Park in Sound

Sunday, August 26, 2007

The Beatles


The Beatles were an English musical group from Liverpool whose members were John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr. They are one of the most commercially successful and critically acclaimed band in the history of popular music.[2]

The Beatles are the best-selling musical act of all time in the United States of America, according to the Recording Industry Association of America, which certified them as the highest selling band of all time based on American sales of singles and albums.[3] In the United Kingdom, The Beatles released more than 40 different singles, albums, and EPs that reached number one. This commercial success was repeated in many other countries: their record company, EMI, estimated that by 1985 they had sold over one billion discs and tapes worldwide.[4] In 2004, Rolling Stone magazine ranked The Beatles #1 on its list of 100 Greatest Artists of All Time.[5] According to that same magazine, their innovative music and cultural impact helped define the 1960s,[2] and their influence on pop culture is still evident today.

The Beatles led the mid-1960s musical "British Invasion" into the United States. Although their initial musical style was rooted in 1950s rock and roll and homegrown skiffle, the group explored genres ranging from Tin Pan Alley to psychedelic rock. Their clothes, styles, and statements made them trend-setters, while their growing social awareness saw their influence extend into the social and cultural revolutions of the 1960s.

1957–1960: Formation
In March 1957, while attending Quarry Bank Grammar School in Liverpool, John Lennon formed a skiffle group called The Quarrymen.[6] Lennon and the Quarrymen met guitarist Paul McCartney at the Woolton Garden Fête held at St. Peter's Church on 6 July 1957.[7] On 6 February 1958, the young guitarist George Harrison was invited to watch the group (who played under a variety of names) at Wilson Hall, Garston, Liverpool.[8] McCartney had become acquainted with Harrison on the morning school bus ride to the Liverpool Institute, as they both lived in Speke. At McCartney's insistence, Harrison joined the Quarrymen as lead guitarist[9] after a rehearsal in March 1958, overcoming Lennon's initial reluctance because of Harrison's young age.[10] Members continually joined and left the lineup during that period, and in January 1960 Lennon's art school friend Stuart Sutcliffe joined on bass.[11] Lennon and McCartney both played rhythm guitar and the group had a high turnover of drummers.

The Quarrymen went through a progression of names — "Johnny and the Moondogs", "Long John and the Beatles", "the Silver Beetles" (derived from Larry Parnes' suggestion of "Long John and the Silver Beetles") — before settling on "The Beatles". There are many theories as to the origin of the name and its unusual spelling. It is usually credited to Lennon, who said that the name was a combination word-play on the insect beetles (as a reference to Buddy Holly's band, The Crickets) and the word beat. Cynthia Lennon suggests that Lennon came up with the name Beatles at a "brainstorming session over a beer-soaked table in the Renshaw Hall bar."[12] Lennon, who was well known for giving multiple versions of the same story, joked in a 1961 Mersey Beat magazine article that "It came in a vision – a man appeared on a flaming pie and said unto them, 'From this day on you are Beatles with an A'".[13] During an interview in 2001, Paul McCartney took credit for the peculiar spelling of the name, saying that "John had the idea of calling us the Beetles, I said, 'how about the Beatles; you know, like the beat of the drum?' At the time, everyone was stoned enough to find it hilarious. It's funny how history is made."[14]

In May 1960, The Beatles toured northeast Scotland as a back-up band with singer Johnny Gentle.[15] They met Gentle an hour before their first gig, and McCartney referred to the tour as a great experience for the band.[16] For the tour the often drummerless group secured the services of Tommy Moore, who was considerably older than the others.[17] Soon after the tour, however, feeling the age gap was too great, Moore left the band and went back to work in a bottling factory as a forklift truck driver.[18] Norman Chapman was the band's next drummer, but was called up for National Service a few weeks later. His departure posed a significant problem as the group's unofficial manager, Allan Williams, had arranged for them to perform in clubs on the Reeperbahn in Hamburg, Germany.[19]

Musical influences
John Lennon said: "It was Elvis who really got me buying records. I thought that early stuff of his was great. The Bill Haley era passed me by, in a way. When his records came on the wireless, my mother used to hear them, but they didn’t do anything for me. It was Elvis who got me hooked on beat music. When I heard 'Heartbreak Hotel', I thought ‘this is it’ and I started to grow sideboards and all that gear...."[20] He also commented: "Nothing really affected me until I heard Elvis. If there hadn't been an Elvis, there wouldn't have been a Beatles."[21]

Other acts acknowledged by the Beatles include Chuck Berry, Carl Perkins, Little Richard, Buddy Holly, Gene Vincent, Eddie Cochran, and The Everly Brothers

1960–1970: The Beatles
Hamburg


On 12 August 1960, the group invited Pete Best to become their permanent drummer. Best had played with The Blackjacks[22] in the Casbah Club, owned by Pete's mother, Mona Best. This was a cellar club in West Derby, Liverpool, where The Beatles had played and often visited.[23] In the documentary The Compleat Beatles, Williams said that Best "played not too cleverly, but passable".

Four days after hiring Best, the group left for Hamburg. The Beatles began playing in Hamburg at the Indra Club and moved on 4 October 1960 to the Kaiserkeller. They were required to play six or seven hours a night, seven nights a week. On 21 November 1960, Harrison was deported for having lied to the German authorities about his age.[24] A week later, having started a small fire at their living quarters while vacating it for more luxurious rooms, McCartney and Best were arrested, charged with arson, and deported.[25] Lennon followed the others to Liverpool in mid-December. Sutcliffe stayed behind in Hamburg with his new German fiancée Astrid Kirchherr. The reunited group played their first engagement on 17 December 1960 at the Casbah Club (with Chas Newby substituting for Sutcliffe).

The Beatles returned to Hamburg in April 1961, performing at the "Top Ten Club".[26] Whilst playing at the Top Ten Club they were recruited by singer Tony Sheridan to act as his backing band on a series of recordings for the German Polydor Records label,[27] produced by famed bandleader Bert Kaempfert.[19] Kaempfert signed the group to its own Polydor contract at the first session on 22 June 1961. On 31 October Polydor released the recording "My Bonnie (Mein Herz ist bei dir nur)", which appeared on the German charts under the name "Tony Sheridan and the Beat Brothers", a generic name used for whoever happened to be in Sheridan's backup band.[28] In addition to the legend that this record led to the group's eventual meeting with Brian Epstein, it also resulted in their first mention in the American press. Around the beginning of 1962, Cashbox mentioned "My Bonnie" as the debut of a "new rock and roll team, Tony Sheridan and the Beat Brothers". A few copies were also pressed under the Decca label for U.S. disc jockeys, as American Decca had a distribution deal with Polydor parent Deutsche Grammophon.[29] (This was ironic, considering that by this time the then-unaffiliated British Decca had turned down the group's attempt to gain a recording contract.) When the group returned to Liverpool, Sutcliffe stayed on in Hamburg with Kirchherr.[30] By then McCartney had taken over bass duties.[31]

Their third stay in Hamburg was from 13 April to 31 May 1962, when they opened The Star Club.[19] Upon their arrival, they were informed of Sutcliffe's death from a brain haemorrhage.[32]

Epstein took over as the group's manager in January 1962 and led The Beatles' quest for a British recording contract. Epstein had been manager of the record department at North End Music Store (NEMS), an offshoot of his family's furniture store. He played on the status of NEMS as a major record dealer to gain access to producers and recording company executives. In a now-famous exchange, Decca Records A&R executive Dick Rowe turned Epstein down flat, informing him that "Guitar groups are on the way out, Mr. Epstein."[33] (See The Decca audition.) While Epstein was negotiating with Decca, he also approached EMI marketing executive Ron White.[34] White (who was not himself a record producer) in turn contacted EMI producers Norrie Paramor, Walter Ridley, and Norman Newell, all of whom declined to record The Beatles.[35] White did not approach EMI's fourth staff producer – George Martin – who was on holiday at the time.[36]

Record contract

After failing to impress Decca Records, Epstein went to the HMV store on Oxford Street in London to transfer the Decca tapes to discs. There, recording engineer Jim Foy referred him to Sid Coleman, who ran EMI's publishing arm. When Coleman heard the demo tapes he suggested taking the tapes to George Martin, who, Coleman explained, "does comedy records" and headed the Parlophone label at EMI. Epstein eventually met with Martin, who signed the group to EMI on a one-year renewable contract and scheduled their first recording session on 6 June 1962 at EMI's Abbey Road Studios in north London.[37] Martin had not been particularly impressed by the band's demo recordings,[38] but he instantly liked them as people when he met them. He concluded that they had raw musical talent, but said (in later interviews) that what made the difference for him was their wit and humour.[39]

Martin did have a problem with Pete Best, [38] whom he criticised for not being able to keep time. He privately suggested to Epstein that the band use another drummer in the studio. There was speculation by some that Best's popularity[40] with fans was another source of friction. In addition, Epstein had become exasperated with his refusal to adopt the distinctive hairstyle as part of their unified look. Best also had missed a number of engagements because of illness. The three founding members enlisted Epstein to dismiss Best – which he did on 16 August 1962.[41] They asked Ringo Starr (born Richard Starkey), the drummer for one of the top Merseybeat groups, Rory Storm and the Hurricanes, to join the band; Starr had performed occasionally with The Beatles in Hamburg.[42] The first recordings of Lennon, McCartney, Harrison, and Starr together were made as early as 15 October 1960, in a series of demonstration records privately recorded in Hamburg while acting as the backing group for singer Lu Walters.[43] Starr played on The Beatles' second EMI recording session on 4 September 1962, but Martin hired session drummer Andy White for their next session on 11 September.[44]

Their recording contract paid them one penny for each single sold, which was split amongst the four Beatles — one farthing per group member.[45] This royalty rate was further reduced for singles sold outside the UK, on which they received half of one penny (again split between the whole band) per single. Martin said later that it was a "pretty awful" contract.[45]

The Beatles' first EMI session on 6 June 1962 did not yield any recordings considered worthy of release, but the September sessions a few months later produced a minor UK hit, "Love Me Do", which peaked on the charts at number 17.[46] ("Love Me Do" reached the top of the U.S. singles chart over 18 months later in May 1964.) On 26 November 1962, they recorded their second single "Please Please Me", which reached number two on the official UK charts and number one on the NME chart. Three months later, they recorded their first album (also titled Please Please Me). The band's first televised performance was on the People and Places programme, transmitted live from Manchester by Granada Television on 17 October 1962.[47] As The Beatles' fame spread, the frenzied adulation of the group, predominantly from teenage female fans, was dubbed Beatlemania.

At this time, the band began getting noticed by serious music critics. On 23 December 1963, The Times music critic William Mann published an essay extolling The Beatles' compositions – their "fresh and euphonious" guitars in "Till There Was You", their "submediant switches from C major into A flat major", and the "octave ascent" in "I Want to Hold Your Hand", for example. The Beatles themselves were perplexed by this analysis by Mann: "...one gets the impression that they think simultaneously of harmony and melody, so firmly are the major tonic sevenths and ninths built into their tunes, and the flat submediant key switches, so natural is the Aeolian cadence at the end of "Not a Second Time" (the chord progression which ends Mahler's Song of the Earth)."

