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The website for the book Still the Greatest: The Essential Songs of the Beatles' Solo Careers

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I Will Be on The John Lennon Hour this Sunday with Host Jude Southerland Kessler Counting Down the Essential Solo Beatles Songs (1/6/13, 5:00 PM Pacific/ 7:00 PM Central)

January 3, 2013 · by solobeatles

Jude is the author of The Lennon Series, a 9-volume work on the life of John Lennon. The first book, Shoulda Been There, covers John’s life from 1940-Dec. 1961. The second book, Shivering Inside, details John’s life from Dec. 1961-March 1963. The third volume, She Loves You, will be out in October 2013 and will cover March 1963-Dec. 1965.

http://www.johnlennonseries.com/

Her terrific radio show The John Lennon Hour airs every Sunday night 5:00 PM Pacific / 7:00 PM Central on Beatles-A-Rama, an amazing internet radio station that plays a constant stream of music by the Beatles and the artists they inspired.

http://www.johnlennonseries.com/radio_home.html

http://www.beatlesarama.com/

A podcast will be on Jude’s website if you miss the show, and will also be available for free on iTunes.

Hope you can check it out!  Happy New Year, everyone!

shoulda-been-there

McCartney’s Anthem to Optimism “Hope of Deliverance”

December 30, 2012 · by solobeatles

The lyrics of the single from 1993’s OFF THE GROUND album recall the stiff upper lip of World War II–era Britain. They’re married to bossa-nova percussion, an accordion, and a twelve-string acoustic guitar vaguely reminiscent of Trini Lopez’s “If I Had a Hammer” or a relaxed take on the 1940s Latin hit “Besame Mucho,” an old standby of the Beatles in their Cavern days.

The storyline of McCartney’s 90-minute classical piece LIVERPOOL ORATORIO followed his own life, beginning with his childhood in Liverpool. When he returned to Liverpool to write it, he was flooded with memories from the 1940s. Perhaps the same memories informed this song as well.  Maybe the 1987 feature HOPE AND GLORY also inspired him. The film was based on director John Boorman’s experience as a little kid in London during the Nazi bombings and how his family tried to hold together during the chaotic times. The film’s title came from the 1902 patriotic British song “Land of Hope and Glory.”

McCartney’s song expresses the same unsinkable determination not to give into despair despite the encroaching darkness.  As it sprang from English history, the song resonated more in the United Kingdom, making it to number fifteen there but only number eighty-three in the United States. (It did reach number nine on the US adult contemporary chart.)

Despite the possible World War II connotations, it became the most played record on German radio ever. It was one of McCartney’s biggest-selling singles in Europe, with sales of over 4 million, helped by a colorful dance remix video in which it looks like the crowd is all on really good ecstasy.

Ringo Rebounds With a Vengeance in “Don’t Go Where the Road Don’t Go”

December 30, 2012 · by solobeatles

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ylJgs308PuU

After being unable to get distribution for his 1983 album OLD WAVE in the States or the UK, Starr dropped out of the music business for the rest of the decade and narrated the children’s TV series Tommy the Tank Engine along with appearing in the occasional commercial.

By the late 1980s, Starr’s substance abuse was out of control and he was blacking out often.  So in October 1988, Starr and wife Barbara Bach entered a detox clinic in Tucson, Arizona, for a six-week alcohol and cocaine treatment program, trying to ignore the press constantly flying overhead.

He realized he needed to get back in the game, so with producer David Fischof came up with the concept for his All-Starr Band. The idea was to assemble a team of musicians who were concert draws in their own right. Starr would sing some Beatles songs and some solo songs, and then he would take a backseat on the drums while the other artists sang their hits.

The first incarnation of the All-Starr Band featured regulars Jim Keltner, Billy Preston, and Joe Walsh, along with Dr. John, Levon Helm and Rick Danko of the Band, and E Street Band members Clarence Clemons and Nils Lofgren. They made their debut in Dallas on July 23, 1989, to ten thousand people and toured North America through the summer. New incarnations would follow every one to three years. By 2010, there had been eleven All-Starr bands featuring the likes of Sheila E., Jack Bruce, Edgar Winter, Zak Starkey (his son), Todd Rundgren, Billy Squier, Richard Marx, Randy Bachman, Peter Frampton, John Waite, John Entwistle, Howard Jones, Greg Lake, Felix Cavaliere (The Rascals), Eric Carmen, and many more. Starr released live albums like baseball programs, ten as of 2011, which are five more live albums than McCartney has issued.

