he was actually doing it the right way!

Was Rhythm Guitarist

Paul originally played "ordinary" guitar with the group--and once filled in on piano during one of the Beatles' trips to Germany. His turn on bass came about when former member Stu Sutcliffe died.

"Give me any time to myself and you'll find me listening to American records, specially rhythm 'n' blues," says Paul. "Anything by Chuck Jackson, the Miracles, Ketty Lester, Little Richard, or Marjie Hendrickson of the Raelettes. You can mark down Juliette Greco for me, too--she looks fab as well as singing so well."

Can't Add Up

At school, Paul was a useful student of English literature but was pretty hopeless at geography and mathematics. A feeling of helplessness when confronted with simple sums is something common to all four Beatles. They have always leaned towards the more artistic subjects. And while John Lennon hates hair-cuts, Paul opts out on shaving whenever he can. Once he said he shaved with green tooth-paste--and was inundated with complaints from fans who'd tried it and found it didn't work!

Big Spender

"I suppose I've become a bit of a big spender," said Paul, serious for a moment. "One day I'd like to buy a house and set everybody up in it--but just at the moment the money seems to run away on the little things, like clothes and food.

"I kinda relax with food. Otherwise, I just sleep, or play guitar, or smoke cigarettes. Films? Yes, I'm a fan. I go for Marlon Brando, Belmondo, Sophia Loren, Peter Sellers. Oh, yes--and Juliette Greco.

"These hits records have done a lot for us. Somehow, we always felt we'd make it big one day. But this has been very sudden.

"We owe a great deal to our manager, Brian Epstein, you know. He's good. Astute and sympathetic . . . even when he's driving us very hard. Call him a good lad, dad!"

Paul, since his days at Liverpool Institute High School, has been very matey with George Harrison. They've developed a fast-chatting gag exchange style of conversation which can prove baffling at first hearing. He says he taught George his first guitar chord.

Marriage

Marriage, one feels, will certainly be for Paul one day. He admits that the idea of domesticity appeals to him, but he won't be committed as to what would be the best age for him to get married. "It'll just happen, I suppose," he says. And leaves it at that.

"I get about 70-odd letters a week," he says. "And, believe me, some of them are very, very odd. I try to answer as many as I can, but it does take time. I hope the fans realise that. It's terrible to disappoint them, but we can only do so much in any one day."

Paul also dabbles on drums and banjo but there's no doubt that bass guitar is his principal interest. It's just that he likes to see how other instruments work . . . so he can understand their problems.

"Song-writing is very important to me," he says. "John and I work well together on this. We don't seem to have any shortage of ideas. What knocks us out is the way some of the top Americans are so interested in working our material."

That's Paul McCartney. Artistic, ambitious. An expert birdwatcher, too!

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

On Rhythm Guitar: John Lennon

Once upon a not so long ago, two lads from Liverpool played before an appreciative audience in Reading, Berkshire, as the Nurk Twins. One was Paul McCartney. The other was John Lennon. John WINSTON Lennon--rhythm guitarist of the four-handed Beatles.

Rumours

John Lennon, brown-eyed, brown-haired, also plays harmonica, drums and tinkers on piano. Short-sighted--so much so that unhappy rumours have been circulated that he is slowly going blind. This is untrue, but John admits:

"For rehearsals, and most of the time off-stage, I do wear heavy glasses. On stage, without them, I can't see very far into the audience. Maybe this is just as well--I can't pick up any expressions on the faces of those who aren't digging our act. That helps me to feel self-confident. I only know an audience is there by their noise--the screams and all that."

At 5 ft. 11 in. ("well, let's settle for six-foot"), John is the same height as both Paul and George. He's also the heaviest--at 11 stone 5 lb. just one pound heavier than his longtime mate Paul.

Art Student

John was educated via Dovedale Primary School, Quarrybank Grammar School and then Liverpool College of Art. Art, in fact, was the subject at which he really shone. "Maths and science proved my downfall on more than one occasion," he recalls. "Anything to do with figures had me baffled." John grinned. "Now I can say that figures are one of the chief interests of my life . . . !"