America

Although the band experienced huge popularity on the UK record charts in early 1963, EMI's American operation, Capitol Records, declined to issue the singles "Please Please Me" and "From Me to You" (their first official number one hit in the UK).[48] Vee-Jay Records, a small Chicago label, issued the singles as part of a deal for the rights to another performer's masters. Art Roberts, music director of Chicago powerhouse radio station WLS, placed "Please Please Me" into radio rotation in late February 1963, making it the first time a Beatles record was heard on American radio. Vee-Jay's rights to The Beatles were later cancelled for non-payment of royalties.[49]

In August 1963, Philadelphia-based Swan Records released "She Loves You", which also failed to receive airplay. A testing of the song on Dick Clark's TV show American Bandstand produced laughter from American teenagers when they saw the group's distinctive hairstyles.[50] In early November 1963, Brian Epstein persuaded Ed Sullivan to present The Beatles on three editions of his show in February, and parlayed this guaranteed exposure into a record deal with Capitol Records. Capitol committed to a mid-January release for "I Want to Hold Your Hand".[51] On 7 December 1963, a clip of The Beatles was shown on the CBS Evening News. (The story originally had been scheduled to air on 22 November, and was aired on the CBS Morning News, but was preempted by the assassination of John F. Kennedy.) The clip inspired a teenage girl in Washington, D.C. to request a Beatles song on a local radio station. The station secured an imported copy of "I Want to Hold Your Hand" – forcing Capitol Records to release the song ahead of schedule on 26 December 1963.[52]

Several New York radio stations – first WMCA, then WINS and WABC – began playing "I Want to Hold Your Hand" on its release day. The Beatlemania that had started in Washington was duplicated in New York and quickly spread to other markets. The record sold one million copies in just ten days, and by 16 January 1964, Cashbox magazine had certified the record number one (in the edition marked 23 January). On 3 January 1964, a film of The Beatles performing "She Loves You" was aired on the late-night Jack Paar Show.

Beatlemania crosses the Atlantic

On 7 February 1964, a crowd of four thousand fans at Heathrow Airport waved to The Beatles as they took off for their first trip to the United States as a group.[53] They were accompanied by photographers, journalists (including Maureen Cleave), and Phil Spector, who had booked himself on the same flight.[54] The pilot had radioed ahead, and as they prepared to land said, "Tell the boys there's a big crowd waiting for them." Kennedy International Airport had never experienced such a crowd, estimated at about 3,000 screaming fans.[55] After a press conference (where they first met Murray the K) they were put into limousines and driven to New York. On the way, McCartney turned on a radio and listened to a running commentary: "They [The Beatles] have just left the airport and are coming to New York City..."[56] After reaching the Plaza Hotel, they were besieged by fans and reporters. Harrison had a temperature of 102 the next day and was ordered to stay in bed, so Neil Aspinall replaced him for the first television rehearsal.[57]

Their first live American television appearance was on the The Ed Sullivan Show on 9 February 1964. The next morning practically every newspaper wrote that The Beatles were nothing more than a "fad", and "could not carry a tune across the Atlantic".[58] Their first American concert appearance was at Washington Coliseum in Washington, D.C. on 11 February 1964.[59]

After The Beatles' huge success in 1964, Vee-Jay Records and Swan Records took advantage of their previously secured rights to The Beatles' early recordings and reissued the songs, all of which reached the top ten the second time around. (MGM and Atco also secured rights to The Beatles' early Tony Sheridan-era recordings and had minor hits with "My Bonnie" and "Ain't She Sweet", the latter featuring John Lennon on lead vocal.) In addition to Introducing... The Beatles, which was essentially The Beatles' debut British album with some minor alterations, Vee-Jay also issued an unusual LP called The Beatles Vs The Four Seasons. This 2-LP set paired Introducing... The Beatles and The Golden Hits Of The Four Seasons, another successful act that Vee-Jay had under contract, in a 'contest' (the back cover featured a 'score card'). Another unusual release was the Hear The Beatles Tell All album, which consisted of two lengthy interviews with Los Angeles radio disc jockeys (side one was titled "Dave Hull interviews John Lennon", while side two was titled "Jim Steck interviews John, Paul, George, Ringo"). No Beatles music was included on this interview album, which turned out to be the only Vee Jay Beatles album Capitol Records could not reclaim.

The Vee-Jay/Swan-issued recordings eventually ended up with Capitol, which issued most of the Vee-Jay material on the American-only Capitol release The Early Beatles, with three songs left off this final US version of the album. ("I Saw Her Standing There" was issued as the American B-side of "I Want to Hold Your Hand", and also appeared on the Capitol Records album Meet The Beatles. "Misery" and "There's a Place" were issued as a Capitol "Starline" reissue single in 1964, and reappeared on the 1980 Rarities compilation album.) The early Vee-Jay and Swan Beatles records command a high price on the record collectors' market, and all have been copiously bootlegged.[60] The Swan tracks ("She Loves You" and "I'll Get You") were issued on the Capitol LP The Beatles' Second Album. (Swan also issued the German-language version of "She Loves You", called "Sie Liebt Dich". This song later appeared (in stereo) on Capitol's US version of the Rarities compilation album.)

In mid-1964 the band undertook their first appearances outside of Europe and North America. They toured Australia without Ringo Starr, who was suffering from tonsillitis and was temporarily replaced by session drummer Jimmy Nicol. In Adelaide they were greeted by over 300,000 people who turned out at Adelaide Town Hall.[61] Ringo had rejoined by the time they arrived in New Zealand on 21 June 1964.[62]

In June 1965, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II appointed the four Beatles Members of the Order of the British Empire, MBE. The band members were nominated by Prime Minister Harold Wilson (who also was the M.P. for Huyton, Liverpool).[63] The appointment – at that time primarily bestowed upon military veterans and civic leaders – sparked some conservative MBE recipients to return their insignia in protest.[64] The first two were returned on 14 June 1965, before The Beatles received theirs on 26 October.[65]

On 15 August 1965, the Beatles performed the first major stadium concert in the history of rock at Shea Stadium in New York to a crowd of 55,600.[66] Their sixth album, Rubber Soul, was released in early December 1965. It was hailed as a major leap forward in the maturity and complexity of the band's music.[67]

Backlash and controversy

In July 1966, when The Beatles toured the Philippines, they unintentionally snubbed the nation's first lady, Imelda Marcos, who had expected the group to attend a breakfast reception at the Presidential Palace.[68] When presented with the invitation, Brian Epstein politely declined on behalf of the group, as it had never been the group's policy to accept such "official" invitations.[69] The group soon found that the Marcos regime was unaccustomed to accepting "no" for an answer. After the 'snub' was broadcast on Philippine television and radio, all of The Beatles' police protection disappeared. The group and their entourage had to make their way to Manila airport on their own. At the airport, road manager Mal Evans was beaten and kicked, and the band members were pushed and jostled about by a hostile crowd.[70] Once the group boarded the plane, Epstein and Evans were ordered off, and Evans said, "Tell my wife that I love her."[71] Epstein was forced to give back all the money that the band had earned while they were there before being allowed back on the plane.[72]

Almost as soon as they returned from the Philippines, an earlier comment by Lennon made in March that year launched a backlash against The Beatles from religious and social conservatives in the United States. In an interview with British reporter Maureen Cleave,[73] Lennon had offered his opinion that Christianity was dying and that The Beatles were "more popular than Jesus now".[74] Afterwards, a radio station in Birmingham, Alabama, ran a story on burning Beatles records, in what was considered to be a joke. However, many people affiliated with rural churches in the American South started taking the suggestion seriously. Towns across the United States and South Africa started to burn Beatles records in protest. Attempting to make light of the incident, McCartney said, "They've got to buy them before they can burn them." Under tremendous pressure from the American media, Lennon apologised for his remarks at a press conference in Chicago on 11 August 1966, the eve of the first performance of what turned out to be their final tour.[75]

The group's two-year series of Capitol compilations also took a strange twist in the United States when one of their publicity shots, used for a Yesterday and Today album and a poster promoting the UK release of "Paperback Writer", created an uproar, as it featured the band dressed in butchers' overalls, draped in meat and plastic dolls. This was said to be a response to the way Capitol had "butchered" their albums[76]. Thousands of copies of the album had a new cover pasted over. Years later, a commentator linked the cover shot with the group's interest in German expressionism.[75]

Elvis Presley disapproved of The Beatles's anti-war activism and open use of drugs, later asking President Richard Nixon to ban all four members of the group from entering the United States. Peter Guralnick writes, "The Beatles, Elvis said, [...] had been a focal point for anti-Americanism. They had come to this country, made their money, then gone back to England where they fomented anti-American feeling."[77] Guralnick adds, "Presley indicated that he is of the opinion that The Beatles laid the groundwork for many of the problems we are having with young people by their filthy unkempt appearances and suggestive music while entertaining in this country during the early and middle 1960s."[78] Despite Elvis' remarks, Lennon still had some positive feelings towards him: "Before Elvis, there was nothing."[79]

In stark contrast, Bob Dylan recognised the Beatles' contribution, stating: "America should put up statues to The Beatles. They helped give this country's pride back to it."[80]

Studio years

In April 1966, the group began recording what would be their most ambitious album to date, Revolver. During the recording sessions for the album, tape looping and early sampling were introduced in a complex mix of ballad, R&B, soul, and world music.

The Beatles performed their last concert before paying fans at Candlestick Park in San Francisco on 29 August 1966.[75] McCartney asked Tony Barrow to tape the event, but the 30-minute tape he used ran out halfway through the last song. The concert lasted a little under 35 minutes.[81]

From then on, The Beatles concentrated on recording. Less than seven months after recording Revolver, The Beatles returned to Abbey Road Studios on 24 November 1966 to begin the 129-day recording sessions for their eighth album, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, released on 1 June 1967.

On 25 June 1967, The Beatles became the first band globally transmitted on television, before an estimated 400 million people worldwide. The band appeared in a segment within the first-ever worldwide television satellite hook-up, a show titled Our World. The Beatles were transmitted live from Abbey Road Studios, and their new song "All You Need Is Love" was recorded live during the show.

The band's business affairs began to unravel after manager Brian Epstein died of an accidental prescription drug overdose on 27 August 1967 at the age of 32. At the end of 1967, they received their first major negative press in the UK with disparaging reviews of their surrealistic TV film Magical Mystery Tour.[82] Part of the criticism arose because colour was an integral part of the film, but in 1967 few viewers in the UK had colour televisions. The film's soundtrack, which features one of The Beatles' few instrumental tracks ("Flying"), was released in the United Kingdom as a double EP, and in the United States as a full LP (the LP is now the official version).

The group spent the early part of 1968 in Rishikesh, Uttar Pradesh, India, studying transcendental meditation with the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.[83] Upon their return, Lennon and McCartney went to New York to announce the formation of Apple Corps. The middle of 1968 saw the band busy recording the double album The Beatles, popularly known as The White Album because of its plain white cover. These sessions saw deep divisions opening within the band, with Starr temporarily walking out. The band carried on, with McCartney recording the drums on the songs "Martha My Dear", "Wild Honey Pie", "Dear Prudence" and "Back in the USSR". Among the other causes of dissension were that Lennon's new girlfriend, Yoko Ono, was at his side through almost all of the sessions, and that the others felt that McCartney was becoming too domineering.[84] Internal divisions within the band had been a small but growing problem during their early years; most notably, this was reflected in the difficulty that Harrison experienced in getting his own songs onto Beatles albums.

