We want the Beatles.
We want the Beatles.
We want
the Beatles.
We want the Beatles.
We want
the Beatles.
We want the Beatles.
When
The Beatles burst
onto the World Stage in 1963,
they transformed
popular music over night.
A commercial phenomenon
like no other,
they paved the way
for every artist
who followed in their wake.
They were selling
vast amounts of records,
a quarter of a million a week.
No one had ever
done that before.
Even Elvis hadn't,
Lonnie Donegan hadn't.
Every week selling a quarter
of a million records.
You had a revolution,
just in terms of sales.
But in addition to that,
The Rolling Stones.
we wouldn't have had
You wouldn't have The Byrds,
you wouldn't have had
Dylan going electric.
You wouldn't have had The Doors,
and all those other bands
we associate with the 60s.
The chances of them existing
without The Beatles
are pretty slim.
Yet the band's
impact spread far beyond music.
As figure heads for
a blooming youth culture,
penetrated to the heart
their influence
of the post-w*r world.
They were
agents of change.
They were carrying
everyone with them.
Everything felt modern, new,
fresh, everywhere you looked.
The world started
to look different.
The colors
started to really emerge,
the green sh**t
of a new culture.
From the point of
The Beatles' arrival,
how culture works.
they completely reinvented
Suddenly, adults were
growing their hair long.
Grown-up women were
wearing mini-skirts.
Suddenly, it was young people
who were determining everything.
That started with The Beatles.
By the
second half of the '60s,
the band transformed
into leaders of the
emerging counterculture.
Bringing new social,
sexual and artistic ideas
into the mainstream, through
their peaceful revolution
they became the undisputed
voice of a generation.
The Beatles were the most
commercial band on earth.
But they were also the most
avant-garde and experimental.
That was their role.
Through their music, they
opened up peoples' minds.
They helped to
move a lot of people
who might not otherwise
have gone along
in '66, '67 and '68.
with the stuff that happened
They were inspirational and
influential in that way.
But as they became more
involved in the counterculture
and more representative of it,
they became a political thr*at.
This film
traces The Beatles' path
through the most extraordinary
decade of the 20th century.
It reveals the lasting impact
of four musicians
from Liverpool,
who went from class warriors
to cultural revolutionaries,
while providing the
soundtrack for a generation.
They were catalysts
for a great many things.
They changed just
about everything.
Great Britain, 1962.
A small and once
dominant Kingdom,
finally recovering
from years of Austerity
following the Second World w*r.
A nation of
discipline and order,
of industrial cities and
quiet village greens.
And although outwardly it
appeared stuck in the past,
beneath the surface a fresh
culture was developing
that would rapidly transform it.
At the close of the
year the UK was hit
by some of the coldest
weather it had ever suffered,
everyday life grinding to a halt
as snow covered the country.
Breaking through this bitter
winter, on January 11th, 1963,
a record was issued that
provided the first glimpse
that was to come.
of the brave new world
Please Please Me,
the second single
by Liverpudlian
four-piece The Beatles,
quickly rose to number
two on the British charts,
and its mainstream success
announced the arrival
of a revolutionary force
in both music and culture.
♪ You don't need me
to show the way love ♪
♪ Why do I always
have to say love ♪
♪ C'mon ♪
♪ C'mon ♪
♪ C'mon ♪
♪ Please please me, whoa
yeah, like I please you... ♪
Please Please Me was
a kind of eruption.
They took the blunt force
of 1950s rock and roll,
which was a blunt instrument,
there's no other
way to describe it.
Musically and socially,
it was a blunt instrument.
And they grafted on
to that the harmonies
quality of the girl groups
and the whole plaintive vocal
of the early 1960s.
Nobody had ever heard anything
quite like this before.
This was a group that had
two of the best singers
of their era in the same group,
and something like that
I don't think had
really happened before.
The sound of John Lennon and
Paul McCartney singing together
is one of the great sounds
in music of the 20th century.
♪ Last night I said
these words to my girl ♪
♪ I know you never
even try, girl... ♪
They were a shock
to the system.
Love Me Do was the first single,
and it was a bit
of a false start.
Please Please Me is when
you had
the unison sound of the band.
They're singing,
"Come on, come on."
There's this sense
of anticipation
and a sense of excitement.
It was a fresh sound.
It sounds so traditional now.
But at the time,
the look and the sound
was completely fresh.
It was positive,
uplifting and modern.
The Beatles..
John Lennon, Paul McCartney,
George Harrison
and Ringo Starr..
provided a much needed
sh*t in the arm
to Britain's pop scene.
Although American rock and roll
had been enormously popular
in the mid 1950s,
its electrifying initial
surge proved short-lived.
With its major stars
either selling out
or disappearing from the scene,
the musicians that came in
their wake were more wholesome
and less threatening.
British artists followed suit,
and the musical
landscape in the UK
was dominated by
talented imitators
and the teen idols of pop
Svengali Larry Parnes.
manager Brian Epstein
With the support of their
and producer George Martin,
The Beatles offered
something very different.
Driven by the unique
songwriting partnership
of John Lennon and
Paul McCartney,
this band composed
their own material.
Most of conventional
English show business,
as we think of it,
was really a pale reflection
of American show business.
It had not always been the case.
But since the w*r,
certainly it was.
You had singers like Matt Monro
who did an almost letter perfect
imitation of Frank Sinatra.
By the same token,
you had the famous facile,
fatuous English pop stars
of the period,
of whom Cliff Richard
was by far the best known
and the most successful,
who was a kind of third-rate
version of Elvis.
of Heartbreak Hotel
And not of the Elvis
but of the Elvis of King Creole,
the Elvis of Elvis
the movie star.
♪ We're all going
on a summer holiday ♪
♪ No more working
for a week or two ♪
♪ Fun and laughter
on our summer holiday ♪
♪ No more worries for me
or you ♪
♪ For a week or two... ♪ ♪
It was pretty professional.
Cliff Richard and The
Shadows were good players.
It was a good act.
But it was family friendly.
And you had also characters
like Larry Parnes,
with his stable of pretty boys
who did what they were told,
who sung what they
were told to sing,
and who had no particular
creative input at all.
So when somebody like
The Beatles comes along
and they're not only
playing their own instruments,
singing beautifully,
their own compositions,
they're also singing
this was incredibly
rare at the time.
The Beatles were
keen from the start
to write their own material.
They wrote the songs
to the audience,
to address the audience.
They knew that the audience
was 80% teenage girls
and they wrote songs
that elicited the perfect
response from them.
And after that,
the deluge followed.
It sent the signal out
to everybody
that you can all
write your own song,
get a slice of the action.
Within a year or two,
all bands were writing,
or having a cr*ck at it.
It wasn't only
the extraordinary sound
of The Beatles or the unique
talents of Lennon and McCartney
that were revolutionizing
popular music.
As they came to dominate
the charts in 1963,
their string of hit records
transformed the
commercial fortunes
of the British record
industry itself.
As The Beatles
became more popular,
and every record seemed
to sell more and more,
you had a revolution in the
British record industry,
just in terms of sales.
They'd never seen
anything like this,
both in the amount of sales
The Beatles would hang around
and the how long
in the charts, for months
and months and months.
In addition to that,
there was the rolling impact
of hit after hit after hit,
that never let the quality drop.
If anything, the
quality increased,
from Please Please
Me to From Me to You,
which was a little more
downbeat but was no less wily.
And then between the eyes:
She Loves You,
which explodes out of
the radio to this day.
♪ She loves you,
yeah, yeah, yeah ♪
♪ She loves you,
yeah, yeah, yeah ♪
♪ She loves you,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah ♪
♪ You think you've
lost your love ♪
♪ Well, I saw her
yesterday... ♪
People like Cliff
and Billy Fury and Elvis,
they were selling quite
substantial amounts of
records per se, but
by the beginning of 1963
when Please Please Me
and From Me to You
and the Please Please Me
album,
they were selling vast
amounts of records.
No one had seen
anything like this
in the pop industry before.
This was suddenly a
happening industry
that not only young people
were taking notice of it,
but the bean counters too.
So you had everyone scouring
Birmingham for The Moody Blues,
The Hollies in Manchester.
And Liverpool of course,
all the scouts were up there
looking for the next Beatles.
Everyone wanted a
slice of the action
because they'd revolutionized
the music industry
in just a matter
of months in 1963.
But
the group's impact
was not merely confined
to the musical world.
They also both represented
and inspired a seismic shift
at the very heart
of British society.
How these four young
working class Liverpudlians
managed to spearhead
such a change
lie in The Beatles,'
and the country's, past.
In the two centuries before
the Second World w*r,
the United Kingdom had led
the Industrial Revolution
and had ruled over the
greatest Empire on earth.
One of the foundations
behind this superpower
was its class system,
which both divided and
ordered its citizens.
After emerging victorious
from w*r in 1945,
the elite class in this system,
known as the Establishment,
which included the monarchy,
the aristocracy, and the heads
of all the major institutions
governing society,
immediately tried to
reinforce their power,
and this chain of
command would once again
shape life in Britain
during the post-w*r years.
Britain was a very
class-ridden society.
We were a nation of
subjects, not citizens.
And as long as you do
have a royal family
and a set of lords and ladies,
the whole hierarchy
of privilege,
then obviously someone's
going to be at the bottom.
After the w*r,
the Establishment obviously
tried to reassert itself.
So you still had the old
Christian values, for instance.
Nothing happened on a Sunday.
Even children's
swings in the parks
were chained up on Sundays.
The '60s really
was the first time
that anyone kicked a hole
in any of that
and started to challenge all
of these traditional
assumptions.
group of middle class people,
Really, it was the same
who assumed they had the right
to tell everybody how to live,
were still very much in power.
Yet
Britain's power was waning
and its empire slowly crumbling.
Almost bankrupt as a result
of its w*r effort,
the years of hardship
that followed
saw the entire country suffer.
The North of England in
particular struggled to recover,
port city of Liverpool,
and the once dominant
heavily targeted by
German air raids,
was beset by widespread damage
and disappearing industry.
During the 19th century,
the North developed this
proud sense of itself.
The port of Liverpool was the
greatest port in the world
because England was the
greatest commercial nation
in the world and most things
came in and out there.
But over the course
of the 20th century,
England went through
a phenomenon that
is now very familiar
to Americans of the
late 20th century,
which is the decline
of industrialization,
the decline of manufacturing.