Family

His interest in music really started with his mother, Julia. She, unfortunately, died before John reached stardom in the business, but she played an important part early on in his musical days by teaching him banjo. John now lives with an aunt, Aunt Mimi, who is "knocked out" at the way The Beatles have hit the top.

"My mother used to accompany her songs on banjo," said John. "Dad sang, too. But there isn't much time for family get-togethers nowadays--I've really only got Julia and Jacqueline, step sisters to me. But even if spare time is pretty sparse, I don't think I'd change anything about life at the moment--except to try and avoid that horrible business of getting up at five o'clock in the morning sometimes to go off on long-distance dates.

"People often ask what I'd do if I couldn't earn my living as a musician any more. It'd be a nightmare to me if that DID happen, but I'd definitely go on writing. I spend most of my spare time writing material and I guess my main aim is to keep on writing hit songs."

Big Ambition

"But I must produce a stage musical one day. That's definite. It'd be a big challenge, but I'd enjoy it. I honestly enjoy writing . . . writing anything. It makes me laugh, if you see what I mean!"

John is fast with the wisecracks, speedy to pick up a new musical idea. If a radio producer asks him for the immediate ad-lib, John obliges. No hesitation, no embarrassment. An agile mind ploughs fast through several alternatives, then he picks out the right one for the right occasion.

He talks fast, always with the hint of good humour. He can deliver a crushing retort with a dead-pan face so that the full importance doesn't sink in immediately.

"This new craze for The Beatles is fantastic," he says. "I've met such a lot of interesting people in the past few months. Of course, the money is very nice to have, too. One day, maybe, I'll branch out away from the music business. Only in the sense of financing something different. Maybe some high-class clothes shops. I spend most of my money these days on clothes--so if I owned the shop I'd be able to give myself a discount."

No Bright Colours

"My own tastes in clothes run from suede to leather, or cord or denim. The only thing I don't like is anything in a really bright colour."

John's birthday is October 9. He's still only 22, a one-time art student who has now written over 100 songs with Paul McCartney. Sonny Terry is his favourite musician and he listens admiringly to discs by Little Richard, Chuck Jackson, Chuck Berry, Mary Wells--and, among the groups, The Miracles, Shirelles, Chiffons and Marvelettes. He doesn't analyse his tastes . . . "I just like that style of singing."

He sometimes relaxes by going to the cinema--specially if Brigitte Bardot is in the movie. But sleeping occupies him deeply. Driving, cars--they leave him cold.

John Lennon is uncomplicated, yet complicated. But he's determined to become a first-rate writer, maybe even to top his present "name" as singer and musician.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

On Lead Guitar: George Harrison

George Harrison and barbers don't get on well. He constantly says that his pet hate is having his hair cut. He first met fellow Beatle John Lennon in the fish-and-chip shop by his school and his immediate reaction was: "He's a good lad. He doesn't get his hair cut, either."

Quick to smile, alert, George operates on lead guitar but is also efficient on drums and piano. Guitar is the main hobby of his life, though, and he says: "One day I want to sit down, give it a lot of thought--and come up with a completely revolutionary idea for a new guitar. They could call it the Harrison Guitar . . ."

Spare Time

"Chet Atkins is, for me, the greatest instrumentalist of 'em all. A fabulous technique. But I'm also very fond of the Duane Eddy group. Duane is a fine musician, too. Really, that's how I spend most of my spare time, just listening to records by favourite artists--and they inspire me to get out my own guitar and play a little just to an audience of only me."

George, at school, found it easy to express himself in art classes but slumped badly when it came to marks for subjects like mathematics or history. At Dovedale Road Primary School in Liverpool, he was a sports fanatic. Any sports: soccer, cricket, athletics, swimming. Had he persisted, he could have reached quite a high standard. "But by the time I went to Liverpool Institute High School, I'd lost all interest in sports," he says.

Clothes

"I suppose I quite enjoyed those school-days--what a long time off they all seem now. But I must say my version of the school uniform didn't go down very well with the masters, specially the headmaster. I used to do myself up in tight trousers, waistcoat and suede shoes. I reckoned it was all very fashionable, but obviously the ones in charge had a different view of what should be worn."

