indexed_doc en utf8 The Beatles by Richie Unterberger So much has been said and written... http://research/ak19/gs3-svn-26Aug2013/web/sites/localsite/collect/Multimedia/tmp/1378708500_3/beatles.html http://research/ak19/gs3-svn-26Aug2013/web/sites/localsite/collect/Multimedia/tmp/1378708500_3/beatles.html import/wordpdf/beatles.pdf tmp/1378708500_3/beatles.html beatles.html beatles.pdf beatles.pdf PDFPlugin 86172 beatles PDF _iconpdf_ doc.pdf doc.pdf 10 Supplementary HASHe0b83d7a6ab31b8bb68e2a 1378708193 20130909 1378708500 20130909 HASHe0b8.dir doc.pdf:application/pdf: <A name=1></a><b>The Beatles</b><br> by <b>Richie Unterberger</b><br> So much has been said and written about the Beatles — and their story is so<br>mythic in its sweep — that it's difficult to summarize their career without restating<br>clichés that have already been digested by tens of millions of rock fans. To start<br>with the obvious, they were the greatest and most influential act of the rock era,<br>and introduced more innovations into popular music than any other rock band of<br>the 20th century. Moreover, they were among the few artists of <i>any</i> discipline that<br>were simultaneously the best at what they did, <i>and</i> the most popular at what they<br>did. Relentlessly imaginative and experimental, the Beatles grabbed a hold of the<br>international mass consciousness in 1964 and never let go for the next six years,<br>always staying ahead of the pack in terms of creativity, but never losing their<br>ability to communicate their increasingly sophisticated ideas to a mass audience.<br>Their supremacy as rock icons remains unchallenged to this day, decades after<br>their breakup in 1970.<br> Even when couching praise in specific terms, it's hard to convey the scope of the<br>Beatles' achievements in a mere paragraph or two. They synthesized all that was<br>good about early rock &amp; roll, and changed it into something original and even<br>more exciting. They established the prototype for the self-contained rock group<br>that wrote and performed their own material. As composers, their craft and<br>melodic inventiveness were second to none, and key to the evolution of rock<br>from its blues/R&amp;B-based forms into a style that was far more eclectic, but<br>equally visceral. As singers, both John Lennon and Paul McCartney were among<br>the best and most expressive vocalists in rock; the group's harmonies were<br>intricate and exhilarating. As performers, they were (at least until touring had<br>ground them down) exciting and photogenic; when they retreated into the studio,<br>they were instrumental in pioneering advanced techniques and multi-layered<br>arrangements. They were also the first British rock group to achieve worldwide<br>prominence, launching a British Invasion that made rock truly an international<br>phenomenon.<br> More than any other top group, the Beatles' success was very much a case of<br>the sum being greater than the parts. Their phenomenal cohesion was due in<br>large degree to most of the group having known each other and played together<br>in Liverpool for about five years before they began to have hit records. Guitarist<br>and teenage rebel John Lennon got hooked on rock &amp; roll in the mid-'50s, and<br>formed a band, the Quarrymen, at his high school. Around mid-1957, the<br>Quarrymen were joined by another guitarist, Paul McCartney, nearly two years<br>Lennon's junior. A bit later they were joined by another guitarist, George<br>Harrison, a friend of McCartney's. The Quarrymen would change lineups<br>constantly in the late '50s, eventually reducing to the core trio of guitarists, who'd<br>proven themselves to be the best musicians and most personally compatible<br>individuals within the band.<br> <hr> <A name=2></a>The Quarrymen changed their name to the Silver Beatles in 1960, quickly<br>dropping the &quot;Silver&quot; to become just the Beatles. Lennon's art college friend<br>Stuart Sutcliffe joined on bass, but finding a permanent drummer was a vexing<br>problem until Pete Best joined in the summer of 1960. He successfully auditioned<br>for the combo just before they left for a several-month stint in Hamburg,<br>Germany.<br> Hamburg was the Beatles' baptism by fire. Playing grueling sessions for hours on<br>end in one of the most notorious red-light districts in the world, the group was<br>forced to expand their repertoire, tighten up their chops, and invest their show<br>with enough manic energy to keep the rowdy crowds satisfied. When they<br>returned to Liverpool at the end of 1960, the band — formerly also-rans on the<br>exploding Liverpudlian &quot;beat&quot; scene — were suddenly the most exciting act on<br>the local circuit. They consolidated their following in 1961 with constant gigging in<br>the Merseyside area, most often at the legendary Cavern Club, the incubator of<br>the Merseybeat sound.