On the business side, McCartney wanted Lee Eastman, the father of his then-girlfriend Linda Eastman, to manage The Beatles, but the other members wanted New York manager Allen Klein. All past Beatles decisions had been unanimous, but this time the four could not agree. Lennon, Harrison and Starr felt the Eastmans would put McCartney's interests before those of the group. In 1971, it was discovered that Klein, who had been appointed manager, had stolen £5 million from The Beatles' holdings. Years later, during the Anthology interviews, McCartney said of this time, "Looking back, I can understand why they would feel that he [Lee Eastman] was biased against them."

Their final live performance was on the rooftop of the Apple building (see Let It Be (film)#The rooftop performance) in Savile Row, London, on 30 January 1969, the next-to-last day of the difficult Get Back sessions. Most of the performance was filmed and later included in the film Let It Be. While the band was playing, the local police were called because of complaints about the noise. Although the group was simply asked to end their performance, the band members later remarked in the Anthology video that they were disappointed they were not arrested – pointing out that the police hauling the band members off in handcuffs would have been "an appropriate ending" for the film.

The Beatles recorded their final album, Abbey Road, in the summer of 1969. The completion of the song "I Want You (She's So Heavy)" for the album on 20 August 1969 was the last time all four Beatles were together in the same studio.

Their final new song was Harrison's "I Me Mine", recorded 3 January 1970 and released on the Let It Be album. It was recorded without Lennon, who was in Denmark when the song was recorded.[85]

Breakup

Main article: The Beatles' breakup

John Lennon announced his departure to the rest of the group on 20 September 1969, but agreed that no announcement was to be publicly made until a number of legal matters were resolved.

In March 1970, the Get Back session tapes were given to American producer Phil Spector, who had produced Lennon's solo single "Instant Karma!". Spector's Wall of Sound production values went against the original intent of the record, which had been to record a stripped-down live performance. McCartney was deeply dissatisfied with Spector's treatment of "The Long and Winding Road" and unsuccessfully attempted to halt release of Spector's version of the song. McCartney publicly announced the break-up on 10 April 1970, a week before releasing his first solo album, McCartney. Pre-release copies included a press release with a self-written interview explaining the end of The Beatles and his hopes for the future.[86] On 8 May 1970, the Spector-produced version of Get Back was released as Let It Be, followed by the documentary film of the same name (see Let It Be (film)). The Beatles' partnership was finally dissolved in 1975.[87]

1970–present: After The Beatles

Shortly before and after the official dissolution of the group, all four Beatles released solo albums, including Lennon's John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band, McCartney's McCartney, Starr's Sentimental Journey, and Harrison's All Things Must Pass. Some of their albums featured contributions by other former Beatles; Starr's Ringo (1973) was the only one to include compositions and performances by all four, albeit on separate songs. Harrison showed his socio-political consciousness and earned respect for his contribution for arranging the Concert For Bangladesh in New York City in August 1971 along with sitar maestro Ravi Shankar.

Other than an unreleased jam session in 1974 (later bootlegged as A Toot and a Snore in '74), Lennon and McCartney never recorded together again.

In the wake of the expiration in 1975 of The Beatles' contract with EMI-Capitol, the American Capitol label, rushing to cash in on its vast Beatles holdings and freed from the group's creative control, released five LPs: Rock 'n' Roll Music (a compilation of their more uptempo numbers), The Beatles at the Hollywood Bowl (containing portions of two unreleased shows at the Hollywood Bowl), Love Songs (a compilation of their slower numbers), Rarities (a compilation of tracks that either had never been released in the U.S. or had gone out of print), and Reel Music (a compilation of songs from their films). There was also a non-Capitol-EMI release of a show from the group's early days at the Star Club in Hamburg captured on a poor-quality tape. Of all these post-breakup LPs, only the Hollywood Bowl LP had the approval of the group members. Upon the American release of the original British CDs in 1986, these post-breakup Capitol American compilation LPs were deleted from the Capitol catalogue.

John Lennon was shot and killed by Mark David Chapman on 8 December 1980 in New York City. Shortly afterward, in 1981, the three surviving Beatles reunited to record "All Those Years Ago", released as a George Harrison solo single. Its original lyrics had been rewritten as a tribute to Lennon.

The BBC has a large collection of Beatles recordings, mostly comprising original studio sessions from 1963 to 1968. Much of this material formed the basis for a 1988 radio documentary series The Beeb's Lost Beatles Tapes. In 1989, many outtakes from The Beatles sessions appeared on the radio series The Lost Lennon Tapes. Later, in 1994, the best of the BBC sessions were given an official EMI release on Live at the BBC.

In 1988, The Beatles were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a group (not as individual performers) during their first year of eligibility.[88] On the night of their induction, Harrison and Starr appeared to accept their award along with Lennon's widow Yoko Ono and his two sons. McCartney stayed away, issuing a press release citing "unresolved difficulties" with Harrison, Starr, and Lennon's estate. Solo Beatles later inducted were Lennon in 1994, McCartney in 1999 and Harrison in 2004.
Collage of the various covers of the Anthology series
Collage of the various covers of the Anthology series

In February 1994, the three surviving Beatles reunited to produce and record additional music for a few of Lennon's home recordings. "Free as a Bird" premiered as part of The Beatles Anthology series of television documentaries and was released as a single in December 1995, with "Real Love" following in March 1996. These songs were also included in the three Anthology collections of CDs released in 1995 and 1996, each of which consisted of two CDs of never-before-released Beatles material. Klaus Voormann, who had known The Beatles since their Hamburg days and had previously illustrated the Revolver album cover, directed the Anthology cover concept. 450,000 copies of Anthology 1 were sold on its first day of release. In 2000, the compilation album 1 was released, containing almost every number-one single released by the band from 1962 to 1970. The collection sold 3.6 million copies in its first week (selling 3 copies a second) and more than 12 million in three weeks worldwide. The collection also reached number one in the United States and 33 other countries, and had sold 25 million copies by 2005 (about the ninth best selling album of all time).

In the late 1990s, George Harrison was diagnosed with lung cancer. He succumbed to the disease on 29 November 2001.

In 2006, George Martin and his son Giles Martin remixed original Beatles recordings to create a soundtrack to accompany Cirque du Soleil's theatrical production Love. In 2007, McCartney and Starr reunited for an interview on Larry King Live to discuss their thoughts on the show. Yoko Ono (John Lennon's wife) and Olivia Harrison (George Harrison's wife) also appeared with McCartney and Starr in Las Vegas for the one year anniversary of Love.

Musical evolution
The Beatles, by Richard Avedon. By 1967, the band had delved into psychedelic music.
The Beatles, by Richard Avedon. By 1967, the band had delved into psychedelic music.

See also: The Beatles' influence on music recording

The Beatles' constant demands to create new sounds on every new recording, combined with George Martin's arranging abilities and the studio expertise of EMI staff engineers such as Norman Smith, Ken Townshend and Geoff Emerick, all played significant parts in the innovative sounds of the albums Rubber Soul (1965), Revolver (1966) and Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967).

The Beatles continued to absorb influences long after their initial success, often finding new musical and lyrical avenues by listening to their contemporaries. Among those influences were Bob Dylan, who influenced songs such as "You've Got to Hide Your Love Away" and "Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)".[89] Other contemporary influences included the Byrds and the Beach Boys, whose album Pet Sounds was a favourite of McCartney's.[90]

Along with studio tricks such as sound effects, unconventional microphone placements, tape loops, double tracking and vari-speed recording, The Beatles began to augment their recordings with instruments that were unconventional for rock music at the time. These included string and brass ensembles as well as Indian instruments such as the sitar as in "Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)" and the swarmandel as in "Strawberry Fields Forever". They also used early electronic instruments such as the Mellotron, with which McCartney supplied the flute voices on the intro to "Strawberry Fields Forever", and the ondioline, an electronic keyboard that created the unusual oboe-like sound on "Baby You're a Rich Man".

Beginning with the use of a string quartet (arranged by George Martin with input from McCartney) on "Yesterday" in 1965, The Beatles pioneered a modern form of art song, exemplified by the double-quartet string arrangement on "Eleanor Rigby" (1966), "Here, There and Everywhere" (1966) and "She's Leaving Home" (1967). A televised performance of Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 directly inspired McCartney's use of a piccolo trumpet on the arrangement of "Penny Lane". The Beatles moved towards psychedelia with "Rain" and "Tomorrow Never Knows" from 1966, and "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds", "Strawberry Fields Forever" and "I Am the Walrus" from 1967.

Achievements
Throughout their relatively short career, the Beatles set a number of world records — most of which have yet to be broken. The following is a partial list:

* The Beatles are the best-selling musical group of all time, estimated by EMI to have over one billion discs and tapes sold worldwide.
* The Beatles have notched up the most multi-platinum selling albums for any artist or musical group (thirteen in the U.S. alone).
* The Beatles have a record six diamond-selling albums (10 million copies): Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, The Beatles, Abbey Road, The Beatles: 1962-1966, The Beatles: 1967-1970, and The Beatles 1.
* The Beatles have had more number one singles than any other musical group (23 in Australia, 23 in The Netherlands, 22 in Canada, 21 in Norway, 20 in the U.S., and 18 in Sweden). Ironically, the Beatles could easily have had even more number ones, because they were often competing with their own singles. For example, the Beatles' "Penny Lane" and "Strawberry Fields Forever" were released as a "double A"-sided single, which caused sales and airplay to be divided between the two songs instead of being counted collectively. Even so, they reached number two with the singles. They even managed to hold separate releases by themselves off the top of the British chart in 1967 with "Hello Goodbye" at number 1 and the Magical Mystery Tour E.P at number 2.
* The Beatles have had more number one albums than any other group (19 in the U.S. and 15 in the United Kingdom).
* The Beatles spent the highest number of weeks at number one in the albums chart (174 in the UK and 132 in the U.S.).
* The most successful first week of sales for a double album (The Beatles Anthology Volume 1, which sold 855,473 copies in the U.S. from 21 November to 28 November 1995).
* In terms of charting positions, Lennon and McCartney are the most successful songwriters in history, with 32 number one singles in the U.S. for McCartney, and 26 for Lennon (23 of which were written together). Lennon was responsible for 29 Number One singles in the UK, and McCartney was responsible for 28 (25 of which were written together).
* During the week of 4 April 1964, The Beatles held the top five positions on the Billboard singles chart. No one had ever done anything like this before, and it is doubtful that the conditions will ever exist for anyone to do it again. The songs were "Can't Buy Me Love", "Twist and Shout", "She Loves You", "I Want to Hold Your Hand", and "Please Please Me".
* The next week, 11 April 1964, the Beatles held fourteen positions on the Billboard Hot 100. Before the Beatles, the highest number of concurrent singles by one artist on the Hot 100 was nine (by Elvis Presley, 19 December 1956).
* The Beatles are the only artist to have 'back-to-back-to-back' number one singles on Billboard's Hot 100 in the modern chart era. Their "Can't Buy Me Love" single supplanted "She Loves You", which had in turn taken the #1 spot from "I Want to Hold Your Hand." Boyz II Men, Nelly and Outkast have directly succeeded themselves atop the chart, but the Beatles are the only artist to 'three-peat'. (In 2004, Usher came within a week of matching this feat, with three of his singles ("Yeah!" "Burn" and "Confessions") holding the top spot for 21 of 22 weeks; only a one-week interruption between "Burn"s 7th and 8th weeks atop the chart by American Idol singer Fantasia broke the streak. Billboard's current version of the "Hot 100" chart is considered to have begun in August 1958; before that, artists such as Elvis Presley, Glenn Miller, Jimmy Dorsey, and Bing Crosby had also had three consecutive #1 hits, but on earlier Billboard charts that preceded the "Hot 100".)
* The Beatles' "Yesterday" is the most covered song in history, appearing in the Guinness Book of Records with over three thousand recorded versions. It is also the most played song in the history of international radio.
* The Beatles had the fastest selling single of all time with "I Want To Hold Your Hand". The song sold 250,000 units within three days in the U.S., one million in 2 weeks. (Additionally, it sold 10,000 copies per hour in New York City alone for the first 20 days.)
* The Beatles have the fastest selling CD of all time with 1. It sold over 13 million copies in four weeks.
* The largest number of advance orders for a single, at 2.1 million copies in the U.S. for "Can't Buy Me Love" (it sold 940,225 copies on its first day of release in the U.S. alone).
* With their performance at Shea Stadium in 1965, The Beatles set new world records for concert attendance (55,600+) and revenue. This was the first time in the history of popular music anyone had played in a proper stadium as opposed to a theatre or concert hall.
* The Beatles were the youngest group to top the UK album charts with their debut album; however, McFly has since topped this record with their debut album in 2004.
* The Beatles broke television ratings records in the U.S. with their first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show with over 70 million people viewing. Crime reportedly fell by a third during the duration of the transmission, although this eventually turned out to be false.
* The Beatles were made Members of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) by the Queen on 12 June 1965.
* On 30 June 1966, the Beatles became the first musical group to perform at the Nippon Budokan Hall in Tokyo. They performed five times in three days gathering audiences of about 10,000 per performance.
* The Beatles appear five times in the top 100 best-selling singles in the UK. No other group appears more than twice.


