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History of The Beatles
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The Early Years.
In March of 1957, John Lennon formed a
skiffle group called The Quarrymen (fleetingly known as The Blackjacks).
In July of that year, Lennon met Paul McCartney whilst playing at the
Woolton Parish Church Garden Fete. The line-up that McCartney joined
featured Lennon, Rod Davis on banjo, Eric Griffiths on guitar, Len Garry
on tea-chest bass, Pete Shotton on the ´Wash-board´, and Colin Hanton on
drums. In February of 1958, the young guitarist George Harrison joined
the group, which was then playing under a variety of names. A few
primitive recordings of Lennon, McCartney and Harrison from that era
have survived. During this period, members continually joined and left
the line up. Lennon, McCartney, and Harrison were the only constant
members.
The Quarrymen went through a progression
of names: Johnny and The Moondogs, Long John and the Silver Beetles, The
Silver Beetles, and eventually arriving at the name of The Beatles. The
origin of the name "The Beatles" with its unusual spelling is usually
credited to John Lennon, who said that the name was a combination
word-play on the insect "beetles," a nod to Buddy Holly's band (The
Crickets) and the word "beat". He also said that it was a joke, meaning,
"Beat-less".
| In 1960, their unofficial manager, Allan
Williams, arranged for them to perform in clubs on the Reeperbahn in
Hamburg, Germany. In August 1960, McCartney invited Pete Best to become
the group's drummer. While in Hamburg, The Beatles were recruited by
singer Tony Sheridan to act as his backing band on a series of
recordings for the German Polydor Records label, produced by famed
bandleader Bert Kaempfert. Kaempfert signed the group to its own Polydor
contract at the first session in June 1961. On 23 October, Polydor
released the recording My Bonnie (Mein Herz ist bei dir nur),
which made it into the German charts under the name "Tony Sheridan and
The Beat Brothers". Upon their return from Hamburg, the group
was enthusiastically promoted by Sam Leach, who presented them
over the next year and a half on various stages in Liverpool 49
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Brian Epstein, manager of the record department at NEMS, his family's
furniture store, took over as the group's manager in 1962 and led The
Beatles' quest for a British recording contract. Epstein secured a
meeting with producer George Martin of EMI's Parlophone label. Martin, a
well-known producer of comedy and novelty albums, listened to the
acetates of the group and expressed an interest in hearing them in the
studio. On 6 June he brought the quartet to London's Abbey Road studios,
and after some consideration decided to grant The Beatles a recording
contract.
In August 1962, Pete Best was dismissed
and replaced by Ringo Starr, whose real name was Richard Starkey. Starr
had been the drummer for Rory Storm and the Hurricanes, and had played
with The Beatles several times in Hamburg. Though Best had some
popularity and was considered good-looking by many female fans, the
three founding members had become increasingly unhappy with his
drumming, his moody personality and his refusal to adopt their
distinctive hairstyle as part of their unified look.
The Beatles' first sessions in September
1962 produced a minor UK hit, Love Me Do, which charted. (Love
Me Do subsequently reached the top of the US singles chart in May
1964.) This was swiftly followed by the recording of their second single
Please Please Me. Three months later they recorded their first
album (also titled Please Please Me), a mix of original songs by
Lennon and McCartney along with some covers. The band's first televised
performance was on a program called People and Places transmitted
live from Manchester by Granada Television on 17 October 1962.
Although the band experienced great
popularity in the record charts in Britain from early 1963 onwards,
Parlophone's American counterpart, Capitol Records (owned by EMI),
refused to issue the singles Love Me Do, Please Please Me
and From Me To You in the United States, partly because no
British act had ever had a sustained impact on American audiences beyond
one-off hits.
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Vee-Jay Records, a small Chicago label,
is said by some to have been pressured into issuing these singles as
part of a deal for the rights to another performer's masters. Art
Roberts, music director of Chicago powerhouse radio station WLS, placed
Please Please Me into rotation in late February 1963, making it
possibly the first time a Beatles' record was heard on American radio.
Vee-Jay's rights to The Beatles were cancelled for non-payment of
royalties.
In August 1963 the Philadelphia-based
Swan label tried again with The Beatles' She Loves You, which
also failed to receive airplay. A testing of the song on Dick Clark's TV
show American Bandstand resulted in laughter and scorn from
American teenagers when they saw the group's Beatle haircuts. Murray the
K featured She Loves You on his 1010 WINS record revue in October
to an underwhelming response.
