Search
Filters
0">
Close
RSS

Beatles News

Beatles superfans will surely recognize this iconic 1964 photo capturing music’s most famous quartet fishing from a guestroom of the Edgewater hotel in Seattle, where the band members stayed during their first global tour.

Like the rest of the world, Seattle was so overwhelmed by “Beatlemania” that the Edgewater was the only hotel willing and able to host the band, installing cyclone fencing around its perimeter to keep crazed fans at a safe distance. (Legend has it, some superfans even attempted to swim across the chilly waters of the Bay in the hopes of getting a glimpse of the Brits.) During their stay, now-iconic images were captured of young and playful John, Paul, George, and Ringo hanging fishing poles out the windows of their hotel suite into the waters of Elliott Bay.

Now, nearly 60 years later, the Edgewater is giving Beatles fans the chance to recreate this famous scene with a unique hotel and concert experience timed to the Seattle stop on Paul McCartney's “Got Back” tour this May. The very limited package includes a pre-show dinner, tickets to the concert, luxe round-trip transportation, and a night’s stay in the Edgewater’s Beatles Suite.

Source: El details

Michael Douglas got a shock when he won his first Golden Globe in 1988. However, Douglas got even more of a surprise when music legends George Harrison and Bob Dylan showed up at his hotel room after the awards to help him celebrate his win.

In 1988, Douglas walked away with his first Golden Globe. He won Best Actor in a Motion Picture Drama for Oliver Stones’ Wall Street.

Douglas thanked Stone in his acceptance speech for giving him such a great role. He starred as the corporate raider Gordon Gekko, who later mentors Charlie Sheen’s character, Bud Fox.

Douglas also won an Oscar for Best Actor for the role. He went up against William Hurt, who recently died on Mar. 13, Marcello Mastroianni, Robin Williams, and Jack Nicholson.

 

Source: cheatsheet.com

Read More<<<

details

Tom Hanks wrote a movie partly inspired by Ringo Starr joining The Beatles.


Hanks drew inspiration from another 1960s rock group while writing the film. The movie included a hit song.

Ringo Starr wasn’t always a member of The Beatles. Tom Hanks watched a documentary that discussed Ringo joining the Fab Four and it subsequently inspired him to write a movie. Notably, Hanks started writing the film to keep his mind off how Forrest Gump would perform during awards season.Hanks directed and wrote That Thing You Do!, a comedy about a fictitious one-hit wonder band named The Wonders. At one point in the film, The Wonders have to replace their bassist before a big performance. This part of the film is connected to Ringo.

Source: cheatsheet.com

Read More<<<<

details

It doesn’t happen very often in showbiz, but George Harrison and Mick Fleetwood were briefly brothers-in-law. The Fleetwood Mac drummer became George’s brother-in-law when he married Jenny Boyd, the younger sister of George’s wife Pattie Boyd, in 1970.

Although both their marriages ended, the musicians remained friends and bonded over their shared love of tropical climates, Maui, and ukuleles.

The lead guitarist met Pattie while The Beatles filmed A Hard Day’s Night in 1964. He asked her to marry him the first day they met, but they didn’t tie the knot until 1966.

After a turbulent 11-year marriage, George and Pattie officially divorced in 1977. Although, they’d split in 1974 after George cheated on Pattie with Ringo Starr’s wife, Maureen, and Pattie and Eric Clapton revealed they were in love.

Source: cheatsheet.com

details

George Harrison shocked Peter Frampton the first time they met. That’s not uncharacteristic of the “quiet Beatle.” George had a profound effect on many people. Often, he’d utter a witty response while meeting someone new or suggest they do something together that the other person hardly expected.

For instance, the first time he met Eric Idle, he invited him to smoke pot in a projection room at a Monty Python and the Holy Grail screening. Similarly, George smoked pot with Martin Short while watching The Hunt for Red October at a dinner party the first time they met.

Source: cheatsheet.com

Read More<<<

details
The Beatle Who Got Away - Monday, March 28, 2022

On August 17, 1960, five young Britons were approaching the stage of a small night club in Hamburg, about to play music in that city for the first time. To reach the stage, they had come an almost unimaginable distance. From their home, in Liverpool, they had driven in a cream-and-green minibus to the port of Harwich. The bus, teetering under the weight of amplifiers and instruments, had been lifted onto a ferry by a crane. At first, the stevedores had refused to handle such a precarious load; a photograph captured the moment just after they changed their minds, with the sixties hanging in the balance.

Source: Ted Widmer/newyorker.com

Read More<<<

details

George Harrison‘s son, Dhani, said Tom Petty’s death was just as hard for him as his father’s death was in 2001. Petty was one of George’s best friends. Both musicians felt as if they’d known each other in their past lives.

So, naturally, Dhani stayed close to Petty and George’s other friends after George died. Petty supported Dhani through everything. He became a pseudo father, uncle, and best friend.

Petty’s death deeply affected Dhani. He turned to his other uncle figure and his father and Petty’s Traveling Wilburys bandmate, Jeff Lynne, for comfort in the immediate aftermath.

“They’re my family, and they’ve always really looked after me, ever since my father passed away,” Dhani told Billboard. “Yeah, my heart’s broken. It’s tremendously sad and absolutely heartbreaking. He’s one of my best mates. It hasn’t hit me yet how much I’m going to miss him.

Source: cheatsheet.com

Read more<<<

details

Young fans were desperate to catch the Fab Four as they shot scenes for A Hard Day’s Night on board

The excitement was all too much for hundreds of Beatles fans when the band stopped off at a Somerset seaside town in March 1964 during filming for their highly acclaimed big-screen debut A Hard Day’s Night.

