It was fifty years ago today…

Gretsch DuoJet GuitarOn a bitterly cold Monday, fifty years ago today, the Beatles entered Abbey Road Studios at 9 a.m. – and left almost at midnight that day having recorded the ten songs they needed for their first album, entitled “Please Please Me.”

It spent 30 weeks as the #1 album on the British charts, and served as the gasoline that fueled the Beatlemania that swept England that fateful year.

Happy Anniversary, Rock ‘n’ Roll!

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50 Years Ago Today : Please Please Me Single Released

Please Please Me CoverAnd your intrepid author is liberally quoted in an article marking the occasion by Examiner.com Beatle correspondent, Steve Marinucci.

 

 


50 years ago: Beatles record their first LP in a single day

beatles-first-logo-sketches

Nearly 50 years ago, on 11 February 1963, the Beatles entered EMI Studios on Abbey Road in London for a marathon session to record the ten songs they needed for their first album. Today, when musical artists often take months to complete an album, it’s hard to believe that the Beatles recorded their first album in a single day.

“The album was basically the gas that fueled the launch of Beatlemania,” says Alex Hendler, author of the critically acclaimed short e-book, Please Please Me. “Yet the Beatles faced tremendous obstacles going into the session. They were on a national tour so they only had the single day to record the entire album. The musicians’ union’s rules had a limit on how many hours the band could actually work so they could only do so many takes of each song. And John was sick as a dog.”

Hendler is making himself and his rare collection of outtakes from the “Please Please Me” sessions available to bring this historic day in rock ‘n’ roll history to life.

“Fifty years later, they still blast ‘Twist & Shout’ between innings at Yankee Stadium. I think people would appreciate the song even more if they knew how John had one performance left in him at the end of a very hard day’s night, and the curious ritual he undertook to nail their classic performance in one take,” says Hendler.

To schedule an interview with Alex Hendler, please contact him directly via email.

 


Blinded by Sound

Nice review of Please Please Me e-book on Blinded by Sound today. Check it out.


That’s something else!

Very nice review of Please Please Me book on “Something Else!” today. Click on the image to check it out.


John Lennon Mansion for Sale

The mansion that John Lennon bought for £20,000 in 1964 with his new Beatle riches (“Kenwood”), and where a lot of memorable songs and memorable moments unfolded, is for sale. A cool £15,000,000 will get you into the house where the first demo for “Strawberry Fields Forever” was recorded. Don’t think the indoor swimming pool was available back then, though…

Click here (then scroll) for even more Beatle bloggery…


Arthur Alexander

Arthur Alexander

Arthur Alexander

Arthur Alexander is a name you hear often from early Beatles’ lore. His song, “Anna (Go to Him),” was covered on the Please Please Me LP, and they covered a few more of his songs, including “A Shot of Rhythm and Blues” and “Soldier of Love,” as part of their live act.

Arthur Alexander. Such a regal name. And yet, as was the fate of many early Rhythm & Blues musicians, he never really cashed in on his talent. In spite of being the only songwriter to have his songs covered by the Sixties’ Holy Trinity – the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and Bob Dylan – he spent much of his life working as a bus driver and died of a fatal heart attack at the age of 53 shortly after he began performing and recording again, according to Wikipedia.

The Beatles recorded “Anna” during the evening portion of the Please Please Me recording session, when they were playing catch-up in their desperate effort to record all the songs they needed for the album before the studio closed for the night. They nailed it in three takes. John’s vocals were like velvet, George had faithfully replicated Floyd Cramer’s piano lick on his black Gretsch Duo Jet, and as for Ringo’s drumming, I think George describes it best:

I remember having several records by (Alexander), and John sang three or four of his songs. Arthur Alexander used a peculiar drum pattern, which we tried to copy, but we couldn’t quite do it, so in the end we’d invented something quite bizarre but equally original. A lot of the time we tried to copy things but wouldn’t be able to, and so we’d end up with our own versions.

– George Harrison, The Beatles Anthology

The Beatles did a number of gorgeous cover songs; this is one of my favorites. Here’s Alexander’s equally gorgeous original version. Have a listen.