By the 1940s, it was very clear
that Liverpool was in decline.
As a result, The Beatles'
generation grew up in this place
that was filled with the
emblems of imperial might
but which was becoming a
very dire place to live
in many ways.
Everywhere there was a debris.
The streets were full
of bombed buildings.
All the kids used to play
in the buildings
and deserted places.
The debris was still going
20 or 30 years later.
There was no money about,
and it was very hard.
What did young people have in
Liverpool to look forward to?
Everything was closing down.
All the factories
were closing down.
It was pretty tough times
in Liverpool in those days.
And it was
within this stark landscape
that The Beatles grew up.
The band's founder and
eldest member, John Lennon,
was the product of a broken home
and was raised by
his aunt and uncle
in a fairly affluent
area of the city.
His future bandmates,
Paul McCartney and
George Harrison, however,
class neighborhoods.
both came from working
Despite the dereliction
surrounding them
and the hard times in
which they were raised,
the future prospects of all
three were given a boost
by a new educational initiative
that saw the brightest children
enrolled in grammar schools,
whatever their
financial background.
John Lennon, Paul
McCartney and George Harrison
took an examination when
they were 11 years old
that essentially
certified them as clever.
And as a result of passing
what was called the 11+ exam,
that meant they were eligible
to go to grammar schools.
Grammar schools were
designed to educate children
in order to go on to some
form of higher education.
What this meant was that
at a relatively early age,
at the age of 11,
particularly Paul McCartney
and George Harrison,
truly working class.
whose origins were
John Lennon was a
bit more complicated.
John was a little
betwixt and between.
But in the case of both Paul
McCartney and George Harrison,
at the age of 11, they
were somewhat isolated
from the world of
the housing estates
that they had grown up on.
Every day they took the bus
into the center of Liverpool
to go to a place called
the Liverpool Institute
and they were essentially marked
and educated from the age of 11
to transcend their
working class origins.
With far better
schooling than their parents,
these future Beatles
were a new breed,
raised within the proud
Liverpudlian working class,
yet unfazed by the educated
elites supposedly above them.
And with the coming of
rock and roll in 1956,
a musical form exploded that
spoke directly to their youth
and their sense of difference.
It was the following year
that John Lennon
met Paul McCartney
and invited him to join
his band The Quarrymen,
with George Harrison
joining shortly there after.
All around them in Liverpool
a new phenomenon was finding
its own rebellious voice:
the teenagers had arrived.
The '50s became the era
when teenagers really
came into their own.
We were together in
our love of the music.
Up until that time a young
lad would be taken to the pub
for his first pint, when he
turned of age, by his dad.
He'd dress like his dad.
He'd go into the
union of his dad
and he'd go in the
same work as his dad.
With the girls, she
was in the kitchen
learning how to
make the breakfast,
all the rest of it.
do the cleaning,
But suddenly the youngsters
were now earning money
and they wanted to
spend it their way
and do their things and
not be told what to do.
A generation
gap was opening up
and this would dominate
cultural life in Britain
across the next decade.
And while rock and roll
resonated
with young working
class Britons,
other American influences,
from the b*at poets
to jazz and blues,
were embraced by
middle class teenagers.
If the future Beatles were at
heart rock and roll rebels,
none of them more embodied
this than John Lennon.
But having failed
his exams in 1957,
he found a place at the
Liverpool College of Art,
where he was thrown
into an unfamiliar,
Bohemian student culture.
Although this would prove
vital in expanding his talents,
here Lennon was an outsider.
I first met John Lennon
at the College of Art.
I was sitting down
in the canteen.
Suddenly I noticed
this guy walk past.
And I thought, what's
he dressed up like?
He was dressed almost
like a teddy boy,
in a completely
unconventional type of dress
compared to all
the other students.
I looked round and everyone
was wearing duffle coats
and turtleneck sweaters.
I thought, oh, they're
all wearing the same,
they're all conventional.
He's the rebel.
He's the one who's different.
I must get to know him.
If you were in art
school in the 1950s
you would have been exposed
to the intellectual radicalism
and rebellion of figures
like Jack Kerouac and
the b*at generation
who were anti-established
religion, pro self-expression
anti any kind of
Establishment repression.
And the angry young men
of theater,
John Osborne, Arnold Wesker..
these guys were angry,
but they were clever.
They found a way of
directing their anger,
which may well have
been a personal angst,
to the outside world
but when it's directed
it can create a great articulate
voice of a generation,
if you like.
Nine hundred and fifty-four...
nine hundred
and fifty-bloody-five,
I could get through in half
the time if I went like a bull,
but they'd only slash me wages,
so they can get stuffed.
Don't let the bastards
grind you down,
that's one thing I've learned.
would have been very appealing
This sort of influence
to someone like John Lennon
who was himself an
angry young man,
for all kinds of
personal reasons.
But if you could be
an angry young man
and thoughtful with it,
then that's very appealing.
By
the summer of 1960,
the school days of John Lennon,
Paul McCartney and George
Harrison were over.
Yet they were quickly thrust
of another kind.
into an education
In August, the band, now
calling itself The Beatles,
headed for a season of shows
in the vibrant
German city Hamburg,
and over the following year
it was here that they
earned their stripes
as a rock and roll band.
Upon their return to
Liverpool in 1961,
they quickly rose to the very
top of the city's music scene.
isolated in the North,
Yet they were
and the rest of the country
paid little attention.
I started writing to
papers like The Daily Mail
saying what is
happening in Liverpool
is like New Orleans at
the turn of the century,
but with rock and roll
instead of jazz.
Of course, no one
was interested.
So I decided to do it myself
and created Mersey b*at
and of course my friends,
John and the group he
formed, The Beatles,
were the main people
I wrote about.
With a teenage
audience hungry for information
about this new rock
and roll scene,
Bill Harry's Mersey b*at music
paper proved a huge success
in the North of England.
Celebrating The Beatles
in almost every issue,
it brought them to the attention
of one of its contributors,
local businessman Brian Epstein.
The manager of a
Liverpool music store,
through Bill Harry, Epstein
arranged to see the band play
at the city's
legendary Cavern Club
and was blown away
by their performance.
He immediately offered
to manage the band
and by January 1962,
a contract was signed.
Wary of the controlling approach
of managers like Larry Parnes,
Epstein was still conscious
of the unwritten rules
of the British
entertainment industry.
If The Beatles were going
to change the world,
they'd first have to
change their look.
What I think he
had was the instinct
to realize the general
overall pattern
of how things worked
in this country.
They were the savage
young Beatles
dressed in black leather
roll to prostitutes,
and playing rock and
gangsters and all the rest
of it in Hamburg,
taking dr*gs
and all the rest of it.
They were the savage
young Beatles.
They would never
have been accepted
by the established media.
And The Beatles'
breakthrough in early 1963
confirmed that Epstein's
instincts were spot on.
He had successfully smuggled
a unique band of rebels
into the heart of
the mainstream.
Yet unlike the
controlling managers
that dominated the British
entertainment world,
he then simply set them loose.
From the moment they
soared to the top
of the British charts,
the press, radio interviewers
and television presenters
came face to face
with The Beatles,
and these quick-witted,
confident
and very modern young men
chose to play the game
by their own rules.
In the beginning, The
Beatles' behavior with the press
was the most revolutionary
thing about it.
Nobody of their age group,
and to a certain extent,
of their background,
had ever behaved this way
with reporters before.
Do you know, you
look like Matt Monro?
Give us "Russia with Love."
Thanks, Boys.
The Beatles were
just audacious.
When they were
being interviewed,
they kind of turned the tables.
When Adam Faith or someone like
that was interviewed before,
it was very much a master
and servant kind of thing.
Cliff, what sort
of tour did you have?
I can honestly say it's been
probably the most pleasurable
one we've had for some time,
just the audiences,
mainly because, not
but because we've
had a few hours off,
we've been swimming
and sunbathing.
The Beatles just
ripped into that,
and almost ridiculed
the whole thing,
turned the whole thing
into a Marx Brothers farce,
which was fantastic.
I hear the four of you
are going to be millionaires
by the end of the year.
Oh, that's nice.
Have you got time to
actually spend this money?
What money? He said.
Doesn't he give any to you?
No.
Have you seen that car of his?
It was very, very
close to the way groups
of male adolescents
interacted with one another
as a matter of course.
This is what teenage boys do.
They try to top one another.
They try to cut one another
down, all this sort of thing.
nerve to take this thing
The Beatles simply had the
and to perform it in front
of microphones and cameras.
John, we hear there's a rumor
in The News of The Beatles paper
that you might be
leaving the group.
Rubbish, I'm contracted.
I've been trying to
get out for years.
You've been
writing some poetry.
What paper?
A paper called
The News of The Beatles.
Do you want to see it?
Never heard of it.
No.
Must be American.
Part of their success
came from the fact
that they were not plastic.
They were authentic.
They came out of a
fairly tough city.
They were just being themselves
and that was astonishing.
That was new to actually
be yourself, it was new.
By presenting
themselves genuinely,
The Beatles managed to
highlight the mannered,
stilted exterior of
British cultural life
at a time when it was already
showing signs of weakness.
Polite society's attitude
to all forms of behavior,
in particular sex,
had been prudish and
stuffy for centuries,
but by the early 1960s
things were changing.
At the beginning of the decade
the novel Lady
Chatterley's Lover
was successfully published.
Withheld from the general
public since the late 1920s,
this erotic tale of love
across the class divide
became a phenomenon
upon its release,
quickly selling over
three million copies.
At the same time,
a scandal erupted
at the very heart of the
British Establishment,
with the exposure
of an illicit affair
and a 19-year-old model.
between politician John Profumo
The uptight sexual
attitudes of the British
were being confronted in public.
And then Beatlemania happened.
By the summer of 1963, the
band's overwhelming effect
on teenage girls was becoming
a nationwide epidemic.
Their critics warned
that the Liverpudlians
had unleashed a wave
of sexual frenzy
in their female audience.
Yet the liberation that The
Beatles offered these girls
was more complicated
than it first appeared.
What everybody
wanted to think,
and also didn't want to think,
was this was somehow
all about eroticism,
this was all about sex,
and that what was going on here
was that these young women
were having something
that looked like it
simulated a sexual experience
in response to the sight
and sound of The Beatles.
talked and written about
Therefore, it was always
in the Freudian
terms of hysteria,
which of course is
a sexually charged term also.
