Lewisohn's epic new Beatles book |
Do we really need yet
another detailed history of The Beatles? A history so detailed and
comprehensive that it will run to three volumes - each volume consisting of about
800 pages (400,000 words). You would be forgiven, if you were to think not. After
all, there have already been a host of books published about the band, covering
virtually every aspect of their career - including a handful of superior
efforts, which skillfully tell the full story: books by the likes of Hunter
Davies, Philip Norman, Ray Coleman and
Bob Spitz. And, of course, the Fab Four themselves eventually got to provide
their own version of the tale - in the exhaustive and lavishly-illustrated book
The Beatles Anthology (2000). The full arc of the career is so
well-known now - Liverpool, Hamburg, England, Europe, America, and the World -
and the catalogue of tours, singles, LPs, and films is so familiar, that it's
hard to imagine that another history - especially a tome of this scope and size
- could find a place in such a seemingly saturated market. But believe me, for
a veritable Fab Four fanatic like me, this is an essential addition to any
serious Beatles collection. In fact, it turns out to be the definitive
treatment - because the author of this biography is Mark Lewisohn.
If you're not familiar with
the man, Mark Lewisohn is responsible for two of the very
best resources about The Beatles. The first is The Beatles Recording
Sessions (The Official Abbey Road Studio Session Notes, 1962-1970), published
in 1988. EMI Records gave Mr. Lewisohn access to the entire archive of Beatles
recordings done at Abbey Road Studios in St. John's Wood, London between June
6, 1962 and May 8, 1970. He listened to every single take: not just the final
mix of each track released on a single, EP, or LP recording, but the scores of
takes that it took to get to the final mix. He listened to hundreds of hours of
alternative takes and unreleased tracks. EMI also made available to him all of
its unpublished documentation for every recording session The Beatles ever did
at Abbey Road. In this book he provides, for each session, the studio number
(usually they worked in Studio Two), the times for the session, the names of the songs they
were working on (including the number of takes they performed of each song), and
the names of the producer and engineers. It is a one-of-a-kind book; and it is
indispensable for those interested in how the band set about creating their
recordings.
Mark Lewisohn's other master-work about the Fab Four is The Complete Beatles Chronicle (1992). It is sub-titled
"The Definitive Day-By-Day Guide to The Beatles Entire Career". It is
primarily a chronology of what the band was up to each day: concert
performance, recording session, TV show, radio program, film work, etc. But it
also includes important appendices - separate lists which document their
discography, the peak chart positions for all their recordings, all their radio
and TV appearances, every venue they played at in the UK and around the World,
and their repertoire - every known song they ever performed live. It is another
fascinating treasure-trove - also indispensible to the serious fan.
Mark Lewisohn listening to EMI's complete archive of every Beatles' recording session |
You get the idea - Mark
Lewisohn is a Beatles expert. He was already one of the most knowledgeable aficionados
of the group before he even started work on the current book. And he then put a
further ten years of work into its preparation: including exhaustive research
and countless interviews with people involved in the Beatles' story. Back in July
2012, when I was doing the National Trust tour of Mendips (where John Lennon grew up with his Aunt Mimi and Uncle George)
on Menlove Avenue in Liverpool, I was chatting to the tour guide, Colin Hall -
who lives much of each year in the house. He mentioned to me that Lewisohn's
book was due out soon and he encouraged me to get it, because it would certainly
be the ultimate treatment of its subject. He was correct.
Colin Hall, tour guide at Mendips on Menlove Avenue (left), and Mark Lewisohn |
Mark Lewisohn's projected three-volume
history is called The Beatles: All Those
Years. Volume One - called Tune In (2013) - was published late last year. I picked it up
immediately and raced through it in about a week. I took copious notes at the
time but, for one reason or another, I had not got around to reviewing it until
now - which is certainly not a reflection on its value or interest.
The McCartneys (l-r): Mike, Mary, Jim and Paul |
Tune In covers
the story from the beginning, and leaves off at the end of 1962, with the band
all primed and ready to go for the growing hysteria that would morph into
Beatlemania in the autumn of 1963. And what is the beginning of the story?
Well, Mr. Lewisohn provides some backstory on each of the family groups that
would nurture the key members of the band. He also describes the cultural and
musical scene in Liverpool and outlines the emergence, first, of the skiffle
craze and, then, the birth of the city's thriving rock 'n' roll culture.
