A student at Quarry Bank School
in Liverpool named John Lennon decided to
form a group in 1957 and laid the foundation
of what was to become the most famous rock
bands of all time. John used the school name
as inspiration for the name "The Quarry
Men" in March 1957. He sang and played
guitar, Colin Hanton played drums, Eric Griffiths
on guitar, Pete Shotton on washboard, Rod
Davis on banjo and Bill Smith on tea-chest
bass. Ivan Vaughan soon replaced Bill.
John was inspired by "Heartbreak
Hotel" and became a fan of American
rock 'n' roll music. He introduced songs
by Buddy Holly, Carl Perkins, The Coasters,
Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis and Gene
Vincent into their repertoire. On July
6, 1957, Ivan Vaughan invited Paul McCartney
to see their gig at The Woolton Parish
Church Fete. The fifteen-year-old McCartney
was introduced to sixteen-year-old Lennon
and a unique song writing partnership began.
The line-up of The Quarry Men increased
to seven with Paul on guitar and vocals,
John Lowe on piano and George Harrison
on guitar and vocals. Soon Griffiths and
another member would leave, leaving a five-piece
band. The group appeared at several local
talent contests but had very few gigs.
By January 1959, the group split up. Although
John and Paul kept in touch, George had
joined the Les Stewart Quartet.
That might have been the end of The Quarry
Men but they had a stroke of luck. The
Les Stewart Quartet had been booked as
a resident band at a new club called "The
Casbah". It was run by Mrs. Mona Best
to support her son's Pete and Rory. Stewart,
upset because his guitarist Ken Brown helped
decorate the club, refused to play there.
Ken and George walked out of the group
and George contacted John and Paul, and
The Quarry Men were reunited as a quartet.
After about seven gigs at the club, Ken
Brown left over a disagreement about money.
From October 1959 to January 1960 John,
Paul and George continued as a trio with
Paul on drums. They called themselves "Johnny & the
Moondogs".
By this time John was enrolled in The
Liverpool College of Art. John knew that
they needed a bass player so he asked two
students if they would like the position.
The two were Stuart Sutcliffe and Rod Murray.
Both could not afford a guitar, so Rod
started to make one by hand. However, Stuart
was able to sell one of his paintings to
a John Moore’s Exhibition and was
able to buy a bass guitar and join the
group in January 1960.
At this time the group had changed its
name to "Silver Beetles". They
also began shifting drummers around, the
first was Tommy Moore who toured with them
through Scotland and then left. The next
was Norman Chapman but he left after only
a few weeks. Finally, George suggested
that Pete Best, the son of club owner Mrs.
Mona Best, become the group's drummer.
Paul contacted Pete and offered him the
job as drummer that he took. The group
had finally settled on "The Beatles" just
before their first trip to Hamburg in August
1960. Now John, Paul, George, Stuart and
Pete would head off for Hamburg. At that
time The Beatles weren't considered to
be the leading group in Liverpool and in
most cases were looked down upon.
In Hamburg they pulled their act together
musically. This was caused by the fact
that they had to play such long hours and
was bullied by the club owner Bruno Koschimider
to "make a show". It wasn't just
Hamburg that made them special. The fact
that Liverpool had so many venues for local
acts to play at, coupled with the rivalry
between more than 300 Merseyside groups,
continued to forge The Beatles until they
were to be regarded as Liverpool's top
band.
At the time, Pete Best was regarded as
the most potent symbol in the band. After
Hamburg, Stuart Sutcliffe left and The
Beatles bceame a four-piece band and Paul
took over as bass guitarist. John, Paul
and George were the three front-line guitarists
and they alternated as lead singers and
also performed vocal harmony with either
John or Paul or all three. Pete Best played
drums and occasionally sang one song but
he had developed a distinctive drum sound
called "the atom beat" which
many other drummers tried to copy.
By this time, The Beatles had hired Brian
Epstein as their manager and he signed
them up for an audition with Decca Records.
The head of Decca Records told The Beatles
manager, "Guitar groups are on their
way out Mr. Epstein.” The Beatles
were devastated by their failed audition
but Epstien secured them a contract with
Parlophone Records. George Martin became
their A&R Man. In August of 1962, Ringo
Starr replaced Pete Best.
Their first single "Love Me Do" was
issued on October 5, 1962, and was a modest
hit. 1963 and 1964 proved to be the most
important years in their careers. In 1963
the "Beatlemania" craze had started
in Britain and The Beatles were no longer
support acts at concerts. Now they were
starring in the Royal Variety Show and
the highest rating TV show "Sunday
Night At The London Palladium".
Their biggest year was 1964 when they
conquered the biggest record market in
the world - America. The group became symbols.
