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An excerpt from the Peter Whitehead film...
Look here!
This is 60's Fashion scene. Mary Quant and mini skirts and PVC coats from original old tv film.
Sir Paul McCartney has landed in Israel and told reporters it was really him after a newspaper speculated that the former Beatle would send an imposter.
Fans were eager to catch a glimpse of Sir Paul ahead of his first concert in the country.
Check out Paul's message straight from rehearsals in London to the people of Tel Aviv...also enjoy the guitar due between Paul, Rusty and Brian!
Paul and the band play the Friendship First Concert in Hayarkon Park, Tel Aviv, Israel, on the 25th September 2008.
Paul Mccartney interview by Ilan Lukatch and Danny Kushmaro from Channel 2 news, Israel
Paul Mccartney interview by Ilan Lukatch and Danny Kushmaro from Channel 2 news, Israel
Returning to St Peter's in 2007 the surviving members of the Quarrymen Len Garry, Rod Davis and Colin Hanton (above) recalled that day back in 1957.
"I was in there messing about on the drums," remembers Colin Hanton.
"One of the boy scouts was playing the bugle and Ivan Vaughan came in with this other dark haired lad that I didn't know, and they stood for about five or ten minutes talking to John."
The band then played an evening performance in the church hall with McCartney stood next to the stage watching.
Lennon accidentally impressed McCartney because of his habit of making up lyrics where he hadn't been able to make out the words when listening to the original.
Rod Davis says this happened with one particular song "We were playing this number and we'd had lots of problems trying to get the words of the songs.
"We were still schoolkids and we didn't have any money anyway.
"So John would fill the gaps in occasionally 'Come come go with me, down down to the penitentiary'. We did a lot of songs about trains and jails so that worked.
"Apparently Paul said how cool John was because he was throwing in these old blues lyrics and he thought he was improvising the words.
"But in fact we always sang it that way because we never got them right in the first place."
The actual lyrics of the song, Come Go With Me were 'Come go with me, please don't send me 'way beyond the sea'.
Love is love (1968)
This is the follow up of Barry's number one hit 'Eloise'
Lyrics:
Glad to be near you
I know you're there - ah
Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey
Love is like an ageing flower
Dying as it's growing higher
And that love is like an angel
Falling through the sky
And crawling down into the ground
'Cos love is love, it's all around
Love is love, is love, is love, is love, is love
Love is love - ha ha ha ha ha
I will give you all the best years
Of your life, if you will be my wife
If you will stay
I will stay with you until I'm old and grey
And when I'm old, I'll pray, like I've been told
'Cos love is love and love is cold
Love is love, is love, is love, is love, is love
Love is love - my my my my my my
Love is love - all my loving
Love is love, is love - all my loving, yeah
Love is love, is love - all my love
Love is love - my my my my
Thank you for your love that is mine again
I'm wasting my day
And I feel that I'm looking for the sun
And wasting my time
Glad to be near you - how do you do? Ah
Yeah yeah yeah yeah
I will play the part of being husband to your heart
And when I'm gone there'll be my son
Listen love to what I'm saying
When I leave here, he will carry on
The things I've left undone
'Cos love is love when we're all one
And that ain't no lie!
Love is love - love is love
Love is love, is love - love is love
Love is love, is love - love is love
Love is love - my my my my my my my ....
Al my love ..., All my love
Love is love
Resurrection
Fantastic American Beatles a likes,recorded at Abbey Road 68/69,from the album `Resurrection`which remained unreleased until 2003.
Part of the fun of watching "Easy Rider" is to see a young (aged 31 in 1968 when the film was made) Jack Nicholson giving his trademark performances, for which he received his very first Oscar nomination in the Best Supporting Actor category. Mr. Nicholson's 12 Oscar nominations and 3 wins comprise a formidable record. The soundtrack of this video is "Mississippi Queen" by Mountain, which, any "Easy Rider" fan can tell you, is not in the movie.
The Beatles in London before departing on a tour of the United States in 1965.
In a front-page article in the newspaper Haaretz on Monday, Yossi Sarid said the real cause of the cancellation was a rivalry between impresarios at the time. One had been offered a Beatles concert in 1962, before their star had risen, by the mother of the Beatles' manager, Brian Epstein, and had turned them down. When a competitor booked them three years later, the first impresario used his government connections to keep the needed money from being disbursed.
"I can assure you that my father had never heard of the Beatles," Sarid said in a follow-up telephone conversation. "The promoter, of course, didn't come to the government and say, 'I don't like this other guy, and I don't want him to get the money.' He said, 'It is a lousy group and will corrupt the spirit of the wonderful, brilliant, pure Israeli youngsters.' He exploited their ignorance."
Israeli leaders in the early 1960s knew almost nothing of popular culture. There is a famous story told of David Ben-Gurion, the founding prime minister, when he read a headline in a mass-selling paper that said Elizabeth Taylor, then among the world's most famous women, was very ill. "Who's Elizabeth Taylor?" Ben-Gurion is said to have asked.