George is just short of six feet tall, weighs more than a stone less than the other two at 5 ft. 11 in. He weighs in at 10 stone 3 lb. He has a sister, Louise, and two brothers, Peter and Harry. And he was born on February 25, 1942, just four months before Beatle Paul McCartney.

"Apart from girls, and listening to records with girls, I put driving as my big hobby. I thoroughly enjoy a long drive, but though I rate myself good behind the wheel, I'm not so sure the police agree."

One Day

"Now the money is coming in, I can indulge myself that bit more than before. But I'm not a big spender. One day, I'd like to buy a big house somewhere quiet, but for the meantime I just buy whatever I like in the way of clothes and records.

"S'Funny. Once I just used to date girls and that was that. Now people seem interested in why I like certain types of girls and they ask for tips and hints and that sort of thing.

"Well, my own tastes run to small blonde girls who can share a laugh with me. That sense of humour is all important to me, but I do like to be able to switch moods as quickly as I do. Anyway, I date as often as we get a night free, which doesn't add up to much dating these days! No, there's nobody regular. It wouldn't be fair on her, not with us as busy as we are right now."

Jelly Babies

George cops at least his fair share of the fan-mail for individual Beatles. His taste for jelly-babies--he shares this with John Lennon--caused panic at one time. Hundreds of pounds of "babies" poured in for him. He once sang a song called "Three Cool Cats" and was besieged by parcels containing china cats. And Teddy Bears--he gets plenty of those.

"With so much travelling, I sometimes get behind on answering fan-mail," he confesses. "I don't seem to get marriage proposals through the post, but I do try and answer any letters that really need an answer. Lots of girls ask what age I feel is best for marriage. The truth is there is no such age--it's just when you feel you ought."

Perfectionist

George lavishes praise on his parents, Harold and Louise Harrison. Though not particularly musical themselves, they helped him a great deal . . . "simply by not complaining at the racket I kicked up when I first started learning instruments," he says. "I think they're very proud of all of us now."

Through R and B music figures so strongly on the Beatles' scene, George likes listening to C and W and to Spanish guitar, as long as both are well played. He's a perfectionist. He's a key figure in the Beatle sound. He's thoroughly likeable. And he's unhappy only when he HAS to go to get a haircut!

Sunday, August 03, 2008

Beatle News

Beatle Holidays

Paul and Ringo returned looking very brown; John came back with twice the energy and George reckons St. Louis is almost as good as Liverpool.

Comments from the boys:

Paul: "The Greeks thought our clothes were real mad!!! They used to look at us in amazement wherever we went. Ringo and I went to a Wine Festival. They gave us a decanter each and then told us to go ahead and try ALL the 200 different wines they had and then fill it up with the one we liked best. I reckon we'd have been well away by number 34 if we'd done as they said!"

Ringo: "I did a lot of swimming during the day while Paul had a bash at the water skiing. During the evenings we used to join in with the local Greek group called the Trio Athenia. 'Course they didn't play pop stuff--not until we turned up at any rate. Now they'll have a go at half our Top Ten."

George: "I thought America was really great. I met Tony Newley over there. He'd never heard any of our numbers so I played him some of our recordings. When I left he said he wanted to record 'I Saw Her Standing There.'"

John: "Paris is a really fab place. I just wandered around and tried to see everything. At night it's fantastic. The whole city becomes one big night club."

But they all said: "It's great to be back again."

Film Being Considered

Brian Epstein has found a film script which might be suitable for the boys. But they've no intention of rushing into anything.

"We'll wait for just as long as it takes to find just what we want," he says.

Fan Club Tops 20,000

Britain's fastest growing community -- Beatletown -- now numbers over 20,000 citizens. And between 750 and 1,000 new Beatle People move in every week. Fan club secretaries are having a bit of a job answering the thousands of enquiries, but they promise that patience will always be rewarded.