Influence on popular culture
Lifestyle

The Beatles' lifestyles were greatly altered by their success and the income they earned. The availability of the first oral contraceptive and illegal drugs changed many people's opinions — including The Beatles' — about life, marriage, and sexual relationships.[91]

Recreational drug use

In Hamburg, The Beatles used "prellies" (Preludin) both recreationally and to maintain their energy through all-night performances.[92] McCartney would usually take one, but Lennon would often take four or five.[92] Bob Dylan introduced them to cannabis during a 1964 visit to New York.[93] McCartney remembered them all getting "very high" and giggling.[94] The Beatles occasionally smoked a joint in the car on the way to the studio during the filming of Help!, which often made them forget their lines.[95]

In April 1965, Lennon and Harrison were introduced to LSD by an acquaintance, dentist John Riley.[96] Lennon in particular became an avid "tripper", claiming in a 1970 interview in Rolling Stone to have taken LSD hundreds of times. McCartney was more reluctant to try the drug, but finally did so in 1966 and was the first Beatle to talk about it in the press.

The Beatles added their names to an advertisement in The Times, on 24 July 1967, which asked for the legalisation of cannabis, the release of all prisoners imprisoned because of possession, and research into marijuana's medical uses. The advertisement was sponsored by a group called Soma, and was signed by 65 people, including Brian Epstein, Graham Greene, R.D. Laing, 15 doctors, and two MPs.[97]

Meditation

On 24 August 1967, The Beatles met the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi at the London Hilton. A few days later they went to Bangor, in North Wales, to attend a weekend 'initiation' conference.[98] There, the Maharishi gave each of them a mantra.[99] The Beatles learned of the death of Brian Epstein while in Bangor with the Maharishi. Their time in early 1968 at the Maharishi's ashram in India was highly productive from a musical standpoint, as practically all of the songs that would later be recorded for The White Album and Abbey Road were composed there by Lennon, McCartney, and Harrison.[83]

Discography

Main article: The Beatles discography
Further information: List of Beatles songs by singer, The Beatles record sales, worldwide charts, and The Beatles bootlegs

Official CD catalogue

In 1987, EMI released all 12 of The Beatles' studio albums – as originally released in the UK – on CD worldwide. (North American releases were on EMI's American subsidiary, Capitol Records.) It was a considered decision by Apple Corps to standardise The Beatles catalogue throughout the world. Because there were tracks that appeared in the UK only on singles and EPs, but not on any of the original UK LPs, it was necessary to create three further CDs containing the missing tracks in order for all their recordings to be available on CD.

One CD was of a 1967 US compilation album that featured the 6-track 1967 UK EP Magical Mystery Tour and the various singles released in that year. The other two CDs were new compilations that gathered together all the other singles, EP tracks and recordings from 1962–1970 that had not been issued on the original British studio albums.

* Magical Mystery Tour - 8 August 1987[100]
* Past Masters, Volume One - 7 March 1988
* Past Masters, Volume Two - 7 March 1988

According to EMI and the Guinness World Records, The Beatles have sold in excess of one billion units (1,010,000,000, including cassettes, records, CDs and bootlegs).

Beginning in 2004, the US album configurations were released as a series of box sets from Capitol Records (The Capitol Albums, Volume 1 and Volume 2); these included both stereo and mono versions based on the mixes that were prepared for vinyl at the time of their original 1960s releases.

Song catalogue

Main article: Northern Songs

In 1963 Lennon and McCartney agreed to assign their song publishing rights to Northern Songs, a company created by music publisher Dick James. The company was administered by James' own company Dick James Music. Northern Songs went public in 1965, with Lennon and McCartney each holding 15% of the company's shares whilst Dick James and the company's chairman, Charles Silver, held a controlling 37.5%. In 1969, following a failed attempt by Lennon and McCartney to buy the company, James and Silver sold Northern Songs to British TV company Associated TeleVision (ATV), from which Lennon and McCartney received stock.

In 1985, after a short period in which the parent company was owned by Australian business magnate Robert Holmes à Court, ATV Music was sold to Michael Jackson for a reported $47 million (trumping a joint bid by McCartney and Yoko Ono), including the publishing rights to over 200 songs composed by Lennon and McCartney.

A decade later Jackson and Sony merged its music publishing businesses. Since 1995, Jackson and Sony/ATV Music Publishing have jointly owned most of the Lennon-McCartney songs recorded by The Beatles. Sony later reported that Jackson had used his share of their co-owned Beatles' catalogue as collateral for a loan from the music company. Meanwhile, Lennon's estate and McCartney still receive their respective songwriter shares of the royalties. (Despite his ownership of most of the Lennon-McCartney publishing, Jackson has only recorded one Lennon-McCartney composition himself, "Come Together" which was featured in his film Moonwalker.)

Although the Jackson-Sony catalogue includes most of The Beatles' greatest hits, four of their earliest songs had been published by one of EMI's publishing companies prior to Lennon and McCartney signing with Dick James — and McCartney later succeeded in personally acquiring the publishing rights to "Love Me Do", "Please Please Me", "P.S. I Love You" and "Ask Me Why" from EMI.

Harrison and Starr did not renew their songwriting contracts with Northern Songs in 1968, signing with Apple Publishing instead. Harrison later created Harrisongs, which still owns the rights to his post-1967 songs such as "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" and "Something". Starr also created his own company, called Startling Music. It holds the rights to his two post-1967 songs recorded by The Beatles, "Don't Pass Me By" and "Octopus's Garden".

The Beatles are one of the few major artists who have not released their recorded catalogue through online music services (for example; iTunes, Napster, etc.). Apple Corp's dispute with Apple Computers (the owners of iTunes) over the use of the name "Apple" has played a particular part in this. An uneasy truce between the two companies broke when Apple Computers opened the iTunes Store, after which Apple Corp sued Apple Computers. This was resolved in February 2007, with Apple Computer owning the Apple name but licensing it back to Apple Records.

On film

Main article: The Beatles on film

The Beatles appeared in several films, all of which featured associated soundtrack albums.

The band played themselves in two films directed by Richard Lester, A Hard Day's Night (1964) and Help! (1965). The group produced and starred in the hour-long television movie Magical Mystery Tour (1967), while the documentary Let It Be (released 1970) followed the rehearsals and recording sessions for the early 1969 Get Back project and won the Academy Award in 1971 for Best Original Song Score. In addition, the psychedelic animated film Yellow Submarine (1968) followed the adventures of a cartoon version of the band; the members did not provide their own voices, appearing only in a brief live-action epilogue.

During 1965-1969, the Beatles were the subject of a Saturday morning cartoon series, The Beatles, which loosely continued the kind of slapstick antics of A Hard Day's Night. Two Beatles songs were played in each half-hour show, with the Beatles' cartoon counterparts "lip-synching" the actual Beatles recordings. Some of the song performances, such as those from A Hard Day's Night, appeared to have been rotoscoped. The regular speaking voices of the characters were not supplied by the Beatles themselves, but rather by voice artists Paul Frees and Lance Percival. (Alex McNeil, Total Television, 1996, Penguin Books, p.82)

Other projects

Anthology


Main article: The Beatles Anthology

Love

Main article: Love (Cirque du Soleil)

Instrumentation

* Rickenbacker, Gretsch, Epiphone, Gibson, Fender, and C.F. Martin & Company guitars
* Höfner, Fender and Rickenbacker basses
* Vox, Fender, and Selmer amplifiers
* Premier and Ludwig drums
* Zildjian cymbals
* Steinway, and Blüthner pianos
* Hammond, Vox and Lowrey electric organs
* Fender Rhodes, Wurlitzer, and Hohner Pianet electric pianos
* Moog Modular synthesiser
* Mellotron Polyphonic Keyboard
* Neumann, AKG, and STC microphones