The structure helped him get back on his feet. In 1990, Starr recorded a cover of the Beatles’ “I Call Your Name” for a TV special marking Lennon’s birth and death anniversaries. Featuring Jeff Lynne, Tom Petty, Walsh, and Keltner, the track was produced by Lynne, who went on to produce two of the best songs on Starr’s first album in nine years, TIME TAKES TIME, including “Don’t Go Where the Road Don’t Go.”

Lynne gives Starr a tougher drum sound and plays a louder, fiercer guitar than had been heard heretofore on a Ringo tune, like “In My Car” on steroids. Lynne layers in some Petty-esque acoustic rhythm guitars, then Suzie Katayama on cello where the lead guitar would typically be. Ringo jumps in, angry, bitter, recounting how he woke up from a nightmare, beaten up and alone in rehab with the walls closing in, and one’s first reaction is, “Whoa, this is a Ringo tune that truly rocks.”

As with much of the album, the lyrics are heavier than those on Starr’s previous work. He sings of once being at the epicenter of the world, but from what he can barely remember of the past, he blew it. Friends who used him when times were good have all disappeared. Still, he’s back with a vengeance and warning us to learn from him: don’t drive/live drunk, or you’ll end up driving where the road don’t go and end up nearly killing yourself. With this song he fashioned an anthem for anyone who has driven their life off a cliff but has rebuilt themselves and hit the road with reborn determination.

I Will Be On Chris Carter’s Breakfast With the Beatles This Sunday Talking About Still the Greatest (12/16, 9 AM-12 PM)

December 15, 2012 · by solobeatles

Breakfast With The Beatles is the nation’s longest-running Beatles radio program, heard weekly on 95.5 KLOS-FM in L.A. and on Little Steven’s Underground Garage on Sirius/XM Satellite Radio Ch. 21.

Host Chris Carter plays classic Beatles songs as well as rare B-sides, outtakes, live recordings and more.

Chris will be world premiering a big new Beatle-related song this Sunday during the news with Jackie DeShannon.

I’ve been a fan for years so it’s very exciting to have an opportunity to be on the show.

Chris has interviewed Paul, George, Ringo, and Pete Best, was a founding member and bassist of the band Dramarama, and wrote and produced the classic documentary “Mayor of the Sunset Strip” about legendary DJ Rodney Bingenheimer.

http://www.breakfastwiththebeatles.com/

Hope you can tune in!

Did Lennon Pinch a Lick From a Coke Commercial For His Final Political Song?

December 13, 2012 · by solobeatles

When Lennon and Ono co-hosted The Mike Douglas Show for a week in January 1972, they brought in friends ranging from radical political figures to Chuck Berry. When Lennon performed “Imagine,” he made the comment, “Only people can save the world.” With “save” switched to “change,” the phrase would become the chorus for this MIND GAMES (1973) track and be printed on the album’s inner sleeve.

The ebullient melody reflects the hopeful little boy part of Lennon’s personality in the same vein as tunes like “I Should Have Known Better” and “Oh Yoko!” With its skipping, folk/R&B swing, it almost sounds like something that could have been sung by the Brady Bunch.

As Lennon was adept at finding inspiration for songs in commercials (i.e. “Good Morning, Good Morning”), it would be unsurprising to learn that “Only People” owed something to the famous “I’d Like to Buy the World a Coke” commercial from 1971, helmed by Medium Cool director Haskell Wexler.

The commercial made such a splash that the New Seekers (“Georgy Girl”) quickly released it as a hit single refashioned as “I’d Like to Teach the World to Sing.” Coke allowed the proceeds to go to UNICEF.

(What do you think?  Am I hearing things?)

“Only People” was certainly Lennon’s least threatening attempt to use pop to sway the masses. For the ultraconservatives who wrote books like The Beatles, LSD, and Communism, no doubt this would have struck them as one of Lennon’s most insidious propaganda pieces, refashioning a Coke commercial for socialism.

Bouncing back from Nixon’s 1972 landslide, Lennon commiserates with his fellow idealists. He concedes they’ve cried a lot of tears, but now they’re wiser and ready to start again. He throws in his usual feminist reminder that if man and woman work together they are unstoppable, and vows to resist the Pig Brother scene, conflating the “Big Brother” that had put him under surveillance and slang for the cops.

