Beatles Gift Ideas
Clearance Apparel
Beatles Robe: Beatles Logo Bath Robe
With the iconic Beatles logo, this bathrobe combines both signature style and ultimate comfort. With limited stock available, you really don’t want to miss out on this exclusive bathrobe. The Bathrobe features: White Piping Large embroidered and satin panel detailed logo on the back Small embroidered and satin panel detail logo on the chest Two large lower pockets The Robe is made with super soft luxury fleece and is designed for both men and women giving you the ultimate quality in chill out wear. Made from Luxury Fleece One size fits most.
Beatles Pillow: The Beatles "Love Me Do" Deco Pillow
"Love Me Do" Decorative Pillow. You'll be singing along to your favorite songs in no time!
Beatles Robe: Beatles Classic Logo Robe
This is your bathrobe with the iconic Beatles logo, this bathrobe combines both signature style and ultimate comfort. Black super soft fleece robe with contrasting white piping & belt. Features embroidered design motifs to front & back. Coral Fleece 280gsm
Beatles Robe: Beatles Apple Logo Robe
this is your bathrobe with the iconic Beatles Apple logo, this bathrobe combines both signature style and ultimate comfort. Black super soft fleece robe with contrasting green piping & belt. Features embroidered design motifs to front & back. Coral Fleece 280gsm
Beatles Robe: Beatles Yellow Submarine Robe
This is your bathrobe with the iconic Beatles Yellow Submarine Design, this bathrobe combines both signature style and ultimate comfort. Navy super soft fleece robe with contrasting yellow piping & belt. Features embroidered design motifs to front & back. Coral Fleece 280gsm
Beatles Robe: Beatles Classic Abbey Road Bathrobe
This is your bathrobe with the iconic Abbey Road Beatles logo, this bathrobe combines both signature style and ultimate comfort. Black super soft fleece robe with contrasting white piping & belt. Features embroidered design motifs to front & back. Coral Fleece 280gsm
Beatles Cap: Hello-Goodbye Drop T
A sandwich peak cotton twill baseball cap featuring the classic Beatles drop T logo with a splash of Apple Green Adjustable Velcro back strap fits most
John Lennon ART: John Lennon's iconic song "Imagine"
The lyrics of John Lennon's iconic song "Imagine" were used to create this work of art. Yoko Ono has given me the rights to the lyrics and picture, she also owns prints 2 and 3.
Beatles Art: Album Covers Art
24 12x12 Cover Sleeve Art from 13 UK albums and 11 others , six are in stunning foil finish. These replica album covers each 12x12 there are only 1963 produced in NUMBERED BOXES the box is the same size a LP box set these awesome prints can be set in a matte and then a frame(s) of your choice.
Beatles ART: 36" X 24" The Beatles Abbey Road Color Canvas
The Green/Teal color version of The Beatles Abbey Road Crossing this 36" X 24" ” wrap around canvas is sure to enhance any décor. You will find this new color available in many other Beatles Abbey Road Products.
Beatles Platter: The Beatles 16 in. Ceramic Serving Platter
The Beatles Mid 60s look in color in this Beatles 16 in. Ceramic Serving Platter "8.5 x 16 x 1.25"" h"
Beatles Cap: Drop T Logo (Snap Back)
Drop T Logo (Snap Back) featuring The Beatles 'Drop T Logo' design
Beatles Lunch Box: The Beatles White Album Limited Edition
The Beatles White Album Limited Edition Metal Lunch Box all are numbered only 1504 made. Each has the track listing and images of the Fabs: Whether it’s holding lunch or storing gear, Fab Four Store retro tin totes are sure to please.
Beatles Hoodie: Yellow Submarine - Apple Logo Zipper Hoodie
The Beatles Yellow Submarine - Apple Logo Zipper Hoodie draw string hood with side pockets
Beatles Cookie Jar: The Beatles Abbey Road Cookie Jar
The Beatles Abbey Road Cookie Jar is Classic 7 x 7 x 11.25" h
Beatles Lunch Box: Beatles "Let It Be" Song Titles
Beatles "Let It Be" Song Titles Design Metal Lunch Box. Whether it’s holding lunch or storing gear, Fab Four Store retro tin totes are sure to please.
