No band has influenced pop culture
the way the Beatles have. They were one of the best things to happen in the
twentieth century, let alone the Sixties. They were youth personified. They
were unmatched innovators who were bigger than both Jesus and rock & roll
itself: During the week of April 4, 1964, the Beatles held the first five slots
on the Billboard Singles chart; they went on to sell more than a billion
records; and 2000's 1, a compilation of the Beatles Number One
hits, hit Number One in 35 countries and went on to become the best-selling
album of the 2000s.
Every record was a shock when it came out. Compared to rabid
R&B evangelists like the Rolling Stones, the Beatles arrived sounding like
nothing else. They had already absorbed Buddy Holly, the Everly Brothers and
Chuck Berry, but they were also writing their own songs. They made writing your
own material expected, rather than exceptional. As musicians, the Beatles
proved that rock & roll could embrace a limitless variety of harmonies,
structures, and sounds; virtually every rock experiment has some precedent on
Beatles records.
As a unit the Beatles were a synergistic combination: Paul
McCartney's melodic bass lines, Ringo Starr's slaphappy no-rolls drumming,
George Harrison's rockabilly-style guitar leads, John Lennon's assertive rhythm
guitar — and their four fervent voices. As personalities, they defined and
incarnated Sixties style: smart, idealistic, playful, irreverent, eclectic.
Their music, from the not-so-simple love songs they started with to their later
perfectionistic studio extravaganzas, set new standards for both commercial and
artistic success in pop.
Lennon was performing with his amateur skiffle group the
Quarrymen at a church picnic on July 6, 1957, in the Liverpool suburb of Woolton
when he met McCartney, whom he later invited to join his group; soon they were
writing songs together, such as "The One After 909." By the year's
end McCartney had convinced Lennon to let Harrison join their group, the name
of which was changed to Johnny and the Moondogs in 1958. In 1960 an art-school
friend of Lennon's, Stu Sutcliffe, became their bassist. Sutcliffe couldn't
play a note but had recently sold one of his paintings for a considerable sum,
which the group, now rechristened the Silver Beetles (from which
"Silver" was dropped a few months later, and "Beetles"
amended to "Beatles"), used to upgrade its equipment.
Tommy Moore was their drummer until Pete Best replaced him
in August 1960. Once Best had joined, the band made its first of four trips to
Hamburg, Germany. In December Harrison was deported back to England for being
underage and lacking a work permit, but by then their 30-set weeks on the
stages of Hamburg beer houses had honed and strengthened their repertoire
(mostly Chuck Berry, Little Richard, Carl Perkins, and Buddy Holly covers), and
on February 21, 1961, they debuted at the Cavern club on Mathew Street in
Liverpool, beginning a string of nearly 300 performances there over the next
couple of years.
In April 1961 they again went to Hamburg, where Sutcliffe
(the first of the Beatles to wear his hair in the long, shaggy style that came
to be known as the Beatle haircut) left the group to become a painter, while
McCartney switched from rhythm guitar to bass. The Beatles returned to Liverpool
as a quartet in July. Sutcliffe died from a brain hemorrhage in Hamburg less
than a year later.
The Beatles had been playing regularly to packed houses at
the Cavern when they were spotted on November 9 by Brian Epstein (b. Sep. 19,
1934, Liverpool). After being discharged from the British Army on medical
grounds, Epstein had attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London for a
year before returning to Liverpool to manage his father's record store.
The request he received for a German import single entitled
"My Bonnie" (which the Beatles had recorded a few months earlier in
Hamburg, backing singer Tony Sheridan and billed as the Beat Brothers)
convinced him to check out the group. Epstein was surprised to discover not
only that the Beatles weren't German but that they were one of the most popular
local bands in Liverpool. Within two months he became their manager. Epstein
cleaned up their act, eventually replacing black leather jackets, tight jeans,
and pompadours with collarless gray Pierre Cardin suits and mildly androgynous
haircuts.
