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The Beatles Biography
The Beginning
How do you begin a biography of the Beatles? I mean honestly, what can
you say that can summarize such a spectacular revolution, not only in
music but in world consciousness? Their scope of influence stretches
from music to film and even dabbles in politics and the art of
friendship. Their story is inspiring, sparking many to get up out of
their chairs and try something new. The Beatles pioneered so much in
their short time together, changing the world for generations to come.
It all began in 1957, Liverpool England, the second most unlikely place
in the world to give birth to stardom (the first being Demorest, Georgia).
John Lennon had learned the banjo at a young age, moving quickly to the
guitar and then starting his own band. Dubbed "The Quarry Men", this
high school skiffle group played around Liverpool, changing members more
frequently than they changed socks. Soon, a young Mr. Paul McCartney
sauntered up to John in between concerts. After hearing him play the
guitar, John said "Hey. Join me band, we?ll become the most popular
group in the world." Not wanting to appear anxious, Paul waited a day before
saying "Alright, sure.". The famous Lennon-McCartney duo was born.
Eight months later Paul had a suggestion for a new recruit. Three years
their junior, George Harrison was nonetheless a wizard on the guitar.
John was hesitant to allow such a young person into the band, but George
won him over. Two weeks before his 15th birthday, George officially
became a member of the band. I don’t know about you, but my fifteenth
birthday wasn’t nearly as productive as his…
The Quarry Men continued to play in and around Liverpool. Their name
went through several changes over the coming months. After using and
discarding the Quarry Men label, Johnny and the Moondogs enjoyed a brief
stint, followed by The Nerk Twins. Finally, John hit upon something
when he conjured "The Beatals" as their new official title, wanting an
insect reference similar to Buddy Holly’s "The Crickets", the whole
beetle theme continued through their next five names: The Silver
Beetles, The Silver Beats, The Beatles, The Silver Beatles. At last,
after going through more metamorphoses than a caterpillar, the ‘silver’
was dropped (again), leaving the short and sweet, ultra catchy and very
rememberable, The Beatles.
Some phenomenal changes were in the air as the universe began to stitch
together the group that would spark so much change throughout the world.
Though they didn’t know it at the time, but this group of young men
were setting their foundation for their climb to the top of the world.
All they needed was a big break.
The Ride to the Top
The Beatles did not immediately jump out to stardom. In fact, their
climb was somewhat like a roller coaster, a slow clanking to the top,
the suspense building and waiting for that first plunge over the hill.
For months they toured Liverpool and the surrounding towns trying to
build a fan base. Eventually they made their way Hamburg, playing to a
particularly rowdy crowd. The boys were forced to rev-up their
performance for the demanding audience, teaching them how to become true
showmen. Upon returning to Liverpool, they discovered some of their
fame had preceded them.
Brian Epstein, a record store owner in Liverpool, got wind of the
Beatles about this time. His interest was piqued, so he went to watch
them perform one night. At first glance, they appeared like most young
Liverpudlians at the time: uncouth hair, leather jackets and dark
trousers. But when they played, their synthesis created something
marvelous. Something about their energy when together inspired Brian to
become their manager. He pulled some strings and got the boys a few
auditions. Sadly, they were unfruitful. This didn’t dampen their
resolve, however, and Epstein continued lobbying for the band until he
finally secured an audition with George Martin at Parlophone records.
Martin, as it turns out, loved their sound. He, too, was an early victim
of the Beatles’ undeniable charm and catchy beats, succumbing to their
charismatic energy like Bugs Bunny to a carrot. He cleaned them up, put
them in tailored suits and gave them a resounding thumbs-up. The only
part of the package he didn’t seem to like was their drummer, Pete Best.
In a move that still raises eyebrows to this day, Epstein was asked to
replace Pete before the deal would be complete. Richard Starkey, our
beloved Ringo Starr, would take his place, completing the rock and roll
quartet. The Beatles were complete.
Being the superstar producer like he was, Martin decided these lanky
Liverpudlians should take over the world. After consulting history books
and noting that marching over mountains with elephants was not
successful, he decided to take the musical route. After several
mildly-successful singles released in the UK, the album Please Please Me
was recorded in a 12-hour studio session and released in March of 1963.
It was a hit, topping the charts for over 6 months. Not too shabby for
one day’s worth of work; much nicer than minimum wage.