<br> They also returned for engagements in Hamburg during 1961, although Sutcliffe<br>dropped out of the band that year to concentrate on his art school studies there.<br>McCartney took over on bass, Harrison settled in as lead guitarist, and Lennon<br>had rhythm guitar; everyone sang. In mid-1961, the Beatles (minus Sutcliffe)<br>made their first recordings in Germany, as a backup group to a British rock<br>guitarist/singer based in Hamburg, Tony Sheridan. The Beatles hadn't fully<br>developed at this point, and these recordings — many of which (including a<br>couple of Sheridan-less tracks) were issued only after the band's rise to fame —<br>found their talents in a most embryonic state. The Hamburg stint was also<br>notable for gaining the Beatles sophisticated, artistic fans such as Sutcliffe's<br>girlfriend, Astrid Kirchherr, who influenced all of them (except Best) to restyle<br>their quiffs in the moptops that gave the musicians their most distinctive visual<br>trademark. (Sutcliffe, tragically, would die of a brain hemorrhage in April 1962).<br> Near the end of 1961, the Beatles' exploding local popularity caught the attention<br>of local record store manager Brian Epstein, who was soon managing the band<br>as well. He used his contacts to swiftly acquire a January 1, 1962, audition at<br>Decca Records that has been heavily bootlegged (some tracks were officially<br>released in 1995). After weeks of deliberation, Decca turned them down, as did<br>several other British labels. Epstein's perseverance was finally rewarded with an<br>audition for producer George Martin at Parlophone, an EMI subsidiary; Martin<br>signed the Beatles in mid-1962. By this time, Epstein was assiduously grooming<br>his charges for national success by influencing them to smarten up their<br>appearance, dispensing with their leather jackets and trousers in favor of tailored<br>suits and ties.<br> One more major change was in the offing before the Beatles made their<br>Parlophone debut. In August 1962, drummer Pete Best was kicked out of the<br> <hr> <A name=3></a>group, a controversial decision that has been the cause of much speculation<br>since. There is still no solid consensus as to whether it was because of his<br>solitary, moody nature; the other Beatles' jealousy of his popularity with the fans;<br>his musical shortcomings (George Martin had already told Epstein that Best<br>wasn't good enough to drum on recordings); or his refusal to wear his hair in<br>bangs. What seems most likely was that the Beatles simply found his personality<br>incompatible, preferring to enlist Ringo Starr (born Richard Starkey), drummer<br>with another popular Merseyside outfit, Rory Storm &amp; the Hurricanes. Starr had<br>been in the Beatles for a few weeks when they recorded their first single, &quot;Love<br>Me Do&quot;/&quot;P.S. I Love You,&quot; in September 1962. Both sides of the 45 were<br>Lennon-McCartney originals, and the songwriting team would be credited with<br>most of the group's material throughout the Beatles' career.<br> The single, a promising but fairly rudimentary effort, hovered around the lower<br>reaches of the British Top 20. The Beatles phenomenon didn't truly kick in until<br>&quot;Please Please Me,&quot; which topped the British charts in early 1963. This was <i>the<br></i>prototype British Invasion single: an infectious melody, charging guitars, and<br>positively exuberant harmonies. The same traits were evident on their third 45,<br>&quot;From Me to You&quot; (a British number one), and their debut LP, <i>Please Please Me</i>.<br>Although it was mostly recorded in a single day, <i>Please Please Me</i> topped the<br>British charts for an astonishing 30 weeks, establishing the group as the most<br>popular rock &amp; roll act ever seen in the U.K.<br> What the Beatles had done was to take the best elements of the rock and pop<br>they loved and make them their own. Since the Quarrymen days, they had been<br>steeped in the classic early rock of Elvis, Buddy Holly, Chuck Berry, Little<br>Richard, Carl Perkins, and the Everly Brothers; they'd also kept an ear open to<br>the early '60s sounds of Motown, Phil Spector, and the girl groups. What they<br>added was an unmatched songwriting savvy (inspired by Brill Building teams<br>such as Gerry Goffin and Carole King), a brash guitar-oriented attack, wildly<br>enthusiastic vocals, and the embodiment of the youthful flair of their generation,<br>ready to dispense with postwar austerity and claim a culture of their own. They<br>were also unsurpassed in their eclecticism, willing to borrow from blues, popular<br>standards, gospel, folk, or whatever seemed suitable for their musical vision.