Epstein tried landing the Beatles a record contract, but
nearly every label in Europe rejected the group. In May 1962, however, producer
George Martin (b. Jan. 3, 1926, North London, Eng.) signed the group to EMI's Parlophone
subsidiary. Pete Best, then considered the group's undisputed sex symbol, was
asked to leave the group on August 16, 1962, and Ringo Starr, drummer with a
popular Liverpool group, Rory Storm and the Hurricanes, was added, just in time
for the group's first recording session. On September 11 the Beatles cut two
originals, "Love Me Do" b/w "P.S. I Love You," which became
their first U.K. Top 20 hit in October. In early 1963 "Please Please
Me" went to Number Two, and they recorded an album of the same name in one
10-hour session on February 11, 1963. With the success of their third English
single, "From Me to You" (Number One), the British record industry
coined the term "Merseybeat" (after the river that runs through
Liverpool) for groups such as the Beatles and Gerry and the Pacemakers, Billy
J. Kramer and the Dakotas, and the Searchers.
By mid-year the Beatles were given billing over Roy Orbison
on a national tour, and the hysterical outbreaks of Beatlemania had begun.
Following their first tour of Europe in October, they moved to London with
Epstein. Constantly mobbed by screaming fans, the Beatles required police
protection almost any time they were seen in public. Late in the year "She
Loves You" became the biggest-selling single in British history (in the
years since, only six other singles have sold more copies there). In November
1963 the group performed before the Queen Mother at the Royal Command Variety
Performance.
EMI's American label, Capitol, had
not released the group's 1963 records (which Martin licensed to independents
like Vee-Jay and Swan with little success) but was finally persuaded to release
its fourth single, "I Want to Hold Your Hand," and Meet the
Beatles (identical to the Beatles' second British album, With
the Beatles) in January 1964 and to invest $50,000 in promotion for the
then unknown British act. The album and the single became the Beatles' first
U.S. chart-toppers. On February 7 screaming mobs met them at New York City's
Kennedy Airport, and more than 70 million people watched each of their
appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show on February 9 and 16. In
April 1964 "Can't Buy Me Love" became the first record to top
American and British charts simultaneously, and that same month the Beatles
held the top five positions on Billboard singles chart
("Can't Buy Me Love," "Twist and Shout," "She Loves
You," "I Want to Hold Your Hand," "Please Please Me").
Their first movie, A Hard
Day's Night (directed by Richard Lester), opened in America in August;
it grossed $1.3 million in its first week. The band was aggressively
merchandised - Beatle wigs, Beatle clothes, Beatle dolls, lunch boxes, a
cartoon series — from which, because of Epstein's ineptitude at business, the
band made surprisingly little money. The Beatles also opened the American
market to such British Invasion groups as the Dave Clark Five, the Rolling
Stones, and the Kinks.
By 1965 Lennon and McCartney rarely
wrote songs together, although by contractual and personal agreement songs by
either of them were credited to both. The Beatles toured Europe, North America,
the Far East, and Australia that year. Their second movie, Help! (also
directed by Lester), was filmed in England, Austria, and the Bahamas in the
spring and opened in the U.S. in August. On August 15 they performed to 55,600
fans at New York's Shea Stadium, setting a record for largest concert audience.
McCartney's "Yesterday" (Number One, 1965) would become one of the
most often covered songs ever written.
In June the Queen of England had announced that the Beatles
would be awarded the MBE (Member of the Order of the British Empire). The
announcement sparked some controversy — some MBE holders returned their medal —
but on October 26, 1965, the ceremony took place at Buckingham Palace. (Lennon
returned his medal in 1969 as an antiwar gesture. Interestingly, even though he
rejected the medal, the honor itself cannot be returned; Lennon technically
remained an MBE.)
With 1965's Rubber Soul,
the Beatles' ambitions began to extend beyond love songs and pop formulas. Their
success led adults to consider them, along with Bob Dylan, spokesmen for youth
culture, and their lyrics grew more poetic and somewhat more political.
In summer 1966 controversy erupted when a remark Lennon had
made to a British newspaper reporter months before was widely reported in the
U.S. The quote — "Christianity will go. It will vanish and shrink. I
needn't argue with that; I'm right and will be proved right. We're more popular
than Jesus now" — incited denunciations and Beatles record bonfires. The
anti-Beatles backlash was particularly intense in the U.S., where the group was
set to begin a tour just two weeks after the controversy erupted, and included
death threats against the group. Largely out of concern for the safety of his
fellow band members, Lennon apologized at a Chicago press conference.
The Beatles gave up touring after an August 29, 1966,
concert at San Francisco's Candlestick Park and made the rest of their music in
the studio, where they had begun to experiment with exotic instrumentation
("Norwegian Wood," 1965, had featured sitar) and tape abstractions
such as the reversed tracks on "Rain." "Strawberry Fields
Forever," part of a double-sided single released in February 1967 to fill
the unusually long gap between albums, featured an astonishing display of
electronically altered sounds and hinted at what was to come. With
"Taxman" and "Love You To" on Revolver, Harrison began to
emerge as a songwriter.