I Want To Hold Your Hand hit the enterprising shores of America at the
end of 1963, floating to number one like a rubber ducky. Their new look
was also a big hit. Teens loved their off-kilter appearance, collarless
suits, mop-top hair and quirky personalities. The Beatles quickly became
known for their plucky sense of humor and constant silliness. In an
interview conducted in February 1964, a reporter informed the Beatles
that Detroit University had a ‘Stamp out the Beatles’ movement. The boys
nodded, and Paul replied with his characteristic head bob "We’ve got a
Stamp out Detroit movement!" After laughing, the interviewer continued.
"They think your haircuts are un-American." John retorted, "Well, it was
very observant of them because we aren't American, actually." Such
flippant and unrestrained joy in life was infectious, only increasing
their charm and lovability.
The Beatles then hopped on a boat and sailed over to the U.S. for their
famous appearance on the Ed Sullivan show. In what was the highest rated
program to that date, the famous words "Ladies and gentlemen, the
Beatles!" introduced the rag-tag bunch to the television world. They
hopped, they sang, they played, they laughed. People loved it. The souls
of the world were opening up to a new era of thought, instigated by the
quartet of young clowns from Liverpool. Their songs were simple but
touching, the tunes catchy and enjoyable. America fell for the Beatles’,
and their success was only beginning.
I Can See My House from Here (or "being on the top)
A sure-sign of being "on the top" would be having a lunchbox with your
image on the front. Or a pencil sharpener. Or a pair of socks. Or
bubblegum. Or all of the above and much more. Beatlemania settled upon
the world, nestling us in the warm winged comfort of the four boys from
Liverpool. Their timing couldn’t have been better to start their ascent
up the pedestal of stardom. The world was on the verge of an enormous
change, and the Beatles, with their budding creativity, would foster the
revolution.
As any comic book teaches us, good never comes without evil. Critics
reared their ugly heads and had their say, proclaiming the Beatles were
nothing but a fad that would die as soon as the next group of cute guys
with guitars came along. Shortly after being proved embarrassingly
wrong, the same critics tucked their tails and ran, beginning lives of
insurance salesmen to retain a shred of their dignity.
The Beatles’ answer to the critics: make a movie. Nothing short of
borrowing Santa’s magic sleigh could allow the group to tour every city
on earth, so, A Hard Day's Night
was created, sending their images to even the smallest towns and
earning them a world-wide reputation for being the happy-go-lucky
fab-four they were. Accompanying the movie was an album of the same
name, a soundtrack of sorts, launching their career even higher into
orbit as thousands of teenage girls watched the movie and swooned.
On the personal side, the band members were molding together in an even
tighter knit than before. They were growing up and growing together,
stepping into their own personalities more deeply than before. A Hard
Day’s Night was the first Beatles album written entirely by the band,
showcasing their creativity and ingenuity even this early in their
career. John and Paul flexed their lyric-writing muscles in preparation
for the records to come.
Since becoming household names, John, Paul, George and Ringo had
unwittingly become workaholics. Touring schedules were hectic, hopping
the boys across cities, states and countries in a matter of months. And
being stars comes with its fair share of responsibility; now they had
fans to attend to, those loyal people who could never get enough
Beatlemania. The first few years of their success gave them little time
to relax and enjoy the fruits of their labors. Beatles for Sale
was released in early December 1964, but contained only a handful of
original songs. By the end of 1964, the consensus was clear–-slow down
and concentrate on the music.
With a bigger budget and more explorative souls, the Beatles produced another movie/album combo six months later. Help!
was released to glowing fans, featuring Ringo as the "Starr" of the
show. (Yes, that was a bad joke, but I had to!) The album featured more
original hits by the Lennon-McCartney duo, including the most-covered
song in the history of music, Yesterday. This record also showed off
John’s vocal abilities and range, his heart rising and falling with his
voice to enchant everyone.
The Beatles were only getting better. They established a pattern of
constantly pushing the limits of both society and themselves (and the
music industry) and setting ever-higher standards for their work. Each
successive album built upon the last as they continued to mesh as a
group, their personalities growing more integrated by the day. The
universe had stitched them together as if they were destined to be, now
they just had to grow as a group to become a whole. Much like a ball of
yarn becomes a sock, actually.
Rubber Soul
has been called the first true Beatles album, symbolizing their break
from traditional love songs and moving into a more eclectic form of
songwriting. Every tune was an original, and a few were more original
than others. In My Life has been called the greatest song ever written,
giving haunting memories of that ruggedly familiar feeling of nostalgia
explicated so poetically by John. Norwegian Wood featured an instrument
unfamiliar to most western ears, the sitar, played by George Harrison.
