Sunday, December 28, 2014

George Honored With Lifetime Achievement Grammy!


For the 57th Annual Grammy Awards, the Recording Academy has chosen to honor George with the Lifetime Achievement Award. The ceremony will take place in Los Angeles on February 8. How great is that? Check it out here:

http://www.jambands.com/news/2014/12/28/george-harrison-honored-with-lifetime-achievement-grammy/

Thursday, October 9, 2014

Happy 74th Birthday John Lennon!



"Living is easy with eyes closed, misunderstanding all you see."

1967 was a transition period for The Beatles. Following the release of Revolver in 1966, the music that powered out of Abbey Road Studios in St. John's Wood, London was vibrantly new and unequivocally revolutionary. 1967's Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band has consistently been voted the greatest rock 'n roll album of all time by Rolling Stone and the like. From there, the Fab Four moved up into a broader stratosphere of music and meaning, knocking the barriers down of what a rock song could be and expanding the range of popular music. The results are legendary. But it all started with a man named John and his guitar.

John Winston Lennon was born on October 9, 1940 in the district of Merseyside in northwestern England, in the dirty and bombed-out port city of Liverpool. Born into the rage of Hitler's Blitz on England during World War II, John was quite lucky to make it through his first few years of life. From his early years on, John led a troubled life, beginning with an incredibly dysfunctional family that split when he was just four years old. At this tender age of four, John was asked to choose who he wanted to spend his life with, his mum or his dad. Though he initially chose his father, who would have taken John to live with him in New Zealand (an alternate history if there ever was one), he changed at the last minute and ran to his mother, Julia. It was at this point that Julia's older sister, Mimi, intervened and took the distraught boy. Julia didn't put up much of a fight and took up with another man and had two daughters. Mimi, Aunt Mimi as John called her, raised John until he was seventeen years old and had an incredibly important impact on John's life and by extension his love affair with music.

This was just the beginning of John's confusion growing up. Mimi, though loving in her own way, was a very harsh mother figure to grow up with. John's almost chronic need to rebel (from cutting school to riding atop buses around Liverpool) clashed magnificently at times with Mimi's pre-war British mindset. But at the same time, Julia lived just a couple hours' walk away in Blackpool with her new family. When she chose to reenter John's life when he was just sixteen, John was caught between two families that more closely resembled warring factions. Conservative Mimi, who still had trouble forgiving her younger sister for virtually abandoning her toddler son, and the free spirit of Julia pulled John in two different directions, leaving an empty vacuum within him that would only be filled by music.

Julia's appalling parenting skills aside, her influence on John was extraordinary. She provided the music legend's first encounter with music, teaching him the Liverpool folk song, "Maggie Mae" on the banjo. She took John to see Elvis Presley on screen, giving him that first taste of rock n' roll, a taste that would never be satiated. She gave John the freedom he always wanted but never got from the rigid life of living with Aunt Mimi at Mendips. It's pivotal that Julia's reappearance in John's life, at such a malleable point in his life, coincides with his meeting of a boy from Woolton, Liverpool who was about two years younger, but could rock harder on the guitar than anyone he had ever met.

John met Paul McCartney at a church fete in St. Paul's Church on a bright summers day in 1957. John had transitioned to the guitar at this point (a guitar that Mimi had bought him) and had gotten his first gig with his high school band, The Quarrymen. Paul, a quiet and well-dressed fifteen-year-old happened to have a mutual friend with the frontman of the band. It's really thanks to Ivan Vaughan, an obscure figure in Beatles history, that John and Paul even met. Paul impressed and intimidated John with his skills on the guitar and his singing, and later that week half of what would become The Beatles was practicing barre chords on John's back porch.

As if the stars had aligned, Paul's schoolfriend George Harrison could also play the guitar, better, Paul told John, than anyone he knew. George famously tried out for the role of lead guitar by playing "Raunchy" on the top deck of a bus late at night in Liverpool after hearing the Quarrymen play a gig. Though only fourteen, George's skill on the guitar earned him a rightful place in the band and three-fourths of the Beatles were together.