<br>Producer George Martin was the perfect foil for the group, refining their ideas<br>without tinkering with their cores; during the last half of their career, he was<br>indispensable for his ability to translate their concepts into arrangements that<br>required complex orchestration, innovative applications of recording technology,<br>and an ever-widening array of instruments.<br> Just as crucially, the Beatles were never ones to stand still and milk formulas. All<br>of their subsequent albums and singles would show remarkable artistic<br>progression (though never at the expense of a damn catchy tune). Even on their<br>second LP, <i>With the Beatles</i> (1963), it was evident that their talents as<br>composers and instrumentalists were expanding furiously, as they devised ever<br>more inventive melodies and harmonies, and boosted the fullness of their<br> <hr> <A name=4></a>arrangements. &quot;She Loves You&quot; and &quot;I Want to Hold Your Hand&quot; established the<br>group not just as a popular music act, but as a phenomenon never before seen in<br>the British entertainment business, as each single sold over a million copies in<br>the U.K. After some celebrated national TV appearances, Beatlemania broke out<br>across the British Isles in late 1963, the group generating screams and hysteria<br>at all of their public appearances, musical or otherwise.<br> Capitol, which had first refusal of the Beatles' recordings in the United States,<br>had declined to issue the group's first few singles, which ended up appearing on<br>relatively small American independents. Capitol took up its option on &quot;I Want to<br>Hold Your Hand,&quot; which stormed to the top of the U.S. charts within weeks of its<br>release on December 26, 1963. The Beatles' television appearances on <i>The Ed<br>Sullivan Show</i> in February of 1964 launched Beatlemania (and the entire British<br>Invasion) on an even bigger scale than it had reached in Britain. In the first week<br>of April 1964, the Beatles had the Top Five best-selling singles in the U.S.; they<br>also had the first two slots on the album charts, as well as other entries<br>throughout the Billboard Top 100. No one had ever dominated the market for<br>popular music so heavily; it's doubtful that anyone ever will again. The Beatles<br>themselves would continue to reach number one with most of their singles and<br>albums until their 1970 breakup.<br> Hard as it may be to believe today, the Beatles were often dismissed by cultural<br>commentators of the time as nothing more than a fad that would vanish within<br>months as the novelty wore off. The group ensured this wouldn't happen by<br>making <i>A Hard Day's Night</i> in early 1964, a cinéma vérité-style motion picture<br>comedy/musical that cemented their image as &quot;the Fab Four&quot;: happy-go-lucky,<br>individualistic, cheeky, funny lads with nonstop energy. The soundtrack was also<br>a triumph, consisting entirely of Lennon-McCartney tunes, including such<br>standards as the title tune, &quot;And I Love Her,&quot; &quot;If I Fell,&quot; &quot;Can't Buy Me Love,&quot; and<br>&quot;Things We Said Today.&quot; George Harrison's resonant 12-string electric guitar<br>leads were hugely influential; the movie helped persuade the Byrds, then folk<br>singers, to plunge all-out into rock &amp; roll, and the Beatles (along with Bob Dylan)<br>would be hugely influential on the folk-rock explosion of 1965. The Beatles'<br>success, too, had begun to open the U.S. market for fellow Brits like the Rolling<br>Stones, the Animals, and the Kinks, and inspired young American groups like the<br>Beau Brummels, Lovin' Spoonful, and others to mount a challenge of their own<br>with self-penned material that owed a great debt to Lennon-McCartney.<br> Between riotous international tours in 1964 and 1965, the Beatles continued to<br>squeeze out more chart-topping albums and singles. (Until 1967, the group's<br>British albums were often truncated for release in the States; when their catalog<br>was transferred to CD, the albums were released worldwide in their British<br>configurations.) In retrospect, critics have judged <i>Beatles for Sale</i> (late 1964) and<br>Help! (mid-1965) as the band's least impressive efforts. To some degree, that's<br>true. Touring and an insatiable market placed heavy demands upon their<br> <hr> <A name=5></a>songwriting, and some of the originals and covers on these records, while brilliant<br>by many group's standards, were filler in the context of the Beatles' best work.<br> But when at the top of their game, the group was continuing to push forward. &quot;I<br>Feel Fine&quot; had feedback and brilliant guitar leads; &quot;Ticket to Ride&quot; showed the<br>band beginning to incorporate the ringing, metallic, circular guitar lines that would<br>be appropriated by bands like the Byrds; &quot;Help!