Were these girls orgasmic?
Was this orgasmic?
That's not what was going on.
With rock
and roll in the 1950s,
that was a catalyst
for a lot of young men
finding a reason to be
something other than a version
of their dad when they
became adolescents.
It wasn't necessarily
fabulously articulate
to dress as a teddy boy and
be a bit rowdy on the street,
but at least it was
finding an identity.
I think for a young female,
it wasn't quite as
straightforward.
Something like Beatlemania,
the screaming that
surrounded The Beatles,
it's quite tempting
to interpret it
as a sort of howl of frustration
their own identity,
as they try and find
and it's as
inarticulate, in a way,
as teddy boys
rampaging in cinemas.
Do
you deliberately try
and create this
screaming reaction?
No, we just arrive
at the theater,
and they're always
there waiting.
Whenever we're doing a show,
the police always come and say,
"Don't look out the window,
'cause you excite them."
These girls were
controlling public space,
and nobody could do
anything about it.
It's a perfect example of what
we would call bad behavior.
Screaming, yelling,
weeping in public.
This is bad behavior
in one way or another.
Yet, it was sanctioned,
not by the authorities,
but by The Beatles themselves.
phenomenon was unstoppable.
The Beatles
At the end of August,
the single She Loves You
became the fastest
selling record
that had ever been
released in the UK.
In less than a year, the
band's success outstripped
that of any artist
who had preceded them.
And the final stage in
their conquest of Britain
came on November 4th, 1963,
when for the first time The
Beatles came face to face
with the highest order
of the Establishment,
the royal family.
The occasion unleashed
the rock and roll rebel
in John Lennon, who saw
in the night's performance
an opportunity too
good to pass up.
John, In
this Royal Variety Show,
when you're appearing
before royalty,
your language has got to be
pretty good, obviously.
Ted Heath saying
This thing about
that he couldn't distinguish..
I can't understand that.
The Queen's English...
I can't understand Teddy
saying that at all, really.
I'm not going to vote for Ted.
But
you're not going
to change your act,
just for the..
Ah no, like, we'll keep the
same kind of thing, won't we?
Oh aye, yes.
Yeah, that's right.
ambivalent relationship with how
Lennon always had an
the Entertainment Establishment
were cozying up to The Beatles.
On the one hand,
the professional in
him loved the fact
that they were being
fantastically successful.
But the rebel in him
found it all hard to take.
So on the occasion of the
Royal Command Performance,
he teased Brian
Epstein by suggesting
swear in front of the Queen.
that he was going to go up and
But in the end, his
professionalism won out.
He managed to create a
little bit of subversion,
but it was very carefully
thought through.
Thank you.
For our last number, I'd
like to ask your help.
Would the people in the
cheaper seats clap your hands?
And the rest of you, if you
just rattle your jewelry.
And this is like a moment
of insurrection, it felt like.
But the thing is it wasn't
quite as radical perhaps
because you look at Lennon's
face after he says it
and he looks as if he's
just admitted to his mum
that he's messed himself,
or something like that!
It was something
really humble pie.
He felt quite sheepish.
But no one else but John
Lennon would come out
and even have the
gall to say that.
a kind of revolutionary,
What may have seemed
insurrectionary moment by
saying, rattle your jewelry,
in a really class driven moment,
was actually punctured
by this sense
that The Beatles were nice boys
and they can get
away with anything.
With the youth
of Britain in their thrall,
The Beatles headed out
to new territories,
traveling to Scandinavia
at the close of the year
and then on to France.
The domestic pop scene
that they left behind
had been transformed
by their success,
and from Liverpudlian acts
like Gerry and the Pacemakers
to London's The Rolling Stones,
new groups were emerging
on an almost weekly basis
to battle it out in the
clubs and on the charts.
The Beatles were
moving on, however,
with manager Brian
Epstein's sights set firmly
of all: America.
on the largest territory
Looking
forward to this American trip,
have you had any
reaction over there?
Have you got any
fan clubs going?
There's one
supposedly started.
They're getting quite
a good response.
12,000 letters a day.
But The Beatle movement's
going over there?
Yeah, it can even be
a Beatle booster, Folks.
I must tell you, by the
way, that Detroit University
have got a Stamp out
The Beatles movement.
Oh yeah?
Ah, no.
We're going to
stamp out Detroit.
They think your
haircuts are un-American.
Well, that's very
observant of them
because we aren't
American actually.
There was always a thing
of, what happens next?
Is The Beatles' bubble
is going to burst?
But it never did.
It just kept going on.
If
Britain was suffering
a particularly harsh
winter when The Beatles
had first set the charts
alight in early 1963,
when their single I
Want to Hold Your Hand
reached America
the following year,
it entered a nation grappling
with far greater misfortunes.
Having emerged from
the Second World w*r
as one of the world's
two superpowers,
the following decade
had been dominated
by the country's
hostile relationship
with the Soviet Union
and the thr*at of
a full blown nuclear w*r.
But Americans
themselves were enjoying
the fruits of
a flourishing economy,
culture had developed
a strong consumer
and domestic confidence
was running high.
In 1960, President John
F. Kennedy came to office,
a young, charismatic politician
who embodied this new confidence
and who promised a bright
and optimistic future.
My fellow citizens
of the world,
ask not what America
will do for you,
but what together we can
do for the freedom of man.
later, in November 1963,
Three years
his assassination shook
the country to its core.
There was this injection
of energy into American life
that he represented.
He was young, he was handsome.
It represented such a marked
change from Dwight Eisenhower.
Eisenhower was a carry-over
from World w*r II.
Obviously, he was a w*r hero.
He was an extension of that
generation into modern America.
was modern America.
But John Kennedy
All of the optimism
and youthfulness.
The baby boom was going on.
You know, it was kind of
epitomized by John Kennedy.
And the Kennedy
assassination just,
it just ended that.
The Beatles
represented, also, youth,
just as John Kennedy did,
and wit and intelligence.
Certainly, for young people
it turned things
around immediately.
The Beatles just lit America up.
I'm sure it could have
been something else.
I'm sure that some other joyful
manifestation of something
could have occurred, but
what occurred was a song.
And it's really
important to realize
in Britain,
The Beatles' personalities,
their repartee, their
whole public performance
was a critical part of the
way they came to the attention
of the British public.
In America, it was a song.
♪ Oh yeah I tell you somethin'
♪ I think you'll understand
♪ When I say that somethin'
♪ I want to hold your hand ♪
It was the perfect vehicle
to come into this traumatized
national atmosphere.
What is the dominant
quality of the sound
of John Lennon and Paul
McCartney signing together?
Joy, joy in performance,
joy in listening to
one another's voices,
reinforcement is going on here.
joy in whatever kind of
That's painting with
really broad strokes.
There's nothing
subtle about that.
There is no
question The Beatles
changed everything immediately.
I Want to Hold Your Hand
made a gigantic impact.
Then of course the
flood gates opened,
not only with one great
Beatles' song after another,
but the British Invasion.
I mean, The Beatles just
knocked the door down.
What The
Beatles had done to Britain
they were now doing to America.
Released at the close of
1963, within two months
I Want to Hold Your Hand had
sold more than a million copies
and became the band's first
number one single in the US.
A week after they
topped the charts,
John, Paul, George and
Ringo crossed the Atlantic
and arrived in New York City
screaming teenage fans.
to greet a new set of
They were also met by
members of the press
keen to understand this
foreign phenomenon,
and the group introduced them
to their unique brand
of informal humor,
as rare in America as
it had been in Britain.
There's no question
that the way they dealt
with the press was original.
It was quite clear that they
were not like anything else.
How smart they really
were, how funny they were!
John and Paul in particular
were extremely intelligent,
articulate, original people.
And George was also
a very droll guy.
And Ringo was sort
of a natural clown.
Who was just that quick,
that smart,
who was a pop star?
I must be forgetting somebody,
but damned if I can
think of who it would be.
as funny records or as music?
Do you think of your records
No, we think that
it's rather peculiar.
Do you feel they're musical?
Obviously they're musical,
because it's music, isn't it?
Instruments make music.
It's a record.
It's musical.
You know: ♪ Bom ♪
It's music, isn't it?
♪ Bom ♪
That's music too.
He's good.
He knows music.
All right, but
what do you call it?
Do you call it rock and roll?
We try not to define it.
We've got so many wrong
classifications of it.
It's no use, we
just call it music.
Even if you don't.
With a question mark?
Pardon?
With a question mark?
No.
With an exclamation mark.
The underlying message
of The Beatles' wit
was about a youth movement
in their press conferences
that wasn't going to be
determined by old people.
From the point of
The Beatles' arrival,
they completely reinvented
how culture works.
Before that everything..
fashion, movies, music..
it all was top down.
It all was what grown-ups liked,
and then it filtered
down to the kids.
After a year or two,
suddenly it was young people
who were determining everything.
That started with The Beatles.
Having broken
all previous sales records
in Britain the year beforehand,
by April 1964, the band made
Billboard Hot 100 history
by becoming the only act ever
to occupy the first five
positions on the chart.
The Four Mop-Tops were now
revolutionizing popular music
in America too,
and Beatlemania spread like
wildfire throughout the country.
And then, in July,
following the time-honored
career trajectory
of all post-w*r
popular entertainers,
the band starred in their
first full-length feature film.
Yet A Hard Day's Night
was, unsurprisingly,
unlike anything that
had preceded it.
♪ It's been a hard day's night
♪ And I been working
like a dog ♪
♪ It's been a hard day's
night... ♪
A Hard Day's Night
Music movies before
were profit-making ventures
intended exclusively
for the teen audience
of whatever artist
happened to be in now.
A Hard Day's Night
just flipped that.
They took what was a toss-off
form, the rock movie,
and made it something great.
Directed by
American Richard Lester,
the film created an
entirely new language
for rock and roll cinema.
Previously, musicians had
all made their transition
to the big screen playing
fictional characters
created by screenwriters.
In A Hard Day's Night, however,
The Beatles played
themselves in a comedy
inspired by their own
experiences of fame.
It was both a commercial
and a critical phenomenon.
They're playing themselves
in a fictional film.
That didn't happen.
the early career of The Beatles
So much of what happened in
hadn't really happened before.
They were breaking through
on so many different levels.
Tell me, how did
you find America?
Turn left at Greenland.
Has success changed your life?
Yes.
