Remember When: The Beatles Decided to Quit Touring
On the evening of August 29, 1966, The Beatles, having just completed a show at Candlestick Park in San Francisco, were hustled into a truck to leave the venue. Paul McCartney, who had been the lone holdout on an opinion shared by the other three members of the band, spoke up and finally agreed: This would be the last live show for them in the foreseeable future.
As it turned out, it would be their last live show ever, not counting their abbreviated rooftop performance in 1969. What brought them to that point? And what were the ramifications of that choice? Let’s go back in time to one of the most momentous decisions in the history of music.
Although The Beatles unofficially formed when Paul McCartney met John Lennon in 1957, their steady touring didn’t truly begin until 1960, when they headed to Germany. From that point forward, they maintained an intense schedule of live shows. That schedule was initially manageable by vehicle travel, but, as they gained worldwide popularity, it meant airplane trips galore.
As they climbed the rungs of stardom and began playing bigger and bigger venues, the enthusiasm of the members stayed high. But as they began to accomplish everything they had initially set out to do, the novelty started to wear off. The massive show at Shea Stadium in New York in 1965 could be seen as a kind of tipping point, after which the Fab Four started to lose their taste for touring.
The reasons were numerous. Even as the venues grew, the technology wasn’t keeping up. Somewhat primitive amplifiers in arenas and stadiums reduced the nuances of The Beatles’ sound to an indistinguishable blare. It didn’t help that the kids screaming in the crowd often blotted out the noise the group was making anyway. The four men felt the level of their live performances was rapidly declining because of all this.
Source: Jim Beviglia/americansongwriter.com