Notes

1. ^ The Beatles touched upon and helped popularise many subgenres of rock and pop. They are too numerous to list here.
2. ^ a b The Beatles: Biography. Rolling Stone. rollingstone.com. Retrieved on 2007-03-29.
3. ^ The American Recording Industry Announces its Artists of the Century. Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) (1999-11-10). Retrieved on 2007-06-26.
4. ^ Shelokhonov, Steve. The Beatles - Biography. IMDB.com. Retrieved on 2007-04-06.
5. ^ The Immortals: The First Fifty. Rolling Stone Issue 946. Rolling Stone.
6. ^ AMG biography Retrieved: 29 January 2007
7. ^ Spitz 2005 p93
8. ^ Ray O'Brien, There are Places I'll Remember: Volume 1, 2001
9. ^ Miles 1998. p47.
10. ^ Spitz 2005. pp126–127
11. ^ Miles 1998. p50.
12. ^ Cynthia Lennon – “John” 2006. p65.
13. ^ Davies, Hunter. The Beatles (1981 edition)
14. ^ Ray O'Brien – There Are Places I'll Remember: The "Beatles" Early Venues in and Around Merseyside London, 2001. p22.
15. ^ Coleman, Ray (1984). Lennon: The Definitive Biography. Pan Books. p212.
16. ^ Spitz 2005. pp188–193
17. ^ Lewisohn, Mark (1992). The Complete Beatles Chronicle. Chancellor Press. ISBN 1-85152-975-6.
18. ^ Coleman, Ray (1984). Lennon: The Definitive Biography. Pan Books. 213.
19. ^ a b c Lewisohn, Mark (1996). The Complete Beatles Chronicle. Chancellor Press, 368. 1851529756.
20. ^ http://features.absoluteelsewhere.net/ZeKingandI/ze_king_and_i.html. Retrieved 2007-07-22
21. ^ Quoted in: Cook, Graceland National Historic Landmark Nomination, 35
22. ^ From Blackjacks to Beatles: How the Fab Four Evolved. Retrieved on 2006-06-21. From Blackjacks to Beatles]Retrieved: 29 January 2007
23. ^ Casbah ClubRetrieved: 29 January 2007
24. ^ Cynthia Lennon “John” 2006. p93.
25. ^ Lewisohn. p24.
26. ^ [1] Photos of Clubs in Hamburg]Retrieved: 29 January 2007
27. ^ Cynthia Lennon “John” 2006. p97.
28. ^ Spitz 2005. p.250
29. ^ Palowski, Gareth L. How They Became The Beatles. Plume. ISBN 978-0452265066
30. ^ Lewisohn. p25
31. ^ Miles 1998. p74. It was Astrid Kirchherr who shot the famous black and white headshots, but contrary to popular belief, did not invent the distinctive haircut of the group.
32. ^ Cynthia Lennon “John” 2006. p109.
33. ^ The Beatles. The Beatles Anthology. Chronicle Books, LLC, 2000.
34. ^ Coleman 88–89
35. ^ Coleman 93
36. ^ Coleman 93–94
37. ^ Davies, Hunter. The Beatles (1981 edition). pp. 178
38. ^ a b Spitz 2005. p318
39. ^ Spitz 2005. pp318-319
40. ^ Spitz 2005. p322
41. ^ Spitz 2005. p330
42. ^ Spitz 2005. p328
43. ^ Lu Walters' recording sessionRetrieved: 29 January 2007
44. ^ Spitz 2005. p353
45. ^ a b "Beatles History: 1962" at Beatles Discography. Retrieved: 29 January 2007
46. ^ Love Me DoRetrieved: 29 January 2007
47. ^ Bill Harry The Ultimate Beatles Encyclopedia P.516
48. ^ JPGRRetrieved: 29 January 2007
49. ^ The Beatles on Vee Jay Records. Retrieved on August 19, 2006. Retrieved: 29 January 2007
50. ^ Spitz 2005. p461
51. ^ JPGR I Want to Hold Your Hand releaseRetrieved: 29 January 2007
52. ^ I Want to Hold Your HandRetrieved: 29 January 2007
53. ^ Spitz 2005. p457
54. ^ Spitz 2006. p458
55. ^ Spitz 2005. p459
56. ^ Spitz 2005. p462
57. ^ Spitz 2005. p464
58. ^ Spitz 2005. p473
59. ^ Harry, Bill (2000). The Beatles Encyclopedia: Revised and Updated, 1134.
60. ^ Rare BeatlesRetrieved: 29 January 2007
61. ^ Ficher, P. and Seamark, K. H. (2005). Vintage Adelaide. East Street Publications, 70–71. ISBN 1-921037-06-7.
62. ^ Beatles in New Zealand Retrieved: 11 July 2007
63. ^ Spitz 2005. p556
64. ^ Spitz 2005. p557
65. ^ Napier ChroniclesRetrieved: 29 January 2007
66. ^ The Beatles Off The Record. London:Omnibus Press p193. ISBN 0-7119-798-5-5
67. ^ Allmusic Rubber Soul review. Retrieved on 2007-06-14.
68. ^ Spitz 2005. p619
69. ^ Spitz 2005. p620
70. ^ Spitz 2005. p623
71. ^ Spitz 2005. p624
72. ^ Spitz 2005. p625
73. ^ "The John Lennon I Knew" from the Telegraph, 5 October 2006. Retrieved: 29 January 2007
74. ^ Cleave, Maureen (1966). "How Does a Beatle Live? John Lennon Lives Like This". London Evening Standard 4 March 1966. Retrieved: 29 January 2007
75. ^ a b c Miles 1998. pp293-295.
76. ^ The Beatles Story, Liverpool. But see also http://www.eskimo.com/~bpentium/whobutch.html
77. ^ Peter Guralnick, Careless Love: The Unmaking of Elvis Presley, 420.
78. ^ Guralnick, Careless Love, p.426. On Presley badmouthing The Beatles to President Nixon, see also Geoffrey Giuliano and Vmda Devi, Glass Onion: The Beatles in Their Own Words-Exclusive Interviews With John, Paul, George, Ringo and Their Inner Circle (1999).
79. ^ CNN.com Elvis is still everywhere August 16, 2002. [2]
80. ^ Sounes, Howard, Down the Highway: The Life Of Bob Dylan (Doubleday 2001; ISBN 0-55299929-6) p 203
81. ^ Barrow, Tony. John, Paul, George, Ringo & Me. ISBN 1-86200-238-X
82. ^ Magical Mystery TourRetrieved: 29 January 2007
83. ^ a b Miles 1998. p397
84. ^ Spitz 2005. pp777–779.
85. ^ Mark Lewisohn. The Beatles Box Set booklet
86. ^ Spitz 2005. p853
87. ^ The Beatles' partnership was legally dissolved in 1975bbc.co.uk - Retrieved: 26 January 2007
88. ^ Hall of FameRetrieved: 29 January 2007
89. ^ GeocitiesRetrieved: 29 January 2007
90. ^ Miles 1998. pp280–281.
91. ^ Miles 1998. p142
92. ^ a b Miles 1998. pp66–67.
93. ^ Miles 1998. p185
94. ^ Miles 1998. pp188–189
95. ^ Miles 1998. p198.
96. ^ Independent.co.ukRetrieved: 29 January 2007
97. ^ Paul McCartney’s arrest in JapanRetrieved: 29 January 2007
98. ^ Beatles in Bangor bbc.co.uk 16 November, 2006. Retrieved: 29 January 2007
99. ^ Miles 1998. p396
100. ^ LP version originally released in the United States on 27 November 1967.

References
* Coleman, Ray (1989). Brian Epstein: The Man Who Made The Beatles. Viking. ISBN 0-670-81474-1.
* Davies, Hunter (1985). The Beatles. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-015463-5.
* Lennon, Cynthia (2006). John. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0-340-89828-3.
* Lewisohn, Mark (1990). EMI's The Complete Beatles Recording Sessions: The Official Story of the Abbey Road Years. Hamlyn. ISBN 0-681-03189-1.
* Miles, Barry (1998). Many Years From Now. Vintage-Random House. ISBN 0-7493-8658-4.
* Spitz, Bob (2005). The Beatles. Little Brown. ISBN 0-316-80352-9.
* The Beatles. Elvis Costello. Rolling Stone Issue 946. Rolling Stone.
* The Immortals: The First Fifty. Rolling Stone Issue 946. Rolling Stone.
* {{cite web| title = ArtistFacts: The Beatles; catalouging (Look for on page)| url =http://artistfacts.com/detail.php?id=1

Further reading

* Astley, John (2006). Why Don't We Do It In The Road? The Beatles Phenomenon. The Company of Writers. ISBN 0-9551834-7-2.
* Bramwell, Tony (2005). Magical Mystery Tours. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-33043-X.
* Braun, Michael (1964 [1995 Reprint]). Love Me Do: The Beatles' Progress. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-002278-3.
* Carr, Roy & Tyler, Tony (1975). The Beatles: An Illustrated Record. Harmony Books. ISBN 0-517-52045-1.
* Colonna, Roberto (2005). Dalla prospettiva degli scarafaggi. Napolipiù - La verità.
* Cross, Craig (2005). The Beatles: Day by Day, Song by Song, Record by Record. iUniverse, Inc. ISBN 0-595-34663-4.
* Dimery, Martin. Being John Lennon. SAF books, 2002. ISBN 0-946719-43-8.
* Emerick, Geoff, & Massey, Howard Chiu (2006). Here, There and Everywhere: My Life Recording the Music of The Beatles. Gotham Books. ISBN 1-59240-179-1.
* Goldsmith, Martin (2004). The Beatles Come To America. Turning Points. ISBN 0-471-46964-5.
* Astrid Kirchherr & Klaus Voormann. Hamburg Days. Genesis Publications, 1999. ISBN 0-904351-73-4. [Chronicals The Beatles early years spent performing at Hamburg's Kaiserkeller, Top Ten Club, and the Star Club, 1960-1962. With Foreword by George Harrison and Afterword by Paul McCartney.]
* Kubernik, Ken (October 16, 2005). Here, There & Everywhere. Variety Magazine's 100 Icons of the Century. Variety Magazine. Retrieved on January 28, 2006.
* Lewis, Martin (October 16, 2005). The Apollonian Spirit of the Beatles. Variety Magazine's 100 Icons of the Century. Variety Magazine. Retrieved on January 28, 2006.
* MacDonald, Ian (1995). Revolution in the Head: The Beatles' Records and the Sixties. Vintage. ISBN 0-7126-6697-4.
* Martin, George (1994). Summer of love: The Making of Sgt. Pepper. Macmillan. ISBN 0-333-60398-2.
* Norman, Philip (1997). Shout: The Beatles in Their Generation. MJF Books. ISBN 1-56731-087-7.
* Alan J. Porter Before They Were Beatles: The Early Years 1956–1960. Xlibris. ISBN 1-4134-3056-2.
* Ryan, Kevin, and Brian Kehew. Recording The Beatles: The Studio Equipment and Techniques Used to Create Their Classic Albums. Houston: Curvebender Publishing, 2006. ISBN 0-9785200-0-9.
* Schaffner, Nicholas (1977). The Beatles Forever. Cameron House. ISBN 0-8117-0225-1.
* Spitz, Bob (2005). The Beatles: The Biography. Little Brown. ISBN 0-316-80352-9.
* Turner, Steve. A Hard Day's Write. 3rd ed. New York: Harper Paperbacks, 2005. ISBN 0-06-084409-4. [Discusses the inspiration for or interprets every Beatles song.]

Monday, August 20, 2007

Limp Bizkit


Limp Bizkit (alternately written as limpbizkit) is a nu metal band from Jacksonville, Florida.

They are often credited, along with their discoverers Korn, for creating the nu metal genre and starting to widen its popularity[1]. Limp Bizkit was very popular during the late 1990s and early 2000s, and their albums have sold over 50 million copies worldwide. Limp Bizkit's current members are vocalist Fred Durst, bassist Sam Rivers, drummer John Otto (Rivers' cousin), and Latvian turntablist/sampler player DJ Lethal. The band's guitarist Wes Borland departed in 2001 following the release of their first three albums to be replaced by Mike Smith for the band's fourth release Results May Vary. Wes rejoined for The Unquestionable Truth (Part 1) only to quit once again in 2006 to work with other projects Black Light Burns and From First to Last. It's unknown if Wes will rejoin Limp Bizkit in 2007 for The Unquestionable Truth (Part 2).

Band history
Early years

There are many rumors about where the band found inspiration for their name, and there have been several conflicting stories about its actual origin. Some, including the band's first guitarist Rob Waters, claim the name was chosen because of how a friend of the band described his brain (like a "limp biscuit") while on marijuana. The band themselves contend that they simply chose what sounded like the stupidest name they could think of at the time [citation needed]. A long standing rumor is that the band was named after the game limp biscuit, although there is no evidence of this. [citation needed]

As a teenager, Fred Durst found himself an outcast simply because he enjoyed two very different styles of music[citation needed]. He liked the break-dancing scene, and music such as Eric B. & Rakim, Michael Jackson etc., [citation needed] which was labeled by others as 'black' music. On the other end of the spectrum, with his skateboarding background, he enjoyed heavy music such as Suicidal Tendencies, and Kiss [citation needed]. This definitely influenced his later works, and is one of the reasons why the band rose to fame.

