The Beatles were one of the most influential popular music groups of the rock era. They affected the post-war baby
boom generation of Britain, the United States and many other countries during the 1960s.
Certainly they are the most popular group in rock history, with global sales exceeding 1.1 billion records.
While they were originally famous for what some labelled light-weight pop music (and the extreme hysterical reaction they
provoked in young women), their later works achieved a combination of popular and critical acclaim perhaps unequaled in the
20th century. They were more than recording artists, influencing fashion
and culture and branching out into film and sometimes political activism. They achieved an iconic status with far reaching effects.
The classic Beatles lineup consisted of John Lennon (guitar), (James) Paul McCartney (bass), George Harrison (guitar), and Ringo Starr (Richard
Starkey) (drums), all from Liverpool, Merseyside, in England.
History
Main article: History of the Beatles
McCartney met Lennon at a garden fete on 6 July 1957, and joined his band, The Quarrymen, into which McCartney
also recruited Harrison, his 15 year old school chum. The band briefly split before regrouping. After going through several
changes in name and band members, it finally became the Beatles in 1960. In 1962 they joined the EMI's Parlophone label. The Beatles' first full-length album,
Please Please Me, was recorded within twelve consecutive
hours.
Beatlemania began in Britain on 13 October 1963 with a televised appearance at the London
Palladium, and then exploded in the United States following three appearances of the Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show, on 9 February, 16 February, and 23 February 1964. The pop-music band became a worldwide phenomenon
with worshipful fans, hysterical adulation, and denunciations by culture commentators and others such as Frank Sinatra. Some of this criticism arose from confusion over the sources of
their music (a similar confusion was evinced in 1956 over Elvis Presley by commentators who were unaware of the tradition of blues, R&B, and Gospel out of which Presley emerged), and some of it was simply an incredulous reaction to the length of their
hair. At any rate, it was regarded by the band members with both awe and resentment.
In 1964 they held the top five places on Billboard's Top Pop Singles Chart, a feat which has never been repeated.
In 1965 they were instated as Members of the Order of the British Empire, but Lennon and Harrison also began experimenting with
LSD in that year, and McCartney would do the same near the end of 1966. Lennon caused a great
backlash against the Beatles the following year when in an interview he claimed that Christianity was dying and he lamented that the Beatles were "more popular than Jesus." Eventually he
apologised, after being slammed by many religious groups, including the Holy See,
having Beatles' records banned or burned across the American South, and receiving threats from groups such as the Ku Klux Klan.
The Beatles performed their last concert before paying fans in Candlestick Park in San Francisco, on 29 August 1966. They then concentrated on recording
and their compositions and musical experiments raised their artistic reputations remarkably while still being tremendously
popular. However, the Beatles' financial fortunes took a turn for the worse when their manager, Brian Epstein, passed away on 27 August 1967, and the band's affairs began to unravel. The various members began to pursue their individual
interests and got together less often. Their actual "last" concert is considered to be a live appearance on the roof at the Apple
studios in London in January 1969, which was known as the "Get Back" sessions and featured on the "Let it Be" album. In 1969 they recorded their last album, Abbey Road (although in 1970 various songs recorded earlier
were compiled into Let It Be). In the same year, the 'Paul Is Dead' hoax sprang up. The band officially broke up in 1970, and any hopes of a reunion were crushed when Lennon was murdered by Mark David Chapman in 1980. However, a virtual reunion
occurred in 1995 with the release of two original Lennon recordings which had the
additional contributions of the remaining Beatles mixed in to create two hit singles: "Free as a Bird" and "Real Love". Three
albums of unreleased material and studio outtakes were also released, as well as a documentary and television miniseries, in a
project known as The Beatles Anthology.
Members
Paul McCartney - bass, piano, guitar, vocals (1957 - 1970)
John Lennon - guitar, vocals (1957 - 1970)
George Harrison - guitar, vocals (1958 - 1970)
Stu Sutcliffe - bass, vocals (1959 - 1961)
Pete Best - drums (1960 - 1962)
Ringo Starr - drums, vocals (1962 - 1970)
Original drummer Pete Best was asked to leave the group in August 1962 just before it started recording, and was
replaced by Starr. Earlier, in June 1961, original
bass player Stu Sutcliffe had decided to leave the band and remain in
Hamburg, Germany where the Beatles had
played several long engagements; McCartney took over the bass role.