New Guitar for George

George decided to join John's exclusive club and buy a Rickenbacker guitar while he was in America. It was stolen from their van outside the theatre in Glasgow, but, luckily the Police were watching and it was recovered immediately.

Strange Coincidence

(Extract from "Echo")

Mr. George Harrison (60) of Pound Lane, Burley, worker in the New Forest for over 20 years, was very annoyed this morning at stories which suggested he had been deprived of his job as a "Beetle Catcher." "They are making a mug out of me," he said.


My very grateful thanks to everybody who sent me so many wonderful cards and presents on my birthday. I wish it were possible for me to write and thank you all personally. JOHN.

Tremendous Reception in Scotland

The boys have been completely overwhelmed by their audiences in Scotland. In fact the balcony audiences went so wild that a piece of stonework was dislodged.

The Fourmost Thank John and Paul

Another Lennon and McCartney penned number goes racing up the charts. This time it's Brian O'Hara, Mike Millward, Billy Hatton and Dave Lovelady known collectively as the Fourmost who have to thank the top songwriting twosome.

Sweden Wants the Beatles

The boys paid a visit to Sweden at the end of October, where they are in big demand following the terrific success of their discs.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

The Early Days

by Raymond McGhee

The early Beatles were wild. Really wild. During their frenzied act John might kiss the microphone or suddenly jump several feet into the air, splitting his old blue jeans in the process. It was just an occupational hazard.

The jokes came hard and fast, too. The group quickly built up a fervent following on Merseyside. They worked without a continuous barrage of screams--and so they could exploit their musical Goonery to the full.

Many of today's screaming fans fail to realise how much zany Beatle comedy they're missing by simply not giving the group a chance to speak between numbers.

Mainly For Kicks

But back to those formative years on Merseyside, when they played for a few shillings whenever work happened to turn up. Most of the people who knew them got the impression they liked to play and sing mainly for kicks.

It was fun. But they didn't really have a driving ambition to get to the top.

What they needed (and they admit it themselves now!) was a little discipline. Says John of himself: "I know I went a bit off the rails when I was about 14. I more or less drifted about, and when I was put in for nine GCE's at school I was a terrible failure.

"I was like that all the time I was at school. Art was the only thing I was interested in, and in the end my headmaster said that if I didn't go to art school I might as well become a labourer!"

Art Student John

Even though art was his strongest subject, John still confesses that he wasn't too happy at the idea of studying it for any length of time. He felt that he would be surrounded by a crowd of bearded, would-be Van Goghs with whom he would have little in common.

"It didn't turn out quite like that," he adds, "but I was so concerned with music that I hardly spent any time there. I suppose I was a bit of a contrast to Paul--he liked art, too, but he studied his other subjects and got through his exams."

The free-and-easy student life had a great effect on John.

For a time he used to rehearse with George and Paul, quite casually, in a room in Gambia Street across the road from the Liverpool College of Art. And for a while he had a flat that looked like something from the Left Bank in Paris when you stepped inside . . . rather untidy, with paintings hung all over the walls. Another artist lived next door.

Bob Wooler

Someone who's known the Beatles almost from the start of their musical career is Bob Wooler, a good friend and the genial host of the Cavern beat club in Liverpool. In fact, the group would be the first to admit that he helped them a lot in their early days by lining up bookings. Without the work he got them they might have drifted apart.

"My impression? Well, they were dishevelled and unkempt. They looked sort of beatnik-y, with leather jackets and faded jeans. People thought they were German.

"Their hair was long then, but not in the style they have it now. It just went anywhere, more or less!

"In spite of their scruffiness, though, they had a sound and a visual impact that left its mark. You might even say they were turning back the Rock-Clock at that time, but they didn't care. Their attitude was that they liked what they were doing, and you could take it or leave it."

Early Friend

Recalling his first booking for teh group, Bob says he asked the dance promoter for £8; the promoter offered £4; and they settled for £6.

Bob is as happy as anyone at the Beatles' fantastic success today. "They were always an electrifying act," he adds, "and they still are. I suppose I could have had the opportunity of managing them at one time, but I was content just to get bookings. And to be quite honest, I don't think I would have been temperamentally suited to managing.