“Dreadful”

“‘Seventeen,’ take two.”

Been on the road for weeks.

Sick as a dog.

It’s bloody 11 in the morning, hardly the time for rock ‘n’ roll.

Have a listen…


The Music of Caves

credit: thegilly

It’s common knowledge that the Beatles honed their sound playing in places like The Cavern, a cellar underneath Mathew Street in Liverpool that was used as an air raid station in World War II.

But they were not the first ‘band’ to hone their musical skills in a cave.

Around 25,000 years ago, Paleo-lithic tribes living in limestone caves like Pech Merle in the Midi-Pyrénées region of France painted red dots to deliberately mark the places inside the cave that had special acoustical properties where they could “excite the resonances” or mimic the sounds of the animals also painted on the cave walls. Professor Steven Errede of the University of Illinois, writing about the research conducted by researcher Iegor Reznikoff of the University of Paris X in Nanterre, reports:

These underground caverns function as immense echo chambers – their naturally-formed vaults are capable of producing sounds similar to those that can be heard in the most famous cathedrals and chapels in Europe, such as the Baptistry di Pisa in Italy.

Perhaps these occasions were the world’s first “rock” concerts – singing and playing musical instruments inside of a gigantic, complex, multiply-connected organ pipe, exciting complex resonances and echoes as they sang and played! They were actually inside a naturally-formed musical instrument of gigantic proportions!

The reverberant/resonant acoustical properties of these caves must have seemed mystical, if not magical (or even supernatural) to them, not having any quantitative understanding of these physical phenomena.

Between 1961 and 1963, the Beatles made 292 appearances at the Cavern. During their time in that cave, the Beatles mastered the art of creating three-part harmonies. While harmonies were somewhat common in pop music at the time, it was rare to find songs with three-part harmonies driven by the pulsating beat of a rock ‘n’ roll band. This became one of their differentiators, to use a marketing term, that helped them evolve from being a band that some Liverpudlians mistakenly thought was a German band to a national phenomenon on the verge of re-writing rock ‘n’ roll history.

Professor Errede reports of visting the Basilica di Pisa, and listening as the cathedral guard sang the individual notes of a C-Major triad – C-E-G – the same triad structure that was often used by the Beatles’ in singing their three-part harmonies, and how those simple musical notes circulating inside the cave-like basilica dome became something completely different.

The sound of this human-generated major triad evolved from what initially started off as recognizably human into a gloriously complex, temporally and spatially-changing sound that was beyond human.

By all accounts the acoustics of The Cavern would never be mistaken for the acoustics found inside the great cathedrals or Paleo-Lithic caves, but the reverb effect of playing in a cave undoubtedly energized their music and the fans listening to them. While the low-fi quality of this video could never capture the “mystical” experience that must have occurred inside that cave underneath Mathew Street in Liverpool, it at least lends a glimpse of what it must have been like. Check it out


Thank, Thank Hugo

Alternative cover for "Please Please Me" by Alex Hendler

An alternative version of the cover. It was hard to choose!

As the Beatles discovered in working with George Martin, no artist is an island, and I have Mr. Hugo Campos to thank for the great book cover (and web site header) he designed. Hugo and I met years ago while working at a San Francisco digital ad agency. In fact, I recommended we NOT hire him. Not the first or last mistake I’ve made because Hugo can pretty much design anything you give him with a phenomenal result – and he always does it with a concerted effort, thoughtful rationale, and a keen eye.

E-book cover design is still in its infancy, with no standard yet set. If you look at the Kindle Store or iBookstore, you’ll notice that, for a majority of the titles, a lot of the text is unreadable on the book cover thumbnails. This would normally get most designers fired, but the reason for that is the major publishers are just repurposing the covers used for their standard book publishing (just goes to show you how old school they are). Really they should be designing a separate version for their e-book releases.

Anyway, Hugo managed to come up with a design that I thought a) best captures the essence of the subject matter and the era and b) works very well with the e-book format, so he very much “pleased pleased” me.

Hugo is a leading light in the patient rights’ movement to secure the data outputted by their medical devices. Check out his very interesting TEDx talk.