Mr. Lewisohn, as you can
tell, is a walking encyclopedia of Beatles lore and information. And his book
is cram-full of exquisite detail on every aspect of the band's development. If
you are a true Fab Four fanatic, like me, then the layering-on of the detail
never becomes tedious. After all, most serious fans know exactly how the history
goes - it's the wallowing in the details that is the delight of tomes like this.
And it is in the details that we get a more nuanced understanding of the
familiar narrative - things, after all, are never so simple and black-and-white
as we are often led to believe.
John and Cynthia Powell (first wife) |
But it's not just the
incredible detail that makes this book so compelling; it is also the
even-handed and insightful judgments he makes throughout the book. Mark
Lewisohn has no axes to grind, it seems to me. Unlike many of the other books
I've read about The Beatles, Lewisohn doesn't inflate the reputation of one
individual, in order to downgrade the reputation of another. He carefully
considers much of the received opinion about the band, and comes to his own
conclusions - based both on the facts and on balancing the opinions of the many
witnesses he has interviewed or read.
And it's the many
interesting insights that make Tune In so valuable. For example, as you
wade through this comprehensive account, it becomes evident what it is about
The Beatles that was so special. Let me itemize some of the key points that
Lewisohn makes. The band was a tight group. It wasn't, like most of their
contemporaries, a leader-singer fronting a backing group - what Lewisohn
characterizes several times as Harry and The Somethings. In the late fifties
and early 60s, the UK pop scene - centred, of course, in London - was dominated
by individual singing stars. It was different in Liverpool, where things were all
about groups. The Crickets - Buddy Holly's band - was taken as the model: a
tight four-piece, with two guitars, bass and drums. It was the universal
adoption of the electric bass guitar which marked a definitive break with the
immediate past; no more stand-up bass (like the jazz groups), and no more
skiffle-styled tea-chest bass.
Early days: Paul playing with John in The Quarrymen |
As part of their own tight-group
ethos, The Beatles invariably used a three-part harmony attack. And in these
early days, they would employ a strict rotation in lead-singing duties amongst
John, Paul and George. Unlike the slick, "professional" approach that
other bands brought to their performances, The Beatles insisted on being
themselves. No choreographed dance-steps (à la Shadows). They would eat
sandwiches on stage. And smoke during their sets. They wore leathers and cowboy
boots. They preferred black and dark colours for their stage clothes. And after their first visit to Hamburg, they
adopted the long-haired look of the "exis" (existentialists) - the
so-called Parisian look. They didn't have any prepared banter - no script. They
carried on as they pleased. Their natural charisma allowed them to command the
stage. John and Paul would engage in constant repartee and would get up to some
strange shenanigans. Added to the driving rock 'n' roll sound, the unique and
casual stage presence made them mesmerizing to watch. They did compromise later
with Brian Epstein about some elements of their stage presentation, but when
they made it big, they still insisted on making it on their own terms.
The Beatles also had a
unique repertoire. They were already writing their own material. And added to
the usual warhorses of the Liverpool bands (Little Richard, Chuck Berry, et.
al.) were more obscure songs - A and B sides from the many American R&B
singles they would check out in local record shops. These shops had individual
listening booths, dubbed "browseries". The Beatles were constantly
searching for interesting and off-beat material to put into their repertoire. They
spent a lot of time in record shops - including the three NEMS shops run by the
Epstein family. The Beatles amassed a large repertoire: rock 'n' roll, country,
R&B, novelty songs and pop. They could do a 45-minute matinee show, and
then follow that - at the same venue - in the evening with another 45-minute
show, and not repeat a single song. In the days of two to two-and-a-half minute
songs, that would mean about 40 different songs.
Brian Epstein - Beatles' Manager |
Tune In
focuses its attention on all the key individuals in The Beatles early history.
There are long sections that tell us all about the early lives of Brian Epstein
and George Martin. We learn a lot about Alan Williams, Tony Sheridan, Astrid
Kirchherr, Jürgen Vollmer, Klaus Voorman, Stuart Sutcliffe, Pete and Mona Best, Neil Aspinall, Bob Wooler and
Bill Harry.