"Brian Epstein has done a really tremendous job for them and I have nothing but praise for the way he has handled their career."

The Beatles looked on Bob as more than a friend in those days. They would call him in whenever there was a particularly big decision to be made.

As time went by, Beatlemania hit Merseyside. Hundreds, sometimes a couple of thousand, would turn up to see the group at local dances.

It had never happened before--it was like a fanatical devotion to some big national idol, but on a strictly-local scale. Quite often visiting national stars didn't stand a chance when the local pride and joy, the Beatles, were appearing in the area the same night.

Saturday, May 31, 2008

A Tale of Four Beatles - Part III

by Billy Shepherd

The boys soon met up with Ringo Starr again--playing with Rory Storm in the Kaiserkeller. The boys summed up Ringo: Ringo summed up the boys.

Paul thought Ringo "a fab drummer". John thought Ringo "a deep type". George was most eloquent about Ringo. "He looked moody, but I found he was quite different once I got to know him. At first, though, I thought he was a smarmy, big-headed bloke, fancying his chances. Had a grey streak in his hair. Only when we'd known each other better did I realise he was a good skin."

And Ringo's views?

"I thought they were a fab bunch of characters and I liked the music they played. But I was happy enough with Rory Storm and, certainly during that German trip, had no thoughts of leaving him. All the same, I used to sit in with the Beatles from time to time whenever Pete Best was off sick."

The Beatles, then, in that autumn of 1960, were together--even if not playing in the same group. There was also Stu Sutcliffe, the guy who'd learned to play bass in double quick time.

John recalls: "One of our first followers in Germany was a good bloke named Klaus Voormann. He used to bring his friends into the Top Ten Club during those last few days."

And he also brought a girl-friend, Astrid, who immediately fell for Stu Sutcliffe. Stu, with his personality, his dark glasses and his hair-style, looked a lot like the late James Dean at that time. No-one could blame Astrid for falling. Nobody did--not even Klaus.

John recalls: "Klaus was a real enthusiast. And, oddly, he didn't seem to mind about Stu and Astrid. Just as long as they were happy . . ." In no time at all, Stu was talking about staying on in Germany after the Beatles' engagement, staying with Astrid--and trying to get himself a grant to the art school in Hamburg.

Stu, on stage, was off-beat to say the least. The boys remember: "He'd never buy himself a new bass string. He had a thing about this. He'd just measure up the length and cut himself a few feet off the piano bass strings, then fit it to the guitar. He'd say 'This is arty'--but we didn't really know what he was talking about. But the sound he got was absolutely fantastic. Didn't sound like a bass but it certainly pleased Stu . . ."

But it was all a very short stay indeed in the Top Ten Club. George had gone home. As far as he was concerned, the bottom had fallen out of his world. He thought he'd be in Liverpool weeks before he'd see any of the other Beatles again. What he didn't know was that Paul and drummer Pete followed him there pretty quickly.

Which left Stu . . . with Astrid. And John. With himself. Said John: "We'd spent our money as we went along. I didn't have any to spare. I felt real sorry for myself. And it was a pretty hungry business working my way back to home. Being stuck in Hamburg with no food money was no joke . . . especially just around Christmas.

"When I did get home, I was so fed up I didn't bother to contact the others for a couple of weeks. I didn't know what they were doing. Anyway, after a while I got to thinking that we ought to cash in on the Liverpool beat scene. Things were really thriving and it seemed a pity to waste the experience we'd got playing all those hours every night in Hamburg."

By then, the groups in Liverpool were all doing a Shadows' act. Grey suits, little step movements--"Apache" and "FBI" were samples of the numbers. Everything neat and tidy and copying the style set by the outfit who called the successful Cliff Richard "our singer"!

But the Beatles were different. So different. "We looked like a gang of scruffs", said Paul. "Wore jeans and leather jackets and boots. We started looking round for bookings. We handled our own business, just jotting down engagements in a diary. Let's be honest, we didn't think there was anyone round who could possibly manage a mob like us."

