1933 – Yoko Ono is born in Tokyo.
1961 – Performance at Aintree Institute in Aintree, Liverpool with the Ravens, Mark Peters and the Cyclones and the Night Boppers.
1964 – Photographic session of the Beatles and Cassius Clay.
1965 – Studio 2 (control room only). 10.00am-1.00pm. Mono mixing: `Ticket To Ride’ (remix 1, from take 2); `Another Girl’ (from take 1); `I Need You’ (from take 5); `Yes It Is’ (from take 14). Studio 1. 3.30-5.15pm. Recording: `You’ve Got To Hide Your Love Away’ (takes 1-9). Studio 2 (control room only). 5.15-6.00pm. Mono mixing: `The Night Before’ (from take 2); `You Like Me Too Much’ (from take 8). Studio 2. 6.00-10.30pm. Recording: `If You’ve Got Trouble’ (take 1); `Tell Me What You See’ (take 1-4). Producer: George Martin; Engineer: Norman Smith; 2nd Engineer: Ken Scott. 1st use (on `You’ve Got To Hide Your Love Away’) of an outside musician-excepting Andy White-: Johnnie Scott (tenor and alto flutes).
1965 – Northern Songs Limited becomes a public company on the London Stock Exchange. 1st song publishing company in this condition.
1968 – Ringo, Paul, Maureen and Jane go to India. [19 February?]
1993 – Paul’s concert in Milano. Start of `The New World Tour’.
1961 – Perform their first lunchtime show at the Cavern Club in Liverpool. It is also George’s first performance there. In all, the Beatles performed 292 times at the Cavern Club.
1963 – `Please Please Me’ number 39 (UK Melody Market chart).
1963 – Concert at the Odeon, Sutherland (Helen Shapiro tour).
1964 20.00. 1st live US performance: CBS’s Ed Sullivan Show. US rating record (72.7%). In front of a studio audience of just 728, this legendary performance set broadcasting history by being beamed to 23 240 000 homes, reaching an estimated 73 million people. The Beatles performed five songs (All My Loving and others). Pre-recording of an additional performance for the Ed Sullivan Show.
1966 – `We Can Work It Out’, 10th and last week in the Top 30 (UK New Musical Express chart). `Rubber Soul’ number 1, 10th week (UK New Musical Express chart).
1967 – Regent Sound Studio. Time unknown. Recording: `Fixing A Hole’ (takes 1-3). Producer: George Martin; Engineer: Adrian Ibbetson; 2nd Engineer: unknown. Recording of rythm track, vocals, harpsichord for `Fixing A Hole’. 1st session for EMI recorded at an studio other than Abbey Road.
1967 – Transmision of `Penny Lane’/`Strawberry Fields Forever’ clips on BBC-TV’s `Top Of The Pops’.
1972 – Wings start an improvisate British tour.
1974 – John’s live performance.
1990 – Paul’s concert in Worcester (`Get Back Tour’).
1996 – `Anthology 1′ number 29, 9th week in the Top 30 (chart based on record stores sales in Santiago, Chile).
‘Welcome to my office, my art gallery and my dosshouse…’ Sir Paul McCartney gives a jovial personal greeting at his HQ in central London. His appearance and the quirky art-filled room (paintings and photography; a modernist sculpture wearing a balaclava) are a relief after the forebodingly clinical reception a few floors below.
It is also surreal: a smart-casual 69-year-old with chestnut-brown hair, instantly recognizable for some of the most celebrated songwriting in pop history, as well as some of the most international press attention, McCartney sweeps an arm towards the window, overlooking the Soho sprawl: ‘I like the view of the garden,’ he adds in his steady Scouse drawl.
McCartney’s ‘dosshouse’ is clearly a hive of activity; the former Beatle and Wings front man has been a prolific recording artist since the early 1960s and he hasn’t slowed down in recent years, although his latest solo album, Kisses On The Bottom, is a wholeheartedly old-timey affair.
The cheeky title comes from a line in the first track, I’m
Gonna Sit Right Down And Write Myself A Letter: a 1930s
jazz standard originally performed by Fats Waller. The album
mostly centers on crooner covers from that period (including
It’s Only A Paper Moon and Irving Berlin’s Always),
along with a couple of original songs penned by McCartney and
featuring guest musicians
Eric Clapton and Stevie Wonder; he’s smoothly backed
throughout by Diana Krall’s band. McCartney created a
similar, seamless mix of covers and originals on his 1999
rock’n’roll tribute album, Run Devil Run.