Beatles Cap: Drop T Logo (Snap Back) Sand
Drop T Logo in Black on sand color cap (Snap Back) black peak, featuring The Beatles 'Drop T Logo' design plastic hole loop fits most:
Beatles Cap: Yellow Submarine (Snap Back) Sand
Drop T Logo in Black on sand color cap (Snap Back) Black peak, featuring The Beatles 'Drop T Logo' design plastic hole loop fits most:
Beatles Cookie Jar: The Beatles Apple Cookie Jar
The Beatles Apple Round Ceramic Cookie Jar fab lid too with Apple color knob!
Beatles Towel: Yellow Submarine on the Beach
Beatles Towel: Yellow Submarine on the Beach Towel 30" x 60"
Beatles Adult T-Shirt: Abbey Road Best Seller
Abbey Road design this is one of the beat selling tees we have ever had, Variation of Abbey Road. Zebra Crossing Short Sleeve Tee "Holistic"
Beatles BAG: Abbey Road Recycled Shopper
The Beatles Abbey Road Large Recycled Shopper, Dimensions: 14.0" x 4.00" x 15.0"
Beatles Cap: The Beatles Logo in Silver
One of our best sellers The Beatles Black Cap with Silver raised letters "The Beatles" plus silver "Apple" logo in back
Beatles Cap: Hello-Goodbye Drop T
A sandwich peak cotton twill baseball cap featuring the classic Beatles drop T logo with a splash of Apple Green Adjustable Velcro back strap fits most
Beatles Robe: Beatles Logo Bath Robe
With the iconic Beatles logo, this bathrobe combines both signature style and ultimate comfort. With limited stock available, you really don’t want to miss out on this exclusive bathrobe. The Bathrobe features: White Piping Large embroidered and satin panel detailed logo on the back Small embroidered and satin panel detail logo on the chest Two large lower pockets The Robe is made with super soft luxury fleece and is designed for both men and women giving you the ultimate quality in chill out wear. Made from Luxury Fleece One size fits most.
Beatles Lunchbox: Yellow Submarine Embossed Tin Tote
Lunchbox: Yellow Submarine Embossed Tin Tote 7.5 x 9.5 x 3.5
Beatles Cap: The Beatles Abbey Road in Black/Silver
The Beatles Black Cap with Silver raised "The Beatles crossing" plus silver "Apple" logo on the side "The Beatles Abbey Road" words on the back:
Beatles Clock: The Beatles 1963 Wall Clock
The Beatles walking in London 50 Years ago: 1963 13.5" Cordless Wall Clock.
Beatles Adult T-Shirt: British Flag
British Flag Distressed on a grey shirt this is a 50-50 shirt Cotton/Poly
Beatles Pen: The Beatles Gel Ink Pen (Hard Day's Night)
The Beatles Gel Ink Pen (Hard Day's Night Album) Great gift idea.
Beatles T-Shirt: "Lucky Dip" Clearance
Lucky Dip Beatles T-shirt You select one shirt size, we select a style/color, These are all BEATLES SHIRTS please note you get one shirt in Adult Size
Beatles Pen: The Beatles Gel Ink Pen (Green Apple)
The Beatles Gel Ink Pen (Green Apple & Drop T) Great gift idea.
Beatles Adult T-Shirt:; Classic Drop-T Distressed
Classic Drop-T Distressed off white (Light Sandy Color)
Beatles Adult T-Shirt:; Classic Drop-T Navy Blue
Classic Drop-T drop T logo on a Navy Blue Shirt
Beatles Tote: Yellow Submarine Shopper
The large recycled tote is earth-friendly (made of 25% recycled materials), strong and water resistant. Great for shopping and a good alternative to a traditional gift bag.