Fred moved to Jacksonville, where he met Sam Rivers. Sam had gotten into music because of his cousin, John Otto, who played drums. Fred asked Sam if he wanted to get together for a jam session, and Sam accepted. Sam brought his cousin John into the picture, and they all instantly got along [citation needed]. Together they started an early version of the band. Originally Fred was going to play guitar, despite the fact that he didn't know how [citation needed]. The trio soon realized this wouldn't be acceptable, and recruited Rob Waters. In 1994 Limp Bizkit was born.

Waters didn't stay in the picture very long. The band's first four-track demo, entitled "Mental Aquaducts", was recorded with him but soon after that he was out of the band. John Otto suggested the group consider Wes Borland, who he had gone to school with, for the now vacant position. Otto stated Borland was an artist, but also a very good guitar player. Fred had noticed him playing at clubs and also wanted to recruit him. At first there was some tension on Sam's side, due to some differences he had with Wes in the past. They eventually all agreed it would be a worthwhile venture [citation needed]. Fred was going to Philadelphia, and he instructed the other members to talk to Wes and see if he'd join the band. Wes accepted, and the very night Fred came back to Jacksonville a show was scheduled. Fred and Wes met for the first time, practiced for a half hour, and then went and played the show.

The band continued to play various shows, their most popular venue being at the Milkbar in Jacksonville. Fred Durst met members of the band Korn when they first started touring and became friends with them [citation needed]. An incident occurred when Fred insisted on showing off his tattooing skills to the band and gave Reginald Arvizu and Brian Welch tattoos. While Arvizu's turned out fine, Welch's, which was supposed to be a "Korn" logo, ended up looking terrible [citation needed]. Durst had given Korn the band's first demo tape with Rob Waters, and they shrugged it off as nothing special. But when Wes came into the picture, a second demo was recorded and this time Korn was impressed. This three song demo included the tracks 'Counterfeit', 'Stuck', and 'Pollution', all of which would end up on Three Dollar Bill Y'all. Reginald Arvizu passed the demo tape onto Ross Robinson, who produced for Korn, and was also very impressed. Ross contacted Limp Bizkit, and stated his intent to produce for the band. Also, at a Garbage concert, Fred had met Jordan Schur and played his demo tape for him in Schur's car. He was impressed, and wanted to sign Limp Bizkit to his label, Flip. About this time they became friends with rap music's House of Pain when the group booked them as the opening act for a small Florida tour. When House of Pain disbanded in 1996, DJ Lethal decided to join Limp Bizkit.

Before Limp Bizkit signed their record deal, Wes quit the band for a small period of time. He neglected to take pills prescribed for his ADHD, causing him to lash out against his fellow band members, and ultimately he quit the band [citation needed]. At first Fred intended to go on without Wes, but everyone soon realized how instrumental he was to the band. Fred begged Wes to return to the band. At first Wes declined, but after working out his personal issues he returned to the band and they went off to record their first album.

Another major event that shaped the destiny of the band occurred before they were signed. It's not exactly clear when it happened due to conflicting accounts. Apparently it occurred after Wes had quit the band, while the remaining members still wanted to go on without him. The band had gotten an offer from major record label Mojo, a subsidiary of MCA. Seeing a greater opportunity with Mojo, the band decided to choose them over the smaller label, Flip. Durst called Jordan Schur, and said, regretfully, that he had decided to choose Mojo over Flip. He also said that the band was driving a van to Los Angeles to sign the record deal and that the only way they weren't going to sign was if the van flipped. These words proved to be an omen of sorts. While the group's van was driving through Texas the driver fell asleep at the wheel and the van flipped. The van rolled several times before landing on its roof. While everyone managed to escape with only minor injuries, the demeanor of the band changed completely. They took it as a sign and from then on wanted nothing to do with Mojo. Everyone, including Ross Robinson, started calling Wes, trying to get him to come back to the band. Once Wes came back, Fred called Jordan Schur and pleaded with him, telling him how big of a mistake they had made, and about how the accident was "a sign". It cost Flip $200,000 to buy out the Mojo contracts. When that was done, Limp Bizkit was signed to Flip. Being a small label, Flip entered into a joint venture with Interscope to distribute the band's first album.

Rising Popularity
Three Dollar Bill Y'All$

, their first full length recording, was released in 1997 on Interscope. The album fared poorly on the Billboard 200 at the time of its release, an indication of times to come, although it did sell steadily over time due to a huge amount of obsessive touring. It wasn't until Limp Bizkit made further associations with Korn that they were able to promote their music via MTV, Warped Tour, the Family Values Tour (Korn's own tour), the Trail of Tears, and Ozzfest, which helped the album to peak at number 25 on the chart. At Ozzfest in particular, the band made a memorable impression on viewers due to the original set they played on, which consisted of a giant toilet. The band climbed out from the toilet at the beginning of the show, with Fred saying lines during the show such as "We're coming straight to you from the sewer" and "I am a piece of shit, and my band is a piece of shit". Sam Rivers once said during MTV Driven "Our music is fueled by negativity, so by saying these things you're only fueling the fire". Wes Borland's outlandish makeup also started making impressions on fans as well. Although their first released single was "Counterfeit", they rose to fame through a cover of George Michael's “Faith”. The song appeared on the soundtrack of Peter Berg's 1998 movie "Very Bad Things" starring Cameron Diaz, Christian Slater and Jeremy Piven.[2] Apparently, the song only took around 10 minutes to arrange. Later that year, Fred lent his vocals to KoRn's third album on the song "All In The Family", a rap-battle of sorts. The album also featured a second disc, with four remixes of the demo for the song and multimedia featuring inteviews between Fred, Wes and the rest of KoRn.

Another unique idea the band came up with was the "Ladies Night in Cambodia" tour. Fred had noticed that mostly young males went to their concerts, and wanted more women to come. So, they came up with the idea to let women get in for free at this tour. The tour was a huge success, and many more women would appear at their later concerts (even though letting them in free was only for that tour). The set was also fairly original, as it made the stage appear to be a jungle (hence the 'Cambodia').

Business beginnings

It was around this time that Fred Durst started to assist the careers of a number of up-and-coming bands, particularly Staind, Cold, Puddle of Mudd and Taproot (who later rejected Durst's contract). Most of these bands have since tried to cement themselves as an independent, standalone band and denounce Limp Bizkit's aid and influence. Some however, such as Staind , stay true to Durst's aid. Staind has always said how thankful they are to Fred. In 2006, when Fred Durst did the song 'Outside' live for the second time with Staind, Aaron Lewis replied to several hecklers with "Hey, if it wasn't for this motherfucker right here, I wouldn't be playing in front of you tonight".

Mainstream Success
Significant Other (1999-2000)


In 1999, Limp Bizkit found major worldwide success with their second album Significant Other, which debuted at number 1 on the Billboard 200 and received generally positive reviews [1]. The album sold 634,000 copies in its first week. The first single “Nookie,” was an enormous hit on rock radio, reaching the top 10 in both rock and rap charts. The band followed-up the single with three simultaneously released singles - "Break Stuff", "Re-Arranged" and "N 2 Gether Now" (featuring Method Man). The album also featured the song "Nobody Like You" with vocals by Jonathan Davis of KoRn and Scott Weiland of Stone Temple Pilots.

In the summer of 1999, Limp Bizkit played at the highly anticipated Woodstock '99 rally. However, violent action sprang up during and after their performance, including fans tearing plywood from the walls during a rendition of the band's single Break Stuff. Several rapes and sexual assaults were reported in the aftermath of the concert [2], resulting in deliberately lit fires and looting when the Red Hot Chili Peppers played the next day. Some have blamed the band for this outbreak, although Fred Durst claimed that none of the instigations he had made at the concert were intended to cause damage. Consequently, the music video for the band's single "Re-Arranged" has the band being tried and punished for the Woodstock uproar.

Along with this episode, controversies involving the band's members began to arise. Durst particularly became involved in feuds with Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails (which gave basis to the belief that Durst practiced mafia-style tactics in the music industry), the nu-metal nonet Slipknot, Ozzy Osbourne's guitarist Zakk Wylde, physical violence with Creed frontman Scott Stapp, verbal wars with rapper Eminem, and later, Bruce Dickinson of Iron Maiden. In addition, the band Taproot released on their website an answering machine message that Durst had left on the lead singer's phone as 'revenge' for ending their record company contract with his record label.

Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water (2000-2001)

15 months later, Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water was released on the 17th of October 2000, selling over a million copies in the US in its first week of release (a record for a rock album) and going on to sell almost 12 million worldwide. The first two singles "My Generation" and "Rollin' (Air Raid Vehicle)" were released at the same time in promotion of the album. "Take a Look Around" was later added to the list as the theme song to the movie Mission: Impossible 2 starring Tom Cruise. A remix of "Rollin'" featuring Method Man, Redman and DMX was also a minor club hit. The fourth single "My Way" was commissioned as the opening theme for the WWF's WrestleMania X-Seven. Despite its commercial success, the album received mediocre reviews from many critics [3]. In late 2000 the band also stirred up some discontent by allowing the controversial peer-to-peer file-sharing network Napster to sponsor their Back to Basics tour, advertised as a chance for fans to 'get closer to the band.' [citation needed]

In an interview in 2001, Borland expressed dissatisfaction with the band and left by summer of that year to play with his side project Big Dumb Face. His departure was interpreted as a major blow by fans and critics to the band. He was often cited as a vital creative force in the group, due in part to his eccentricity.

Controversy continued with a death during a 2001 tour of Australia at the Big Day Out rock festival in Sydney. Teenager Jessica Michalik suffered a heart attack when fans rushed the stage in the mosh pit. It was claimed by security and witnesses that Fred Durst was urging the crowd on in a possibly violent manner, or that he failed to attempt to calm the crowd after the accident. Jessica was announced clinically dead when she was pulled out of the pit by security guards, but regained consciousness after having air pumped into her lungs as well as an epinephrine shot to her heart from paramedics backstage. She was immediately rushed to Sydney's Concord Hospital where she died a few hours later. Durst released statements to the TV show Access Hollywood in the U.S. that he had 'visited the girl's bedside' and 'kept in touch with her family,' though police claimed he did 'no such thing.' [citation needed] Thirty fans were treated for minor injuries at the festival's medical tents.

Durst refused to fly to Australia in order to appear in court for the trial of the girl's death, which lawyers scoffed at [4]. He claimed that he was a 'nervous flier' and 'couldn't fit it into his schedule,' although he provided some of the band's managers with testimony. During the hearing he claimed, via a video connection from the U.S., that he had warned the concert's organizers and promoter Vivian Lees of the potential dangers of such minimal security, even going so far as to say Limp Bizkit would 'pull out' if the issue wasn't properly addressed. Big Day Out attorneys attempted to pin the blame on Limp Bizkit because the band did not stop playing when they received news of the incident. Although the guitars, drums and bass ceased, DJ Lethal played a quiet computer-generated loop. While admitting that Lethal took it upon himself to play the interlude, Durst claimed that the quiet melody did have a soothing effect on the crowd. The Coroner's Court decided the band 'could've been more helpful in efforts to aid the girl'. The security practices employed by festival organizers Creative Entertainment Australia bore the brunt of the blame. After viewing videotapes and hearing witness testimony, however, Milledge, the coroner, said it was evident that the density of the crowd was dangerous at the time Limp Bizkit took the stage.[3]

Mainstream Success Decrease

Results May Vary (2002-2004)


With Borland's absence, Limp Bizkit began a nation-wide audition in 2002 for their new guitarist called "Put Your Guitar Where Your Mouth Is".[4] Durst announced at the outset that he was interested in recruiting a female or more than one new member into the band [5]. Thousands of hopefuls were said to queue up to participate. Some controversy occurred when rumors surfaced that all contestants were required to sign a document giving Limp Bizkit the full ownership of any riffs they played. Fred Durst said on the band's website that what they signed was only a release form so that each person's likeness could be used in a documentary if the band were to make one.[6] Each auditioner was allowed only sixty seconds in the first round to prove themselves in the eyes of the band. The final contestants were Monte Pittman, Anousch and Jonas Anderson. Christopher Arp of Psyopus auditioned in this guitarist search, as he later said in an interview with Terrorizer magazine, and Eddie Van Halen auditioned for fun due to his being friends with the band.

