Wednesday, October 6, 2021

RIP Lizzie Bravo, Apple Scruff Who Sang with the Beatles

 Lizzie Bravo, plucked off the street by Paul McCartney to sing high harmony on "Across the Universe," has died.  

While the Beatles were recording "Across the Universe" at Abbey Road Studios in early 1968, Lizzie and her English friend and fellow Apple Scruff Gayleen Pease had the chance of a lifetime.  John and Paul thought that high harmonies on the line "nothing's going to change my world" would sweeten the track.  As it was Sunday, no backup singers were immediately available, so Paul asked Lizzie and Gayleen if they could "sing high."  They did, spending about two hours in the studio.  Though their vocals were not included on the track eventually released on Let it Be, they can be heard in the on the December 1969 album, No One’s Gonna Change Our World, a benefit disc for the World Wildlife Fund:


Here's Lizzie with Paul and John:




Lizzie Bravo died in her native Brazil at the age of 70.  RIP.  

Friday, October 1, 2021

Interstellar Beatles


Quotations from all four Beatles will grace NASA's Lucy probe, which launches later this month on a journey to Jupiter's Trojan asteroid field.  Words from McCartney, Lennon, Starr, and Harrison join those of Albert Einstein, Martin Luther King, Jr., Carl Sagan and others on the plaque, meant to inspire future humans who might encounter the spacecraft as it slips away across the universe.  



Friday, August 27, 2010

Rolling Stone Lists Top 100 Beatles Songs

And the number 1 best Beatles song is. . .

"A Day in the Life."

I.don't.think.so.

Pretentious, bombastic, and musically pretty uninteresting. "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite" and "Fixing a Hole," also on Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, are both better than "A Day in the Life," IMHO.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Beatle Bums

Ringo and John, with their trousers on.

For the Beatles collector who has everything, now something new: John's toilet bowl will be up for auction in Liverpool:

A porcelain toilet used by John Lennon between 1969 and 1972 is among the 303 lots going up for auction Saturday at the 33rd annual Beatle Week Festival in Liverpool.

"The toilet might be worth something, and it might not, but it is certainly one of the more unusual items we've sold," auction organizer Steven Bailey told the Daily Telegraph.

The toilet was in a bathroom at Tittenhurst Park, the English mansion into which Lennon and Yoko Ono moved after John's divorce from his first wife Cynthia. When John and Yoko relocated to New York in 1972, the house was sold to Ringo, who probably used the toilet as well. That means that this toilet might have support one half of the Beatle bums!



Sunday, August 22, 2010

What a Nice Guy


Paul McCartney surprised former president Bill Clinton on his 64th birthday with a phone call and a serenade:

Sir Paul McCartney sang When I'm Sixty-Four down the phone to ex-US President Bill Clinton on his birthday this week.

The surprise serenade delighted the Democrat - who was only joking when he told advisers last month that a call from the Beatles legend would be the greatest present of all on reaching the age on Thursday. But his team took him seriously. As did Macca, 67, when they got in touch.

I hope Macca is still around to call me on my 64th birthday. . .



Monday, August 16, 2010

Group to Re-create Beatles' First Hamburg Gig


To mark the 50th anniversary of the Beatles' debut in Hamburg, Bambi Kino--Mark Rozzo, Ira Elliot, Doug Gillard, and Erik Paparazzi--will perform the songs the Beatles played half a century ago in four shows at the Indra Club on the Reeperbahn, beginning on August 17, 2010.

Go here for some samples.

Bambi Kino is probably a little better, musically, than the Beatles were in August 1960. Still, I wish I could be there.

Chapman Up for Parole Again

John Lennon graciously autographs an album for his murderer, December 8, 1980

Mark Chapman, confessed murderer of John Lennon, is up for parole (again):

The last time Chapman was up for parole, in 2008, the New York State Division of Parole issued a release saying his request was denied "due to concern for the public safety and welfare." He also was denied parole in 2000, 2002, 2004 and 2006.

Chapman, 55, is serving a sentence of 20 years to life in prison for the shooting death of Lennon outside Lennon's New York City apartment on December 8, 1980.

He has served 29 years of his sentence at the maximum-security Attica Correctional Facility, where he is held in a building with other prisoners who are not considered to pose a threat to him, according to officials with the state Department of Correctional Services.

He has his own prison cell but spends most of his day outside the cell working on housekeeping and in the library, the officials said.

For the past 20 years he has been allowed conjugal visits with his wife, Gloria. The visits are part of a state program called "family reunion" that allows inmates to spend up to 44 hours at a time with family members in a special setting.