At Minehead, now part of the West Somerset Railway heritage line, one schoolgirl had to be escorted off the tracks by a police officer as she attempted to greet the Fab Four. While other youngsters stood in an orderly fashion next to the railway line, others stormed the tracks, clamouring at the windows of the restaurant car to get their pop idols’ attention.

Source: Jackie Butler/somersetlive.co.uk

Read More<<<

details

The Beatles never attended the Grammy Awards. They never sat next to artists like the Mamas and the Papas, or maybe Frank Sinatra, and waited for the announcement. The Beatles never walked to the podium to give a witty speech, thanking fans.

Unfortunately, a Beatle never graced the Grammy stage until after The Beatles broke up.
Initially, their first two wins came in 1965. They won Best New Artist and Best Performance by a Vocal Group (for “A Hard Day’s Night”). That year, they were nominated for Record Of The Year (for “I Want To Hold Your Hand”) and Best Rock & Roll Recording (for “A Hard Day’s Night”).

Source: cheatsheet.com

Read More<<<

details

Before The Beatles managed themselves, the boy band had business owner Brian Epstein as their official manager. When talking about this rock group during a The Beatles: Get Back video clip, Epstein said he was “immediately struck” by their stage presence.

John Lennon and Paul McCartney wrote songs together as teenagers. The duo eventually turned into a four-piece band that created original music. In 1961, business owner Epstein signed up to manage “four scruffy, unknown lads,” now known as the Beatles.

These artists became the world’s best-known boy band in the following years. They performed abroad and made history with songs like “I Want To Hold Your Hand.” Even Epstein became well-known by fans, appearing in interviews separate from the group.

Source: cheatsheet.com

Read More<<<

details

The Beatles bassist Paul McCartney has been married three times. However, when he tied the knot with his third wife Nancy Shevell, he returned to a place filled with happy memories from his first marriage. McCartney’s 2011 marriage to Shevell at Old Marylebone Town Hall was a full-circle moment for the singer. He first wed Linda Eastman there 42 years prior in 1969. McCartney and Linda would remain married for 29 years until her death in 1998. The couple welcomed three biological children together: Mary, Stella, and James. McCartney adopted Linda’s daughter Heather from a previous marriage shortly after they wed.

Source: cheatsheet.com

Read More<<<

details

On Friday, Sean Lennon will open the Yoko Ono Lennon Centre which will be home to the University of Liverpool’s new 400-seat concert hall, The Tung Auditorium.

The event will be celebrated in the evening with a gala concert featuring composer Professor Shirley Thompson’s premiere of One World, a re-imagining and homage to the ex-Beatle’s iconic song Imagine.

A “thrilled” Yoko Ono, an honorary graduate of the university, said: “Thank you to the university and to the people of Liverpool for this wonderful honour.

“Liverpool has become part of me from years of going there, and with this new centre part of me will always be there – for that I’m very thankful.

“I think John is smiling about it too. I’m also very thankful that our son, Sean, is there in Liverpool for the celebrations around the opening.”

Source: Kim Pilling/standard.co.uk

Read More<<<

details

Paul McCartney once said he didn’t like to hear fans say One Direction was the new Beatles. Despite this, he said Harry Styles and the other members of One Direction were successful for one of the same reasons The Beatles were successful. Paul also revealed what he thought of One Direction’s songs.

The Beatles' Paul McCartney with a guitar

The Beatles and One Direction were compared numerous times over the years. Both the Fab Four and One Direction were British bands who started out making uptempo love songs and had young fans. During a 2013 interview with The Wall Street Journal, Paul said he didn’t like fans comparing other bands to The Beatles.

“I always think it’s a little bit unfortunate when you call [a band] ‘the new Beatles,'” the former Beatle opined. “It can be the kiss of death because people expect you to live up to what we did.”

Source: cheatsheet.com

Read More<<<

details

“Dylan… was really into the whole idea of it for the refugees….” says George Harrison over the restored footage above from 1971’s Concert for Bangladesh. The quiet Beatle’s scouser lilt will surely tug at your heartstrings, as will Harrison and Dylan’s careful rehearsal take of “If Not for You,” a song they did not end up playing together during the concert. It’s a significant shared moment nonetheless. As fans know, “If Not for You” became a keystone song for both artists at the turn of the 70s.

Dylan wrote the song the year previous as the first track on his 1970 New Morning, a record critics heralded as a return to form after the panned double album, Self Portrait. Harrison himself sat in on a session for the song and recorded a “languid early version,” notes Beatles Bible, “at Columbia’s Studio B in New York.”

Source: openculture.com

Read More<<<

details

George Harrison‘s son, Dhani Harrison, worked on the former Beatle’s final album. He made sure one of the songs on the record was track seven for a specific reason. In addition, the song made a famous drummer cry every time he heard it.

Jim Keltner is a drummer who worked with numerous famous musicians. He played on songs by Bob Dylan, Mick Jagger, John Lennon, Celine Dion, and numerous others. During a 2005 interview with Modern Drummer, he discussed George’s final studio album Brainwashed. He said some of the songs from Brainwashed deeply affected him.

“One that makes me cry every time I hear it, and probably always will, is ‘Stuck Inside a Cloud,'” Keltner revealed. “That’s one of his older one’s that he used to play for me all the time. It had a magical, misty, very English sort of quality to it.”

Source: cheatsheet.com

Read More<<<

details
Beatles Radio Listener Poll
What Beatles Era do you like better?