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Beatlemania
Following Brian Epstein's success in
early November in persuading Ed Sullivan to commit to presenting The
Beatles on three editions of his show in February, even though the group
had no American record label , Epstein parlayed this guaranteed exposure
into a record deal with Capitol Records. Capitol committed to a
mid-January release for I Want To Hold Your Hand, A series of
unplanned circumstances triggered premature extensive airplay of an
imported copy of the single on a Washington DC radio station in
mid-December. Capitol decided to take advantage of the positive consumer
reaction and brought forward release of the record to December 26.
Several New York radio stations -
including WMCA, WINS and WABC - began playing I Want to Hold Your
Hand on its release day, and the Beatlemania that had started in
Washington was duplicated in New York and quickly spread to other
markets. The record sold one million copies in just 10 days, and by
January 16 Cashbox Magazine had certified The Beatles record #1 (in the
edition published with the cover-date January 23).
This contributed to the hysterical fan
reaction at JFK Airport on February 7, 1964. A record-breaking 73
million viewers — approximately 40% of the US population at the time —
tuned in to the first Sullivan appearance on February 9. During the week
of April 4, 1964 The Beatles held the top five places on the Billboard
Hot 100, a feat that has never been repeated.
In mid-1964 the band undertook their
first appearances outside of Europe and North America - touring
Australia and New Zealand. When they arrived in Adelaide, The Beatles
were greeted by what is reputed to be the largest crowd of their touring
career, when over 300,000 people — about one-third of the entire
population of the city at that time — turned out to see them. In
September of that year, baseball owner Charles O. Finley paid the band
the unheard of sum of $150,000 to play in Kansas City, MO.
In 1965 Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
officially bestowed upon them the MBE, a civic honour nominated by Prime
Minister Harold Wilson. The MBE award - at that time primarily given to
military veterans and civic leaders - sparked some conservative MBE
recipients to return their awards in protest. On August 15 of that year,
The Beatles performed at the first stadium concert in modern rock,
playing at Shea Stadium to a crowd of 56,000.
Backlash and breakup of The Beatles
In July 1966, an out-of-context
re-printing of a comment from a serious interview caused a backlash
against The Beatles from religious and social conservatives in the Bible
Belt of the US. Lennon had offered his opinion that Christianity was
dying and that the group was in some respects "more popular than Jesus"
- something he referred to as a topic that should cause concern and
consideration. Beatles records were banned and burned in many cities and
towns across America (primarily in the South) and from countries such as
South Africa. These events, along with threats from racist groups such
as the Ku Klux Klan, eventually forced Lennon to apologise for his
remarks several times.
| The Beatles performed their last concert
before paying fans in Candlestick Park in San Francisco on 29 August
1966. From this time until the group dissolved in early 1970, they
concentrated on recording music. The Beatles' situation took a turn for
the worse when manager Brian Epstein died in August 1967 at the age of
32, and the band's affairs began to unravel. Just two months earlier, on
June 25, 1967, The Beatles became the first band globally transmitted on
television, in front of an estimated 400 million people worldwide. The
Beatles were a segment within the first-ever worldwide TV satellite
hook-up - a show titled Our World. The Beatles' contribution was
transmitted live from the EMI studios at Abbey Road in London, and their
song All You Need Is Love was recorded live during the show.
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At the end of 1967, they received their
first major press criticism in the UK with negative reviews of their
surrealistic TV film Magical
Mystery Tour.
In 1968, the group spent the early part
of the year in Rishikesh, Uttar Pradesh, India studying transcendental
meditation with the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Upon their return, Lennon and
McCartney took a trip to New York in order to announce the formation of
Apple Corps, an initially altruistic business venture which they
described at the time as an attempt at "western communism." The latter
part of 1968 saw the band busy recording the double album The Beatles,
popularly known as The White Album due to its stark white cover.
These sessions saw deep divisions opening within the band for the first
time.
Their final live performance was on the
rooftop of the Apple building in Savile Row, London in January 1969
during the difficult "Get Back" sessions (later used as a basis for the
Let It Be album). Largely due to McCartney's efforts, they
recorded their final album, Abbey Road in the summer of 1969. The
band officially broke up in April 1970, and one month later Let It Be
followed as their last commercial album release.
Following the breakup, the only album to
feature all four Beatles (although not on the same song) was Ringo,
a 1973 Starr solo album. Any hopes of a reunion were dashed when Lennon
was murdered by Mark David Chapman, a mentally ill fan, on December 8,
1980. However, a virtual reunion occurred in 1995 with the release of
two original Lennon recordings which had the additional contributions of
the remaining Beatles mixed in to create two hit singles, Free as a
Bird and Real Love.