But just as everything was matching up for the first time in John's life, it took a turn for the worst. John had repaired his relationship with Mimi, one of the people who cared most passionately for him, and Julia and was beginning to see a future with both of them in it. On her way back from Mendips in 1958, Julia was struck by a speeding car and killed instantly. For a time, it seemed that the dream of starting a band that would be as big as Elvis was over. For the incredibly important relationship that John and Paul had, both personally and musically, Julia's death deeply cemented their friendship and connection. Paul's mother, Mary (yes, Mother Mary in 1970's "Let It Be") had died of breast cancer when Paul was just twelve. Paul and John comforted each other in their times of trouble and grief.

Overcoming his grief of losing his mother twice, John, Paul, George, and Pete Best (their original drummer) ferried over to Hamburg, Germany to play their first gig at the Indra Club in the St. Pauli district. The Silver Beetles at this point, their time while in Hamburg served as a sort of baptism-by-fire and greatly tightened their skills as a performing group. The late teens would work full days and nights, taking pills to stay awake but performing sets that they would play later on in the 1960s. But Hamburg is significant for other reasons. It was the place where they first met the last member that would make the Fab Four (much to the detriment of poor Pete Best), Ringo Starr. Already a member of a more popular Merseyside band, Rory Storm and the Hurricanes, Ringo filled in for Pete when he was too ill to perform. Paul remembers that when Ringo would play with the three of them, it just seemed to click. By the time the band was ready to return to Liverpool and begin playing sets at the famed Cavern Club, Pete was not matching up to par.

Other than Abbey Road Studios and Hamburg, the Cavern Club is easily the most significant Beatles location, and still serves as a pilgrimage site for Beatles fans the world over. John, Paul, George, and Pete were playing at the steamy, underground night club when a little known record store owner, Brian Epstein, was asked if he had any Beatles records in stock. Curious, he sought out The Beatles and watched them perform in the Cavern. What he saw when he descended down the winding staircase and into the overcrowded club, we can only imagine. Four young lads decked out all in black leather and cowboy boots rocking out to Little Richard's "Long Tall Sally" must have been a sight. But it electrified Epstein and he chose to abandon his family's record store and offer his services as manager of The Beatles. It is thanks to Epstein that George Martin, EMI Records producer, even agreed to meet with them. But by August 1962, Ringo Starr had officially replaced Pete Best as drummer and the Fab Four were headed to Abbey Road Studios in London to cut their first single, "Love Me Do" and later record, Please Please Me.

From the start, John felt the need to be the head of The Beatles, even over Epstein. As the one who started the group, John saw it as his band. But the point, Epstein and Martin maintained, was that unlike other guitar groups of the day, The Beatles were all the head of the band, equal members that contributed equally to group (at least appearance-wise). They were the Fab Four, not Gerry and the Pacemakers. This often led to conflict with John and Epstein, who clashed over the suits that they were made to wear and the bowing they did after every show.

Touring took a toll on John, like the others. Epstein, a brilliant public relations man, created a relentless touring schedule for The Beatles, spanning the globe. But by 1966, The Beatles were ready to move away from the screaming fans and into the quiet creativity of Abbey Road Studios. John and Paul's artistic tension blossomed during this period. When John wrote "Strawberry Fields Forever," Paul would respond with "Penny Lane," and so forth. John's songwriting was very much characterized by responses to Paul's happy-go-lucky style, a deep attachment to introspection (though "I Am the Walrus" might be an exception), and the taking of inspiration from the environment around him.

After The Beatles broke up in 1970, John led a troubled and brief life. After divorcing his first wife Cynthia, John married the Japanese artist, Yoko Ono and had one son, Sean in 1975. As for his three best friends, George, Paul, and Ringo, he never played or recorded with them again. Their friendship was only repaired a year or so before tragedy struck. On December 8, 1980 at 11:50 pm, John Lennon was shot by Mark David Chapman outside the Dakota Building in New York City. He died on the scene. It was a senseless ending to a complicated and beautiful life.

Through all of the problems that John had growing up, music always made sense for his life. Music put right the chaotic world of John Lennon and the turbulent 1960s. His contributions to music cannot be understated and it's on his 74th birthday that we remember his life. Happy birthday, John.