Only primary instruments are listed; at one time or another, each of the four Beatles played other instruments on record as
well.
Studio style evolution
The role of producer George Martin was one of the crucial elements in
the success of the Beatles. He used his experience to bring out the potential in the group, where a lesser producer would have
imposed his views and inhibited the creativity he recognised and nurtured. His earlier experience of producing recordings by acts
ranging from Jimmy Shand to the Goons prepared him for the open-minded, experimental approach to the studio which the group began to develop as
they became more experienced. Martin's connection with the Goons had been impressive to the group, who were fans.
At the height of their fame in the mid-sixties, bolstered by the two films Help! and A Hard Day's
Night, the band discontinued touring. The difficulty of performing to thousands of screaming fans who typically made so
much noise that the music could not be heard had led to the disillusion with touring, and the group retired from live performance
in 1966, to concentrate on making records. Their demands to create new sounds with every
recording, the influence of psychedelic drugs and the studio techniques of
recording engineer Geoff Emerick resulted in the albums Revolver (1966) and
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely
Hearts Club Band (1967), still widely regarded as classics. Particularly notable,
along with the use of studio tricks such as sound processing, unconventional microphone placements, and vari-speed recording, was
the Beatles' use of unconventional instruments for pop music, including string and brass elements, Indian instruments like the
sitar, tape loops and early electronic
instruments.
The group were increasingly taking charge of their own production, and Paul McCartney's increasing dominance in this role
played its part in the tensions that eventually split the group.
The stress of their fame was beginning to tell and the band was on the verge of splitting at the time of the release of
The Beatles ("The White Album"), with some tracks
recorded by the band members individually, and Starr taking a two-week holiday — sometimes reported as a temporary break-up
— in the middle of the recording session. By 1970, the band had split, with each of
the members going on to solo careers with varying degrees of success.
In film
The Beatles also had a limited film career, beginning with A Hard Day's Night (1964). It was a comic farce (often
compared to the Marx Brothers) directed in a black-and-white documentary
style by the up-and-coming Richard Lester, then known for directing the
television version of the Goon Show. In 1965 came Help!, a Technicolor extravaganza shot in exotic locations in the style of a James Bond spoof. The Magical Mystery
Tour (the concept of which was adapted from Ken Kesey's Merry Pranksters LSD-oriented bus tour
of the USA), was critically slammed when it aired on British television in 1967, but is now considered a cult classic.
The animated Yellow Submarine followed shortly after, but
had little input from the Beatles themselves, save for a live-action epilogue at the film's conclusion, and the contribution of
four new songs for the film, including a holdover from the Sgt. Pepper sessions, "Only A Northern Song". Nonetheless, it
was acclaimed for its boldly innovative graphic style and clever humour as well as the soundtrack.
Finally, the documentary of a band in terminal decline, Let It Be was shot over an extended period in 1969; the music from this formed the album of the same name, which although recorded before
Abbey Road, was (after much contractual to-ing and
fro-ing and significant tinkering by producer Phil Spector) their final
release.
Achievements
Throughout their relatively short time recording and performing together, the Beatles set a number of world records —
most of which have yet to be broken. The following is a partial list.
- The Beatles are the best-selling musical group of all time, estimated by EMI to have over
one billion discs and tapes sold worldwide.
- The Beatles have notched up the most multi-platinum selling albums for any artist or musical group (thirteen in the U.S.
alone).
- The Beatles have had more number one singles than any other musical group (23 in Australia, 23 in The Netherlands, 22 in
Canada, 21 in Norway, 20 in the U.S., and 18 in Sweden). Ironically, the Beatles could easily have had even more number ones,
because they were often competing with their own singles. For example, the Beatles' "Penny Lane" and "Strawberry Fields
Forever" were released as a "double A"-sided single, which caused sales and airplay to be divided between the two songs
instead of being counted collectively. Even so, they reached number two with the singles. They even managed to hold separate
releases by themselves off the top of the British chart in 1967 with Hello Goodbye at number 1 and Magical Mystery Tour E.P at
number 2.
- The Beatles have had more number one albums than any other group (19 in the U.S. and 15 in the United Kingdom).