&quot; was their first burst of<br>confessional lyricism; &quot;Yesterday&quot; employed a string quartet. John Lennon in<br>particular was beginning to exhibit a Dylanesque influence in his songwriting on<br>such folky, downbeat numbers as &quot;I'm a Loser&quot; and &quot;You've Got to Hide Your<br>Love Away.&quot; And tracks like &quot;I Don't Want to Spoil the Party&quot; and &quot;I've Just Seen<br>a Face&quot; had a strong country flavor.<br> Although the Beatles' second film, <i>Help!</i>, was a much sillier and less<br>sophisticated affair than their first feature, it too was a huge commercial success.<br>By this time, though, the Beatles had nothing to prove in commercial terms; the<br>remaining frontiers were artistic challenges that could only be met in the studio.<br>They rose to the occasion at the end of 1965 with <i>Rubber Soul</i>, one of the classic<br>folk-rock records. Lyrically, Lennon, McCartney, and even Harrison (who was<br>now writing some tunes on his own) were evolving beyond boy-girl scenarios into<br>complex, personal feelings. They were also pushing the limits of studio rock by<br>devising new guitar and bass textures, experimenting with distortion and multi-<br>tracking, and using unconventional (for rock) instruments like the sitar.<br> As much of a progression as <i>Rubber Soul</i> was relative to their previous records,<br>it was but a taster for the boundary-shattering outings of the next few years. The<br>&quot;Paperback Writer&quot;/&quot;Rain&quot; single found the group abandoning romantic themes<br>entirely, boosting the bass to previously unknown levels, and fooling around with<br>psychedelic imagery and backwards tapes on the B-side. Drugs (psychedelic and<br>otherwise) were fueling their already fertile imaginations, but they felt creatively<br>hindered by their touring obligations. <i>Revolver</i>, released in the summer of 1966,<br>proved what the group could be capable of when allotted months of time in the<br>studio. Hazy hard guitars and thicker vocal arrangements formed the bed of<br>these increasingly imagistic, ambitious lyrics; the group's eclecticism now<br>encompassed everything from singalong novelties (&quot;Yellow Submarine&quot;) and<br>string quartet-backed character sketches (&quot;Eleanor Rigby&quot;) to Indian-influenced<br>swirls of echo and backwards tapes (&quot;Tomorrow Never Knows&quot;). Some would<br>complain that the Beatles had abandoned the earthy rock of their roots for clever<br>mannerism. But <i>Revolver</i>, like virtually all of the group's singles and albums from<br>&quot;She Loves You&quot; on, would be a worldwide chart-topper.<br> For the past couple of years, live performance had become a rote exercise for<br>the group, tired of competing with thousands of screaming fans that drowned out<br>most of their voices and instruments. A 1966 summer worldwide tour was<br>particularly grueling: the group's entourage was physically attacked in the<br>Philippines after a perceived snub of the country's queen, and a casual remark<br> <hr> <A name=6></a>by John Lennon about the Beatles being bigger than Jesus Christ was picked up<br>in the States, resulting in the burning of Beatle records in the Bible belt and<br>demands for a repentant apology. Their final concert of that American tour (in<br>San Francisco on August 29, 1966) would be their last in front of a paying<br>audience, as the group decided to stop playing live in order to concentrate on<br>their studio recordings.<br> This was a radical (indeed, unprecedented) step in 1966, and the media was rife<br>with speculation that the act was breaking up, especially after all four spent late<br>1966 engaged in separate personal and artistic pursuits. The appearance of the<br>&quot;Penny Lane&quot;/&quot;Strawberry Fields Forever&quot; single in February 1967 squelched<br>these concerns. Frequently cited as the strongest double A-side ever, the<br>Beatles were now pushing forward into unabashedly psychedelic territory in their<br>use of orchestral arrangements and Mellotron, without abandoning their grasp of<br>memorable melody and immediately accessible lyrical messages.<br> <i>Sgt. Pepper</i>, released in June 1967 as the Summer of Love dawned, was the<br>definitive psychedelic soundtrack. Or, at least, so it was perceived at the time:<br>subsequent critics have painted the album as an uneven affair, given a<br>conceptual unity via its brilliant multi-tracked overdubs, singalong melodies, and<br>fairy tale-ish lyrics. Others remain convinced, as millions did at the time, that it<br>represented pop's greatest triumph, or indeed an evolution of pop into art with a<br>capital A. In addition to mining all manner of roots influences, the musicians were<br>also picking up vibes from Indian music, avant-garde electronics, classical, music<br>hall, and more. When the Beatles premiered their hippie anthem &quot;All You Need Is<br>Love&quot; as part of a worldwide TV broadcast, they had been truly anointed as<br>spokespersons for their generation (a role they had not actively sought), and it<br>seemed they could do no wrong.