Beatles Adult T-Shirt: Abbey Road Crossing in Color Long Sleeve
Beatles Adult T-Shirt: Abbey Road Crossing in Color The Beatles Adult t-shirt cotton featuring the Abbey Road Crossing in Color available in a wide range of sizes S - 3 XL
Beatles Kid Shirt: The Beatles Black Abbey Road - Baby to Youth
Sizes 1 to 12 Year old The Beatles Abbey Road design. This high quality garment is available in Black 100% Cotton.
Beatles Mug: "Yellow Submarine" 18 oz. Ceramic Oval Mug
"Yellow Submarine" 18 oz. Ceramic Oval Mug Unique Oval Shape Made from High-Quality Stoneware Bold and Bright Character Designs Dishwasher and Microwave Safe Dimensions: 5.5 x 4 x 4.5" h
Beatles Adult T-Shirt: Beatles American Tour 1964
Black color classic style men's soft cotton tee featuring The Beatles 'American Tour 1964' Features back print detailing with tour dates and cities. Tag has used ticket image.
Beatles Adult T-Shirt: Beatles Classic Revolver White
Beatles Revolver Short Sleeved Cotton Classic Tee Replenished Stock
Beatles Adult T-Shirt:; Classic Drop-T Song Titles
Classic Drop-T new design from Liverpool song titles inside the drop T logo
Years before the Beatles sold hundreds of millions of albums themselves, they were looking for a record deal that would save them from playing racy Hamburg venues, only to be given an uncredited performance opportunity on an album they didn’t even like that much. As the old adage goes, beggars can’t be choosers, right?
The recording process might not have been everything the band dreamed of. Still, it was an interesting precursor to a life they would soon become well-acquainted with: that of an original recording artist. But before that could happen, the lads had to pay their dues.
As is so often the case in the music industry, the Beatles got their start as a backing band, not the original band we know and love today. The group cut their teeth across Europe, performing for hours on end for solo performers, entertaining nightclub attendees into the wee hours of the morning, and other kinds of “jukebox” gigs that make playing music feel like, well, a real job. Countless green performers will “pay their dues” in this way in the hopes that these backing gigs will lead to something bigger for themselves, and the Beatles were no exception.
When solo performer Tony Sheridan needed a backing band to cut a few records in the studio, the Beatles obliged. But once they got there, they quickly realized that this wasn’t the “big break” they had been looking for. As George Harrison recalled in Anthology, “It was a bit disappointing because we’d been hoping to get a record deal ourselves.” Moreover, the band walked into the session with a great deal of confidence. “We thought it would be easy,” John Lennon added. “The Germans had such s***** records. Ours were bound to be better. We did five of our own numbers. But they didn’t like them.”
Source: americansongwriter.com/Melanie Davis
He's known for this three-word mantra.
When the average person hears the name Ringo Starr, a few things might come to mind: The Beatles. Drums. "Yellow Submarine." Thomas and Friends. And, of course, there's always the musician's iconic catchphrase: "Peace and love."
It's long been assumed by many that Starr, 84, came up with his motto after visiting India with the other Beatles — John Lennon, Paul McCartney, and George Harrison — in 1968. But as he recently told the Associated Press, Starr was actually inspired to coin the phrase after spending time in a particular American city.
“It actually came, for me, from San Francisco, where the hippies were,” Starr said. “They were, of course, great peace and lovers, and then it changed. But I found a picture the other day of the four of us [giving the peace sign]...I didn’t invent it, I just picked it up. Johnwas a big proponent of peace and love, and it just came to me.”
In the years since, however, Starr has come to appreciate the true value of his message, which the world might need to hear now more than ever.
“I think it’s important every day — and right now the world is going through a madness. Maybe it’ll help,” Starr said.
Later in the same interview, the drummer admitted that he's naturally “an optimist, not a pessimist," referencing the challenges of his early life (which included contracting tuberculosis and spending two years in a sanatorium, where he learned to play the drums).