Meanwhile, Julian, Sean, and Yoko Lennon have spent 0 hours with John since late in the evening of December 8, 1980. Presumably, if Chapman is paroled, he will be able to spend the next 30 or so years with his wife, a privilege denied to the Lennon family by Chapman's actions on that night nearly three decades ago.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Beatles as Visual Artifact

A student acquaintance of mine has designed a cover for a Beatles coffee-table book:



These images have become iconic. They evoke a time, a place, and a set of distinctive experiences. And--like everything else about the Beatles--they're tasteful, aesthetically pleasing, and compelling.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Close Call for Roberta Flack

Hard at work on a new album of Beatles covers, sultry-voiced Roberta Flack nearly lost a year's work:

One rainy day last month, Roberta Flack, the smooth voice of 1970s soul ballads, stepped out of her recording studio in Chelsea, hailed a yellow taxi and threw a suitcase of CDs into the back seat. Arriving at the Dakota, her longtime home, Ms. Flack got out and hurried past the wrought-iron entrance gate, seeking cover from the downpour.

Then: “Panic! Panic! Panic!” Ms. Flack recalled on the telephone the other day. “I left the suitcase in the cab!”

In an instant, Ms. Flack had joined the ranks of world-class musicians (most famously the cellist Yo-Yo Ma) forced to grapple with a quintessential nightmare of New York transit. More than a year’s worth of work, including much of a new compilation of Beatles covers — tentative title: “Let It Be Roberta” — had disappeared to points unknown.

“It was priceless,” Ms. Flack, 73, said a few weeks after the episode. (The trauma still sounded fresh.) “I’ve been working on this album for a while. I had packed all of the stuff that had been finished, stuff that had not been finished, things I was thinking of approaching, things I was not thinking of approaching ever.”

I can't believe she's 73! But I guess that makes sense, since she had her first hit in 1973:

Her duets with Donny Hathaway (who committed suicide in 1979) were magical. Here are Roberta and Donny singing "The Closer I Get to You" in 1978:

This song always gives me the chills. I'm sure John Lennon loved Roberta Flack's music; he and the other Beatles were huge fans of the 1950s and 1960s soul classics with which Roberta grew up. And she lives at the Dakota!

Catholic Church Blesses Beatles UPDATED


Father Guido Sarducci, former gossip columnist for L'Osservatore Romano


L'Osservatore Romano
, the official newspaper of the Vatican, announced this week that all is forgiven for the Beatles:

“Their beautiful melodies changed music and continue to give pleasure …what would pop music have been like without the Beatles?”

Lots of snarky comments have met this news, see here, here, and here. If the Vatican's new stance is all about damage control, though, remember that not everyone has forgiven the Beatles: they're still banned in Iran.

UPDATE: See this Catholic News Service story, claiming that the Vatican never cursed the Beatles, even in the throes of the "bigger than Jesus" scandal. The author of this story rightly observes that that comment was widely taken out of context, and, as John explained in 1966, the statement was an observation, not a boast.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Lady Gaga Inspired by the Beatles


Lady Gaga, looking like the offspring of John Lennon and Dusty Springfield


After trying to watch the video of "Bad Romance," I'm not sure I see the connection. But apparently the Beatles inspire everyone, even Lady Gaga:
Lady Gaga was inspired by the Beatles' hometown Liverpool during her U.K. tour - insisting she wrote the "greatest music" of her career while staying in the English city.

The Poker Face hitmaker took her Monster Ball trek to the U.K. in February, and played just one night in the northern city where the Fab Four kickstarted their groundbreaking music careers.
But the singer insists it was during her short stay in Liverpool that she wrote her best material to date.
She tells fans on her official website, "I've already written the first single for the new album and I promise you that this album is the greatest of my career.
"It is the anthem for our generation. I wrote it for you, because of you, when I was in Liverpool I wrote the greatest music I've ever written."


In a way, I guess, the Beatles inaugurated the synthesis of performance art and pop music when they donned their Sgt. Pepper's garb and invented new identities for themselves. Glam Rock soon followed, which in turn spawned the high-concept videos of Madonna, Lady Gaga's most important precursor. Lady Gaga's songs, though (at least what I've heard) aren't particularly musical--industrial syntho beat and vocals so processed they don't sound like they come from a human being. I'd like to hear her explain exactly how the Beatles and Liverpool influenced her. Maybe on the new album, her "greatest ever," she'll actually make music!

Saturday, April 3, 2010

New Beatles Monument in Kazakhstan

In my book, The Long and Winding Road from Blake to the Beatles, I say that the Beatles were the first truly universal cultural touchstone, the avatars of celebrity in the modern world. Here's proof, a statue of the Fab Four in Kazakhstan:




I think there must be Beatles monuments on every continent (except Antarctica).