Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Video Source Summary

The Beatles On Record (Part 1)


The Beatles On Record is a collection of interviews and footage of the band detailing how their sound progressed and how their albums were made, broken up into five parts.

In part one, George Martin talks about the virtually unknown group  from Liverpool (soon to be the Beatles), and how he eventually led them into the Abby Road Studios in London to record their first single, "Love Me Do," which went on the charts in just two days.
"They weren't great, but there was something about them that was worth investigating," said George Martins when being asked about his first impressions of the band.
The band recorded their next single, "Please Please Me," which became the Beatles' first #1. Because the Beatles' singles started to look so good, Martins told the band to record every song they had, and they created the album Please Please Me, released in January 1968.


Question:
What do you think would've happened to the Beatles if George Martins did not see something special in them, and start recording with them? How do you think it would have impacted their rise to stardom over the next few years?

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Video Source Summary


The Beatles explained why they are called "The Beatles," Ringo explains how his name came to be, (from wearing rings all the time), and you see the Beatles in their quirky, and goofy state that made people come to love them, and also stand out from all the other bands.

Question:
Do you think the Beatles were actually serious about their music career, or were they were goofing off all the time like in this video?


Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Book Source Summary


"The Beatles: A Hard Day's Write"

This book tells the stories behind every Beatles song ever written. It looks at the how, why and where of the songwriting, as well as traces the inspiration of the song. This book does not explain what the Beatles 'were trying to say', but it simply tells the story of how each song came into being. It could have been a musical inspiration, or a phrase that wouldn't go away, like the 'waves of sorrow, pools of joy' line that compelled John to write 'Across The Universe'. The songs explored in this book are from throughout the Beatles' lives together on record; from the period largely characterized by Beatlemania, to a period of songs predominantly about boys who liked girls or girls who liked boys, to their more cerebral and experimental period.



'I Want To Hold Your Hand'
This song was created on October 16th, 1963 in the basement den of the Ashers' home in Wimpole Street. According to John, 'I Want To Hold Your Hand' sprang into being when, having come up with an opening line, Paul hit a chord on the piano. "I turned to him and said, 'That's it! Do it again!' The line in the song 'that my love, I can't hide, I can't hide, I can't hide, I can't hide' was a musical phrase repeated over and over that had stuck with them.

'Can't Buy Me Love'
The lyrics to this song suggests it's partly an answer to Berry Gordy and Janie Bradford's 'Money'. The Gordy/Bradford line was that money could get you anything. The Lennon/McCartney response was that it could get you anything but love.

'Eight Days A Week'
Paul heard the phrase 'eight days a week' from a chauffeur who drove him to John's home in Weybridge one day for a writing session. Paul asked if he had been busy lately, and the chauffeur replied,"Busy? Ive been working eight days a week." When Paul arrived at John's house, he told John he had the title for the song they were going to write that day.

'Help!"
'Help!' was written with Paul at John's Weybridge home, in April 1965. The lyrics of the song were a candid insight into John's dissatisfaction with himself. He was eating and drinking too much, had put on weight, and felt trapped by fame. The song, he later admitted, was a cry for help. "I needed the help," he said. "The song was about me."

'Yesterday'
Paul woke up one morning at the Ashers' home in Wimpole Street with the tune for 'Yesterday' in his head. There was a piano by the bed and he went straight to it and started playing.

'Norwegian Wood'
The lyrics to this song open with a boast about a girl John has 'had', but he quickly corrects himself by saying that it was she who 'had' him. She takes him back to her apartment and asks him to admire the furnishings made out of cheap Norwegian pine. The song had been written about an act of unfaithfulness, "without letting my wife know I was writing about an affair," John said. The track stood out on Rubber Soul for its use of sitar- it was the first time the Indian instrument had been used on a pop record.