In Hamburg (l-r): Pete Best, George, John, Paul, and Stuart Sutcliffe (photo by Astrid Kirchherr) |
Lewisohn brings his critical
judgment to bear on some long-standing controversies in The Beatles history. He
documents fully why Pete Best was pushed from the band: it was primarily a
musical issue, but it was also a personality problem. Put bluntly, Pete Best
was a crummy drummer. This kept being
pointed out to the band at key moments. When Tony Sheridan, for example, would
step onto the stage in Hamburg to sing a couple of songs with the band, he
would invariably turn around and yell off-mic to Pete to keep the beat. When
the German producer Bert Kaempfert used The Beatles as a backing group for
Sheridan during a recording session (they were dubbed The Beat Brothers), he
was so dissatisfied with Best's drumming that he removed his bass drum and tom-tom,
leaving only the snare drum and cymbal. George Martin was also critical of
Best's work. After the first Beatles session at Abbey Road, Martin planned to
bring in a session drummer for their next recording date. Best just wasn't good
enough.
Just arrived at The Indra in Hamburg - shoddy equipment and poor instruments |
But it was also apparent
that Pete Best did not fit in with the others. He was a moody loner. He could
not relate much to the others in the band. After a show, the group would usually hang
out together - but not with Pete. Pete would take off immediately and do his
own thing. The reason he lasted so long, really, was because they had always
had trouble finding a drummer; Pete had a good set of drums of his own; and his
mother, Mona, had been a big help to the group - giving them gigs at The Casbah,
the social club she established in the basement of her home.
George, Stuart Sutcliffe and John in Hamburg (photo by Astrid Kirchherr) |
Lewisohn marks each key
turning point in the band's development - making its particular significance
clear. The group's tour of Scotland in early 1960, for example. The Liverpool
promoter Alan Williams became an associate of the London based entrepreneur
Larry Parnes. Parnes had established a stable of teen idols - handsome young
men, whose names were changed to fit a preconceived image. He began with Tommy
Steele and Marty Wilde; and moved on to sign the likes of Billy Fury, Vince
Eager, Duffy Power and Johnny Gentle. In May 1960 Parnes had booked a tour of
Scotland for Gentle, and he asked Alan Williams if he could find a Liverpool
band to work as a backing group for his singer. Williams offered the gig to The
Beatles. It was a moment of decision. Paul would miss a written paper he was
required to do for his A-Levels. Stuart Sutcliffe was also close to his A Level
exams. And George would have to quit his job at Blackler's department store -
ending his apprenticeship as an electrician. They took the job on May 18th.,
rehearsed all day on May 19th., and then they were off. They were now the first
Liverpool rock group to go on tour.
(photo by Astrid Kirchherr) |
The Beatles' first visit to Hamburg was an even more important turning point. It was there that they were transformed into a dynamic, tight rock band. When they first arrived at the Indra Club, they would play standing still. Their boss, Bruno Koschmider would yell at them to "Mach shau!" ("Put on a show!). Eventually, they learned to let loose on stage - engaging in all manner of silly antics and outlandish behaviour. They played long, long hours. Lewisohn lists the incredible statistics: in their first two Hamburg visits (over 27 weeks) they played for 918 hours - that's the equivalent of 612 ninety-minute shows! During their second visit to Hamburg they played 92 nights in a row. They returned to Liverpool as an incredibly tight outfit, and they blew every other band off the stage.
In the Abbey Road cafeteria with producer George Martin |
Another fascinating turning
point that Lewisohn covers was George Martin's eventual capitulation to the
band's artistic freedom. When The Beatles had their first recording session at
Abbey Road - it was an audition of sorts - Martin had it already in mind that
he would do the typical producer thing and provide them with a catchy tune to
record for their first single. He was also looking to pick one of the band as
prime vocalist (Lennon would have been the obvious choice) in order to rename
them - in the current fashion - as Paul McCartney and The Beatles, or John
Lennon and The Beatles. [Oh, how Paul would have loved to be chosen as
"leader" of the band. But, no chance!] The Beatles had their own plans.
They already had it in their minds that they would only record their own songs
for their 45 r.p.m. singles. George Martin was dubious, but he agreed to work with
them on what he thought was the best song they presented to him - "Love Me
Do". Even after it was released as their first single in November 1962,
Martin wasn't convinced that it would be successful. But when it got into the
Top Twenty chart, he changed his mind - and his attitude. He met with the group
and announced that he would no longer attempt to foist other material on them;
that they would now work together in the studio primarily on the group's own
songs; and, oh, by the way, they would now set about recording their first LP.
The band was floored, but they were up to the challenge. And after their very
first session George realized that it was best to leave the group as a
"leaderless" unit.