Whooping like a cheerleader before a clapping gospel chorus, Lennon finished his final political song. He and Ono would mirror their generation by abandoning activism, and by the end of the decade, Ono would transform herself into an economic wheeler dealer like the yuppies.

But while it would be easy to slam the sixties idealists for selling out, they had won the war against conformity and ended the Draft. The right to liberated sex without marriage, long hair, and freedom of expression and religion progressively melded with the mainstream throughout the decade. The ex-Beatles could look around at the new, freer world and know they had played a central part in changing it.

Solo Beatles Event at L.A.’s Book Soup Dec. 4!

November 29, 2012 · by solobeatles

If you’re near the Sunset Strip on Tuesday, December 4 at 7PM, please drop by my reading at Book Soup and bring your own favorite solo Beatles songs to discuss!

What do you do when you need to hear new Beatle songs but you’ve just replayed all their CDs? Mix the best of their solo stuff into new Beatle albums! But with over 900 tracks over the last 40 years, where to start?

STILL THE GREATEST rounds up the crème de la creme, sharing the fascinating stories behind the songs and compiling them into The 12 Beatles Albums That Should Have Been (1970-2011). Rolling Stone.com ran excerpts from the book and USA Today recommended it.

Bring along your own suggestions for the best solo tracks (or guilty pleasures), and hear about the Post Fabs’ most pivotal moments, feuds, affairs, reunions, and comebacks.

Who was the house band of John, George, and Ringo? Was Jeff Lynne the 5th Solo Beatle? How did the Post-Fab Four fare against arch-rivals Dylan and the Stones in the 70s? What new genres did they tackle on their own? And what are the deep cut classics due for reappraisal?  Meet other local Beatles maniacs and get a whole new perspective on the underrated Second Act of John, Paul, George and Ringo!

Admission: Free!

Book Soup link: http://www.booksoup.com/author-

8818 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, California 90069

310-659-3110

Tune Into Fab Four Radio’s Side Track Sunday This Sunday (11/11) at 7 PM Pacific/10 PM Eastern

November 11, 2012 · by solobeatles

Host Happy Nat and I will play and discuss the Solo Beatles’ Best Songs of the ’70s.  (Video playlist here.)

Fab Four Radio continuously streams Beatles and Solo Beatles songs and you can find them at http://fab4radio.blogspot.com/

Check out Happy Nat’s website The Beatles Rarity at http://www.thebeatlesrarity.com/

(For the playlist below, press the fast forward arrow on the lower left to skip to the next song.)

Interview in Examiner.com

October 25, 2012 · by solobeatles

Recently I spoke with Beatles expert Steve Marinucci about pivotal moments in the Fab Four’s saga after the break up.  Here’s the link to the article …

http://www.examiner.com/article/interview-personal-triumphs-tragedies-helped-propel-beatles-solo-career

Interview in This Month’s Culture Magazine

October 19, 2012 · by solobeatles

Writer David Jenison interviewed me for this month’s CULTURE MAGAZINE in honor of the 50th anniversary of the release of the Beatles’ first single “Love Me Do” on October 5, 1962.

http://ireadculture.com/2012/10/news/buzz/all-you-need-is-bud/

If You’re in New York For John’s Birthday October 9

October 9, 2012 · by solobeatles

Go sing with the crowd at Strawberry Fields. I don’t live in New York but I happened to be there back in 2003. I had forgotten it was his birthday and was just wandering around the city as a tourist, heading toward the Dakota to check it out.  Walking through Central Park, looking at the skyscrapers poking over the trees under the gray sky, I heard the echo of a crowd singing “Please Please Me.” It made me think of how exciting it must have felt back in February ’64 when then Liverpudlians first arrived in New York.

Dozens of fans were circled around the Strawberry Fields mosaic, along with guitarists, keyboardists, a drummer, and sax player. For hours people sang early, mid, and late Beatles from hits to the obscure and solo Lennon tunes. When it came to songs like “Help!” and “You’re Gonna Lose That Girl” half the people took the lead vocals, half the backing. For some reason the moments that stand out the most are everyone singing the wordless “Flying” (of all songs), and the haunting “oooh” coda of “It’s Only Love.”

I was back in the Big Apple in 2007 and the crowd was even larger, with a lot of kids having been turned on to the Beatles by that year’s “Across the Universe.” So if you make it there this year, sing “I Feel Fine” and “Don’t Let Me Down” for me.

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