I'd like to keep Britain tidy.
Are you a mod or a rocker?
No, I'm a mocker.
Have you any hobbies?
As I see it, it's
really A Hard Day's Night
that establishes them as
something completely new
and interesting beyond
your wildest imaginings.
I don't snore.
You do, repeatedly.
Do I snore, John?
Yeah, you're
a window rattler, Son.
That's just your opinion.
Do I snore, Paul?
With a trombone
hooter like yours
it would be unnatural
if you didn't.
mock the afflicted.
No, Paulie, don't
Ah, come off it.
It's only a joke.
It may be a joke,
but it's his nose.
He can't help having
a hideous great hooter,
and a poor little head
trembling under
the weight of it.
This was not the
rock and roll movie
that you were expecting
to see, not at all.
And although their wit,
they were always funny
it had been clear
on the microphone,
its irreverence
and its irreverence
about themselves
was just completely
unprecedented.
And, of course, it just made
them seem even more godlike.
And
while The Beatles
embarked on a substantial US
tour in the summer of '64,
back in Britain
the whole country
was evolving in their wake.
Following the sex scandals
of the previous year,
the nation had turned
against the Establishment
and voted in the
Labor government
of new Prime Minister
Harold Wilson,
a man who seemed to
represent the voice
of a younger, more
progressive United Kingdom.
Harold Wilson actually became
leader of the Labor party
The Beatles were having
around the same time that
the first stirrings
of huge success.
He was northern.
Let's not forget that.
So this was again part of
this big northern powerhouse.
You had The Beatles on
the popular culture sense,
and then you had Harold Wilson
who was reflecting modernity
in the political sense.
We're thrusting
into a new world.
We were behind
Europe in the '50s.
The Tories had let us down.
He wanted to:
Let's get modern.
Like the Italians, like the
French, like the Germans,
let's get working
and let's make everyone enjoy
the fruits of the success.
And central to this new,
progressive Britain
was its youth.
The staggering
international success
of the homegrown pop scene
had injected the younger
generation with confidence,
country's growing prosperity,
and, boosted by the
a new consumer culture emerged.
Fresh from the breeding
grounds of the art colleges,
the modern ideas
of Britain's budding
designers were unleashed.
This was nowhere more
apparent than in fashion,
and its nerve center in London's
bustling Carnaby Street.
This was the first time that
young people had enough money
to buy records, to buy clothes,
to have their hair cut.
Out of that almost immediately
came a separate youth market.
Carnaby Street thrived.
Up until that point,
when a girl left school,
she immediately began
dressing like her mother.
whereas someone like Mary Quant
made dresses you could run in,
you could dance in and do
stuff that young people do.
And, of course, that
transformed the whole face
of British fashion.
Everything felt
modern, new, fresh.
Everywhere you looked the world
started to look different.
The black and white of the
early Beatles and pre-Beatles,
even with The Beatles
all in black and white,
even A Hard Day's Night
was in black and white.
Within a year, the colors
started to really emerge,
the green sh**t
of a new culture.
Although they
had played the central role
in cultivating this
new cultural landscape,
by late 1964, The Beatles
themselves were growing weary
of their Eight Days a Week fame.
In an attempt to escape
from Beatlemania,
both John Lennon
and George Harrison
had moved to rural Surrey,
30 miles from the
center of London,
and Ringo Starr would join
them there the following year.
In December, Beatles For Sale,
the band's fourth studio
album, was released,
signs of fatigue.
and it clearly showed
You only have to
look at the cover.
These are young men
exhausted really
by a couple of years
of Beatlemania.
It was just obvious that
they were becoming worn out,
and that the incredible
appeal of early fame,
which they just rode that
like a wonderful wave,
and you can see and feel the joy
in the records and
the interviews.
By Beatles for Sale, it's
losing its luster quite quickly.
Yet the onward
march of youth culture
would soon revive the band.
While the kaleidoscopic
colors of Carnaby Street
were in full bloom,
a more experimental
subculture was developing
in West London, the
leaders of which
would soon cross paths
with The Beatles.
Inspired by avant-garde
literature, art and music,
this loose group of
artists and artisans
lacked a sense of community.
In June 1965, however,
Barry Miles, the manager
of renowned independent
bookshop Better Books,
arranged a momentous poetry
event at London's Albert Hall,
featuring Allen Ginsberg
and other leading
American b*at writers.
It was of huge significance,
uniting the various
creative clans
counterculture.
of an emerging British
The big poetry reading
at the Albert Hall in '65
and was I think the
first time a constituency
was seen in London.
Up until that point the
actors and the poets
and the filmmakers and the
people who ran boutiques,
none of them knew each other.
At this event,
which was basically
a b*at generation reading
of Allen Ginsberg, Lawrence
Ferlinghetti and Gregory Corso,
all of these people
came together
into the Albert Hall,
7,000 people.
The whole thing
was a giant party,
really like the first mass
networking session, I suppose.
At
this pivotal event
that he had helped organize,
Miles met John Dunbar,
an artist friendly
with both Allen Ginsberg
and Gregory Corso
young singer Marianne Faithful.
and who had recently married
Together, they
planned a new center
for underground activities,
the Indica Bookshop and Gallery,
and this would
bring Miles directly
into The Beatles' world.
We went along
to the Albert Hall
and a friend called
Paolo Leone went,
"Oh, you should meet this guy."
Miles worked at Better
Books at that point.
So we got chatting.
I don't know how many people
it holds, the Albert Hall,
couple of thousand,
5,000, I don't know.
Anyway, we kind of thought,
everybody's paid a quid
to see this,
so maybe we could do a shop.
We decided to combine forces
and start a bookshop
art gallery combined.
His best friend was a
guy called Peter Asher
who at that point was
in Peter and Gordon,
a little rock and folk duo
who had number
one hits, in fact,
in Britain and
America and Japan.
And so Peter had some money,
so naturally we looked to Peter
to finance this venture.
Consequently, we
started a company
called Miles, Asher
and Dunbar, MAD.
I got to know Peter, of
course, through this.
He was living at home
with his parents.
his sister Jane Asher.
Also living at home was
Jane was a TV personality.
She interviewed people.
She was a child star in films
and did a lot on the radio.
Also living there was
Jane Asher's boyfriend
who was Paul McCartney,
who was living on the top floor
in a little attic room
next to Peter's room.
So there was this
extraordinary household
that I got introduced to.
up the bookshop,
And when I was setting
we had all the books
delivered to the basement
because we hadn't
found any premises yet.
Obviously, through that I
got to know Paul as well.
He would come in late at
night, browse through the books
and just leave me a note
saying what he'd taken.
So he was my first customer,
in fact, in the bookshop.
When we did find some premises,
he helped put up the
shelves and paint the walls,
so he was very, very involved
with the whole project.
It was wonderful
to get to know him.
While his
bandmates had fled London
in favor of the
quiet suburban life,
through his contact with
the progressive art world,
Paul McCartney soon became the
most cultured of The Beatles.
Where John Lennon had
been married for years
and was raising a young son,
with girlfriend Patti Boyd
George Harrison had moved in
and Ringo Starr was a newlywed,
McCartney was actively
pursuing fresh sounds
and fresh concepts, with Miles
as his avant-garde guide.
In his own words,
he used to go round London
with his antenna out.
One day he would go to
see a John Cage concert
or Luciano Berio or
some electronic music.
Then the next day he would
go to see Tessie O'Shea
at the Talk of the Town,
or some torch singer
down at The Blue Angel.
It was all being sucked in.
McCartney was very much
the culturally aware Beatle
about town, while the others
went into a slightly
cozier existence
in the stockbroker belt.
He was still curious,
he was still hungry
for any stimulation.
It's around this time,
1965, 1966,
begins to drive The Beatles.
that McCartney really
He hung around in
London, being stimulated,
and bringing all of that
back to The Beatles' table
and giving them, continuing
to give them an artistic edge.
That artistic
edge would prove unmistakable
when The Beatles headed
to the studio in mid-1965
to record the album Rubber Soul.
Across the previous year,
the wave of bands inspired
by The Beatles' example
up with the Liverpudlians,
had not only begun to catch
but in some cases
threatened to overtake them.
Following Lennon and
McCartney's lead,
the Rolling Stones had
managed to break America
and had begun to
write their own hits.
Folk icon Bob Dylan
had gone electric
and transformed into the
preeminent poet of rock,
and new bands were emerging,
from The Who to The Byrds,
introducing fresh
sounds and perspectives.
Yet The Beatles were ready
to pave the way once again.
In pursuit of total
creative control,
with Rubber Soul, producer
George Martin booked the band
into Abbey Road Studios
for an entire month,
turning conventional
recording rules on their head.
Before Rubber Soul,
a professional recording day
was overseen by recording
engineers in white coats.
the morning, a break for lunch,
And there was three hours in
and three hours
in the afternoon.
And that was it.
That was your recording day.
When Rubber Soul came along,
they had enough clout to say,
we want a bit more
flexibility than that.
We might want to stay on
and record into the night.
They invented the idea
of treating a record album
as if it were a work of art.
anything that's worthwhile.
It takes time to do
So you had this new idea,
the idea of the recording studio
as compositional laboratory.
This was this incredible
real revolution,
not just how to make records,
but how to make music.
♪ There are places I
remember... ♪
Rubber Soul looks like
the moment when pop music
could become popular art.
The whole album had a sense of
being an artistic statement.
of The Beach Boys said,
Brian Wilson himself
when I heard Rubber Soul
I knew that's how good
pop records could be.
They could be a
whole artistic world.
That's how good Rubber Soul was.
♪ Is there anybody going
to listen to my story ♪
♪ All about the girl
who came to stay ♪
♪ She's the kind of girl
♪ You want so much
it makes you sorry ♪
♪ Still you don't
regret a single day ♪
♪ Ah, girl
♪ Girl, girl ... ♪
John Lennon is suddenly
writing lyrics like:
"Was she told when she was young
"that pain would
lead to pleasure?
"Did she understand
it when they said
"that a man must break his back
to earn his day of leisure?
Will she still believe
it when he's dead?"
And that's in
a song called Girl.
Those aren't pop song lyrics.
a very different feel.
That gave Rubber Soul just
♪ Say the word
and you'll be free ♪
♪ Say the word and be like me
♪ Say the word I'm thinking of
♪ Have you heard
the word is love...♪
You could hear that they
were actually writing songs
as artists, not just
as pop performers.