America was mourning the death of President John
F. Kennedy and The Beatles appeared
on the scene to bring them fun and excitement
and end their mourning. They also brought
back rock 'n' roll to America. After Elvis
had join the army, he lost much of his
early rebelliousness. Jerry Lee Lewis and
Chuck Berry were rocked by scandals and
their careers suffered. Buddy Holly, The
Big Bopper and Ritchie Valens had been
killed in an plane crash. The American
media was promoting what The Beatles called "One-Hit-Wonders" such
as Frankie Avalon, Tab Hunter, James Darren,
etc.
Ed Sullivan had been at London airport
when The Beatles return from Sweden and
saw all the girls screaming, the boys cheering
and the media taking pictures. He knew
they were something special and he booked
them on his TV show "The Ed Sullivan
Show". That show received the highest
ratings in the history of television up
to then. That same year The Beatles toured
America for the first time and starred
in their first motion picture "A Hard
Day's Night". In 1965, The Beatles
second motion picture HELP!" premiered.
Later that year, The Beatles performed
at Shea Stadium in New York to a crowd
of 55,000 screaming fans. The largest live
audience in history. Their tours did have
their darker moments. The first being in
Tokyo, Japan where The Beatles were locked
up in their hotel and were not allowed
to come out until show time. The next was
in the Philippines when, on a day off,
Madam Marcos asked them to attend a Royal
dinner. The Beatles politely turned down
the invitation and the public was furious.
The Beatles quickly left.
In 1966, The Beatles were under heavy
pressure from the press after John made
a remark that The Beatles were more popular
than Jesus. John had to apologize and explain
himself several times. Not only that but
their tour of America was plagued with
mishaps. On August 19, 1966 they receive
a death threat in Memphis and a firecracker
went off during the show terrifying The
Beatles. The next day in Cincinnati a concert
promoter failed to provide a stage canopy
and can't understand why The Beatles were
unwilling to play electric guitars in a
rainstorm. Paul becomes so agitated he
becomes ill. On August 28, 1966 at Dodger
Stadium, L.A. cops are seen beating teenage
girls. Dozens are trampled in the chaos.
During the sixties, The Beatles not only
became a musical phenomenon, they affected
the styles and fashions of the decade.
They transformed the record industry as
well. They brought about royalties for
artists and producers, revolutionized music
tours, and started the Pop promo film or
what we know today as "The Music Video".
Everyone of their albums, from Please Please
Me to Abbey Road were all popular and unique
in their own way. But after the death of
their long time manager Brian Epstein,
things would start to fall apart for The
Beatles.
Due to outside interests the group focused
less and less and the band. In late 1964
they were introduced to marijuana and would
experiment with more drugs such as LSD
which they were first introduced to in
late 1965. The Beatles played their last
concert at Candlestick Park in San Francisco
on August 29, 1966. In 1967, their manager
Brian Epstein died of a accidental drug
overdose. Some friction was caused between
John and Paul because Paul was trying to
become the leader of the group after Brian's
death. Ties were still strong at this point
between the band members despite Ringo
leaving the band for a short time during
The White Album because he felt left out.
When Ringo decided to return he found his
drum kit decked with flowers and the others
tried to include him more. After The White
Album they embarked on the "Let It
Be" project. The idea was to see The
Beatles jam, rehearse and record a whole
new album of songs. At the end they would
give a concert from some spectacular place.
Tensions were high between Paul and George
as they started recording at Twickenham
Film Studios. John was off in his land
of love with Yoko and Ringo was left in
the background. One day George walked out
on a session after a disagreement with
Paul. George came back to finish up the
album but as John would later explain, "We
couldn't play the game anymore, we just
couldn't do it".
The Beatles gave their last public appearance
on top of the Apple building on January
30, 1969. However their "Let It Be" album
was deemed un-releasable. It was handed
over to Phil Spector who added lush orchestrations
to such songs as "The Long and Winding
Road", infuriating Paul. Despite all
of this, The Beatles decided to get together
to make one final album "Abbey Road" which
would go on to become their biggest selling
record in history. It was mainly Paul who
kept the group together this long, encouraging
them to make Magical Mystery Tour back
in 1967 after Brian's death and trying
to get them all excited about recording
and performing. Recording yes, performing
no. From Sgt. Pepper's through Abbey Road
these were considered to be their "studio
years" where they rarely got together
except to record. The Let It Be album was
finally released on May 8, 1970 less than
a month after Paul publicly announced he
was no longer a member of the group.
In the end, The Beatles became true legends.
Their music touched all our lives. The
Beatles wanted more than just to "Be
Beatles", they wanted happiness. A
happiness that they once had back when
they first became successful. John found
happiness with his one true love Yoko,
his Plastic Ono Band, and son Sean; Paul
found happiness with Linda, his children,
and Wings; George found happiness with
his solo career, Olivia, and his son Dhani;
and Ringo found happiness with his solo
career, acting career, Barbara, and his
sons. They will always be the greatest
rock 'n' roll band in history. |