Three volumes (six CDs in total) of
unreleased material and studio outtakes were also released, as well as a
documentary and television miniseries, in a project known as The
Beatles Anthology. On December 15, 2005, McCartney and Starr, along
with the families of Lennon and Harrison (who died 29 November 2001)
sued EMI in a royalties dispute in which Apple Corps claimed EMI owes
The Beatles £30 million.
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Further information
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NYT > The Beatles
The Beatles were without any question the most popular, most influential of all rock groups. Their influence expressed itself first of all in the simple sociological dimensions of their success, unmatched in pop-music history. But the band also managed almost singlehandedly to transform the innocent entertainment of rock-and-roll into the artistically self conscious pretensions of rock.
As the Beatles began to define their generation, it became apparent that John Lennon and Paul McCartney were the creative forces behind the band. Ringo Starr was cute and cuddly and George Harrison played eloquent lead guitar, but it was Mr. Lennon and Mr. McCartney who composed most of the band's songs and were the lead singers. They worked together in a classically complementary manner. Mr. McCartney was the sunny, bright one, the purveyor of lilting ballads and cheery love songs. Mr. Lennon was the harder, fiercer man, the true rocker of the foursome, with the deepest, most convoluted sense of rock's anger and potential triumph. ? John Rockwell
CORRECTIONS; Correction
Correction of July 6 Editorial Notebook about history of Beatles
Ringo Starr Is 70
As the generation of music-lovers that grew up on the Beatles? songs grow older, the band?s music remains ageless.
EDITORIAL NOTEBOOK; Ringo Starr, at Age 70. The Beatles, Ageless.
Eduardo Porter Editorial Notebook on Beatle Ringo Starr's 70th birthday recalls pleasure of listening to Beatles music as child; notes timeless quality of their songs; suggests self-centered boomer generation into which Beatles poured their music never grew up; holds as boomers move into middle age, they bring along Beatles and pass them to their children
Ringo Starr at 70: ?Not Hiding From It, You Know?
With plans to celebrate his birthday in New York on Wednesday, the ex-Beatle talks about performing at what he used to consider an advanced age.
An Indie That Believes in CDs
While many labels are shrinking or fighting to survive, the Concord Music Group has concentrated on what it calls the adult audience.
After Outcry, EMI Says Abbey Road Isn?t for Sale
EMI denied that Abbey Road Studios, the London recording complex made famous by the Beatles, was being put on the market but confirmed that it was seeking financial help to save it.
A Love of Gospel Music, a Wish to Spread It Around
Patty Griffin?s new gospel-infused album, ?Downtown Church,? celebrates what she calls the largely untapped soul of American music.
Beatles Video Game: Sales Not So Fab
Here?s some news the Beatles were never used to hearing: they aren?t selling very well.
The Smart One: John Lennon
A haunting, mammoth, terrific biography of John Lennon.
The Cute One: Paul McCartney
This biography aims to present Paul McCartney as more artistically and intellectually complex than the sweet and bubbly caricature we have known.
Stayin? Alive
The golden anniversary of the Bee Gees, three talented brothers from Australia, reminds us of the disco classic that made everybody happy.
Teaming Up The Beatles With Comme Des Garons
Comme des Garons has unveiled a high fashion bag collection, patterned in apples and polka dots, in an official collaboration with the Beatles.
The Beatles Have Something Else to Sell
If, when the Beatles released the remastered versions of their albums in September, you withstood the pressure to buy the stereo and mono boxed sets that contained their entire catalogs, your patience is about to be rewarded, sort of. Apple Corps Ltd. and EMI Music said they were releasing a limited-edition USB hard drive that contains the stereo versions of the Beatles? albums, as well as the bonus materials that were included in their rerelease, including short documentary films about the cre...
Not-So-Fab Sales for Beatles
Though it was promoted here, there and everywhere, a video game featuring the music and the likenesses of the Beatles posted only moderate sales in its first month of release. The Beatles: Rock Band, above, which was released by MTV Games and Electronic Arts, sold about 595,000 copies, according to a report from NPD Group, a market research company. The game was released for the Nintendo Wii, Microsoft Xbox 360 and Sony PlayStation3 consoles on Sept. 9, the same day that remastered versions of ...
Lucy Vodden, Who Inspired a Beatles Song, Dies at 46
Ms. Vodden provided the inspiration for the Beatles? song ?Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds.?
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I read the news today: All Beatle news.
Your one-stop shop for daily Beatles related news.
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Could you imagine spending your entire adult life being one of the most famous people on the planet? Truthfully, as much as I would wish and dream for it, it must be total hell. I imagine you have to be a pretty guarded individual. You have to constantly worry about the things you say, and [...]
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