(photo by Astrid Kirchherr) |
As I said earlier,
Lewisohn's insights often counter received wisdom. For example, Paul McCartney
has always been recognized as the most "musical" of the group - a
natural, who could pick up things so quickly. His shift to bass guitar, after
Stuart Sutcliffe left the group, is a good illustration of his innate
musicality - he learned bass with great facility, and became proficient in no
time at all. But Lewisohn points out that in the early days, when he was still
on guitar, Paul always had the shoddiest instrument. And Paul was always the
most nervous of the group when they faced an audition - blowing it several
times. During the recording of "Love Me Do", for example, John was
doing the lead vocal, but also had to play the harmonica. To ease into the
crossover, George Martin asked Paul to sing the final line of each verse -
before John came in on the harmonica. Paul was very nervous about this and
folded under the pressure. It was like the Decca audition in January, 1962.
Although Lennon, arguably, was the best all-round vocalist - able to cover the
most varied of styles - he only sang four of the 15 songs they recorded at the
audition; George sang four; and Paul handled seven. Paul had succumbed to
nerves then, too. And it happened again at the group's first audition for BBC
Radio.
Lewisohn also takes things
we already knew, but refocuses our attention on their importance by his
particular emphasis. The phrase "John, Paul, George and Ringo", for
example, as Neil Aspinall points out to Lewisohn, indicated the chain of
seniority, as well as the pecking order, in the band. John was the original
member; it was he who accepted Paul into the band; George was introduced to
John by Paul; and it was primarily George who lobbied to bring Ringo in to
replace Pete Best. The dynamics in the group were interesting. Paul, George and
Ringo each had their own close bond with John, whom they recognized as the
leader. But then the group often split into two pairs: John and Paul; George
and Ringo - although George often served as a buffer and catalyst between John
and Paul. There was some ambivalence between Ringo and Paul, and between George
and Paul - and this would become manifest later in their career. And the publishing
contract signed by John and Paul meant that the band's primary songwriters would
earn significantly more than the other two - something they couldn't help but
resent a little. All things considered, though, the real
binding strength in the band was the John-Paul-George musical triad.
Brian Epstein and George Martin at Abbey Road |
Another conclusion of Lewisohn
is how lucky The Beatles were to have three such honest men running key aspects of their career: Brian Epstein, their manager; George Martin, their
record producer; and Dick James, their music publisher. In those days, many people in the music business were dishonest shysters - only in the
business to make as much money as they could. They thought
nothing about ripping off their naive clients. The Beatles seemed able -
perhaps because of their unique talent and charisma - to earn respect and to
attract loyal people. In some ways, it was their own open and honest attitudes
which encouraged the honesty of people around them. Other notably honest and
loyal members of the band's entourage: Neil Aspinall, Mal Evans and Tony
Barrow.
Mark Lewisohn
demonstrates clearly that The Beatles slow, but inexorable, growth was a
natural and authentic progression. It was based on ambition, experience, ability
and creative drive. They remained untainted by hype and commercial dilution. At
nearly every stage of their development they insisted on doing things their
way. They hated the inauthentic "star image" of the show-biz scene.
They wanted to be themselves. They fought against, and defeated, the
condescending attitude that just about everybody had in the London
entertainment and media industry for people from the "provinces" - cities
like Liverpool, Manchester, Newcastle and Birmingham.
Mark Lewisohn - author of Tune In |
Tune In is
a wonderful achievement. I have read many different versions of The Beatles'
early history. Mark Lewisohn's book is the definitive account. How long will it
take him to produce the next two volumes? They cannot come soon enough, in my
opinion. Meanwhile, I highly recommend this first volume. All serious fans of
the Fab Four should get this book. It is fully footnoted; it has a comprehensive
index; and it includes 24 pages of interesting photographs. Kudos to Mr.
Lewisohn - he has done it again!
Rare colour photograph from Hamburg - Pete Best on the left |
Sounds very interesting Clive. Is it a page turner? I am wondering whether the minutiae of the detail might be too much for the ordinary fan. I might be wrong. I hope I am.
ReplyDeleteTony
Well, I found it to be a real page-turner. But I'm a regular reader and an ardent fan. It is probably too detailed for the casual fan, but then I don't think a casual fan would be interested in a non-fiction book that is three-inches thick! I found the minutiae to be particularly interesting in certain areas. For example, Lewisohn continually updates us on the latest R&B and rock 'n' roll singles they've been listening to. Some of these they incorporate into their vast repertoire. It's the first time that I can recall a bio of the group listing so many of the records that were influencing them, week-by-week, month-by-month. Let's face it - as far as the Fab Four goes, I can never get enough!
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