'Let It Be'
"Let It Be' was written by Paul out of his general feelings of despair as the Beatles began to fall apart soon after the death of their manager, Mr. Eptein.John preferred spending time with Yoko, and the other band members were not pleased with her presence. George had already quit the group once, and his songwriting was being discouraged by the other members of the group. And Ringo took a short vacation from the band when he sensed the bad atmosphere. Paul wanted organization and discipline, so he was trying to take charge as leader of the group. Paul said he wrote 'Let It Be' as a response to all the pressure he was facing, and writing that song helped him pass through his "hour of darkness."

Question:
What is your favorite Beatles song? (I will add the song onto the list so you can find out more about it)




Turner, S. (1994). The beatles: A hard day's write. New Yowrk, NY: Carlton Books Limited.





Newspaper Source Summary

February 9th, 1964 at around 8:00p.m. was a very important date in Beatle history- it was their big debut on  "The Ed Sullivan Show," the most popular show of the day.
Fun Facts about the Beatles' performance on "The Ed Sullivan Show:"

  • Ed Sullivan was so desperate to get the Beatles' North American live TV debut, he paid them $100,000 for three performances, two live and one taped. A few years earlier, he paid Elvis $50,000 for three appearances. 
  • The Beatles' North American TV debut wasn't on "The Ed Sullivan Show," but their first performance was on one of Sullivan's rival, Jack Paar, who aired one of their BBC performances on January 3rd, 1964.
  • George Harrison almost didn't make the performance because he had the flu, and was sick in bed during rehearsals, and had to have the Beatles' assistant Neil Aspinall stand in for him.

Question:
How do you think Ed Sullivan felt knowing that he was not the first person to debut the Beatles in North America?

Howell, Peter. "Pop Culture Is Born." Toronto Star (Toronto, Canada). Feb. 5 1994: L1+. SIRS Renaissance. Web. 06 Mar 2012.


Magazine Source Summary

In LIFE's Remembering John Lennon, I read an article called "The Fab Four," which talked about one of the most important days in Beatles history, July 6th, 1957... the day John Lennon met Paul McCartney.

At age 16, John Lennon formed a band called the Quarry Men, (also written as Quarrymen), named after his high school Quarry Bank, after being inspired from first hearing Elvis Presley's "Heartbreak Hotel." The band wasn't very good at first, knowing how to play only a few simple songs and chords, but the band managed to play at parties, school dances, cinemas and amateur contests. There was one gig that changed the Quarry Men's future forever.

On Saturday, July 6th, 1957, the Quarry Men performed at St. Peter's Church Rose Queen garden fete in Woolton. The bassist of the band, Ivan Vaughan invited a friend of his named Paul McCartney to the show. During a break, Vaughan introduced Lennon to McCartney. Paul showed John how he tuned a guitar, and performed a few songs he knew on guitar. McCartney later joined the band two weeks later, and made his debut with the Quarry Men on Friday, October 18, 1957 at a Conservative Club social at the New Clubmoor Hall.

Paul McCartney later introduced the next member of the band, George Harrison, who was a bit younger than all the members, (fourteen to be exact). He knew quite a bit of chords on the guitar, and was appointed to lead guitarist of the Quarry Men. 

Brian Epstein, who ran a music store, listened to one of the band's performances and later became their manager, landing them a recording session under one condition- drummer Pete Best was to be replaced. He was replaced by a fellow Englishman the band had all had come to know; his name was Ringo Starr.

The Quarry Men soon went by different names, one of which was the Silver Beatles, a tribute to Buddy Holiday and the Crickets. John changed the e to an a to give off the idea of a Beat group. The band finally changed their name to the Beatles for their performances in Hamburg during a Scotland tour with Liverpool singer Johnny Gentle. 

Questions:
What do you think would happen if Paul McCartney was not introduced to John Lennon? Where do you think the future of the Beatles would be if that important event had never happened?

In what way do you think the removal of Pete Best, and the addition of Ringo Starr affect the band?



Loengard, J. (2010, November 19). The fab four. Life: Remembering John Lennon10(10), 128.