JOHN LENNON 1940-1980

Monday, September 22, 2014

Song of the Day: Cayenne (The Beatles Anthology, 1960)

This is a bit of a different post tonight, as this song is not technically a Beatles song. "Cayenne" is one of the first songs that Paul McCartney ever recorded, laying down the track in 1960 at his home on Forthlin Road in Liverpool. The song has a bit of a western vibe going for it and only lasts about a minute and a half. Though three out of the four Beatles can be heard playing on the record (Ringo would not join the band until August 1962), they were not calling themselves The Beatles by this point. The name went through various changes, starting in 1957 as The Quarrymen and moving along to the Silver Beetles until finally becoming the legendary Beatles around 1961. The song itself is not very well known, but it's possible to discern the very distinct style that would characterize their music for the next decade.

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

This Day in 1963

On September 16, 1963, George Harrison became the first Beatle to set foot in the United States-indirectly a big moment for Beatles history. George was the youngest of the Harrison children, with two older brothers and an older sister, named Louise. Louise moved to Benton, Illinois with her husband in the early 1960s, far before The Beatles made it big in the United States in 1964. At the time of his visit, The Beatles had enjoyed a year of Beatlemania back home in Britain, but they were still unknown in the United States (they hadn't even been heard yet on the radio waves-first gracing them, that November.) George was able to walk the streets of Benton incognito, shopping, eating, and even jamming with a local band (how cool is that ?!!). It was most likely the last time George was able to walk in public like an ordinary person, something he would cherish dearly in the next few years of Beatlemania. The above picture is the only picture that exists of George's relatively unknown trip to the United States.

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Come Together

One, two, three, FOUR!

There are places I'll remember all my life though some have changed. Some forever not for better. Some have gone and some remain...But of all these friends and lovers, there is no one that compares with you and these memories lose their meaning when I think of love as something new...I know I'll often stop and think about them. In my life, I've loved you more.

There are times when all you want to say is encompassed perfectly in a song. But for me, almost all I want to say is perfectly expressed in a Beatles song. This is my first blog post in London, the city that has seen so much and radiates history from its walls. But as I walk around the streets of this great metropolis all I can think of is four twenty-somethings arriving in London from Liverpool to record for the very first time in Abbey Road Studios, strutting about the alleyways following their first number one, dodging screaming fans as Beatlemania cascaded down upon them, leaving Heathrow to fly into JFK International Airport in New York, spending days holed up in the studio recording legendary tracks, walking across the street, and finally performing for the last time to the world on the rooftop of Apple Studios. London itself, is the center of The Beatles, seeing their tentative beginning and modest but incredible end. T

The London scene in the 1960s was a magnificent place to be in world history even without The Beatles' contribution. To be here studying history and with a big place for the Beatles in my heart, is more than I ever could have hoped for. I feel closer to them than ever, despite the fifty-year gap between our lives.

Hopefully, I will be inspired to be a better blogger living here! I'll try to post pictures as much as I can.

Sunday, August 10, 2014

PAUL MCCARTNEY AT DODGER STADIUM TONIGHT!!

That's right. Sir Paul will be at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, California at 8 pm during his time in the US for his tour "Out There." Who else will be there? ME. In a few short hours Paul will run out on stage and I will see him for the first time with my own eyes, not through a screen or the lens of a camera. I'll try to post pictures, I promise.

P.S. I've had a busy summer, and I'm sorry I haven't posted in what seems like and eternity.

Monday, June 16, 2014

Song of the day: I Will (The White Album, 1968)

In honor of Paul McCartney's 72nd birthday on Wednesday, I'm going to post some of my favorite Paul compositions of The Beatles this week. Here is the White Album's (The Beatles for sticklers) "I Will" from 1968.

Friday, June 6, 2014

This day in 1966

On June 6, 1966, Paul McCartney recorded the final dubbing for Revolver's "Eleanor Rigby." This is also a few months before "Paul is Dead" conspirators believe Paul was killed in his Aston Martin in a car accident and Billy Shears took over as the Beatle. Just as a side note, today is the 70th anniversary of the D-Day landing on the beaches of Normandy in France.