Source: parade.com/Jacqueline Burt Cote
Some Beatles critics were quick to blame the Fab Four for the rise of drug culture, particularly psychedelics and marijuana, in the late 1960s, but George Harrison had a different idea about who was really responsible for the public’s interest in LSD and weed. While it’s true that much of the Beatles’ later work was heavily influenced by this psychedelic drug and the mental and visual revelations they had while taking it, the band didn’t feel it was their obligation to lie about it.
When someone asked about their recreational drug use, they were honest. And as Harrison once argued during a 1971 appearance on the Dick Cavett Show, that was the real problem. George Harrison Says Beatles Weren’t Responsible For Drug Culture
To pin the rise of drug use and counterculture solely on the Beatles would be wholly overestimating their cultural influence as a singular musical group. The Beatles were massive, certainly, but hardly big enough to inform an entire generation of global citizens without any extra help. The Beatles were one thread in a larger tapestry of societal change. They didn’t invent LSD. They were merely one of the thousands of people who started trying it recreationally in the mid-1960s. And even then, this was after the drug had already been present in psychiatric and other scientific circles for decades.
Nevertheless, the Beatles were one of the biggest bands in the world in the mid-1960s. If they said jump, most of their fans would ask, “How high?” Social influence of this size comes with its fair share of downsides, including the fact that critics will often lobby your personal choices against you in the context of other people’s choices. Because the Beatles did LSD, the media tried to blame other people using LSD on them. But as George Harrison argued during a 1971 appearance on the Dick Cavett Show, he and his bandmates simply didn’t believe that to be true.
Source: americansongwriter.com/Melanie Davis
If you’re under 60, you probably heard the line “I read the news today, oh boy” before encountering the song it opens. Even after you discovered the work of the Beatles, it may have taken you some time to understand what, exactly, it was that John Lennon read in the news. The “lucky man who made the grade” and “blew his mind out in a car” turn out to have been inspired by the young Guinness heir Tara Browne, who’d fatally wiped out in his Lotus Elan. The figure of 4,000 holes in the roads of Blackburn came from another page of the same edition of the Daily Mail. These are just two of the memorable images in “A Day in the Life,” which sonically reconstructs the fabric of the nineteen-sixties as the Beatles knew it.
In his new video below, Evan Puschak, better known as the Nerdwriter, calls “A Day in the Life” “arguably the Beatles’ best song.” Critic Ian MacDonald is rather less ambiguous in his book Revolution in the Head: The Beatles’ Records and the Sixties, proclaiming it “their finest single achievement.”
And if any single factor shaped its development, that factor was LSD. “A song about perception — a subject central both to late-period Beatles and the counterculture at large — ‘A Day in the Life’ concerned ‘reality’ only to the extent that this had been revealed by LSD to be largely in the eye of the beholder,” he writes. Lennon may have proven to be the group’s most dedicated enthusiast of that shortcut to enlightenment. It’s worth noting, as Puschak does, that it was Browne who first “turned on” Paul McCartney.
Source: openculture.com/Colin Marshall
The Beatles' split was famously acrimonious and left them on bad terms with one another. Factors including John Lennon's relationship with Yoko Ono, emerging creative differences and a disagreement over the appointment of Allen Klein at their label Apple Records are all cited for the break up of the world's biggest band.
However, it seems the troubles really began during the recording sessions of the band's 1968 record 'The White Album', which were notoriously feisty. Ringo Starr left the band for a period, fed up with the mood, as The Beatles clashed.
About that period of recording, Paul McCartney said: "There was a lot of friction during that album. We were just about to break up, and that was tense in itself". John later added: "The break-up of The Beatles can be heard on that album."
In September 1969, after the band had recorded the majority of what became 'Let it Be' (the 'Get Back' sessions) and 'Abbey Road', John told Paul, George Harrison and Ringo that he wanted a "divorce" from The Beatles. Paul went away to work on his first solo album 'McCartney', believing it was all over for the group.
