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The Beatles.
The English ROCK MUSIC group The Beatles gave the 1960s its characteristic
musical flavor and had a profound influence on the course of popular music, equaled by
few performers. The guitarists John Winston Lennon, Oct. 9, 1940; James Paul
McCartney, June 18, 1942; and George Harrison, Feb. 25, 1943; and the drummer
Ringo Starr, Richard Starkey, July 7, 1940, were all born and raised in Liverpool. Lennon
and McCartney had played together in a group called The Quarrymen. With Harrison,
they formed their own group, The Silver Beatles, in 1959, and Starr joined them in 1962.
As The Beatles, they developed a local following in Liverpool clubs, and their first
recordings, "Love Me Do" (1962) and "Please Please Me" (1963), quickly made them
Britain's top rock group. Their early music was influenced by the American rock singers
Chuck BERRY and Elvis PRESLEY, but they infused a hackneyed musical form with
freshness, vitality, and wit.
The release of "I Want to Hold Your Hand" in 1964 marked the
beginning of thephenomenon known as "Beatlemania" in the United
States. The Beatles' first U.S. tour aroused a universal mob
adulation. Their concerts were scenes of mass worship, and their
records sold in the millions.
Their first film, the innovative A Hard
Day's Night (1964), was received enthusiastically by a wide audience
that included many who had never before listened to rock music.
Composing their own material (Lennon and McCartney were the
major creative forces),The Beatles established the precedent for
other rock groups to play their own music. Experimenting with new
musical forms, they produced an extraordinary variety of songs: the
childishly simple "Yellow Submarine"; the bitter social commentary of
"Eleanor Rigby"; parodies of earlier pop styles; new electronic
sounds; and compositions that were scored for cellos, violins,
trumpets, and sitars, as well as for conventional guitars and drums.
Some enthusiasts cite the albums Rubber Soul (1965) and Revolver
(1966) as the apex of Beatle art, although Sergeant Pepper's Lonely
Hearts Club Band (1967), perhaps the first rock album designed
thematically as a single musical entity, is more generally considered
their triumph. The group disbanded in 1970, after the release of
their final album, Let It Be, to pursue individual careers. On Dec. 8,
1980, John Lennon was fatally shot in New York City. In 1991, Paul
McCartney's classical composition Liverpool Oratorio was performed
to some acclaim in Britain and the United States.
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