Thursday, June 5, 2014

This day in 1964



On June 5, 1964, The Beatles arrived in Holland at the Schipol Airport, where they immediately went to a press conference. From there, they were driven to Hillegom to record a program for VARA-TV. In addition, they answered questions at the Cafe-Restaurant Treslong from the audience. What started as a fairly routine performance, turned into a conflict, as the picture above displays. By the sixth song, the audience came on stage and completely smothered them while playing. The audience was resilient and was not able to be ushered off, causing The Beatles to leave. This performance was watched from afar in London by Ringo, who was recovering in the hospital after having his tonsils removed. Jimmy Nichols was filling in as drummer during this period. The Beatles were experiencing even higher levels of mania since they were last on the European mainland in 1963. They had only recently returned from their now legendary first US tour in which they performed to 73 million on the Ed Sullivan Show.

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

This day in 1963

On June 4, 1963, the first broadcast of The Beatles' own BBC radio series, Pop Go The Beatles! was aired. 1963 was the year Beatlemania broke out and as a result, a whopping 2.8 million people listened to that first broadcast. The boys' popularity would only go up from here. In addition, The Beatles travelled to the north of England to the Town Hall in Congreve, Birmingham.

Monday, May 26, 2014

Let's play catch-up.

So sorry for the month-long break on my blog, folks. Since I last posted, a lot of things have happened, both in my life and in Beatles news, some good and some bad. Let's catch up then, shall we?

I finished my first year at Pepperdine University on April 24, and am now currently in the waiting stage between the end freshman year and my sophomore year in London! I leave September 3, and I can't wait! Look out London (and Liverpool, obviously)!

Next, I have big news. Paul McCartney has been on his "Out There" tour for most of this spring, beginning in Latin America and moving through Asia. You've probably heard that he had to cancel his Japanese tour dates, which included his second-time ever performance at the Budokan Theater that the Beatles graced in 1966, as a result of contracting a virus infection. It was very serious for a couple of days, so serious that he was hospitalized earlier this week. But, all is well again and he is scheduled to resume his tour in Lubbock, Texas on June 14, the home of Buddy Holly! About two months after that,  Paul will perform at Dodger Stadium in our very own, Los Angeles, California. And, yes. I WILL BE SEEING PAUL MCCARTNEY IN CONCERT ON AUGUST 10th AT DODGER STADIUM! It's official. I'm looking at the tickets right now. It doesn't feel real yet and I can't even begin to describe what it feels like to hold a former Beatles' ticket in my hand. I just have one more thing to say: "Yeah, yeah, yeah!"

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Imagine the Band

Some fantastic soul out there slowed down John Lennon's classic "Imagine," sped up Paul McCartney's "Band on the Run," and put them together. The result is this surprisingly moving tribute to Paul and John's friendship. Enjoy!

Monday, March 17, 2014

This Day in 1967

On March 17, 1967, The Beatles recorded the sad, slow ballad "She's Leaving Home" for Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band in Abbey Road Studios. Characteristic of The Beatles, "She's Leaving Home" is inspired by true events, this time a runaway teenage girl, as the article above describes. John and Paul especially were very much inspired while writing songs to use current events, as songs like "Her Majesty" and "Taxman" can attest.

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Happy 71st Birthday George Harrison!

February 25, 1943, No. 12 Arnold Grove, Liverpool, England: George was born into the Harrison family to Harold and Louise. Peter, Harry, and Louise had a new baby brother. The baby was born at home, in a little "up and down" home in the outskirts of Liverpool, a city recently ravaged by German bombs. The smallest Harrison had big ears and resembled his older brothers and father. He was like any other boy. But what no one could know, nor expect, was that his small boy in a family of six in one of the poorer parts of a dirty port city, would become the legendary George Harrison, lead guitarist of The Beatles and a musician in his own right.

Though one of the more impoverished of the four, George was fortunate enough to know a wholesome family experience, his mother and father remaining married and in support of him throughout The Beatles' career and a couple of years after that (Louise passed away of cancer in 1970, followed by Harold in 1978). Louise played an important role in the development of George's fascination with music. George recounted in 1994 in The Beatles Anthology that Louise bought him his first guitar and would stay up late at night with him while he struggled with barre chords and bloody fingertips. Luckily for him, his skill on the guitar is what brought him into contact with another young boy around a year older named Paul McCartney and later John Lennon.