It took four months and $75,000 to
record Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band using a then
state-of-the-art four-track tape recorder and building each cut layer by layer.
Released in June 1967, it was hailed as serious art for its "concept"
and its range of styles and sounds, a lexicon of pop and electronic noises;
such songs as "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds" and "A Day in the
Life" were carefully examined for hidden meanings. The album spent 15
weeks at Number One (longer than any of their others) and has sold over 8
million copies. On June 25, 1967, the Beatles recorded their new single,
"All You Need Is Love," before an international television audience
of 400 million, as part of a broadcast called Our World.
On August 27, 1967 – while the four
were in Wales beginning their six-month involvement with Transcendental
Meditation and the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (which took them to India for two
months in early 1968) — Epstein died alone in his London flat from an overdose
of sleeping pills, later ruled accidental. Shaken by Epstein's death, the
Beatles retrenched under McCartney's leadership in the fall and filmed Magical
Mystery Tour, which was aired by BBC-TV on December 26, 1967, and later
released in the U.S. as a feature film. Although the telefilm was panned by
British critics, fans, and Queen Elizabeth herself, the soundtrack album contained
their most cryptic work yet in "I Am the Walrus," a Lennon
composition.
As the Beatles' late-1967 single
"Hello Goodbye" went to Number One in both the U.S. and Britain, the
group launched the Apple clothes boutique in London. McCartney called the retail
effort "Western communism"; the boutique closed in July 1968. Like
their next effort, Apple Corps Ltd. (formed in January 1968 and including Apple
Records, which signed James Taylor, Mary Hopkin, and Badfinger), it was plagued
by mismanagement. In July the group faced its last hysterical crowds at the
premiere of Yellow Submarine, an animated film by Czech avant-garde
designer and artist Heinz Edelmann featuring four new Beatles songs; a revised
soundtrack featuring nine extra songs was released in 1999 (Number 15).
In August they released McCartney's
"Hey Jude" (Number One), backed by Lennon's "Revolution"
(Number 12), which sold over 6 million copies before the end of 1968 — their
most popular single. Meanwhile, the group had been working on the double album The
Beatles (frequently called the White Album), which showed their
divergent directions. The rifts were artistic — Lennon moving toward brutal
confessionals, McCartney leaning toward pop melodies, Harrison immersed in
Eastern spirituality — and personal, as Lennon drew closer to his wife-to-be,
Yoko Ono. Lennon and Ono's Two Virgins (with its full frontal
and back nude cover photos) was released the same month as The Beatles and
stirred up so much outrage that the LP had to be sold wrapped in brown paper. (The
Beatles, went to Number One, Two Virgins peaked at
Number 124.)
The Beatles attempted to smooth over
their differences in early 1969 at filmed recording sessions. When the project
fell apart hundreds of hours of studio time later, no one could face editing
the tapes (a project that eventually fell to record producer Phil Spector), and
"Get Back" (Number One, 1969) was the only immediate release.
Released in spring 1970, Let It Be is essentially a
documentary of their breakup, including an impromptu January 30, 1969, rooftop
concert at Apple Corps headquarters, their last public performance as the
Beatles.
By spring 1969 Apple was losing
thousands of pounds each week. Over McCartney's objections, the other three
brought in manager Allen Klein to straighten things out; one of his first
actions was to package nonalbum singles as Hey Jude. With money
matters temporarily out of mind, the four joined forces in July and August 1969
to record Abbey Road, featuring an extended suite as well as more
hits, including Harrison's much-covered "Something" (Number Three,
1969). While its release that fall spurred a "Paul Is Dead" rumor
based on clues supposedly left throughout their work, Abbey Road became
the Beatles' best-selling album, at 9 million copies. Meanwhile, internal
bickering persisted. In September Lennon told the others, "I'm leaving the
group. I've had enough. I want a divorce." But he was persuaded to keep
quiet while their business affairs were untangled. On April 10, 1970, McCartney
released his first solo album and publicly announced the end of the Beatles. At
the same time, Let It Be finally surfaced, becoming the
group's 14th Number One album (a postbreakup compilation would become their
15th in 1973) and yielding the Beatles' 18th and 19th chart-topping singles,
"Let It Be" and "The Long and Winding Road."