- The Beatles spent the highest number of weeks at number one in the albums chart (174 in the UK and 132 in the U.S.).
- The most successful first week of sales for a double album (The Beatles Anthology Volume 1, which sold 855,473 copies in the U.S. from 21 November to 28 November
1995).
- In terms of charting positions, Lennon and McCartney are the most successful songwriters in history, with 32 number one
singles in the U.S. for McCartney, and 26 for Lennon (23 of which were written together). Lennon was responsible for 29 Number
One singles in the UK, and McCartney was responsible for 28 (25 of which were written together).
- During the week of 4 April 1964, The
Beatles held the top five positions on the Billboard
singles chart. No one had ever done anything like this before, and it is doubtful that the conditions will ever exist for anyone
to do it again. The songs were "Can't Buy Me Love", "Twist and Shout", "She
Loves You", "I Want to Hold Your Hand", and
"Please Please Me".
- The next week, 11 April 1964, the Beatles
held fourteen positions on the Billboard Hot 100. Before the Beatles, the highest number of concurrent singles by one artist on
the Hot 100 was nine (by Elvis Presley, 19 December 1956).
- The Beatles are the only artist to have 'back-to-back-to-back' number one singles on Billboard's Hot 100. Boyz II Men and Elvis Presley have succeeded themselves on the chart, but the Beatles
are the only artist to 'three-peat'.
- The Beatles' "Yesterday" is the most covered song in history, appearing in the Guinness Book of Records with over three thousand recorded
versions. It is also the most played song in the history of international radio.
- The Beatles had the fastest selling single of all time with "I Want To Hold Your Hand". The song sold 250,000 units within three days in the U.S., one million
in 2 weeks. (Additionally, it sold 10,000 copies per hour in New York
City alone for the first 20 days.)
- The Beatles have the fastest selling CD of all time with 1. It sold over 13 million
copies in four weeks.
- The largest number of advance orders for a single, at 2.1 million copies in the U.S. for "Can't Buy Me Love" (it sold 940,225
copies on its first day of release in the U.S. alone).
- Sgt. Pepper's Lonely
Hearts Club Band is the best selling album of all time in the UK (over 4.5 million copies sold).
- With their performance at Shea Stadium in 1965, The Beatles set new
world records for concert attendance (55,600+) and revenue. This was the first time in the history of popular music anyone had
played in a proper stadium as opposed to a theatre or concert hall.
- The Beatles broke television ratings records in the U.S. with their first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show with over
70 million people viewing. Crime reportedly fell by a third during the duration of the transmission, although this eventually
turned out to be false.
- On 12 June 1965, the Beatles were made
Members of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) by the Queen.
- On 30 June 1966, the Beatles became the
first musical group to perform at the Nippon Budokan Hall in
Tokyo. They performed five times in three days gathering audiences of about 10,000 per
performance.
- The Beatles appear five times in the top 100 best-selling singles in the UK. No other group appears more than twice.
Music
Unlike their contemporaries the Rolling Stones, the Beatles
were seldom directly influenced by blues. Though they drew inspiration from an eclectic variety of sources, their home idiom was
closer to pop music. Their distinctive vocal harmonies were influenced by early
Motown artists in the U.S. Chuck
Berry was perhaps the most fundamental progenitor of the Beatles' sound; the Beatles covered "Roll Over Beethoven" and "Rock
And Roll Music" early in their careers on record (with most other Berry classics heard in their live repertoire). Chuck Berry's
influence is also heard, in an altered form, in later songs such as "Everybody's Got Something to Hide Except Me And My Monkey"
(1968) and "Come Together" (1969) (when "Come Together" was released, Chuck Berry sued John Lennon for copyright infringement of
his song "You Can't Catch Me", after which the two reached an amicable settlement, the terms of which including that Lennon cover
some Chuck Berry songs as a solo artist).
The Beatles were fond of Little Richard, and some of their songs
— especially their early work — featured falsetto calls very similar to
those Little Richard offered as punctuation in his own songs.
A significant and acknowledged musical influence was The Beach Boys,
who were in turn spurred on by the work of the Beatles. Brian Wilson
acknowledges that Rubber Soul challenged him to make Pet Sounds, the album which in turn inspired McCartney's vision of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club
Band. Another example is the song "Back in the USSR", which
contains an overt allusion to the Beach Boys' "California Girls".
