Beatles News
The Beatles is proof that regardless of popularity in the music industry, one may still not be able to release a live album as easily as possible.
The Beatles' fans finally got the band's first live album 44 years ago. Titled, "The Beatles at the Hollywood Bowl," the album became one of their successful pieces before their split.
However, fans noticed that the first live album took more than a decade before it was released, and the reason behind it did not have something to do with the members' lack of trying.
Two years after the event was recorded live, Capitol Records - the band's US label - started brainstorming to take advantage of The Beatles' popularity.
Source: Angeline Sicily/musictimes.com
John Lennon often heard The Beatles’ “Yesterday” in a specific setting. John and Yoko Ono did the same thing when someone played “Yesterday” for them on the violin. “Yesterday” appeared on the soundtrack of one of The Beatles’ classic movies.
John Lennon revealed he kept hearing The Beatles’ “Yesterday” in a specific setting. In addition, he revealed what he did when someone played “Yesterday” on the violin in front of him. Notably, audiences in different countries had significantly different reactions to the song.Subsequently, John discussed his influences. “It happened to me when I heard rock ‘n’ roll in the ’50s,” he added. “I had no idea about doing music as a way of life until rock ‘n’ roll hit me.”
Source: cheatsheet.com
We don't need to remind anyone at this point of how the Beatles revolutionized popular music from the moment their performance on "The Ed Sullivan Show" became the February 1964 equivalent of "breaking the internet" or going viral via TikTok in present times. Over a six-year period that came to an unfortunate end in 1970, the Fab Four reinvented themselves in so many ways but never stopped topping the charts or influencing legions of young people to pick up some musical instruments and start a band.
Source: Grunge.com/flipboard.com
Those words, from Don’t Bother Me, a glum kiss-off to an lover, which appeared on The Beatles’ 1963 album With The Beatles, mark George Harrison’s first recorded entry as a songwriter. It wasn’t of any significant artistic weight that would rattle the axis of the golden Lennon/ McCartney team, nor would it hint at the glory and sophistication that would be his masterpiece solo record.
Flash forward more than half a century later, and Harrison’s landmark All Things Must Pass album is not only considered perhaps the greatest solo record by a Beatle, but is also routinely selected in the music press as among the most important rock albums of all time.
Source: Ken Sharp/loudersound.com
On August 21, 1964, The Beatles played their first concert in Seattle. More than 14,000 screaming fans packed into the Seattle Center Coliseum, including these sisters from Ballard.
“I was 14 when I saw The Beatles, and I’m 72 now,” said Barbara Horn.
“I was 21 when I saw The Beatles, and I will be turning 80 in July,” said Irene Crawford.
Typically, the little sister learns about the cool new bands from their older sibling, but not in this case.
“I didn’t even know who these Beatles were,” said Irene. “But I worked downtown and she’d want me to pick up these magazines for her that had The Beatles on it, at Woolworths. So then I started looking at them and listening and I thought, oh, they’re good.”
Source: RACHEL BELLE KIRO Newsradio/mynorthwest.com
Sir Paul McCartney admitted he has a recurring dream in which the audience at his concert deserts him for the bar when he plays a lesser known song.
The former Beatle, 79, discussed the challenge of choosing his setlists from more than 60 years of music ahead of his Got Back Tour, which began on Thursday April 28 in the US.
Speaking during rehearsals, he said he wanted to include the track Women And Wives, from his 2020 number one album McCartney III, in his upcoming shows but worried fans might switch off.
Source: PA News Agency/centralfifetimes.com
As the Beatles drifted apart towards the end of the 1960s, Let It Be would prove to be the band's final album.
The Fab Four's final number one, The Long and Winding Road, caused further conflict within the outfit as Paul McCartney had major reservations about alterations made to the track. The final album was largely mixed by Phil Spector, with McCartney- no longer on good terms with the rest of the band- remaining scarce.
Spector took issue with the recorded tapes for the track and so decided to mix it with string and choir overdubs. Before the record went to press, Paul received a copy and did not like what he heard.
Source: Aaron Curran/liverpoolecho.co.uk
There are many great guitar moments within the Beatles catalog. We all have our favorites. But as far as Paul McCartney is concerned, one of those highlights happens to be the song “Taxman.”
And for good reason.
In addition to laying down his unforgettable Motown-style bass hooks on the track McCartney contributed a wild electric guitar solo that would make anyone proud.
Source: Tom Mulhern, Rod Brakes/guitarplayer.com
The right combination of variables is needed to achieve a blazing success—one explanation for why there was never a “Kinksmania”Imagine there were no Beatles—or that there was no Beatlemania anyway and that the lads from Liverpool were just another band that never got a record deal or that split up before they hit it big. That is the premise Harvard University professor Cass R. Sunstein ponders in an entertaining and thought-provoking essay to be published in September in the first issue of the Journal of Beatles Studies. (A preliminary draft was posted online early this year.)
The fact that there could be an academic journal devoted just to John, Paul, George and Ringo is emblematic of how popular and influential the Beatles are. Many assume they were destined for greatness. “It was just a matter of time,” said John Lennon in a 1980 interview. But maybe not. Early on, record executives were unimpressed (“The boys won’t go,” they told manager Brian Epstein). And the group did almost split up. Its members were carried along their winding road by an unusually enthusiastic manager (Epstein), a risk-taking producer (George Martin), a big local fan base, and more. “
Source: Lydia Denworth/scientificamerican.com
George Harrison was constantly amazed by Bob Dylan. Everything he did and said, especially how he wrote and recorded music. So, George took to recording Dylan whenever they were together. The ex-Beatle had his own personal Dylan bootlegs.
In a 2002 special edition of Rolling Stone called “Remembering George,” Tom Petty talked about what it was like being in a band with George and Dylan. Along with Jeff Lynne and Roy Orbison, the trio formed The Traveling Wilburys in the late 1980s.
Petty said that George was fascinated by everything Dylan did, so George tended to film him.
“George quoted Bob like people quote Scripture,” Petty said. “Bob really adored George, too. George used to hang over the balcony videoing Bob while Bob wasn’t aware of it. Bob would be sitting at the piano playing, and George would tape it and listen to it all night.”
Source: cheatsheet.com