So you had songs like The Word,
which is an extraordinary
song for 1965.
that word is love."
"Say the word and
This is two years before
the Summer of Love.
The despair of Beatles for Sale,
and there they are
now reaching out
for something that they've
picked up on something else.
And
just as Rubber Soul
reestablished the band's
musical superiority,
the four young Northern radicals
were officially recognized
by the British Establishment.
the highest accolades
Having already received
from the entertainment world,
in October 1965
they were invited to Buckingham
Palace to meet the Queen.
Here they would be
anointed as members
of the Most Excellent Order of
the British Empire, or MBEs.
This has been one of the
talents of the Establishment
for a very long time.
In fact, this is what
the MBEs and knighthoods
and all sorts of things
like that were all about.
At a certain point,
renegades need to be
brought into the fold.
But it's at that very
moment that they now,
'cause they were always
importing musical influences,
but they also become a conduit
for imported American influences
in these other fields that
they're getting interested in.
Miles is turning them
onto Ginsberg's poetry.
Robert Fraser is turning them
onto American pop
artists, things like this.
They've become
citizens of the world.
So it's perfectly appropriate
that at that very moment
the British
Establishment should say,
"Time for you to come
to Buckingham Palace
and be certified as members
of the British Empire."
John, had
you met the Queen before?
No, first time.
What did she
think of you in the flesh?
Did she tell you?
No, she's not going
to say either way.
She seemed pleasant
enough to us.
Made us relaxed.
Now
you've got this,
do you feel that you're becoming
part of the Establishment,
as it's so called?
No, don't feel any different.
I still feel just like before.
I feel exactly the same.
You feel exactly the same.
It was a recognition that
the pop world had come of age.
They were the aristocracy
of the pop world,
of pop culture, of
working class culture.
So it was inevitable in a way
that they would be rewarded
in the spirit of
the new democracy.
But also it closed
a chapter, because from then on
they went off and
did it their way
which wasn't the
Establishment's way.
In fact, it was the
beginning of a period
of great antagonism with the
Establishment and pop culture,
and The Beatles, as usual,
were pretty much at
the center of that.
The Beatles'
position at the center
of these new developments
in youth culture
was crucial to their evolution
over the next two years.
With McCartney now
closely affiliated
with key players in London's
underground artistic scene,
and with similar movements in
both New York and Los Angeles
influencing American musicians,
the stage was now set
for more radical ideas
to enter the mainstream.
And as these were developing,
a new drug and a new figurehead
were gaining prominence
on both sides of the Atlantic.
The message is very simple.
Six words.
Turn on, tune in, drop out.
Psychologist
Timothy Leary had emerged
prominent spokesman
in the US as a
for the hallucinogen
LSD, or acid.
Having led psychedelic
experiments at
Harvard University
since the turn of the '60s,
and with b*at poet Allen
Ginsberg a key early supporter,
by 1965 Leary was becoming a
major countercultural figure.
Tim Leary was a psychiatrist,
psychoanalyst, psychotherapist.
He claimed to have
something like seven PhDs.
He was a professor at Harvard
who began working
originally with psilocybin
before he got onto LSD
as a way of treating prisoners
and treating mental illness.
I mean, the thing is
Leary was very much part
of the Establishment.
He'd worked right across the
normal lines of psychiatry.
But, of course, when he started
to take all these things,
he contacted his own self
on a cellular level
an awful lot of this
and he realized that
was gameplaying and rubbish.
So he basically felt that this
was in fact a spiritual key
that he'd been handed
and that his message
really should be
to encourage people to
leave the Establishment
and find themselves
creatively or spiritually.
And the newly
appointed MBEs, The Beatles,
were already on their way
to leaving the Establishment
through hallucinogens.
and rediscovering themselves
John Lennon and George
Harrison had been introduced
to LSD in early 1965, and had
been joined by Ringo Starr
for their second experience
with the drug later that year.
Combined with Paul
McCartney's newfound interest
in experimental art through
his London social circle,
the world's most commercial band
were ready to take a
very unexpected detour.
discover who they were.
They wanted to
They had no real sense of who
they were, I think, anymore.
So they were picking
up the pieces,
putting it together it again.
How the hell did they make sense
of the goldfish bowl life
they'd been thrown into?
From playing at the Casbah
in Liverpool, and the Cavern,
to being feted all
around the world
and just seeing
themselves reflected back,
of them everywhere,
people getting pieces
not knowing really
who they were.
And I think that was the
engagement of pop culture,
represented by The Beatles
with the counterculture,
which was growing in confidence.
And the fact that the two
started to join forces
in London, in San Francisco..
they sparked off each other.
It was
at the close of 1965
that McCartney drew the
ever skeptical Lennon
out of his Surrey sanctuary
and introduced him to the
underground world of Miles
and the Indica
Bookshop and Gallery.
One day, very shortly
after we opened,
Paul McCartney showed
up with John Lennon,
I think it was the first time
John was ever in the shop.
He was looking for
a book by "Nitzske."
I just didn't know who he meant.
It took me maybe half a minute
to figure out it was Nietzsche.
for him to get quite irritated
And that was just enough time
and think I was being this
middle class university type,
putting him down.
And then Paul had
to do his usual role
of sort of calming everybody.
"No, no, he went to art
school just like you.
It's just 'cause you
didn't know how to say it!"
In the meantime,
I remembered we had
only just the day before
had a big shipment
of The Psychedelic
Experience by Tim Leary.
John curled up on
the settee with it.
And literally in Tim
Leary's introduction
before you even get to the text,
it says, turn off
your mind, relax
and drift down the stream,
or however the lines are
that finally showed up
only about a month later
in Tomorrow Never Knows.
This song would be
the most innovative composition
of the band's career to date.
Alongside Lennon's
Leary-inspired lyrics,
Paul McCartney's contributions
to the track were
equally radical.
Having joined Miles at a number
of avant-garde
electronic music events,
the Beatle had begun
enthusiastically working
on his own experimental
compositions
using loops of recorded tape.
As The Beatles
entered the studio
to begin producing
Tomorrow Never Knows,
George Martin invited McCartney
to bring these to the sessions.
He had produced a
whole load of them
and brought them into the
studio just in a plastic bag.
They arranged the studio
so that there were
different tape recorders
in different parts of the
Abbey Road studio complex.
And I was in a room
with Peter Asher
quite a long loop
and we were playing
which entailed
holding a jam jar.
The loop went round the jam jar,
then past the playback
head and then back over.
We had to keep it in tension.
I think there were eight
or maybe even 10 of us
around the building
all standing holding
pencils or jam jars.
And all of this information
was going into the deck.
there with his headphones.
George Martin was just sitting
Whatever he did, of course,
it was impossible
to ever reproduce.
That was it.
That was the master as
soon as he pressed "record."
When I heard the playback,
it was astonishing actually.
I thought, "Good God,
this is the future."
♪ Turn off your mind,
relax, and float downstream ♪
♪ It is not dying,
it is not dying... ♪
The studio was an instrument.
this almost invisible console
Once upon a time, it was just
that was just there
to absorb what was being
played on the floor.
Now it was actually being
used as an instrument.
And it was more important
than individual
instruments, in a way.
This was unprecedented, and
the other interesting thing
about Tomorrow Never Knows,
it was the first
recording for Revolver.
It was done in April '66.
I mean, this is extraordinary.
Tomorrow Never Knows
is undoubtedly the most
psychedelic song recorded
at that period.
There's nothing else like it.
I mean, the word
psychedelic wasn't really
in popular parlance at all.
It was the title of a book
that John got from
Indica Gallery.
Tomorrow Never Knows
is definitely the world's
first psychedelic track.
The interesting
thing is, of course,
The Beatles were not only the
world's most commercial band,
but at that point they were also
the world's most experimental
band, which is very unusual.
That became clear
when The Beatles' follow-up
to Rubber Soul, Revolver,
was issued in August 1966.
Alongside Tomorrow Never Knows,
the album's tracks were brimming
with invention and originality.
If Rubber Soul had suggested
that pop music could be art,
Revolver confirmed it.
was The Beatles
Revolver really
moving towards the
fifth dimension.
"She said, she said I know
what it's like to be dead."
The Beatles, Lennon,
singing about
I know what
it's like to be dead.
What the hell is going on?
Well, they've been
partying with The Byrds
on the West Coast and
dropping acid by then.
dr*gs, we have a very
negative view on them now
and you can be imprisoned
by them, but in the mid '60s
people felt it was the opposite.
It was to loosen the
chains of imprisonment,
this single view
of who you were.
And then suddenly
you had perspectives,
and with Revolver
you can hear it,
with all the different
production sounds..
it was all altered states
and perspectives.
to turn rock and roll
The idea was basically
into a legitimate art form.
And I think they did it.
So many of the
things they tried,
from feedback and
reverse tapes and sitars,
whatever they did,
all over the world other
bands immediately tried out.
They were tremendous leaders.
Brian Epstein was concerned
that they were going too far
ahead of their fan base.
But they were very,
very sensible,
they always wanted to bring
the fans along with them.
They didn't want to
become some kind of wild,
avant-garde band that only
150 people had heard of.
Epstein's
fears that the band
would start to lose some of
their audience were unfounded
regarding their musical output,
but would prove accurate
in terms of their politics.
With The Beatles' compositions
expressing a more
complex world view,
journalists began to ask them
more significant questions.
In a series of
landmark interviews
for British newspaper
The Evening Standard,
the individual band
members were quizzed
over their thoughts
on current affairs.
Lennon's frank opinions
on Christianity
proved uncontroversial upon
their publication in Britain,
yet when they were
reprinted in America,
the first scandal of
The Beatles' career erupted,
with a single quote
becoming instantly infamous,
"We're more popular
than Jesus now."
The first time anybody
had asked John Lennon
questions about his
life and his philosophy.
And it just passed.. whoosh..
without..
But months later, all
those teenage magazines
just printed that:
"We're bigger than Jesus,"
which caused a lot of problems.
A lot of problems.
Death threats and
records being burnt
and broken and smashed,
and the Ku Klux Klan,
and concerts being canceled.
It was very unpleasant
for everyone.
Well, originally I was
pointing out that fact
in reference to England,
that we meant more to
kids than Jesus did,
or religion, at that time.
I wasn't knocking it
or putting it down.
I was just saying it.
It was a fact.