On March 7, 2003, Limp Bizkit announced they would perform live for the first time in two years, at the upcoming WWE's WrestleMania XIX taking place on March 30.[5] They also signed up for several live tours, despite their lack of a guitarist. The guitarists for the Wrestlemania tour were later revealed when Durst wrote in a post on the official website: "We are playing Wrestlemania this weekend. On the guitars will be Head from Korn and Mike Smith from Snot". This live lineup performed the song Crack Addict, which was rumored to be on their upcoming album, although it was not.

During this time, Durst spoke of many collaborations with guitarists, with a few rap guests sprinkled in on songs for the album. Among them were Rivers Cuomo of Weezer, Page Hamilton of Helmet, Al Jourgensen of Ministry, and Brian "Head" Welch of Korn as well as Jay-Z, Bubba Sparxxx, and Snoop Dogg. None of the songs with those guitarists would make it onto the album, except "Build a Bridge", which was written with Brian "Head" Welch, and "Red Light, Green Light", which featured Snoop Dogg.

For whatever reason, the finalists from the "Put Your Guitar Where Your Mouth Is" contest were rejected in favor of former Snot guitarist Mike Smith. The band also changed its logo to limpbizkit to promote their change of style.

The band had already recorded an album's worth of material for an upcoming release. But with Mike Smith now in the band, it was decided that they would go back in the studio and record another album's worth of songs. The best of these tracks would make it onto the final release. Fred refers to the tracks recorded during this period that didn't make it to the album as the 'Off The Record' tracks, as if it were an album in itself.

On September 23, 2003, Results May Vary, their fourth album and last top ten recording, was released, with about half the songs featuring Mike Smith on guitar and about half having Limp Bizkit's Sam Rivers on guitar. "Build a Bridge" has Brian "Head" Welch on guitar. The album was considered a commercial flop, breaking the group's number-1 spree on the Billboard 200. It received platinum certification (1 million copies sold) in the United States after fourteen weeks on the charts. In comparison, their previous work Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water sold one million albums in its first week. Results May Vary appealed more to fans of Fred-written ballads with less of a hard rock emphasis than on previous releases. On the other hand, the album received generally poor reviews by critics. [7]. Although Rolling Stone's review was generally positive, Playlouder called it 'fucking crap' [8], Yahoo! Launch labeled it 'a frightening insight into the vacuous state of 21st century culture,' [9], and another review stated that it 'suffered from an utter lack of form and direction.' [10]. Nevertheless, an acoustic cover of The Who's "Behind Blue Eyes" was a moderate hit on mainstream radio,and its video featured actress Halle Berry. "Eat You Alive" was released as the first single off the album, cracking the top 20 of both American rock charts with an accompanying video that features actress Thora Birch being berated. The album's ballad "Build a Bridge" was the official theme song of WWE's Survivor Series pay-per-view event in November 2003, although it was never released as an official single due to Mike Smith's departure [11]. Another song from the album, Almost Over, cracked the Rock Top 40. However it was never released as a single or video.

'Results May Vary' is considered by some to be the last mainstream album that will ever be released by the band. Their latest album 'The Unquestionable Truth (Part 1)' received limited advertisement, and is seen as both a relative commercial and critical failure in comparison to their previous albums.[citation needed]

Also in 2003, Limp Bizkit toured on the Summer Sanitarium Tour 2003 with Metallica, Linkin Park, Deftones and Mudvayne to promote Metallica's 2003 release, St. Anger.

The Unquestionable Truth (Part 1) and Greatest Hitz (2004-2006)
Throughout July 2004, various rumors began circulating claiming that Wes Borland had been playing with the band again. By July 8, a fan site released an official report that Wes Borland was recording with the band in London. Photos appeared on the band's official website of him playing with the band, and a live video of them playing a new song The Truth in studio was also posted on the website. Durst said of Borland's re-entry, "We are very content with Mike being gone. We are the type of people that stay true to our family and our instincts and at any moment will act on intuition as a whole. Mike wasn't the guy. We had fun playing with him, but always knew, in the back of our minds, that he wasn't where we needed him to be mentally."[6] At this stage, they reverted back to the use of their original logo.

Two months prior to the release of their fifth album The Unquestionable Truth, a homemade pornographic film starring Fred Durst was leaked onto the internet. The T Mobile Terrorist group claimed responsibility [citation needed], although later Durst mentioned to MTV that it had been spotted by "a man who came to repair his computer" who then stole it and spread it about the net.[7] Durst was later approached by a company asking him if he wanted to sell the film on the market, however Durst declined and filed a lawsuit against the thief [citation needed].

The band returned to the studio with producer Ross Robinson, who had worked with them on Three Dollar Bill Y'All$, to create a seven track EP titled The Unquestionable Truth (Part 1). Drummer John Otto was only able to contribute to one track on the album due to personal matters, with Sammy Siegler providing percussion on the remaining tracks. Durst promised fans before its release that it would be a return to the 'rawer, more abrasive style' of their first album. [citation needed]

The Unquestionable Truth (Part 1) was released as a 7-track EP internationally on May 3, 2005 with little fanfare or advertising, debuting at number 24 on the Billboard 200 and selling only 37,000 copies in its first week. The mini-album has finally sold over 1,000,000 copies worldwide, but just slightly over 100,000 in the US.[8] It also received mediocre reviews, with some critics thinking that Durst was trying too hard to imitate Rage Against the Machine's lead singer Zack de la Rocha [12].

Limp Bizkit's first greatest hits compilation, titled Greatest Hitz, was released on November the 8th in 2005. It contained material from the band's first four albums (the track The Truth was released in some countries). An additional DVD, which featured music videos for most of their major hits, was released in conjunction with the CD. The album and DVD were heavily promoted by the band's label, even to the point where Durst claimed he was being forced to do interviews about a compilation he wasn't very excited about.[13] The promotion did not pay off, with the album debuting at number 47. The compilation album featured 3 previously unreleased songs, "Why" and "Lean On Me", which were acoustic-based leftovers from Results May Vary, dropped for heavier songs[14], and a medley of The Verve's "Bittersweet Symphony" and Mötley Crüe's "Home Sweet Home", which was released to radio but did not receive much airplay. Wes Borland stated that the CD was a "piece of shit and a waste of money".

The Future

The Unquestionable Truth (Part 2)


Limp Bizkit's future remains uncertain. There was mention of future Limp Bizkit albums when The Unquestionable Truth (Part 1) was released, including a follow-up, The Unquestionable Truth (Part 2). The band has remained extremely quiet as a whole, making no public appearances. Many of the members are pursuing personal goals. Several of the band's members worked with solo hard rock artist Rob Zombie on his latest release Educated Horses.

Wes Borland has spoken a number of times regarding the status of Limp Bizkit, including an interview with MTV in March 2006, where he said that the band were on 'extended hiatus' [15]. In other interviews, he has declared that Limp Bizkit has split and that The Unquestionable Truth, Part 2 will not be released, although he does not rule out the possibility of Limp Bizkit re-uniting.

Surprisingly, Durst contradicted Borland's assertions, leading to MySpace comments back-and-forth between the two on the future of the band. Durst has assured press that The Unquestionable Truth Part 2 will be coming out and that the band will tour to support it, but with some songs that do not feature Borland on guitar. He has also claimed it will be a full length release rather than an EP and will be even more experimental and aggressive than the first. Durst also has plans to direct his first motion picture film. Additionally, he claimed to be touring in the northeastern United States, recording sessions (dubbed by Durst as the 'Off The Record' tracks) that didn't make it onto the album.

While Fred was deep in production of filming The Education Of Charlie Banks, he had stated numerous times that in his spare time he continued to work on lyrics for the next album. Apparently once the film was finished on July 25, 2006, the band planned to go directly into the studio to record the next album.

On July 23, 2006, Durst stated that he would begin editing and recording vocals for The Unquestionable Truth (Part 2) in Los Angeles on August 7.

On March 17, 2007, Durst stated on his myspace blog that he would like to tour with the original line-up, including Wes Borland. DJ Lethal also shared the same sentiments, and told fans to ask Wes Borland to come back to Limp Bizkit.

Recently in an interview for MTV, Fred Durst said that The Unquestionable Truth (Part 2) is done, but will not be released until the time is right ("timing is everything"). He stated that right now people should be enjoying the Rage Against the Machine come back tour.

On June 26, 2007, best friend of the band Gabe had posted up pictures of Fred Durst and DJ Lethal finishing up The Unquestionable Truth (Part 2). It shows the two in the studio. [16]

Theres also a video on Limp Bizkit myspace where John is playing the drums with Fred. There is talk that Fred is going to play the guitar for the band due to Wes Borland leaving, despite a hint that the next guitarist would be chosen through Myspace.com.

Band members
Current


* Fred Durst - Vocals
* Sam Rivers - Bass Guitar
* John Otto - Drums
* DJ Lethal - Turntables/keyboard/samples

Former

* Rob Waters - Guitar (1994)
* Wes Borland - Guitar (1994-2001, 2004-2006)
* Mike Smith - Guitar (2003-2004)

Non-Musical Album Appearances
* Les Claypool and Matt Pinfield - Outro Significant Other
* Ben Stiller - Outro Chocolate Starfish and the Hotdog Flavored Water
Discography
Main article: Limp Bizkit discography
Studio albums

* 1997 - Three Dollar Bill, Yall$
* 1999 - Significant Other
* 2000 - Chocolate Starfish and the Hotdog Flavored Water
* 2001 - New Old Songs
* 2003 - Results May Vary
* 2005 - The Unquestionable Truth (Part 1)
* 2007 - The Unquestionable Truth (Part 2)

Guest appearances in Limp Bizkit videos

* Sen Dog (Cypress Hill), Thom Hazaert (President - Corporate Punishment Records) - Counterfeit
* Chino Moreno - Counterfeit [Lethal Dose Mix]
* Eminem, Dr. Dre, Jonathan Davis, Snoop Dogg, Pauly Shore, Seth Green and more - Break Stuff
* Ben Stiller, Stephen Dorff - Rollin'
* Bill Paxton, Thora Birch - Eat You Alive
* Halle Berry - Behind Blue Eyes
* Jonathan Davis, Fieldy, Head - Faith, footage from Family Values
* Matt Pinfield - Rearranged
* Method Man, Pauly Shore, Redman, DJ Premier - N 2 Gether Now
* Xzibit - Getcha Groove On
* Bubba Sparxxx, Timbaland - "Rearranged (Timbaland Mix)"

Guest appearances in other videos

* Fred Durst - Avril Lavigne, "Complicated"
* Fred Durst - Bow Wow, "Bow Wow That's My Name"
* Fred Durst - Cold, "Give"
* Fred Durst - Eminem, "The Real Slim Shady"
* Fred Durst - Kid Rock, "American Bad Ass"
* Fred Durst - Kid Rock, "Bawitdaba"
* Fred Durst - Korn, "Falling Away From Me"
* Fred Durst - Korn, "Got The Life"
* Fred Durst - Methods of Mayhem, "Get Naked"
* Fred Durst - Puddle of Mudd, "Control"
* Fred Durst - Soulfly, "Bleed"
* Fred Durst - Staind, "Home"
* Fred Durst - Staind, "It's Been Awhile"
* Fred Durst - Staind, "Just Go"
* Fred Durst - Staind, "Outside"
* Fred Durst - 8Ball, "Quit Playin Games"
* Fred Durst - Other artist, Whats Going On
* Mike Smith - Britney Spears, "I Love Rock 'N Roll "
* Mike Smith - Staind, "Outside"
* Wes Borland - The Crystal Method, "Born Too Slow"
* DJ Lethal - Dilated Peoples, "Worst Comes To Worst"

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Radiohead


Who will ever figure how last year's hype band becomes this year's underdog and then next year's underdog hype sensation? Oxford, England's Radiohead are the prime example of such an affliction. They started as a grunge wannabe band with their Gen X-posing hit "Creep." Immediately, it was recognizable that singer Thom Yorke possessed an intriguing voice, but the material was laughably weak on their debut album, Pablo Honey.