Throughout the Seventies, as repackages of Beatles music
continued to sell, the four were hounded by bids and pleas for a reunion.
Lennon's murder by a mentally disturbed fan on December 8, 1980, ended those
speculations. In 1988 the Beatles were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame. McCartney, citing business conflicts with the two other surviving
members, did not attend. Relations between him and Harrison, in particular, had
been strained for some time.
In January 1994 Goldmine magazine
reported that McCartney, Harrison, and Starr had begun recording music for a
long-rumored Beatles documentary the previous August, with more secret sessions
scheduled. There were other signs that the three band members were on the mend
— when Lennon was inducted to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a solo artist
in 1994, for instance, McCartney did the honors (McCartney himself was inducted
in 1999). Later in 1994 Live at the BBC was released,
featuring 56 songs the Beatles performed on the British radio between 1962 and
1965. It debuted at Number One in the U.K.; in the U.S., it debuted and peaked
at Number Three.
The Beatles Anthology, the long-awaited six-hour television special, was
broadcast over three nights in November 1995, coinciding with the release of
the George Martin-compiled double-CD Anthology 1 (Number One),
which featured alternate takes, demos, and rare tracks, and premiered the first
new song by John, Paul, George, and Ringo since 1970. "Free as a
Bird" (Number Six, 1995), a demo recorded by Lennon in 1977, was completed
by the other three and produced by Jeff Lynne; it became the Beatles 34th Top
10 single. Lennon's lyrics didn't extend much beyond the title, and so Harrison
and McCartney collaborated on lyrics for a new bridge.
Two additional double CDs, Anthology
2 and 3 (both Number One), followed in 1996, as well
as an extended videotape version of the documentary. Anthology 2's
"Real Love" (again a Lennon demo, from 1979, with modern additions by
the others) reached Number 11 and became the group's 23rd gold single (the most
of any group).
The Liverpool juggernaut continued
to roll on in 2000: the Beatles became the highest certified act of all time,
with over 113 million albums sold in America (which grew to 170 million albums
in 2008); a coffee table book, The Beatles Anthology, topped the New
York Times bestseller list; and 1, a collection of the
band's Number One hit songs, became the Beatles' 19th chart-topping album,
selling 25 million copies by 2005.
On November 29, 2001, George
Harrison, diagnosed with lung cancer in the late 1990s, became the second
Beatle to pass away. Three years later Capitol Records released all of the
Beatles' U.S. albums (in both stereo and original mono versions) as two box
sets, The Capitol Albums, Vols. 1 and 2. In 2006, George Martin and
his son Giles produced a set of Beatles remixes, Love, for the
soundtrack to Cirque du Soleil's theater production of the same name. The
following year, McCartney and Starr appeared on CNN's Larry King Live to
talk about the project; they joined Beatles widows Ono and Olivia Harrison in
Las Vegas to celebrate the Love production's first anniversary.
Until 2007, the Beatles' Apple Corp. was in legal limbo with
the Apple, Inc. computer company over use of the name. Apple Corp. had sued
Apple, Inc. after the computer company opened its online iTunes music store;
one result of the suit was that the Beatles' group and solo music was not made
available for digital download. In February 2007, the two sides came to an
agreement. Apple, Inc. would retain ownership of the name and license it back
to the Apple Corp. record label. By October, all of the Beatles' solo works
were available on iTunes, but as of early 2010 the Beatles catalogue was still
not available on iTunes.
September 9, 2009 was a day of 21st
century Beatlemania: Apple/EMI released remastered versions of the band's
studio albums, with dramatically improved sound. (Mono versions were also
available, though only as a box.) Also that day, The Beatles Rock Band video
game hit shelves, featuring 45 Beatle songs; by the end of 2009, it had sold
more than one million copies worldwide.
McCartney and Starr continued to
tour and record throughout the 2000s. McCartney, who is reportedly a
billionaire, released three solo albums during the decade as well as three live
albums, including Good Evening New York City, which documented the
inaugural concerts at New York's Citi Field in 2009. Starr released three
albums in the 2000s, as well as 2010's Y Not. He appeared with
McCartney at several events, including 2002's Concert for George, a charitable
event held on the first anniversary of Harrison's death.
Source link: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/artists/the-beatles/biography
No comments:
Post a Comment