Lennon's "The Beatles are
more popular than Jesus" line,
which even to me as a kid, I
could see what he was saying.
I mean, he wasn't saying..
It's what he said in his
quote unquote "apology."
"I wasn't saying we're
better than Jesus.
"I wasn't saying it's
good or it's bad.
It's just that it's true."
And to me it was
absolutely true.
It was unquestionable.
There was such a
backlash against that.
It made you aware of
some of the fault lines
in American culture.
Or made you aware once
again that what seemed maybe
like a unified culture,
really wasn't.
And it was harsh.
You know, it was scary.
lines in American society
These fault
had been growing
since the early 1960s,
and where the civil rights
campaigns for racial equality
had most clearly exposed
these divisions
earlier in the decade,
by the mid 1960s
there was no issue more
pressing or more polarizing
than the Vietnam w*r.
Since the US entered into
the conflict in 1962,
public opposition
it had provoked widespread
and organized protests both
in the US and across Europe.
The underground movement
McCartney had become involved in
had itself emerged from the
early '60s pacifist movement
in the UK, and by the time
of their 1966 US tour,
privately both he
and his bandmates
were opponents of the w*r.
As they traveled across America,
already battling controversy,
the ever honest Liverpudlians
came under fire once again
absolutely clear to the press.
when they made this position
In 1966, the w*r was
without any question
much more on people's minds
in America than The Beatles.
Nineteen-sixty-six was the year
the w*r exploded.
Nineteen-sixty-six was the year
that the number of draftees
more than doubled
in this country.
Nineteen-sixty-six
was also the year
in which the w*r really got
terrible in Vietnam itself.
It was a bigger, bigger
deal all the time.
There was more
destruction going on.
At the height of American
involvement in Vietnam,
they had 550,000
troops in that country.
I mean, that's a
lot of young people.
There was a draft in
the United States.
The w*r had come home
in a big way.
It wasn't an abstract
issue in any regard.
And youth representatives
like The Beatles,
people who were part
of youth culture,
were expected to
take a stand on it.
It seems to me
you've always been successful
because you've been outspoken
and direct and forthright
and all this sort of thing.
Does it seem a bit hard to you
that people are now knocking
you for this very thing?
Yes, Richard.
It seems hard.
It seems very hard.
But you know, free speech.
But is it possible
just to say what you think
all the time? What about
14-year-old teenagers
who think you're
absolutely marvelous
and can't bear to be hurt?
When we say anything
like that, we don't say it,
as older people seem to
think, to be offensive.
We mean it helpfully, you know.
And if it's wrong what
we say, okay, it's wrong.
wrong about that one.
People can say you're
But in many cases, we
believe it's right.
We're quite serious about it.
Do you mind
being asked questions?
For example, in America
people keep asking you
questions about Vietnam.
Does this seem useful?
Well, I don't know.
If you can say
that w*r's no good
and a few people believe
you, then it may be good.
You can't say it too much,
though, that's the trouble.
It seems a bit
silly to be in America
and for none of them
to mention Vietnam
as if nothing was happening.
They were the first band
to be asked about politics,
about Vietnam, about a whole
number of social issues.
And in fact, I mean,
although Dylan came
a little bit before,
as far as I know, he never
once ever came out in public
against the Vietnam w*r.
So maybe The Beatles
were the first there,
in terms of a very
well-known band.
Well, it cost them a lot.
There were then teenage girls
in the South, in the Midwest,
who didn't like
The Beatles anymore.
I think The Beatles
are a real talented group,
but I think they need
to watch what they say,
because they're in
such a position
that a lot of teenagers
really think of them
as something really big.
When they say things like that
some teenagers are going to
just believe anything they say.
In 1965, The Beatles
were universally beloved.
Nobody didn't like them.
They were just
wonderful and funny
and creative and unthreatening.
As they became more involved
in the counterculture
and more representative of it,
that belovedness.
they lost a lot of
They helped to move
a lot of people
who might not otherwise
have gone along
with the stuff that happened
in '66 and '67 and '68.
Without any question,
they were inspirational and
influential in that way.
But they also lost
a lot of people.
They became part of what
many, many people in America,
of people in America,
probably a majority
regarded as a disturbing...
loosening of values and morals.
And a political thr*at.
And at exactly
this point,
The Beatles ceased operating
as a traditional band.
Upon their return from the US,
they announced that they were
abandoning live performance,
with the final show
of the American tour
their last ever paid gig.
And then the most photographed
celebrities in the world
the public eye altogether.
simply disappeared from
Can I have a word?
Are The Beatles going to
go their own ways in 1967?
We could be on
our own or together.
We're always involved with each
other, whatever we're doing.
Could you ever see a time
when you weren't
working together?
I could see us working
not together for a period,
but we'd always get together
for one reason or another.
people for ideas as well,
I mean, you need other
you know,
and we all get along fine.
Rumors of a
break-up began to circulate.
Yet, away from the spotlight,
the four Liverpudlians
were hard at work
on their most ambitious
production to date.
The public would have
to wait for months
before The Beatles reappeared,
and when, in February 1967,
they finally did,
both their image and their sound
had undergone a
startling transformation.
Strawberry Fields of course
was originally intended
as part of the Sgt. Pepper
sessions.
But the press kept on saying,
"Are The Beatles finished?
"They've disappeared,
they've run out of ideas,"
not realizing that
they were working
on one of their
greatest achievements.
And to me, obviously,
it wasn't unexpected
because, well, I was at
some of the sessions.
But I think to the public
it came as quite a shock.
♪ Let me take you down
♪ 'Cause I'm going
to Strawberry Fields... ♪
"Strawberry Fields Forever"
was something else again.
It was:
The Beatles had gone weird.
That was basically
what people felt.
What is wrong with them?
That's..
"Let me take you down
'cause I'm going to
Strawberry Fields."
The voice, it didn't
sound like Lennon.
Well, that's because they'd
slowed the voice down.
Nothing sounded
normal on that record.
The whole production.
Everything was up in the
air, put through effects.
And then there was a video that
was made at the time as well,
sh*t in Sevenoaks or somewhere,
and it was the strangest thing.
he was disembodied.
You had Ringo as if
They were falling out of trees.
There was nothing
like that at all.
♪ Living is easy
with eyes closed ♪
♪ Misunderstanding all you see
♪ It's getting
hard to be someone ♪
♪ But it all works out
♪ It doesn't matter much to
me... ♪
It had more in common
with Salvador Dali
and the Surrealists and Dada.
All these highfalutin
art kind of ideas,
which was once
the preserve, really,
mainly,
of the educated elite.
But this is The Beatles now
bringing it to everybody.
The short film for Strawberry
Fields had a seismic impact
because it showed that they
had traveled a distance
that, well, I felt it
kind of incumbent on me
to then travel as a young
person who believed in them.
It was like, "Wow, okay,
this is what's being
asked of me now."
It wasn't just,
"Oh, they look cool."
It was, "All right,
this is the path."
And that
path became even clearer
as the year progressed.
By the turn of 1967,
the counterculture
was gaining momentum,
with huge numbers of youths
gravitating towards
its new Mecca,
San Francisco's
Haight-Ashbury district.
From here, a strong musical
scene was developing,
headed by psychedelic
bands The Grateful Dead
and the Jefferson Airplane,
and word spread of a new
phenomenon: the hippy.
In the UK, the underground's
influence expanded,
with its own newspaper,
The International Times,
a live music club, UFO,
and emerging stars
the Pink Floyd
and the American,
Jimi Hendrix.
Into this blooming
scene of peace, love
and mind-expanding dr*gs,
came The Beatles' most
ambitious work to date,
one which would not
only capture the essence
of this new sensibility,
but also transform the
record industry once again:
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely
Hearts Club Band.
Presented as a work of art,
unifying the album as a whole,
with a single concept
it announced that the age of
the traditional pop single
and the pop band was over.
Sgt. Pepper revolutionized
the record industry.
All of a sudden, albums
sold as much as singles.
Sgt. Pepper sold
in the millions.
On pure business terms, it
was a revolutionary release.
But also it was
revolutionary in terms
record industry know
of letting the
precisely what it could sell.
What you could do is invest
in the finest artistic minds
of a generation and give them
the freedom to make their art,
package it up as an album
and sell it in the millions.
Paul had this idea of,
"We want to get away
"from being the four mop-tops
and The Fab Four.
"So we create this new
name for ourselves.
"We're going to be
a different group.
That'll give us the freedom
to do what the hell we want."
That is the basic concept.
The songs..
many of those songs
could have been on
any of the other albums.
They weren't specific
to that particular one.
But the influence of it
was staggering.
The Beatles were a force
to be reckoned with.
Even The Stones were badly
affected by them at that point.
to deal with them.
Everyone just had
They were like a roadblock.
If you were in the
music business,
you had to deal with
this great big thing
in front of you and get
round it the best you could.
♪ Lucy in the sky
with diamonds ♪
♪ Lucy in the sky
with diamonds ♪
♪ Lucy in the sky
with diamonds ♪
♪ Ah
to a bridge... ♪
♪ Follow her down
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely
Heart Club's Band,
I mean, just the title
itself was a piece of art
and something that
mystified people.
Peter Blake did the cover,
and Peter Blake was the
father of British Pop Art.
Everything about Sgt. Pepper
was an enigma.
The fact that they were
pretending to not be The Beatles
but to be another band.
The locked groove at
the end of side two.
Lucy in the sky with
diamonds. Ah, L-S-D.
Secret messages all
the way through.
It was like a work
of literature.
It was like a Ulysses
or something,
where people were just thinking,
I don't quite understand this
but there's definitely
something really going on.
This
combination of imagination
and mystery proved irresistible.
With Sgt. Pepper, The
Beatles transformed
from pop culture icons into
mystics of the modern age.
When The Beatles came
out with their new song,
people started pondering
that these are people
that you're looking
to for meaning.
By '67,
I think the release
of Sgt. Pepper in America
established
The Beatles basically
as the leaders of
the counterculture
along with a few other people
like Allen Ginsberg,
Timothy Leary.
But The Beatles were
the musical leaders.
Right across the board, they
were seen as, yes, as gods.
Leary himself said a lot
of silly things about them,
they were a type of new
superheroes, leaders of men,
and all this stuff.
I'm not convinced that the
youth culture in the mid '60s
were terribly aware of
LSD and Timothy Leary
and even counterculture
attitudes.