Paul and George were schoolmates at the Liverpool Institute for Boys, where they would frequently ride the bus into every morning. Together, they played guitar (Paul struggled a bit before he realized he was left-handed), listened to the music that was powering across the Atlantic from the United States, and traveled around to learn new chords from other boys similarly affected by the American rock scene. Paul and George's friendship is officially the beginning of The Beatles. In 1957, Paul introduced George to 17-year-old John Lennon, who was forming a band called The Quarrymen at the time. Paul was unable to play lead guitar and so he brought in his "little friend," the best guitarist he knew. The rest is history. George played "Raunchy" and three quarters of The Beatles were together.

The history of The Beatles is one that has been spelled out thousands upon thousands of times, on this blog, and elsewhere. I know it so well, I could tell it to you in my sleep. The impact of The Beatles cannot be understated, but it is so very important to remember that George was an individual in his own right, a musician of several different instruments, a deeply spiritual man dedicated to his family and his search for God, and a person in the pursuit for meaning in this life. George was a Beatle, but he was so much more than that, a fact that never lost significance for George himself. His musical and spiritual impact echoes across the globe and remains extraordinary for individuals, like me. Happy birthday, George.

          February 25, 1943-November 29, 2001

Monday, February 24, 2014

More photos! Linda McCartney's Retrospective photos released today

Paul McCartney's official website has announced the release of Linda's personal photographs from 1969 to 1997. The collection will be shown at Le Pavillon Populaire in Montpellier as an exhibition, but you can view most of the photos on the Paul's website. Just click the link below. More than The Beatles, Linda's camera documented her life with Paul, from concerts, to other music legends, to babies. Linda unfortunately passed away in 1997 of breast cancer, but Paul still pays tribute to her today through this exhibition.

http://paulmccartney.com/the-collection/27751-linda-mccartney-retrospective-1965-1997

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Ringo to release his long-anticipated book, Photograph, this month

Who knew Ringo was a photographer, and a fantastic selfie-photographer at that? This month, never-before-seen personal photos that Ringo took of his band will be released in a hard-cover volume, Photograph. If you're interested, you can pay about $4,000 for a signed copy. If only…

Rolling Stone can tell you all about it below.

http://www.rollingstone.com/music/pictures/ringo-starrs-lost-beatles-photo-album-20131108

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Ladies and gentlemen…THE BEATLES!

"The city never has witnessed the excitement stirred by these youngsters from Liverpool, who call themselves The Beatles. Now tonight, you're going to twice be entertained by them, right now and again in the second half of our show. Ladies and gentlemen….THE BEATLES! [insert screaming]"

That was it. That was the moment.

Ed Sullivan didn't know it, but he had just introduced the most legendary rock band in history and ushered in a new era of music, television, and culture. As John, Paul, George, and Ringo stood on that brightly lit stage, with appropriately placed cardboard arrows pointing to the area of about ten feet in radius, everything changed. And it was 50 years ago today.

Ten feet and thirty minutes rocked the world. 73 million people watched The Beatles bob up and down,    play songs written hastily on scraps of paper in the corner of a bus in between concerts, and (to the detriment of many a young female) shake their heads with a wild "OOOOO!" Criminals paused in their dark pursuits to watch four young guys from a city in England people barely even knew about. Parents, teenagers, politicians, everybody watched The Ed Sullivan Show. And for the boys, they were along for the ride. Though, I think they knew what they were doing.

The idea of The Beatles as a positive force in the United States was epitomized on Sunday, February 9, 1964 on CBS at 8 pm eastern time. Americans still reeling from the assassination of President John F. Kennedy that past November, flocked to see the new generation from England. The Beatles sang of young, innocent love, holding girls' hands, writing letters, and they did so with smiles on their faces and and an incredible amount of energy. The Beatles helped the United States to her feet, launching the second British Invasion of music and injecting a positive atmosphere into Americans in the process. 1964, effectively, can mark the beginning of the sweeping change that characterizes the 1960s. The world, namely the United States and Britain, were standing on the brink of counterculture and upheaval when The Beatles performed that Sunday night, and no one but probably The Beatles were aware of what was happening.