<br> Musically, that would usually continue to be the case, but the group's strength<br>began to unravel at a surprisingly quick pace. In August 1967, Brian Epstein —<br>prone to suicidal depression over the past year — died of a drug overdose,<br>leaving them without a manager. The group pressed on with their next film<br>project, <i>Magical Mystery Tour</i>, directed by themselves; lacking focus or even<br>basic professionalism, the picture bombed when it was premiered on BBC<br>television in December 1967, giving the media the first real chance they'd ever<br>had to roast the Beatles over a flame. (Another film, the animated feature <i>Yellow<br>Submarine</i>, would appear in 1968, although the Beatles had little involvement<br>with the project, either in terms of the movie or the soundtrack.) In early 1968, the<br>Beatles decamped to India for a course in transcendental meditation with the<br>Maharishi; this too became something of a media embarrassment, as each of the<br>four would eventually depart the course before its completion.<br> The Beatles did use their unaccustomed peace in India to compose a wealth of<br>new material. Judged solely on musical merit, <i>The White Album</i>, a double LP<br>released in late 1968, was a triumph. While largely abandoning their psychedelic<br> <hr> <A name=7></a>instruments to return to guitar-based rock, they maintained their whimsical<br>eclecticism, proving themselves masters of everything from blues-rock to<br>vaudeville. As individual songwriters, too, it contains some of their finest work (as<br>does the brilliant non-LP single from this era, &quot;Hey Jude&quot;/&quot;Revolution&quot;).<br> The problem, at least in terms of the group's long-term health, was that these<br>were very much <i>individual</i> songs, as opposed to collective ones. Lennon and<br>McCartney had long composed most of their tunes separately (you can almost<br>always tell the composer by the lead vocalist). But they had always fed off of<br>each other not only to supply missing bits and pieces that would bring a song to<br>completion, but to provide a competitive edge that would bring out the best in the<br>other. McCartney's romantic melodicism and Lennon's more acidic, gritty wit<br>were perfect complements for one another. By the <i>White Album</i>, it was clear (if<br>only in retrospect) that each member was more concerned with his own<br>expression than that of the collective group: a natural impulse, but one that was<br>bound to lead to difficulties.<br> In addition, George Harrison was becoming a more prolific and skilled composer<br>as well, imbuing his own melodies (which were nearly the equal of those of his<br>more celebrated colleagues) with a cosmic lightness. Harrison was beginning to<br>resent his junior status, and the group began to bicker more openly in the studio.<br>Ringo Starr, whose solid drumming and good nature could usually be counted<br>upon (as was evident in his infrequent lead vocals), actually quit for a couple of<br>weeks in the midst of the <i>White Album</i> sessions (though the media was unaware<br>of this at the time). Personal interests were coming into play as well: Lennon's<br>devotion to romantic and artistic pursuits with his new girlfriend (and soon-to-be-<br>wife) Yoko Ono was diverting his attentions from the Beatles. Apple Records,<br>started by the group earlier in 1968 as a sort of utopian commercial enterprise,<br>was becoming a financial and organizational nightmare.<br> These weren't the ideal conditions under which to record a new album in January<br>1969, especially when McCartney was pushing the group to return to live<br>performing, although none of the others seemed especially keen on the idea.<br>They did agree to try and record a &quot;back-to-basics,&quot; live-in-the-studio-type LP,<br>the sessions being filmed for a television special. That plan almost blew up when<br>Harrison, in the midst of tense arguments, left the group for a few days. Although<br>he returned, the idea of playing live concerts was put on the back burner;<br>Harrison enlisted American soul keyboardist Billy Preston as kind of a fifth<br>member on the sessions, both to beef up the arrangements and to alleviate the<br>uncomfortable atmosphere. Exacerbating the problem was that the Beatles didn't<br>have a great deal of first-class new songs to work with, although some were<br>excellent. In order to provide a suitable concert-like experience for the film, the<br>group did climb the roof of their Apple headquarters in London to deliver an<br>impromptu performance on January 30, 1969, before the police stopped it; this<br>was their last live concert of any sort.