Radiohead is a British rock band formed in Oxford during the late 1980s, originally under the name On A Friday, a name referring to the only time where all band members were able to practice. Their current moniker "Radiohead" was taken from the Talking Heads song "Radio Head". The band consists of Thom Yorke (vocals, rhythm guitar and keyboards), Ed O'Brien (guitars, vocals), Jonny Greenwood (guitars and electronics), his brother Colin Greenwood (bass guitar), and Phil Selway (drums). Yorke and J. Greenwood are often regarded as being the two main artists behind the band, while the other members play supporting roles.

Producer Nigel Godrich has worked with the band since the recording of The Bends, and is said to have contributed significantly to their sound, often being dubbed the "sixth member" of the band. Another major contributor has been Stanley Donwood, who has produced the artwork for the bands albums since The Bends in collaboration with "Dr. Tchock" – a pseudonym for Yorke. Donwood and Yorke met at Oxford, and also produce the official band website, Radiohead.com (http://www.radiohead.com/).

Rising to superstardom (1994-1996) - left to right: Colin Greenwood, Ed O'Brien, Phil Selway, Jonny Greenwood and Thom Yorke. While Radiohead are not normally referred to as a Britpop band, their influence on contemporary Britpop, especially bands such as Coldplay, Muse and Travis, is noticeable. Lately their electronic influence has placed them in Warp Records territory, though they remain basically an experimental alternative rock group.

Radiohead first came to international attention when their single "Creep" received extensive airplay and charted in many countries. Striking a highly popular and sympathetic note of similar self-loathing among fans, "Creep" was released around the same time as other so-called "slacker" anthems such as Beck's "Loser". The band later came to hate "Creep" and, until recently, refused to play it, believing that its meaning had been misinterpreted and given too much weight by fans.

The band at the zenith of their popularity (1997-1999) - left to right: Jonny Greenwood, Thom Yorke, Phil Selway, Ed O'Brien and Colin Greenwood Radiohead's first album, Pablo Honey (1993), which included "Creep", was a solid if unremarkable recording that lacks both the force and experimentation of their later work. Drawing heavily on 1960s influences as well as the then popular grunge music exemplified by groups such as Nirvana, Radiohead were considered a less than significant band. The EP My Iron Lung (1994) was released between the two albums, and saw the band in a transitional stage between the poppy simplicity of Pablo Honey and the musical depth of their next album The Bends. It was a significant step forward for the group with Yorke's vocal style to the fore. Tracks such as "Planet Telex", "Street Spirit [fade out]" and "Fake Plastic Trees" were striking, original and indicators of the group's later developments. Widely praised at the time of its release, The Bends is considered by many critics as one of the best albums of the mid-1990s.

After a year of solid touring, the band recorded their next album, 1997's OK Computer, in a studio located in the Oxford countryside. The album received even greater acclaim than The Bends, featuring prominently in many "best album" polls, then and now. OK Computer found Radiohead taking musical risks uncommon in the Britpop world, experimenting with ambience and noise to create a set of songs that many consider to be a high point of late-twentieth century rock music. With worldwide commercial success, Radiohead toured extensively, documenting their 1997-1998 tour on Super 8 and later released on DVD in 1999 as Meeting People Is Easy.

Exhausted by their fame and on the verge of burnout following the OK Computer tour, the band spent the latter part of 1998 in relative quietness. The same year the band released their fifth EP, Airbag/How Am I Driving?, which fills the gulf between the progressive rock of OK Computer and their subsequent experimental work on Kid A and Amnesiac. Thom Yorke admitted that after the tour the band was on the verge of splitting up. He also added that he fell in depression and Michael Stipe (R.E.M.'s singer) helped him a lot to recover and continue songwriting and recording. At the end of 1999 they returned to the studio to record Kid A, a defiantly experimental album that complemented the lyrical and musical hooks of their earlier work with a more minimalist style. The album's arrangements have been likened to a meeting of Pink Floyd and Aphex Twin. The album was released in October 2000. The band cited Alice Coltrane, Charles Mingus and Paul Lansky as influences, as well as the entire back catalogue of Warp Records.



Artist Biography - Radiohead
Radiohead TicketsLatest years (2000-present) - from Left to right: Ed O'Brien, Jonny Greenwood, Thom Yorke, Phil Selway and Colin Greenwood. The next album, Amnesiac, which was released in June of the following year, was comprised of further tracks from the same recording sessions as Kid A. Conceived as two separate sequences of songs, the two albums are similar in style and are linked by two different versions of the same song: "Morning Bell." After the release of this album, the band staged their own mini-festival in Oxford's South Park, featuring Sigur Ros, Supergrass, Humphrey Lyttelton (who played trumpet on "Life in a Glass House", the closing track on Amnesiac), and themselves. It was at this concert that the band finally played "Creep," after having refused to perform the song for many years. Initially the band wanted to release I Might Be Wrong as their new single after "Pyramid Song" and "Knives Out", but soon the idea expanded into a full-fledged live record. I Might Be Wrong also included one unreleased track, "True Love Waits". In the fall of 2001, they released their first live album, which showed performances from Berlin, Paris and various other concerts.

Recording process for their next LP Hail to the Thief was remarkably different from those for the previous three studio albums. Rather than holing themselves up in a studio for months on end, the band elected instead to take their new material on the road in Portugal and Spain during July and August of 2002 prior to recording it. With the songs fleshed out and finalized during the tour, the recording process took only 20 days in a Los Angeles studio. In 2003 the band released their sixth album, which was rooted in less overt experimentation than its two immediate predecessors but was still a long way from their earlier guitar-driven material. The album's title raised controversy in the U.S., being interpreted as a reference to the 2000 U.S. Presidential election. The band deny this claim. In the June 2003 issue of Spin Magazine, Thom Yorke was quoted as saying "If the motivation for naming our album had been based solely on the U.S. election, I'd find that to be pretty shallow." Instead, Yorke claimed that he had gotten the phrase from a radio program about the also controversial 1888 U.S. presidential election. That being said, he couldn't deny that the phrase "Hail to the thief" was additionally used a great deal as an anti-Bush slogan by protestors at the end of the controversial 2000 election campaign that put him into the White House. On the day of his inauguration, Bush was greeted in Washington by thousands of protestors with banners, who shouted "Hail to the thief, our commander in chief!".

Two months before the album release, an unfinished version of the album was stolen, apparently from the recording studio where they were working, and uploaded to the internet several weeks before it was officially released. Unfortunately for them, the original album recordings also met the same fate, but the band remained adamant, didn't pull the album for an earlier date, and released it on the announced day: June 9, 2003. Even though the album was leaked, its sales overgrew those of their last two records in the first week and overall as well. After that, Radiohead embarked on a huge international tour, which continued for about an year. It saw the band visiting Australia and Japan for the first time for 7 years, since their OK Computer tour in 1997. Radiohead headlined the main (Pyramid) stage on the Saturday of the Glastonbury festival, to crowd acclaim and positive press reviews. They omitted the traditional fan-pleasing "Creep", to no-one's surprise, but the crowd got to hear it when it was covered by Sunday night's headliner, Moby. Meanwhile the same year, Jonny Greenwood, with the help of his brother Colin Greenwood, recorded and produced the soundtrack Bodysong for the avant-garde documentary of the same name.


The band in a happy moment: Colin Greenwood, Phil Selway, Jonny Greenwood, Thom Yorke, producer Nigel Godrich, Ed O'Brien. Exactly the same happened with COM LAG (2plus2isfive): the band released their EP one year (2004) after Hail to the Thief. The difference with COM LAG is that it's a bit longer than their previous releases. While the first half is filled with standalone songs like Airbag/How Am I Driving? and My Iron Lung, the second half consists of b-sides, recording demos and different versions of some of the album's songs. In the middle of the year, drummer Phil Selway stated that the band will probably start recording their next LP in 2005. He said in an interview for NME that such a marked change in direction with next album as Kid A is unexpected. To be more specific, the band needs just some time not thinking about music and getting with the right motivation for recording.

By now all the members of the band are working on separate projects. Jonny Greenwood became "Composer in Residence" for the BBC, charged with creating modern classical pieces for the BBC Concert Orchestra. There are a few rumors and reports that Thom is working on solo project, and Phil Selway is involved with the Samaritans' Health organization. Most recently, Jonny (on guitar) and Thom (on piano) combined their talents with Sir Paul McCartney (on bass) for the Band Aid 20 project to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the original song, which featured stars like George Michael, Duran Duran and Phil Collins. The project is helmed by Radiohead producer in staff - Nigel Godrich. It features collaborations of members from the most famous bands in the world - like Damon Albarn of Blur, Bono of U2, The Thrills, Sugababes and The Darkness. It is expected to be released November 29, 2004.

Radiohead was one of the few alternative bands of the early '90s to draw heavily from the grandiose arena rock that characterized U2's early albums. But the band internalized that epic sweep, turning it inside out to tell tortured, twisted tales of angst and alienation. Vocalist Thom Yorke's pained lyrics were brought to life by the group's three-guitar attack, which relied on texture — borrowing as much from My Bloody Valentine and Pink Floyd as R.E.M. and Pixies — instead of virtuosity. It took Radiohead awhile to formulate their signature sound. Their 1993 debut, Pablo Honey, only suggested their potential, and one of its songs, "Creep," became an unexpected international hit, its angst-ridden lyrics making it an alternative rock anthem. Many observers pigeonholed Radiohead as a one-hit wonder, but the group's second album, The Bends, was released to terrific reviews in the band's native Britain in early 1995, helping build a more stable fan base. Having demonstrated unexpected staying power, as well as increasing ambition, Radiohead next released OK Computer, a progressive, electronic-tinged masterpiece that became one of the most acclaimed albums of the '90s.