If it hadn't been for that
conduit that was The Beatles,
this sort of stuff
might have just stayed
in San Francisco, in California.
The counterculture wasn't
called the "Underground"
for no reason.
Not many people knew about it.
Yet
The Beatles were determined
to spread the word even further.
At the end of June 1967,
less than a month after
the release of Sgt. Pepper's,
the band were invited
to represent Britain
in the first ever
international satellite
television broadcast.
Across the US,
Canada and Europe,
the youthful optimism
of the counterculture
was reaching its peak
during the Summer of Love,
with thousands flocking
to large public events.
With their historic contribution
to the One World broadcast,
The Beatles delivered the
scene's definitive anthem
to an audience of over 500
million viewers worldwide.
The Beatles, true to form,
national representatives
representing their country,
they start with
the national anthem.
The only problem is it's
the French national anthem!
That's a classic.
That is total Beatles humor.
♪ Love, love, love
♪ Love, love, love
♪ Love, love, love... ♪
It was fun.
I was at that one.
It was like a party.
They'd invited a load
of their friends,
The Small Faces and
The Rolling Stones,
and everybody was there,
all in our psychedelic finery.
Sitting on the floor there,
it looked like it might
all explode at some point.
And there was an awful lot
of frantic waving
and people rushing around,
holding on to their headphones
and talking to people.
That was mostly
to do with the international
link-up, though,
because no one had
ever done that before.
It really did go out live
all around the world.
It was fantastic.
♪ All you need is love
♪ All you need is love
♪ All you need is love, love
♪ Love is all you need... ♪
the release of Sgt. Pepper.
This is mere weeks after
Every other band would
choose to use that moment
to promote Sgt. Pepper by doing
a couple of tracks from it.
Right? It just makes total
business sense.
But they took the opportunity
to send a message to the world
that all you need is love.
They'd already been
saying it on Rubber Soul,
the word is love.
But this was the time they
could tell the whole world
all at the same time.
The Beatles are clearly
leading the way.
I think there's a
great significance
in the idea of them sitting
on those high chairs,
with the beautiful people of
London, including Mick Jagger,
sitting at their feet,
looking up at them
and singing along to a song
they've only just heard.
That's powerful.
All You Need Is
Love was an anthem of hope
certain that the old order
from a youth movement
was about to crumble.
The Beatles were steering
an entire generation
into uncharted territory,
yet it would not take
the Establishment long
to respond to these
peaceful revolutionaries.
In the UK, the
police were mobilized
and began to make a
number of drug busts,
arresting not only
prominent figures
on the underground scene
but also Mick Jagger,
Keith Richards
and later Brian Jones
of the Rolling Stones.
These high-profile cases
didn't faze Paul
McCartney, however.
Following the arrests,
he not only paid for,
but also put his name to
a national press advert
calling for the
legalization of marijuana.
Weeks later, he
admitted to a journalist
that he had taken LSD
and repeated this in
a television interview,
much to the shock
of Brian Epstein.
Brian didn't like
things being made public.
He was a very private person,
obviously, because of
his way of life.
The thing about
dr*gs is it wasn't
anything about them
being good or bad.
It's just it was illegal.
often have you taken LSD?
Paul, how
About four times.
Where
did you get it from?
If I was to say where I
got it from, it's illegal.
It's silly to say that.
Don't you believe
that this was a matter
which you should
have kept private?
The thing is, I was asked
a question by a newspaper
and the decision was
whether to tell a lie
or to tell him the truth.
I decided to tell him the truth.
But I really didn't want
to say anything.
If I'd had my decision,
if I had it my way,
I wouldn't have told anyone.
'Cause I'm not trying to
spread the word about this.
But the man from the
newspaper is the man
from the mass medium.
I'll keep it a personal
thing if he does too,
if he keeps it quiet.
But he wanted to spread it.
So it's his responsibility
for spreading it, not mine.
The thing is, Paul
is always honest.
If a reporter asked him,
have you taken LSD?,
he's going to say yes.
He wouldn't lie.
Why should he?
If they're going to
ask that question,
they get an honest answer.
It was a risky thing
for him to say.
It probably gave Brian
Epstein a conniption.
But basically, although The
Beatles had made a lot of money,
they were never really
in it for the money.
Once they had enough to
really live well, that was it.
I think that was a
very good sign of them.
They paid their tax and
they said what they wanted.
The Beatles'
sense of security
was about to be
challenged, however.
In late August, the band were
shocked to receive the news
that their manager
Brian Epstein had d*ed,
their most trusted accomplice.
In his absence they
were suddenly left
without his
stabilizing influence.
At the same time,
their quest for personal and
spiritual growth continued.
George Harrison had
become fascinated
by Indian music in 1965,
and as he immersed
himself in its techniques,
to its spiritual foundations.
he became increasingly drawn
This led him to
discover the Indian guru
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
and his technique of
transcendental meditation.
By mid-1967, Harrison was
introducing his bandmates
to the Maharishi's ideas,
and soon The Beatles had
a new spiritual advisor.
When they first got
involved with him,
I wrote and asked Allen
Ginsberg what the story
was on the Maharishi, in India,
because Ginsberg had lived there
for a number of years
and he knew a lot of the
gurus and the teachers.
He wrote back saying the
Maharishi was very commercial
and that he was under
a lot of criticism in India
for taking disciples' money,
because in fact the
teaching should be free.
So I reported this to
John Lennon who came out
with a wonderful line of,
"Ain't no ethnic bastard
going to get any golden
castles out of me."
Despite his
initial reservations,
in February 1968, Lennon
and his bandmates
traveled to India for an
extended retreat with the guru.
Joined by their various
wives and girlfriends,
their departure to the East
for spiritual fulfillment
made headlines worldwide.
The press swarmed
around the perimeter
14-acre compound,
of the Maharishi's
both intrigued and baffled
by this latest chapter
in The Beatles'
unpredictable journey.
This exposure brought Eastern
religion to the attention
of an enormous audience.
Sometime in January,
it was sudden,
"Right, we're off to Maharishi
to live in a holiday
camp in India."
"Oh, right.
Have a good time.
But they did write a
heck of a lot of songs
while they were there,
churning them out.
The Beatles
introduced the world,
especially the young world,
to things they would
never have stumbled upon
had The Beatles not been there.
The philosophy
behind transcendental
meditation, Buddhism,
they were looking outwards.
Meditation was at
the center of it.
That's actually really
all that matters.
It's the soul.
The reality is here.
Not many people had really
thought about that before.
And if The Beatles, the most
popular band in the world,
the most popular cultural
phenomenon in the world,
were talking earnestly
about this stuff,
obviously, as much as a lot
of the elders might laugh,
at least as many young
people went along with them.
And, you know, sales of
texts of Eastern wisdom
went through the roof
in the late '60s.
People flocked to
see the Maharishi.
The Beatles were this
gateway to another world.
Although the
band emerged from India
both spiritually and
creatively refreshed,
this sense of calm
would be short-lived.
In February 1968, they set up
their own corporation, Apple.
This multifaceted
company was developed
to broaden
The Beatles' activities
and to retain full
control over their output.
Yet it would prove the first
of many overambitious projects
for the band.
As they entered the
studio in the summer
to work on their
follow-up to Sgt. Pepper,
for the first time, creative
and personal disputes
recording sessions.
crept into the
A particular source of
tension was the daily presence
of an outsider in
The Beatles' inner sanctum,
the conceptual artist Yoko Ono,
with whom John Lennon had
fallen deeply in love.
It was a relationship that had
been blossoming, in private,
for more than a year.
While McCartney had been
growing in confidence
through his
underground activities,
in rural Surrey had increased.
Lennon's sense of isolation
Initially finding a
release through LSD,
it was Yoko Ono who offered
him a means of escape.
A relatively unknown artist
when she had traveled to London
with husband Tony Cox in 1966,
it was through
the Indica Gallery
that she came into
contact with Lennon.
Its owner, John Dunbar,
provided the space
for Ono's first UK exhibition,
and it was he who
invited his Beatle friend
to attend this unusual show.
She was plainly an
interesting, powerful woman.
I didn't show ordinary pictures
on the wall at all, really.
And so, you know, she had some
good ideas and I liked them.
She wanted to do a show.
We managed to find
a couple of weeks
where we didn't
have something on.
Yoko was reluctant to
have anybody look at it
until she'd totally finished
and labeled everything.
So we were sort of doing that.
But me and Tony had
to sort of tell her,
"Look, this guy might buy
something, you never know."
He came round and he
did like the ladder
and then looking through
the magnifying glass
and it says "Yes,"
so, he liked that.
The
relationship that developed
across the following two years
would be consummated
in May 1968,
just before The Beatles began
work on the White Album.
Lennon emerged a changed man,
released from an
unhappy marriage
and liberated as an artist.
The arrival of Yoko Ono
into John's life
transformed Lennon completely.
She was the mother,
lover, teacher.
She was kind of everything
really to John. He needed that.
basically a mother figure.
When he met Yoko, she was
I mean, he used to
call her "Mother."
She, for her own reasons,
took him on,
and saved him, actually.
As Ono's presence
made an impact on both Lennon
and the bond
between The Beatles,
the world outside of the
band began to darken.
As the w*r in Vietnam spiraled
further out of control
to the conflict in sight,
and with no apparent end
across the West, the
cultural movement so inspired
by The Beatles
no longer believed
love is all you need.
The progressive, liberal
core of the counterculture
came under fire, with
the assassinations
of, first, Civil Rights
leader Martin Luther King,
and, then, Presidential
candidate Robert Kennedy,
increasing tensions.
Both in the US and Britain,
once peaceful anti-w*r
demonstrations
descended into v*olence.
Student riots brought
Paris to a standstill,
and images of street skirmishes
and police brutality
became commonplace.
As the authorities led
an unforgiving onslaught
on the counterculture,
revolution replaced love
as the new objective.
In '68, it all exploded.
You know, you had
assassinations in the States,
the thr*at of Civil w*r,
Riots in the
Democratic Convention,
riots in Paris, in London,
v*olence on the streets.
Actually, there was
a sort of a fight. Power..
you don't really get power,
it won't trickle down.
It has to be
sort of... forced.
If you look at history,
that tends to be the case.
The Beatles revolution
was a benign one,
through art and love,
flying all over the place.
but by '68, the bricks were
It wasn't just
the sweet utopianism
of the Summer of Love,
but really days of rage.