<br> <hr> <A name=8></a>Generally dissatisfied with these early-1969 sessions, the album and film — at<br>first titled Get Back, and later to emerge as <i>Let It Be</i> — remained in the can as<br>the group tried to figure out how the projects should be mixed, packaged, and<br>distributed. A couple of the best tracks, &quot;Get Back&quot;/&quot;Don't Let Me Down,&quot; were<br>issued as a single in the spring of 1969. By this time, the Beatles' quarrels were<br>intensifying in a dispute over management: McCartney wanted their affairs to be<br>handled by his new father-in-law, Lee Eastman, while the other members of the<br>group favored a tough American businessman, Allen Klein.<br> It was something of a miracle, then, that the final album recorded by the group,<br><i>Abbey Road</i>, was one of their most unified efforts (even if, by this time, the<br>musicians were recording many of their parts separately). It certainly boasted<br>some of their most intricate melodies, harmonies, and instrumental<br>arrangements; it also heralded the arrival of Harrison as a composer of equal<br>talent to Lennon and McCartney, as George wrote the album's two most popular<br>tunes, &quot;Something&quot; and &quot;Here Comes the Sun.&quot; The Beatles were still<br>progressing, but it turned out to be the end of the road, as their business disputes<br>continued to magnify. Lennon, who had begun releasing solo singles and<br>performing with friends as the Plastic Ono Band, threatened to resign in late<br>1969, although he was dissuaded from making a public announcement.<br> Most of the early-1969 tapes remained unreleased, partially because the footage<br>for the planned television broadcast of these sessions was now going to be<br>produced as a documentary movie. The accompanying soundtrack album, <i>Let It<br>Be</i>, was delayed so that its release could coincide with that of the film. Lennon,<br>Harrison, and Allen Klein decided to have celebrated American producer Phil<br>Spector record some additional instrumentation and do some mixing. Thus the<br>confusion that persists among most rock listeners to this day: <i>Let It Be</i>, although<br>the last Beatles album to be released, was not the last one to be recorded.<br><i>Abbey Road</i> should actually be considered as the Beatles' last album; most of<br>the material on <i>Let It Be</i>, including the title track (which would be the last single<br>released while the group was still together), was recorded several months before<br>the <i>Abbey Road</i> sessions began in earnest, and a good 15 months or so before<br>its May 1970 release.<br> By that time, the Beatles were no more. In fact, there had been no recording<br>done by the group as a unit since August 1969, and each member of the band<br>had begun to pursue serious outside professional interests independently via the<br>Plastic Ono Band, Harrison's tour with Delaney &amp; Bonnie, Starr's starring role in<br>the <i>Magic Christian</i> film, or McCartney's first solo album. The outside world for<br>the most part remained almost wholly unaware of the seriousness of the group's<br>friction, making it a devastating shock for much of the world's youth when<br>McCartney announced that he was leaving the Beatles on April 10, 1970. (The<br>&quot;announcement&quot; was actually contained in a press release for his new album, in<br>which his declaration of his intention to work on his own effectively served as a<br>notice of his departure.)<br> <hr> <A name=9></a>The final blow, apparently, was the conflict between the release dates of <i>Let It Be<br></i>and McCartney's debut solo album. The rest of the group asked McCartney to<br>delay his release until after <i>Let It Be</i>; McCartney refused, and for good measure,<br>was distressed by Spector's post-production work on <i>Let It Be</i>, particularly the<br>string overdubs on &quot;The Long and Winding Road,&quot; which became a posthumous<br>Beatles single that spring. Although McCartney received much of the blame for<br>the split, it should be remembered that he had done more than any other<br>member to keep the group going since Epstein's death, and that each of the<br>other Beatles had threatened to leave well before McCartney's departure. With<br>hindsight, the breakup seemed inevitable in view of their serious business<br>disagreements and the growth of their individual interests.