Paul has said he told his bandmates in advance that he would release 'McCartney' with a press release announcing his departure from The Beatles in April 1970. The Beatles had released 'Let it Be' as a single in March 1970, so the new album was renamed after it and they set a May 1970 release date for that album - following the film's premiere.
But with record label Apple wanting to avoid a clash and Paul not wanting to speak to them due to his disapproval of manager Klein, Ringo went to his home with a letter from himself, John and George asking him to move his release date. Paul and Ringo had a huge row and he threw the drummer out of his house.
Source: liverpoolecho.co.uk/Dan Haygarth
Years before the Beatles sold hundreds of millions of albums themselves, they were looking for a record deal that would save them from playing racy Hamburg venues, only to be given an uncredited performance opportunity on an album they didn’t even like that much. As the old adage goes, beggars can’t be choosers, right?
The recording process might not have been everything the band dreamed of. Still, it was an interesting precursor to a life they would soon become well-acquainted with: that of an original recording artist. But before that could happen, the lads had to pay their dues.
The Beatles’ Uncredited Album Gig From Early Hamburg Days
As is so often the case in the music industry, the Beatles got their start as a backing band, not the original band we know and love today. The group cut their teeth across Europe, performing for hours on end for solo performers, entertaining nightclub attendees into the wee hours of the morning, and other kinds of “jukebox” gigs that make playing music feel like, well, a real job. Countless green performers will “pay their dues” in this way in the hopes that these backing gigs will lead to something bigger for themselves, and the Beatles were no exception.
When solo performer Tony Sheridan needed a backing band to cut a few records in the studio, the Beatles obliged. But once they got there, they quickly realized that this wasn’t the “big break” they had been looking for. As George Harrison recalled in Anthology, “It was a bit disappointing because we’d been hoping to get a record deal ourselves.” Moreover, the band walked into the session with a great deal of confidence. “We thought it would be easy,” John Lennon added. “The Germans had such s***** records. Ours were bound to be better. We did five of our own numbers. But they didn’t like them.”
Instead, the band recorded covers with Sheridan providing lead vocals, including “My Bonnie.” When the time came to list the band on the singles, Bert Kaempfert, the band leader and producer, changed the Beatles’ name to the Beat Brothers. “This is more understandable for the German audience,” Paul McCartney recalled him telling the band. “We went along with it,” he said. “It was a record.”
It Didn’t Take Long For Those Tables To Turn
The Beatles might have left the German recording session with their tail between their legs. But that humility didn’t last long. It would only take a few years for the band—properly billed under their own name—to reach international stardom. What’s more, they managed to do so with their original music. This was still a novelty at a time when most music was written by songwriters, not by the performing artist. When Tony Sheridan first released his records with “the Beat Brothers” as his backing band, even songs where he wasn’t present, like “Ain’t She Sweet” and “Cry For a Shadow,” were still primarily billed to him, not the future Fab Four.
Source: americansongwriter.com/Melanie Davis
US release of the Paul McCartney LP McCartney (Apple). Songs: The Lovely Linda, That Would Be Something, Valentine Day, Every Night, Hot as Sun / Glasses, Junk, Man We Was Lonely, Oo You, Momma Miss ...
The album McCartney was released in the United States to mostly disappointing reviews. Paul recorded this album alone mostly at home playing all the instruments and doing all the vocals with Linda con...
The Beatles' single Let It Be is #1 in the US charts for the second straight week.
Also, Therapist Arthur Janov suggests to John Lennon that he should pay a visit to his first wife, Cynthia, and thei...
-UK release of Paul McCartney's LP McCartney (Apple). Songs: The Lovely Linda, That Would Be Something, Valentine Day, Every Night, Hot as Sun / Glasses, Junk, Man We Was Lonely, Oo You, Momma Miss Am...
On this date in 1966...
Studio Two, EMI Studios, London
Eleven uninterrupted hours, 2:30 pm-1:30 am, completing "Rain", overdubbing tambourine, bass and more vocals, then doing tape-to-tape reductio...