It was no mystery to the boys of the effect that they had. As the first band to break the barriers of the powerhouse of the American music industry, The Beatles were aware of the momentous nature of their visit to the States. Earlier that year, "I Want to Hold Your Hand," (christened as the song that launched the British Invasion) had reached number one in the American charts, something unheard of for music coming outside of the United States. The Beatles were ready for America, but America was not ready for The Beatles.

For those who can't come to terms with, what some have called the overexposure of The Beatles, from a purely historical perspective, at the very least, the significance  Fab Four's performance on The Ed Sullivan Show cannot be understated. Music, television (still a burgeoning medium in the mid 1960s), culture, and by extension politics was transformed almost instantaneously, one of the few times in history that such rapid change occurred. They say that the world can't change in one day, but it did. The Beatles blew everyone out of the water, especially that phrase. The world changed in thirty minutes.

Tonight, in honor of this incredible historical event, The Grammys will pay tribute to The Beatles in a two-hour special airing on CBS at 8 pm, the same time, network, and day that the performance originally aired half a century ago. Mark today as a day to remember in the future.

FEBRUARY 9, 1964



50 years ago today...


Here's the full Ed Sullivan performance of The Beatles, beginning on February 9, 1964.

Saturday, February 8, 2014

Read an article about The Beatles' visit to the States from 1964!

Paperback writer.

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/section/learning/general/onthisday/pdf/02071964article.pdf?smid=tw-nytimes?smid=fb-nytimes&WT.z_sma=OT_PHT_20140207&bicmp=AD&bicmlukp=WT.mc_id&bicmst=1388552400000&bicmet=1420088400000&_r=0

There's a lot of good stuff out there folks...


The New York Times-and institution that witnessed this event-is paying its own form of tribute to The Beatles. The NY Times blog has posted an article with the personal album of Bill Epperidge, a photographer famous for such shots as the Robert Kennedy assassination and his renowned photo essay following the life of two drug addicts in New York City. But until recently, it wasn't known that Mr. Epperidge also captured one of the biggest moments in music history. This link will take you to the NY Times blog, where you can view Mr. Epperidge's photos and read about his once-in-a-lifetime experience with the Fab Four.

http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/02/03/the-beatles-visit-revisited/?_php=true&_type=blogs&smid=fb-nytimes&WT.z_sma=LE_TBV_20140207&bicmp=AD&bicmlukp=WT.mc_id&bicmst=1388552400000&bicmet=1420088400000&_r=1&

Friday, February 7, 2014

This day in 1964

On February 7, 1964, The Beatles arrived in New York at the John F. Kennedy Airport to an audience of three thousand teenagers, mainly screaming girls. This is a clip from a news report that night.

Thursday, February 6, 2014

This day in 1964

On February 6, 1964, the last ticket for The Beatles' first performance on the Ed Sullivan Show for that momentous Sunday night was sold. To that lucky person, I salute you. Just remember the rest of us who were born more than thirty years after this. In other news, the first Beatles wigs went on sale, though there was probably less demand than for a ticket to one of the most revolutionizing moments in music and television history. Look forward to February 9 and tune into CBS for a tribute to the four lads who shook the world.

Monday, February 3, 2014

This day in 1964


On February 3, 1964, The Beatles went to the American embassy in Paris to get visas and work permits in anticipation of their first US tour. Americans were also getting ready for the visit. "I Want to Hold Your Hand" and the album Meet the Beatles! were given a gold disc in the United States. The Beatles were a mere six days away from officially making history (the first of many such occasions) and entering the realm of music legends. February 9 marks the day the four humble boys from Liverpool, England performed to an audience of 73 million across the nation on The Ed Sullivan Show. On February 9, 2014, CBS will air a two-hour special honoring this achievement, on the same day, at the same time and on the same network that The Beatles performed in 1964. A half-century has passed since that Sunday night, but it remains important for Beatles history, music history, television history, but more importantly, cultural history. The British are coming! The British are coming!