Such a blending of cultures and sounds was indicative of the group’s
collective charm and charisma as well as the budding movement of
non-violence and love growing throughout the world.
Never satisfied with milking old formulas, the experiments continued. After Rubber Soul came Revolver
,
a veritable fruit smoothie of melody, harmony, love, traditional style
and something very new. If Rubber Soul was a single step into
originality, Revolver was a full game of hopscotch. Songs such as
Eleanor Rigby, Yellow Submarine and Tomorrow Never Knows showcased the
talent waking up from a long winter’s nap within the group. Fully
comfortable with themselves, with each other, and with their music, the
Beatles had shoved their sticks in the ground and were preparing to pole
vault across the lines of normality even farther.
The renaissance of culture and consciousness was in full-swing at this
point. Hippies, those free-willed 15-25 year olds with a penchant for
peace, were leaving their homes and striking out on their own, rejecting
the old and forging into the new. The Beatles were doing similar things
at this time, releasing the traditional styles of music and breaking
into their own style. Were the Beatles a catalyst for this movement of
change or did they just ride the universal waves? The answer is,
undoubtedly, a little bit of both.
After turning up the creativity in exponential notches for their
previous albums, the Beatles did their most creative work to date with Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
.
The brainchild of Paul, the name was a nom de plume of sorts for the
Beatles, giving them an excuse to wear crazy outfits. The album features
many musical firsts, as per the usual Beatles’ style. Each song blends
smoothly into the next, creating the impression that the whole album is
one grand concert, complete with applause and screaming fans.
Sgt. Pepper was also the "coming-out" album for the Beatles. Although
they had been innovative on their previous recordings, Sgt. Pepper
proved they were never out of fresh ideas to experiment with. Their
voices can really be heard on this album; they sound more aware, more
grown up and more settled in their roles as world musicians. At this
time, psychedelic drugs were in full swing in many countries around the
world, and the Beatles experimented with their effects as well. While
many say this was the source of their creativity in the later years, at
best it only contributed to their inherent innovation. Still, Sgt.
Pepper was inventive and fresh, becoming an instant hit and long-term
inspiration for many.
The Beatles’ were about to embark upon a gauntlet of changes beginning
in 1967. Paul sketched out a plan for a new movie, this one completely
unscripted. The idea was that a group of actors would be placed on a bus
with the Beatles and taken for a ride through their imagination. A
"magical mystery tour" of sorts. Work began on the album and movie in
the spring of ’67, but was interrupted by several major events. Their
manager since the beginning, the man who discovered the Beatles, Brian
Epstein, passed away. This was not only an emotional blow to the group,
having lost a trusted companion and friend, but a work-related strain as
well. Without a manager to handle the business details of the band, the
work fell onto the members. Paul had a very proactive attitude toward
the process, immediately taking responsibility and encouraging the
others to do so as well. John and George had very different opinions,
and Ringo didn’t seem to mind either way. The first internal strain had
begun to form, one that would, in combination with many other factors,
lead to the eventual breakup of the Beatles.
The Beatles also visited Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the man becoming famous
in America for bringing an ancient Indian technique of meditation to the
world. Seeking spiritual knowledge just as we all were, the Beatles
traveled to India with the hopes of gaining enlightenment. Each band
member had a different experience there, creating a larger rift between
them. They came back unfulfilled on one level but full of creativity on
another. Magical Mystery Tour
was finished shortly after, releasing both the movie and the album before the end of the year.
The tension created by the loss of their manager and by the varied
experiences in India was taking its toll. This combined with John’s
insistence on having his new love interest Yoko Ono present at the
studio (despite his band-mate's wishes) made the situation more
harrowing. At one point, Ringo actually left the group. The Beatles were
far from through with their creative streak, however, as their very
next album would show.
In stark contrast to their previous two works, the The Beatles (The White Album)
featured a simple white cover with "The Beatles" inconspicuously
written on the front. Its simplicity was a foil to the complex music
found within. Over two dozen songs filled the inside of this plain white
wrapper, each more different than the last. From crazy psychedelic
songs such as Wild Honey Pie to somber melodies in Julia, Blackbird and I
Will, the White Album would become famous for containing more musical
styles than many artists had dabbled with in their entire careers. Such
was the nature of the Beatles’ free spirit and inventiveness, the four
personalities melding together to allow the freedom and ingenuity for
the various styles to come forward.
The band owed United Artists another movie (thanks to those fun things
called ‘contracts’), so it was decided to make an animated movie based
on the song Yellow Submarine (Songtrack)
previously released on Revolver. The soundtrack by the same name
featured only four new songs by the Beatles, George Martin creating the
orchestral pieces and arranging the other songs.