McCartney album mixes in a studio
‘I’m a sponge,’ quips McCartney. ‘I’m very influenced by rock’n’roll and my dad’s era of music. I never heard his 1920s jazz band but I got a love of that style through what he played at home. We used to have big New Year’s parties; the family would get together, roll back the carpet, get drunker as the evening went on and sing songs like Always and Bye Bye Blackbird, which they knew by heart.
‘With The Beatles, I found that we mixed two genres: the
structure of these old songs, with the new rock’n’roll we
were hearing. People always associate
John Lennon with hard rock’n’roll
but one of the first things I liked about him was that
we could talk about favorite songs from that older
era.’
There’s a decidedly unfazed air to McCartney, whether he’s releasing personal serenades or ruminating on whether he and Lennon might have ever reunited creatively (‘We were getting our relationship back together when John was killed but I don’t think The Beatles would have got back together; we’d made a considered decision that we’d come from A to Z’).
One of his latest album’s original numbers, My Valentine, was penned for Nancy Shevell, whom he married last year. ‘I sometimes write love songs in the way people write fairy tales; I’m quite romantic,’ he says. ‘My Valentine makes me think of the day I wrote it for Nancy, whereas songs like Maybe I’m Amazed or My Love still remind me of Linda [McCartney’s first wife, who died in 1998].’
He’s less keen to talk about the songs from his acclaimed 2001 album Driving Rain, including Heather (about his then-wife Heather Mills – they acrimoniously divorced in 2008); there’s a cool air of control here, too.
Still, it’s hard to think of another star whose work in the past ten years alone has encompassed bluegrass, pop-rock, classical symphonies and electronic music (The Fireman, McCartney’s experimental project with producer Youth, has yielded several excellent records, including 2008’s Electric Arguments).
‘I’ve never been a style snob,’ says McCartney. ‘I actually like to go outside the box. If I’m allowed into these different worlds and it’s a pleasure, then I’ll do it.’
A conversation with McCartney feels like a whirl of musical landmarks, scattered with unexpected details. In 2010, he played live at the White House to collect the Gershwin Prize for songwriting and remarked that it was a special experience ‘for an English kid growing up in Liverpool’.
As someone who’s been in the spotlight since Beatlemania, how much could McCartney feel like a regular Liverpool lad?
‘I’m lucky that I’ve always retained a sense of wonder,’ he says. ‘I was looking at the George Harrison book accompanying Martin Scorsese’s Living In The Material World recently and opened it at a picture George had taken of me and the other guys on an airplane. It took me right back; I was like: “Was I really there, in The Beatles? Bloody hell!” It’s obviously a stupid thought but I’m glad I haven’t got used to it yet. And then, getting invited to the US president’s gaff…’ He leads us out of the room, still reminiscing: ‘It was a tri-i-ip…’ And, with that, the lift doors to McCartney’s HQ slide shut.
MACCA CAN: Paul McCartney’s Adventures In Pop Culture
Death-defying Beatle
Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts
Club Band sent signals to some fans
A pre-internet myth said that Paul McCartney died in 1966 and was replaced by a lookalike. The conspiracy theory was sparked by US students who’d spotted ‘clues’, including spooky messages when tracks such as Strawberry Fields Forever were played backwards. They also cited signals on album artwork for Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (Peter Blake’s cover appeared to include a fresh grave; on the back, McCartney was the only Beatle not facing the camera) and Abbey Road.
Computer avatar:
Give My Regards To Broad
Street gave McCartney a flurry of hit singles
It might have been a cinema flop, but McCartney’s 1984 movie Give My Regards To Broad Street yielded hit singles and a (then pioneering) Commodore 64 game. The game’s soundtrack features a catchy eight-bit version of his Wings tune Band On The Run.
Classical composer:
The 1991 Liverpool Oratorio
is where McCartney began his classical journey
McCartney’s classical forays began with his epic 1991 Liverpool Oratorio with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic and Carl Davis. ‘I’d had spurts of working with orchestras on songs such as Eleanor Rigby and Live And Let Die,’ McCartney says. ‘I didn’t think it’d be such hard work but it was stimulating.’