The Everly Brothers were another major influence on the
Beatles, with Lennon and McCartney consciously trying to copy Don and Phil
Everly's distinctive two-part harmonies.
The song-writing of Gerry Goffin and Carole King was yet another influence upon the Beatles, and it could be said that one of the Beatles' many
achievements was to marry the relative sophistication of Goffin and King's songs (which used major-seventh chords, for example)
with the simplicity of Buddy Holly, Berry and the early rock-and-roll
performers. Lennon and McCartney's songwriting partnership had initially been inspired by Goffin and King; Lennon and McCartney's
goal when they started was to become the next Goffin and King.
Individually, the four Beatles drew further inspiration from different sources. John Lennon's early style owed a huge debt to
Buddy Holly and Roy
Orbison ("Misery" from 1963 and "Please Please Me" from 1963). After becoming acquainted with the work of Bob Dylan, Lennon
became influenced heavily by folk music ("You've Got To Hide Your Love Away" and "Norwegian Wood" from 1965). Lennon played the major role in steering the group toward psychedelia "Strawberry Fields
Forever" and "I Am the Walrus" from 1967), and renewed his interest in earlier rock forms at the close of the Beatles' career ("Don't Let Me Down" from
1969).
Paul McCartney is perhaps best known as the group's romantic balladeer: beginning with "Yesterday" (1965), he pioneered a modern form of art
song, exemplified by "Eleanor Rigby" (1966) and "She's Leaving Home"
(1967). Meanwhile, McCartney maintained an affection for the driving R&B of
Little Richard in a series of songs which John Lennon dubbed
"potboilers", from "I Saw Her Standing There" (1963) to "Lady Madonna" (1968). "Helter Skelter" (1968) — arguably an early
heavy metal song — is a McCartney composition.
George Harrison derived his early guitar style from 1950s rockabilly greats
such as Carl Perkins, Scotty Moore (who worked with Elvis Presley), and
Duane Eddy. "All My Loving" (1963) and "She's A Woman" (1964) are prime
examples of Harrison's early rockabilly guitar work.
In 1965, George Harrison broke new ground in the West by recording with an Indian
sitar on "Norwegian Wood". A result of his long and continued collaboration with Sri
Ravi Shankar, a famous Hindustani musician, many of his following compositions were based on Hindustani forms, most notably "Love
You To" (1966), "Within You, Without You" (1967), and "The Inner Light" (1968). Indian music and culture also influenced the band
as a whole, with the use of swirling tape loops, droning bass lines, and mantra-like vocals on "Tomorrow Never Knows" (1966) and
"Dear Prudence" (1968). Harrison retained Western musical forms in his later compositions, where he emerged as a significant pop
composer in his own right, occasionally reprising major themes that indicated his new relationship with Hindustani music and the
Hindu god Krishna. His later guitar style,
while not displaying the virtuosity of Jimi Hendrix and Eric Clapton, became distinctive with its use of clear melodic lines and subtle
fills ("Something" [1969], "Let It Be" [1970]) in contrast to
the increasingly distorted riffs and rapid-fire guitar solo work of his contemporaries.
Ringo Starr's contributions to The Beatles' sound are less known compared to the other Beatles, as Starr himself rarely
actually wrote songs. While he is mostly appreciated for his gentle comic baritone ("Yellow Submarine" 1966, "Octopus's Garden" 1969), steady drumming, and everyman image, he
was likely responsible for the group's occasional interest in surprisingly authentic country sounds ("What Goes On" 1965; "Don't Pass Me By" 1968) and his own performance on Buck Owens' "Act
Naturally".
In the Beatles' later music, the pace of the songs tends to be moderate, with more of the interest usually (but not always)
coming from the melody and the orchestration than the rhythm. "Penny Lane"
(1967) is a good example of this style. Their earlier songs were often a bit faster paced. Throughout their career, their songs
were rarely riff-driven. "Day Tripper" (1965) and "Hey Bulldog" (1969, recorded 1968) are
among the exceptions.