Monday, January 27, 2014

Paul and Ringo's performance last night at the Grammys!

The 2014 Grammys aired last night, honoring guests such as Macklemore, Lorde, Beyonce and others, but no one was honored as much as the legends who launched the global music scene in the United States, Sir Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr. Both of the living Beatles performed, Ringo separately and then together for Paul's new hit, "Queenie Eye" on his recently released New. Along with their wives, Yoko Ono and Sean Lennon also were given prime seats at the Staples Center, to witness the ultimate reunion. The Recording Academy will honor The Beatles' contribution to music in a two-hour special to be aired Sunday, February 9 on the same day, at the same time, on the same network that the boys performed on the Ed Sullivan show 50 years ago in 1964. So cool!

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Today's the day!

Be sure to tune into the 2014 Grammy's tonight, live from Staples Center in Los Angeles, California. Paul and Ringo are both set to perform, though not explicitly together. But, I think that it is highly probable that the two living Beatles will take this chance to perform together for the first time in 5 years in honor of their incredible American tour, all those years ago. In case you didn't know, this is one of the biggest Beatles years in a long time. 50 years ago this February, The Beatles toured the eastern seaboard of the United States for two weeks. After "I Want to Hold Your Hand" was released, the boys were finally able to break through in America, initiating the second British Invasion to the US (the first, of course, being the literal British Invasion in the War of 1812). In honor of this feat and true moment in history, other artists at the Grammys will be paying tribute to The Beatles. The pain I will feel tonight cannot be emphasized enough. I live only about 45 minutes from downtown LA (without traffic, of course, but it makes it sound even worse when I exaggerate). The two living Beatles are going to be in one place at one time and I know where they are! NO. I can't.

Friday, January 24, 2014

We all live in a yellow submarine sneaker

Following The Grammy's and the Recording Academy's honoring of The Beatles this Sunday, Vans will be releasing its form of honoring the Fab Four. On March 1, these four (how appropriate, one for each of the boys) styles of tennis shoe will be available to buy for around $65. All are dedicated to The Beatles' 1968 film and album, Yellow Submarine. YES!

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

FOR YESTERDAY: This day in 1966

On January 21, 1966, George Harrison and Pattie Boyd were married. The second of The Beatles to get married, George met Pattie on the set of A Hard Day's Night in 1964.

Monday, January 20, 2014

Song of the Day: Doctor Robert (Revolver, 1966)

There's a lot of speculation about where the inspiration for this song came from, but most believe that it is an anecdote from John and George's recent exposure to LSD for the first time. According to John, whom you can rarely trust to be entirely truthful in his stories (look at the story of how he said The Beatles got their name. Hint: it involves the title of this very blog) John and George were invited to dinner at their dentists' home in 1965, after the release of Rubber Soul. After dinner, they were brought coffee and and sugar cubes, except they weren't sugar cubes, but LSD powdered into cubes. After John and George had taken a sip of their coffee, the dentist revealed that he had secretly switched sugar for the hallucinogen and that they had just taken LSD for the first time. Initially angry at being bamboozled so, John and George left with their wives Cynthia and Pattie. But the effects began to come on the four of them. In The Beatles Anthology, George recounts what taking LSD was like, such as being in love with everyone and everything, and seeing people with makeup 3 feet thick on their faces. After that first experience, the two were hooked and encouraged Paul and Ringo to try it as well. Ringo tried it instantly, but Paul held off for a while, afraid of the detrimental effects of the drug and also of the psychological and spiritual effects it might have on him. By the time Revolver was released, Paul had joined his cohorts and tried it, hence the song, "Got to Get You Into My Life," a song about LSD and not a sweet girl. "Doctor Robert" is the dentist, which is why John opens the song with "Being my friend I'd said you'd call Doctor Robert…He's a man you must believe, helping anyone in need. No one can succeed like Doctor Robert." If you watch the 2007 psychedelic musical, Across the Universe, Bono of U2 plays a drug guru named Doctor Robert, in honor of this song.