The demonstrations at
the Democratic Convention
in Chicago in 1968,
you know, was a kind
of dividing line.
You saw the police out
there clubbing kids,
and there really was a sense of,
"We're kind of at w*r now."
Just as this
unrestrained police brutality
tore through Chicago
in August 1968,
The Beatles issued
the single Revolution,
addressing the struggles of
a youth culture under thr*at.
Yet unlike All You Need
Is Love the previous year,
John Lennon's composition
refused to express the voice
of this disillusioned movement
or to accept the call to
arms of the radical Left.
saw The Beatles turned upon
For the first time, this
by their own peers.
Yet Lennon's reluctance
to commit to v*olence
not only led to two different
versions of the track
but also reflected
the inner struggles
that many young people
were dealing with.
The song Revolution,
there are two versions of it.
Lennon goes back and forth on
"Don't you know that
you can count me out"
as far as Revolution
is concerned.
Exactly where you were supposed
to stand was difficult.
All young people
were feeling that.
You know, go to a protest?
Yeah, sure.
Go to a protest that maybe
occupies a building? Oh, maybe.
You know, burning
that building down?
Do you draw the line there?
♪ You say you want
a revolution ♪
♪ Well, you know
change the world ♪
♪ We'd all love to
♪ You tell me that
it's evolution ♪
♪ Well, you know
♪ We'd all love
to see the word ♪
♪ But when you talk
about destruction ♪
♪ Don't you know that
you can count me out, in... ♪
If you're talking
about destruction
Lennon's saying count me out
then he's saying count me in.
He doesn't know.
He's on the fence at that point.
Lennon, as much as he
could be a bit handy,
was seduced by this
idea of peace and love.
He'd just written the
anthem of the previous year.
There always was a
kind of inherent optimism
in The Beatles somehow,
whereas that wasn't true
of Dylan,
it wasn't true of The Stones.
It was almost like
Martin Luther King.
People don't say this now
but there was a sense in which
a lot of the black radicals
who were emerging seemed
more of the moment.
Dr. King seemed
like kind of part
of the protest Establishment.
And in a certain way
The Beatles seemed a
little bit like that too.
If the band were
losing some of their relevance
as a cultural force through
Yoko Ono's influence,
John Lennon ensured that they
remained musical pioneers.
Where Revolution had pulled
its punches politically,
an experimental collage that
he created with his new partner
captured the chaos of 1968
simply through sound itself.
When it was issued on
the band's self-titled LP
at the close of the year,
the track Revolution 9
became the most widely heard
avant-garde composition
ever released.
It was a startling
statement from a man
who had been heralding
only a year beforehand.
in the Summer of Love
He went from one
extreme to the other.
Lennon suddenly saw
it's all gone wrong.
He turned to the flip side,
and the flip side
was Revolution number 9,
Revolution 9,
which was a very,
very different view
of the future.
♪ Number nine, number nine
♪ Number nine, number
nine, number nine... ♪
Revolution 9 was
the sound really
of not just the riots in Paris
or the streets of Chicago.
This is the sound
of the apocalypse.
This is his incredibly
honest depiction
of the worst fear of all
which is a society
and a world in global turmoil.
It's an extraordinary piece,
and one of the scariest pieces
of music you could ever hear.
In the 21st century,
is far more relevant
Revolution 9
than it ever was in '68.
Having delivered
the most extreme composition
in The Beatles' catalog,
Lennon's further
experimental activities
continued outside of the band.
By the end of 1968,
the first of a trilogy of albums
with Yoko Ono was issued
Two Virgins, with a cover
depicting the couple naked.
Still a member of
the most popular
and commercially successful
act in the world,
Lennon was now breaking
every rule imaginable.
Yet the anger in some
quarters of the counterculture
toward the song
Revolution also led him
into a greater political role.
In 1969, as Richard
Nixon was sworn in
as the new President of America,
John Lennon and Yoko Ono emerged
as the world's most
prominent activists.
When Lennon came out and said,
destruction, count me out,
if you're talking about
he was terribly criticized
by the hard Left.
And it seems to me that
his reaction to that
was not to change his
mind about destruction,
but actually to say,
"No, I really don't think
the answer is destruction.
I think the answer
actually is peace."
In March 1969,
John Lennon and Yoko
Ono were married.
the couple embarked
With their honeymoon,
on a high-profile
campaign for peace,
presented as a series of
conceptual art events.
In the spirit of The Beatles'
initial attitude to the press,
the first of these took place
in their hotel bridal suite,
in which they
invited journalists
to discuss politics
openly and frankly.
This is for world peace.
And we're thinking that
instead of going out and fight,
and make w*r,
something like that,
we should just stay in bed,
everybody should just stay
in bed and enjoy the spring.
He put his career right on
the line there for his beliefs.
And you have to applaud
him for that, of course.
It brought him an awful lot
of harassment and trouble.
While you're in bed
and you're giving your press
conferences in pillow cases,
are you laughing at us?
No, no.
No more than you're
laughing at us.
We have a laugh, we
think it's funny,
the fact that the front
page news should be the fact
that two people went to
bed on their honeymoon.
We see the funny side of it.
And that in Vienna, which
is a pretty square place,
there's all these
beautiful photographs
of microphones
being held to a bag,
to wait for the bag to speak.
It's rather nice.
But we're serious
about the peace bit.
Brave, foolhardy,
they were all of that.
But who else would
have done that then?
It would be front page
news if they were in bed,
talking about peace.
John didn't know
necessarily the ins and outs
of the whole Vietnam thing.
He and Yoko knew
that it was wrong
napalm on villages
to be dropping
and stripping the
skin off children.
I mean, he wasn't
wrong in that thinking.
He really wasn't wrong.
As the
couple's honeymoon moved
from Europe to Canada,
they were joined in their
hotel room by Timothy Leary,
Allen Ginsberg and a variety
of counterculture figures,
to record an anthem
for their campaign.
And where their
experimental records
and their public appearances
had left many confused,
this song managed to
bring their message
to a global audience.
Give Peace a Chance
was his attempt
to do something in his own
terms that was actually useful
and I think it proved to be so.
He wrote an anthem.
It's a simplistic anthem,
but it's an anthem that has a
good heart and a good message
and that people have
been singing ever since.
♪ Ev'rybody's talking
'bout Bagism, Shagism ♪
♪ Dragism, Madism,
Ragism, Tagism ♪
♪ This-ism, that-ism,
is-m, is-m, is-m ♪
♪ All we are saying
♪ Is give peace a chance
♪ All we are saying
♪ Is give peace a chance... ♪
He's moved further
and further away
from the elegant combination
choices and resonant text
of artistic musical
into records that
only have a message.
He had that ability to
distill something down
to its bare essence,
make it communicative,
make it unforgettable, and it
still resonates to this day.
While
Lennon pressed on
campaigning for peace,
the close of the decade saw
the first major casualties
of the youth movement,
with the death of
Rolling Stone Brian Jones
and permanent narcotics damage
on both Beach Boy Brian Wilson
and Pink Floyd's Syd Barrett.
The utopian vision of a brave
new world was crumbling,
and this was reflected within
The Beatles camp itself.
The tensions that had
previously arisen in the studio
now spread into the bandmates'
own relationships
with each other,
and when McCartney
Eastman in 1969,
married his new partner Linda
none of his fellow Beatles
attended the ceremony.
As the world moved
into the 1970s,
Paul issued his
debut solo record
along with a press release
which announced that he
was quitting the band.
It was official.
The Beatles were no more.
The demise of the band
shocked their fans worldwide,
yet those close to the musicians
gradually drift apart
had watched them
over a two-year period.
There was no cohesion.
The old Liverpool bubble that
they all used to live in
and see each other all the
time and love each other
and be tolerant of
each other's foibles
and differences had gone.
So now they were spinning
off in different directions
with new ideas, new families,
new girlfriends, new children.
It just wasn't working anymore.
It was obvious really
had pretty much come to an end.
that The Beatles as a group
Has a multi-million
dollar entertainment act
ever broken up because
it wasn't fun anymore?
Well, we know actually
because so many groups
from that same period
continued and
continued and continued
when it most definitely
wasn't fun anymore.
The Beatles ended it
because the reasons
gotten into doing it
that they had
ceased to have value for them.
So they said, let's
not do this anymore.
That's as powerful a statement
about their integrity
and their intentions
and their values
as anything that I can think of.
In
The Beatles' wake,
youth culture
became more divided,
rock music got heavier
and more self-indulgent
attention to glamor.
and pop turned its
As for the band
members themselves,
despite Lennon's
continued activism
and string of hit singles,
McCartney's mainstream
triumph through his band Wings
and Harrison's
successful emergence
as an artist in his own right,
their impact as individuals
could never match that
of their Beatles glory days.
Yet although their
vision of utopia
had failed to materialize,
the world was still
forever changed
by The Beatles' innovations
and the values that
they represented.
Even if no one has ever managed
to compete with that impact,
with every successive
generation of musicians
The Beatles remain the benchmark
for how popular
entertainers can interact
with the wider world.
Did cultural and
musical changes,
to which they were
without any doubt
the largest contributors,
have a permanent effect
on how rock and roll
conceived itself?
Yeah, permanent effect
on how rock and roll
perceived itself.
So that there's even now
in this glitzy pop era,
pop stars see it as an option
that they have to
accept or refuse
to be conscious,
controversial...
and some choose one,
and others really deny it,
and some are extremely bland,
but it's there on the table.
Always there on the
table, for everybody.
And as the band's
astonishing achievements
continue to make an impact
half a century later,
the legacy of The Beatles,
and of the remarkable decade
in which they flourished,
remains unrivaled.
The unique story of four
working class Liverpudlians
who changed the world.
Lennon said
something along the lines of,
"We weren't leaders
in this world.
"We were just the guys on
the mast saying land ahoy.
We were letting you
know what we could see."
And without The Beatles,
understanding the '60s
would have been a completely
different experience.
They touched everything.
The Beatles covered it all.
the '60s were about,
If you want to know what
you listen to Beatles records.
It tells you..
the story is there.
It sounds like a cliché,
but it's really impossible
to over state
The Beatles' impact.
It sounds like
you're exaggerating,
and to younger people
who weren't there,
you know,
it just sounds ridiculous.
But it was true.
They changed everything.
How the Beatles Changed the World (2017)
Moderator: Maskath3