There was an abrupt change in direction due to the Beatles' decision to stop touring in 1966. Reportedly stung by criticism of
"Paperback Writer", the Beatles poured their creative energies into the recording studio in a determined attempt to produce
material they could be proud of. There had already been a clear trend towards progressively greater complexity both in technique
and style, but this now accelerated noticeably, as was evident on "Revolver". The subject matter of the post-touring songs was no
longer you, I, love, boy meets girl, etc., and this took them very far from the days in 1963 when their material had shown some
similarity with, say, the work of The Hollies. Now all manner of subjects
were introduced, from home repair and circuses to nonsense songs and others that defied description.
The extreme complication evident on Sgt. Pepper's reached its height on the Yellow Submarine soundtrack album. Parts of this, specifically "It's All Too Much" and "Only A
Northern Song", were left over from 1967 and ended up being used only on Yellow
Submarine in January 1969 apparently
because the Beatles themselves weren't much interested in this as a project and didn't feel inclined to greatly exert themselves
producing a lot of new material for it.
After the Revolver/Sgt. Pepper's phase, the creative surge seemed to exhaust itself, and their self-titled double album, largely written in India, reverted to a much simpler style and sometimes to simpler subjects (for example
"Birthday"). Some of it (for example "Why Don't We Do It In The Road" and "Wild Honey Pie") were far less complex than much of
their material from just a year or two before, and in 1969, the band began to disintegrate during sessions for the abortive
Get Back project (which eventually emerged in 1970, much altered, as Let It
Be) which had been intended to be a return to more basic songs, avoiding massive editing or otherwise artificial
influences on the final output (ironically Let It Be was heavily overdubbed and edited by producer Phil Spector's wall of
sound technique). Not wanting to leave things like that, the last album the Beatles recorded, Abbey Road, represented a mature attempt to integrate what they
knew, and use recording studio techniques only to improve the songs, rather than to experiment to see what happened. It
represented one final effort, as McCartney once put it, to "leave 'em laughing".
Beatle music is still performed in public by tribute bands such as the
Bootleg Beatles, and shows like Beatlemania!. They are also the basis for Eric
Idle's parody band, The Rutles (1978).
To many their real musical power was in the contrasting styles of John and Paul. A whole album of just John's music would be
seen as too sarcastic and schizophrenic to tolerate for 45 minutes, and a whole album of Paul would come off as too sappy.
However, when intertwined, the balance is like nothing else. Throw in a little Harrison style to spice it up even more, and the
whole is greater than the sum of their parts.
Discography
For a detailed discography, see: Beatles
discography
Trivia
- Ringo Starr, Paul and Linda McCartney, and George Harrison all
guest starred on The Simpsons although not at the same time. This
makes The Simpsons the only non-variety show to feature all the
surviving Beatles.
- George Harrison cooperated with Eric Idle and Neil Innes in authoring and filming (for television) the fictitious story of the Rutles, a Merseybeat group whose evolution mirrored that of the Beatles quite closely.
The main differences are that firstly the Rutles don't take themselves quite so seriously, and secondly that they still
perform—albeit on an occasional basis. Neil's capacity to parody particular Beatles songs with lyrics only marginally less
believable than those of the Fab Four is remarkable, and the pastiche always sounds affectionate. The parody began as part of the
British comedy television series Rutland Weekend Television.
Related topics
References
- beatles-discography.com
(various pages). Retrieved Dec. 15, 2004.
- Braun, Michael (1964), Love Me Do: The Beatles' Progress. London: Penguin Books, 1995 [Reprint]. ISBN 0140022783.
- Carr, Roy & Tyler, Tony (1975). The Beatles: An Illustrated Record. Harmony Books. ISBN 0517520451.
- Davies, Hunter (1985). The Beatles (Second Revised Edition). McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0070155267.
- Goldsmith, Martin (2004). The Beatles Come To America. Turning Points. ISBN 0471469645.
- Lewisohn, Mark (1990). EMI's the Complete Beatles Recording Sessions: The Official Story of the Abbey Road Years.
Hamlyn. ISBN 0681031891.
- MacDonald, Ian (1995). Revolution In The Head: The Beatles' Records and the Sixties. Vintage. ISBN 0712666974.
- Norman, Philip (1997). Shout: The Beatles in Their Generation. MJF Books. ISBN 1567310877.
- Schaffner, Nicholas (1977). The Beatles Forever. Cameron House. ISBN 0811702251.
External links
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