The Beatles, still virtually unknown to Liverpool fans, had to be billed as something. So it was "Direct From Hamburg." Which led to most of the folk around thinking they were four German lads--they were convinced that the style of dress was all the rage in Germany.

The Beatles really didn't understand the scene in Britain. They were booked into various places for about £6 a night. Dance hall dates started coming in for very small fees. They noted that attendances at the halls were getting bigger--but thought all dance halls did good business every night. They just didn't realise that they were proving an above-average attraction. And the Beatles went on whipping up a storm using the same roaring material they used in Germany.

"Don't you speak good English" said the fans. They did think it funny the boys seemed to know Liverpudlian English--after all they WERE billed as "Direct From Hamburg."

There was an "audition" type of basis for a lot of the bookings in Liverpool at that time. The group would turn up in a hall for "peanuts", pay-wise--and if they went down well they'd be given return bookings at a slightly higher fee. At one hall, the Beatles went down particularly well and felt sure that they'd get some engagements out of it.

Truth was the promoter had sent his "bouncers" out into the hall, guarding the way backstage. He wanted to keep other managements away from the boys. And he succeeded. He offered them £8 for a long series of dates--which seemed big money after the £6 10s. top whack they'd earned before. That promoter said he was helping the boys by keeping other agents away. Maybe he was. He was also doing himself no little favour.

They moved into the Cavern Club at lunch-times. There was still a jazz tradition at this now famed stomping ground. Often John would introduce, for example: "And now Big Bill Broonzy's 'What'd I Say' "--a gag! But it went down well with the fans. Ray McFall, the owner and promoter of the Cavern, said the boys had been "blankety-blank fools" for playing for eight quid a time.

The boys, astonished at their new-found drawing power, tended to agree. But there were still no managers on the scene. They coped with their own problems. Which were plentiful. Whatever other people may claim, the Beatles were fast laying the sound basis of the current Liverpool type music. Even though they'd developed it in Germany.

Ringo was back in Liverpool at this time. He would sit in with the group when Pete Best was unable to cope. And Ringo, for a spell, was bearded. Nothing too flash--but a beard just the same.

Meanwhile, Stu had returned to Germany with Astrid. They were clearly very happy together and Stu argued with the authorities loud and long to work his way into the art school over there. On their brief trip back to Liverpool, Stu and Astrid had left no doubts that they planned to get married.

Then letters started arriving from Hamburg for the Beatles. Club owners were anxious to get the bunch of eccentrics back again . . . and besides a whole bunch of local eccentrics had howled for a fast return. There was to be no work permit problem this time. George was 18 in February, 1961, and out of the clutches of the lengthy German arm of the law.

So it was back to the Top Ten Club in Hamburg. April, 1961, the date--and the boys toted their gear over on the train route. They'd ploughed some of their earnings back into equipment and were now down to four in number.

The next three months were to prove among the most memorable of their career as a group.

The Top Ten Club was highly organised by this time. Often, they were the only group on from seven in the evening until two in the morning. They had a quarter of an hour break in every hour and they simply had to produce a full-scale repertoire of numbers.

Said George: "We performed like a gang of lunatics. It was all right once we got the hang of it all and it was great fun. The boss would send up cups of coffee on stage and we take turns to take a sip. The crowds varied a heck of a lot each night."

John, George, and Paul used echo microphones which added to the excitement. Instead of them all singing together, they'd take it in turns to do solo work. That way they saved their throats from what could have been irreparable damage.

Up to ten o'clock in the evenings, the audiences were mostly the under-eighteens--they had to be off the premises under German law by ten. Later, the fans would be more in the 18 to 25 age-group. So it was wild rockers for the first part--then a mixture of the rockers and the wildies and the slower stuff later on. No change in the material. Still Little Richard, Carl Perkins, Chuck Berry, Presley's stuff like "Blue Suede Shoes". Anything and everything that could whip up a storm.