21st-century remix:
Paul on stage with Jay-Z Chester Bennington
of Linkin Park during the 48th Annual Grammy Awards in 2006
(Picture: Getty)
US producer Danger Mouse blended The Beatles’ classics with rapper Jay-Z on 2004’s bootleg The Grey Album. Both parties approved and, years later, Macca and Jay-Z duetted on stage at the Grammys.
Cartoon hero:
Paul McCartney even starred
in The Simpsons (Picture: Sky)
McCartney has been drawn in various cartoon guises, notably for the mid-1960s TV series The Beatles and iconic 1968 animation Yellow Submarine. He was also the voice actor for Rupert Bear in 1984 children’s film Rupert And The Frog Song – but his most recent appearance was in The Simpsons (1995, left), in which Macca and then-wife Linda befriended fellow vegetarian Lisa Simpson.AH
Kisses On The Bottom (Mercury) is out today.
Source Article from http://www.metro.co.uk/music/889352-sir-paul-mccartney-i-often-think-was-i-really-in-the-beatles-bl-dy-hell
That left an open date for Monday, the 10th.
And that’s where our story of “just imagine what if” begins.
At the time, WKBW Radio was one of the powerhouse of rock and roll stations in the whole country- its signal reached up and down the east coast.
And so the Beatles’ management approached KB radio to see whether the station would be interested in bringing the Beatles to Buffalo to play at the old Aud.
Remember, this would have their first ever American concert, on the night after what turned out to be their record-setting appearance on the Ed Sullivan show.
The Beatles asking price?? A guarantee of $3,500. That’s right, $3,500!
Two of KB’s top DJs at the time, Danny Neaverth and Joey Reynolds, would have been the promoters.
So, you would think it wouldn’t have taken them very long at all for them to to say “yeah, yeah, yeah, “right?
Danny?
Dan Neaverth: “We talked it over, and we’re like wait a minute- a Monday in Buffalo even if it’s after the Ed Sullivan show, who’s going to come to a concert like that? And we thought it over and said that’s too much of a risk. I mean $3,500 that’s a lot of money for a group that’s just getting started really.
Now had they offered us Friday or Saturday we would have taken a chance on that.”
Scott Brown: ”In February no less?”
Dan Neaverth: ”Oh yeah, oh yeah, who’s going to come out? it might snow!”
On February 9th, Danny and 73 million other people watched the Beatles on Ed Sullivan.
Beatlemania was born.
Overnight, kids all over America were giving “all their lovin’” to the Fab Four.
Now remember, their very next appearance could have been in Buffalo the very next night.
Scott Brown: ”After you saw them on the Sullivan show that night did you say ‘oh my God we’ve made huge mistake here’”?
Dan Neaverth: “I can honestly say even then when we watched that show I never really thought it was going to be that big a deal. I know the kids were going crazy at the Ed Sullivan show, but it just didn’t seem like it would be that good a deal. And in the end, we looked like jerks! It wasn’t our smartest monetary move ever.”
And so instead of coming to Buffalo, the Beatles instead took a train to Washington, D.C. to play their first-ever concert in the states.
It was a sell-out in front of screaming teenagers.
The Beatles would go on to tour the states again in 1965 and 66.
Scott Brown: ”After you missed out on the first opportunity did you ever try to bring them to Buffalo?”
Dan Neaverth: ”No there was no way, at that point, a $3,500 guarantee? No way they wouldn’t even consider something like that. But we did do something to semi make up for it- we did take contest winners to two different concerts, one in Pittsburgh and another in Toronto.
That was interesting because I never heard one note of their songs ever at either of the concerts because there was no way you could hear anything because of the screaming. Right now, Kodak’s in trouble, but back then they were making a continuous amount of money on flashbulbs because there was a continuous flash from one end of the concert to the other, you couldn’t see and you couldn’t hear anything.”
Today nearly 50 years later, Danny Neaverth, Buffalo broadcasting legend and a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame admits that the decision to not bring the Beatles to Buffalo was not one of the most “fab” he’s ever made.
Scott Brown: “When you’ve told people this story over the years what has been their universal reaction?”
Dan Neaverth: ”Wow, the Beatles and you said no? (laughs) It almost puts me in an artificial sense of power of “I said no to the Beatles!” It wasn’t that at all, it was fear! That’s all it was, a business decision and we certainly weren’t very smart businessmen!”