The Breakup
Unfortunately, the band felt they were running out of steam. Tensions
had grown and the overall feeling was that the Beatles were near their
end. A final album was planned, but even the details of it could not be
agreed upon. The producer favored Paul’s ideas, causing John to withdraw
from many sessions in resentment. George and Ringo felt unneeded and
refused to show up at many rehearsals. Though the band’s problems were
increasing, their music did not seem to suffer the same fate. Abbey Road
,
planned as a farewell album, featured tight vocals, haunting harmonies
and the famous You Never Give Me Your Money medley, pulling many songs
together in one long enjoyable ride. Abbey Road was released in the fall
of 1969, but the Beatles still were not done with the world, or so it
seemed.
Paul tried to convince the others to do a handful of concerts to
re-establish their core group of fans. John and George were against the
idea. What resulted was the famous rooftop concert staged in London. At
its conclusion, John said the famous line "I'd like to say thank you on
behalf of the group and ourselves, and I hope we passed the audition!".
They still had their magic. Songs recorded here were combined with other
Beatles material and mixed by Phil Spector. Let It Be
(recorded before Abbet Rd) was pieced together and released to the
world, an unintended finale to the Beatles’ tromp through the world.
Their end officially came on December 29, 1970. The Beatles, the world’s
most influential group of musicians, had been through it all. From
rising from obscurity to a serendipitous beginning, they floated on the
waves of fame and rode them all the way to America. There they delighted
fans and critics alike, awing them with their playful sense of life and
harmonious music. They had merchandise, millions of fans, and even a
mass album burning in the mid 60’s when John stated they were "more
popular than Jesus". Up and down, side to side, the Beatles traversed it
all. It was the symbolic end of an era the Beatles had helped create.
The world was changed because of them, and it would never be the same.
As John said at the conclusion of the rooftop concert, "I'd like to say
thank you on behalf of the group and ourselves, and I hope we passed the
audition!"
Post-Beatles:
The four men went their separate directions. John became known for his
political activism and his own music career, often combining efforts
with wife Yoko Ono. His most famous post-Beatles song, Imagine
(from the album of the same name), encouraged unity and peace between
nations. It was a ballad for world harmony, encouraging everyone to
imagine a world free from war, united as one.
Though his career after the Beatles was successful, it did not reach the
height of what he had accomplished in the band. His final album was
released in late 1980, rising straight to number one almost everywhere
in the world. In December of the same year, John Lennon was tragically
murdered by a gunman outside his Manhattan apartment. The world cried
collectively when they heard the news, as one of the greatest
revolutionary songwriters had moved on from this world and to the next.
His work would live on, affecting the lives of billions of people
throughout time.
George Harrison, often referred to as the "quiet Beatle", slowly came
into his own after the breakup of the band. He released several albums
and singles sporadically, including rock’s first triple album, All Things Must Pass
.
He had a growing interest in Hinduism and eastern meditation techniques
spurred by his meetings with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Throughout the 90’s
he fought a battle with lung cancer, one that would eventually take his
life in November of 2001. This gentle soul, one who was forever
advocating love and spirituality, was cremated, his ashes rumored having
been spread on the holy river Ganges in India.
Paul enjoyed a successful solo career after the splitting of the
Beatles, continuing to produce albums to this day. Ringo released an
album that topped the charts in the late 80’s but was otherwise not very
active in the music industry. In the mid 1990’s, coming together for
the closest thing to a Beatles’ reunion possible, Paul, George and Ringo
agreed to allow a three volume six CD Beatles’ Anthology 1
, Anthology 2
, Anthology 3
(with accompanying television shows) to be produced, containing
unreleased recordings, demos, and two new songs. Free as a Bird and Real
Love, originally written by John but re-recorded from his demo tapes.
It was both a tribute and a retrospection for the Beatles, reminding the
world and a new generation that they were the most influential band
ever to grace our globe.
John Lennon once said in reference to the Beatles’ popularity, "We were
just a band that made it very very big, that’s all." In some ways he’s
correct. The Beatles was a band, four men from Liverpool, that rose to
fame as any band would. When they made it to the top, the world was
ready for change. The combined energies of these four created something
spectacular, something undeniably unique. This allowed for unmatched
creativity and ingenuity, the pinnacle of human potential expressed in
their group. Their message is timeless, their songs unique and dear to
everyone’s heart. They are sure to delight and inspire listeners for the
rest of time.
~by John Bardinelli © 2004 Beatlesnumber9
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