The club was smoky; the audience restless between numbers. The business excellent. The boys built up an individual following. "And we'd try out any sort of numbers from the current Top Twenty", said Paul. "In a way, it was marvellous--simply because we could experiment. Tired? We were dead whacked but we got great kicks out of watching the audiences, seeing the way they reacted to different gear."

Just a guidance note, here, about the contents of the British Top Twenty in those days. Helen Shapiro was moving up with "Please Don't Treat Me Like A Child"; Cliff was tackling "Gee Whiz It's You"; Elvis was scoring with "Wooden Heart". And Bobby Darin was swinging along on "Lazy River". And Jerry Lee Lewis was getting nearest the Beatles' mark with "What'd I Say".

Among the audiences were artists, all anxious to sketch the visiting Britishers. And photographers, keen on getting some "different" shots. Klaus Voormann was there, constantly bringing in different group of his mates.

The photographers liked the boys to perspire a lot. "Please, will you sveat for us?", they'd plead. And the boys, working flat out for so many hours on end, didn't find it hard to oblige. Their hair-styles were floppy and unruly even in those days. They'd hardly dare to get a hair-cut, because the sketch-artists at the Top Ten would notice the different and kick up a storm of protest in Germanic anger.

"Long-haired and black folk" is the way George sums up the frenzied fringe crowd who packed in night after night to see the Beatles. "Exi's" shouted the more regular patrons. Which was short for "existentialists".

There were a couple of ballet-dancers there often trying to jive and "get with it" to the ultra-modern beat music. They were just about jeered off the floor! The atmosphere was choking . . . but electric, too. To say that Hamburg was fast becoming Beatle-mad is no exaggeration.

And something else happened of great importance to the Beatles. They made a record. Though it was only as backing group to Tony Sheridan, a popular guitarist from Britain who was making a name for himself on the Continent.

The Deutschegramafon Company looked around for a group to work with Tony Sheridan and came up with Beatles as the answer. Their name, originally, was changed to the Beat Boys, simply because this German company didn't think "Beatles" would mean anything to Continental audiences. Or if it meant anything, it would mean the wrong thing!

The boys barely remember those sessions. Tony Sheridan was the "star" name and he sang away on a series of numbers, including "My Bonnie" and a tear-up on "The Saints". The Beatles were just paid for the session, went back to the Top Ten Club and forgot all about it.

But the session was handled, in his capacity as artists' and repertoire manager for the company, by the well-known orchestra leader Bert Kaempfert, who had a world-wide hit with "A Swingin' Safari". Nobody bothered about the disc in Britain--where Polydor was the releasing company.

And here the "Tale of Four Beatles" has to jump a little ahead of itself. It jumps to June, 1963, when "From Me to You" was riding high in the British charts. For Polydor re-issued the "My Bonnie" in Britain, changing the Beat Boys to their now established Beatles' title--and it went into the charts, obviously just because the foursome were doing something, albeit a backing chore, on the disc.

But back to Germany. Back to the swingin' scenes which went on at the Top Ten Club for three months from April, 1961, through May and June. The Beatles had had an increase in pay but they were still spending pretty much as they got it--often having to borrow against the next week's salary. There were parties galore--after one, John found himself clinging to a television aerial on top of the roof of the Top Ten Club. He was photographed, too, in that awkward situation.

They received enquiries from Liverpool, where news of their German success had leaked back. Promoters who'd cashed in with the boys following the first trip were keen to cash in again.

And so they went back to Merseyside. Back to the Cavern Club and their ever-growing band of Liverpool fans. They still weren't conscious of their tremendous popularity. They just accepted it as part of the general widespread enthusiasm for pop music.

Perhaps the most important step in their career had already been taken. And that was their desire to sing and play their own original material. If they had not been given this first big boost by their early audiences they might have been content to play the tunes topping the current hit parade and leave it at that.

Because of the reception that their own material received they knew that they already had the right songs before they ever went into a recording studio.

They hoped that their bookings would be better; that they might develop their act still further. But they never dreamed that they were already on the ladder to fame.

Everyone knew that it was virtually impossible for a Liverpool group to get anywhere without going to London. But the future was going to show them just how old-fashioned that idea was!