Source Article from http://www.wgrz.com/news/article/153712/37/The-Beatles-In-Buffalo-It-Almost-Happened
Source Article from http://www.ocregister.com/entertainment/beatles-339216-time-remain.html
1958 – Evening: Performance of the Quarry Men at the Wilson Hall, Garston. Paul introduces George to John. George performs `Raunchy’ for John, who had to admit that he was impressed.
1961 – Performance at Aintree Institute in Aintree, Liverpool and then at Hambleton Hall in Huyton, Liverpool.
1962 – [Or around this day.] Brian goes to HMV’s store, 363 Oxford Street, London, to have acetates cut from tapes of some songs of the Decca audition, and chat with Bob Boast, disc-cutter Jim Foy, and Sid Colman, who contacts him with George Martin.
1963 – Concert at the ABC, Carlisle (Helen Shapiro tour). The Beatles are ejected from a ballroom for wearing leather jackets.
1964 – `With The Beatles’ number 1, 10th week (UK Record Retailer chart). `I Want To Hold Your Hand’ number 1, 2nd week; 4th week in the Top 100 (Billboard). `She Loves You’, 3rd week in the Top 100 (Billboard). `Please Please Me’, 2nd week in the Top 100 (Billboard). `I Saw Her Standing There’, 1st week in the Top 100 (Billboard). Rehearsal for the Ed Sullivan Show performance, at the CBS Studios, New York. Photographic session in the Central Park, New York. George, sick with fever, stays in bed.
1965 – It is announced that the next Beatles film will be Richard Condon’s `A Talent For Loving’, produced for Pickfair Films.
1967 – Studio 2. 7.00pm-2.15am. Recording: `Good Morning Good Morning’ (takes 1-8). Producer: George Martin; Engineer: Geoff Emerick; 2nd Engineer: Richard Lush. Recording of rythm track for `Good Morning Good Morning’.
1968 – Studio 2. 2.30-9.00pm. Recording: `The Inner Light’ (overdub onto take 6). Mono mixing: `The Inner Light’ (remixes 2-4, from take 6). Recording: `Across The Universe’ (overdub onto take 8). Producer: George Martin; Engineer: Geoff Emerick/Ken Scott; 2nd Engineer: Richard Lush. Studio 2 (control room only). 10.00pm-12.15am. Mono mixing: `Across The Universe’ (remixes 1, 2, from take 8). Producer: George Martin; Engineer: Ken Scott; 2nd Engineer: Richard Lush. Recording of backing vocals for `The Inner Light’. It is decided to keep `Across The Universe’ for a World Wildlife Found album, and give `The Inner Light’ the B-side of the next single.
1969 – `Yellow Submarine’ LP, 4th week in the Top 30 (Billboard). `Unfinished Music No. 1
1969 – ‘Two Virgins’ enters the ranking, number 158 (Billboard).
1972 – Unannounced Paul’s concert at the Nottingham University.
1990 – Paul’s concert in Worcester (`Get Back Tour’).
1961 – Performance at the Merseyside Civil Services Club in Liverpool.
1963 – Concert at the Odeon, Wakefield (Helen Shapiro tour).
1964 – Press conference at the Heathrow Airport. 6.30. The Beatles and Brian leave from London to New York (Flight 101, Pan Am). 13.35. Arrival at the US for a 10-day tour, at the Kennedy Airport, New York. Press conference at the Kennedy Airport. The Beatles are taken to the Plaza Hotel. Photographer Dezo Hoffmann is with them at both airports ard during the flight. George gets a flu.
1964 – UK EP release: `All My Loving’ All My Loving (EP) `New Musical Express’ reveals that Brian has turned down an 8000 pounds offer for the Beatles to play a concert at the Madison Square Garden. It speculates that the Beatles talked Brian out of a `big deal’ with Bernard Delfont. And it says that one can `discount rumours linking Alma Cogan’s name romantically with Brian Epstein’.
1967 – BBC’s `Not Only… But Also’, with John’s appearance, is retransmitted. Knole Park, Sevenoaks, Kent. Shooting for `Penny Lane’ clip. Horse-riding and candelabra scenes.
1969 – George’s stay at the London University College Hospital begins. His tonsils are removed. Ringo attends the `Candy’ premiere.
1970 – `Live Peace In Toronto’ number 10, 1st week, its highest position; 5th week in the ranking (Billboard).
1978 – Start of `London Town’ LP sessions at Abbey Road Studios (3rd period).