<br> As bitter as the initial headlines were to swallow, the feuding would grow much<br>worse over the next few years. At the end of 1970, McCartney sued the rest of<br>the Beatles in order to dissolve their partnership; the battle dragged through the<br>courts for years, scotching any prospects of a group reunion. In any case, each<br>member of the band quickly established viable solo careers. In fact, at the outset<br>it could have been argued that the artistic effects of the split were in some ways<br>beneficial, freeing Lennon and Harrison to make their most uncompromising<br>artistic statements (<i>Plastic Ono Band</i> and <i>All Things Must Pass</i>). George's<br>individual talents in particular received acclaim that had always eluded him when<br>he was overshadowed by Lennon-McCartney. Paul had a much rougher time<br>with the critics, but continued to issue a stream of hit singles, hitting a<br>commercial and critical jackpot at the end of 1973 with the massively successful<br><i>Band on the Run</i>. Ringo did not have the songwriting acumen to compete on the<br>same level as the others, yet he too had quite a few big hit singles in the early<br>'70s, often benefiting from the assistance of his former bandmates.<br> Yet within a short time, it became apparent both that the Beatles were not going<br>to settle their differences and reunite, and that their solo work could not compare<br>with what they were capable of creating together. The stereotype has it that the<br>split allowed each of them to indulge in their worst tendencies to their extremes:<br>Lennon in agit-prop, Harrison in holier-than-thou-mysticism, McCartney in cutesy<br>pop, Starr in easy listening rock. There's a good deal of truth in this, but it's also<br>important to bear in mind that what was most missing was a sense of group<br>interaction. The critical party line often champions Lennon as the angry, realist<br>rocker, and McCartney as the melodic balladeer, but this is a fallacy: each of<br>them were capable, in roughly equal measures, of ballsy all-out rock and sweet<br>romanticism. What is not in dispute is that they sparked each other to reach<br>heights that they could not attain on their own.<br> Despite periodic rumors of reunions throughout the 1970s, no group projects<br>came close to materializing. It should be added that the Beatles themselves<br>continued to feud to some degree, and from all evidence weren't seriously<br>interested in working together as a unit. Any hopes of a reunion vanished when<br> <hr> <A name=10></a>Lennon was assassinated in New York City in December 1980. The Beatles<br>continued their solo careers throughout the 1980s, but their releases became<br>less frequent, and their commercial success gradually diminished, as listeners<br>without first-hand memories of the combo created their own idols.<br> The popularity of the Beatles-as-unit, however, proved eternal. In part, this is<br>because the group's 1970 split effectively short-circuited the prospects of artistic<br>decline; the body of work that was preserved was uniformly strong. However, it's<br>also because, like any great works of art, the Beatles' records carried an ageless<br>magnificence that continues to captivate new generations of listeners. So it is<br>that Beatles records continue to be heard on radio in heavy rotation, continue to<br>sell in massive quantities, and continue to be covered and quoted by rock and<br>pop artists through the present day.<br> Legal wrangles at Apple prevented the official issue of previously unreleased<br>Beatle material for over two decades (although much of it was frequently<br>bootlegged). The situation finally changed in the 1990s, after McCartney,<br>Harrison, Starr, and Lennon's widow Yoko Ono settled their principal business<br>disagreements. In 1994, this resulted in a double CD of BBC sessions from the<br>early and mid-'60s. The following year, a much more ambitious project was<br>undertaken: a multi-part film documentary, broadcast on network television in<br>1995, and then released (with double the length) for the home video market in<br>1996, with the active participation of the surviving Beatles.<br> To coincide with the <i>Anthology</i> documentary, three double CDs of previously<br>unreleased/rare material were issued in 1995 and 1996. Additionally, McCartney,<br>Harrison, and Starr (with some assistance from Jeff Lynne) embellished a couple<br>of John Lennon demos from the 1970s with overdubs to create two new tracks<br>(&quot;Free as a Bird&quot; and &quot;Real Love&quot;) that were billed as actual Beatles recordings.<br>Whether this constitutes the actual long-awaited &quot;reunion&quot; is the subject of much<br>debate. Certainly these cuts were hardly classics on par with the music the group<br>made in the 1960s. Some fans, even diehards, were inclined to view the whole<br><i>Anthology</i> project as a distinctly 1990s marketing exercise that maximized the<br>mileage of whatever could be squeezed from the Beatles' vaults. If nothing else,<br>though, the massive commercial success of outtakes that had, after all, been<br>recorded 25 to 30 years ago, spoke volumes about the unabated appeal and<br>fascination the Beatles continue to exert worldwide.<br> <hr>