A glance at the printed tickets for the canceled 1965 Beatles concert, copies of which still exist as collectors' items, and can be viewed on the Internet, tell their own story of a bygone era.
The marked price, in the lira currency, then under enormous pressure and now defunct, amounted to about $7.
The Hebrew name for the group printed on the tickets is also worth noting. The performers were universally known as the Beatles, but in Israel, then still trying to create a culture buffered from foreign words and influence, they were Hipushiot Haketzev, or the Beat Beetles (like the bugs).
It was a laborious if endearing effort that no one would bother with today in a country where English permeates daily speech ("sorry," "whatever") and advertising logos, and where many official Hebrew names for new developments simply do not enter the mainstream vocabulary.
Sarid noted that although the official Hebrew name for the Beatles then was Hipushiot Haketzev, many adults dismissed them as Hipushiot Hazevel, or "Dung Beetles."
Esteron, the editor, like others, said the change in 40 years from an isolated, egalitarian and agrarian society to a market-driven, plugged-in, high-tech haven of enormous wealth - and some alarming poverty - had been dizzying and somehow oddly embodied by the story of Israel's relationship with the Beatles.
Published: August 28, 2008 by International Herald Tribune
David Harris with the contract
This first contract was never signed by Brian Epstein who vowed not to sign it until it he had secured a recording contract for the group.
"At that time in late December 1961 Pete Best was still the drummer," David Harris remembers. "Initially the contracts were all done in Brian's name, as an individual, but then things progressed.
"He realised it was more sensible to form a company, and in fact I formed the company for him, NEMS Enterprise Ltd, which meant of course there had to be a further contract drawn up between the new company and the group."
This contract, the successor of the one David Harris wrote in such a hurry in December 1961, is now hailed as one of the most important in rock and roll, marking the beginning of the groups journey to international stardom.
The contract signed by The Beatles and Brian Epstein in 1962.
The contract is signed by John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr.
The signatures of Harold Harrison and James McCartney, George and Paul's parents are also featured as their consent was needed because their sons were under 21.
Ted Owen, the managing director of The Fame Bureau, which is holding the auction has described it as "one of the most important documents in music history."
David Harris says Brian Epstein acted very properly throughout the process, "I was very concerned, and he was too, that their parents should be fully involved.
"They were of an age when it was necessary and desirable that the parents knew exactly what was going on.
"He did say he wanted to be scrupulously fair to them and did not want to take advantage of them.
At the time the contract was just one of many items of legal paperwork that David Harris was working on, it was only later as The Beatle's became superstars that he realised the significance of his contribution to musical history.
"Yes, it was a surprise that things happened so quickly," says David Harris.
"They did extremely well, they were very talented and are very talented."
The guitar John Lennon was playing when he first met Paul McCartney could fetch up to £100,000 when it is put up for auction by Sotheby's in London next month.
The Gallotone "Champion" acoustic guitar is the earliest Beatles guitar to be offered at auction.
The 17-year-old John Lennon was playing it while leading his band the Quarry Men at a church fĂȘte in 1957 - watched by the then 15-year-old McCartney.
Sotheby's Rock 'n' Roll specialist Stephen Maycock said: "This is the most important and significant piece of early Beatles memorabilia to come on the market."
The Gallotone "Champion" guitar bought by Lennon for £10
The cherry-coloured Dutch-made guitar has been fully restored and bears the "Champion" logo. It is also bears a brass plaque with the inscription "Remember you'll never earn your living by it".
It refers to a remark that Lennon's Aunt Mimi is thought to have made out of exasperation at the amount of hours the young Lennon spent practising on the guitar rather than studying.
But, her nephew was out to prove her anxiety wrong and if he had not been playing his guitar once again at the St Peter's church fĂȘte in Woolton, Merseyside he might not have had that fateful encounter.
A black and white photo of the afternoon shows Lennon standing at the front of the stage playing the Dutch-made guitar. Among the crowd of spectators was the teenage McCartney.
The two were introduced later in the day as the Quarry Men set up for an evening session in the church hall.
McCartney was impressed with Lennon's ability to play the guitar and remember lyrics from well-known rock 'n' roll songs.
A former member of the Quarry Men recalled that Lennon bought the instrument by mail order a month or so earlier, for only £10.
Forty-two years on, the guitar, which is being sold along with Lennon's typewriter and records from his early collection, is expected to sell for up to £100,000 at the Rock 'n' Roll Memorabilia Sale at the Hard Rock CafĂ©.
In September 1994, a tape recording of John Lennon singing and playing the guitar with the Quarry Men at the fĂȘte was bought by EMI Records for £78,500 at the annual sale.
However, recent auctions of Beatles memorabilia have proved a disappointing.
The guitar George Harrison played at the Beatles' last live performance was withdrawn from auction on 19 August, after it failed to reach its reserve price of £200,000.
While in July, the coat John Lennon wore at the height of Beatlemania also sold at auction for a bargain price of just over £4,000, instead of the estimated £100,000.