Saturday, January 18, 2014

Song of the Day: I Saw Her Standing There (Please Please Me, 1963)

One of Paul's most famous and lasting Beatles song, "I Saw Her Standing There" is a fun, slightly raunchy Cavern Club favorite. The influence of the late-1950s rock scene can be seen in this song, with a heavy guitar solo and a ridiculously fast-paced bass line that drives the piece into a frenzy of screaming and stomping. "I Saw Her Standing There" is one of the earliest songs that Paul and John worked on together, though most of the credit goes to Paul. The original opening lyrics, "Well she was just seventeen, never been a beauty queen," were changed to the more suggestive lyrics "Well she was just seventeen, you know what I mean," at the request of John, leaving raised eyebrows for decades, most noticeably when Paul sings the song live now (he's 71 years old!). This is one of my favorite Beatles songs, and one of theirs as well, as you can see in the boy's excitement in this live performance in Sweden in 1963.

Friday, January 17, 2014

This day in 1967

On January 17, 1967, Paul McCartney was interviewed by Jo Durden Smith for Scene Special in Granada. Paul and Jo discussed Paul's affiliation with the underground culture, something he had been involved with since around 1965. Before John (or so Paul claims) became heavily involved with the counterculture movement, Paul had been exposed to the culture of London and then the underground culture as well. Partially as a result of The Beatles' time with the "exis" (existentialists) in Hamburg, Germany, like Astrid Kircherr and Klaus Voorman, Paul had become interested in the other world that existed underground. His experimentation with mixing tapes and messing with recording equipment, most noticeable on 1966's Revolver is a tangible example of his hipster (to use a modern term) interests.

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Paul and Ringo to reunite for the first time in five years at the Grammys this year!

Paul has just announced that he will be performing at the 2014 Grammys at Staples Center in Los Angeles. Ringo will also be one of the performers, though it hasn't been said explicitly if the two will perform together. But really? How could they NOT play together if they're playing at the same event? It'd be too cruel. I'm barely getting over the fact that the two surviving Beatles will be less than an hour from me and in the same county and I will not be able to see them. It looks like it's time to sit down, hug my knees, watch the Grammys on TV, and tip over and cry, cry a lot. Though, it might be better if I didn't see the two of them live, as I'd probably fall over and never wake up from shock. The Grammys will be aired 7 pm West Coast time on Sunday, January 26th.

Sunday, January 12, 2014

This Day in 1963

On January 12, 1963, The Beatles played a typical evening show at the Invicta Ballroom in Chatham, England. In a little over a year, they would have conquered the United States, when they first appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show to a record breaking 73 million in February, 1964, 50 years ago this year. Next month, as the half-century anniversary, will be a BIG Beatles month, with special musical tributes and documentaries all over TV. So excited!

Monday, January 6, 2014

Song of the Day-Julia (The Beatles, 1968)

A slow and somber break from the eccentric and often slightly deranged mix that makes up The Beatles, "Julia" is a beautiful tribute to John Lennon's mother, Julia. The story of Julia and John is a sad one fraught with immaturity, misunderstanding, and pain. But it also remains as a story that sheds light onto the development of John's life in the music world. Though often incapacitated as a mother at times due to intense personal and psychological issues, Julia introduced John to music and what it can mean for a person. While John ditched school at Quarry Bank, he would go to Blackpool to Julia's house. It was there that she taught him the banjo, with a quirky Liverpool ballad, "Maggie Mae." John developed a relationship with Julia when he was sixteen years old. By the time he was seventeen and his life seemed back on track with Julia, her family, and his Aunt Mimi (Julia's older sister), Julia had been struck by a speeding car and killed instantly. The impact that this had on John was enormous, evident in the songs he wrote in his career, with this song and subsequent others like "Mother." Julia lit the match to the fire that music set to his life. Though a woman with many faults, Julia remains an important figure in the life of a troubled man and in the history of the Beatles.

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Happy New Year!

From Me to You. This year is going to be the pinnacle of my existence-and I say that every year. But this year is going to see me finish my first year of college and begin the first half of my year studying abroad in London! I wish a very happy start to 2014 to all and make it a year with The Beatles!