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The Beatles Tennessee Connections. The Beatles in Tennessee

  • ️Pat Adams

The Beatles Tennessee Connections


August 19, 1966: The Beatles play in Memphis at the Mid-South Coliseum
John Lennon recalled "that's when I knew, that was the last tour"
after someone threw fireworks on stage during the last of two shows while playing If I Needed Someone

By John Beifuss from The Memphis Commercial Appeal. Published in the Tennessean, Aug 20, 2006
It was 40 years ago, and the city of Memphis didn't want the band to play. At least that was the official stance the mayor
and Board of Commissioners took in a unanimous resolution passed August 10, 1966, to express "official disapproval" and
"advised The Beatles that they are not welcome in the City of Memphis." The Blue Meanies didn't stand a chance. On
August 19, 1966, Britain's Beatles - Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, George Harrison and John Lennon - performed two
concerts at the Mid-South Coliseum, at 4 and 8:30pm. Tickets were $5.50.    The Memphis date was the eighth in a
14-city tour that would be the last ever for the band that remains the most influential in rock history.    For each Memphis
show, the Beatles performed 11 songs in about 28 minutes, after almost two hours of music from an interesting roster of
opening acts: the Ronettes; Boston garage greats the Remains; Pennsylvania bubblegum popsters the Cyrkle ("Red Rubber
Ball"); and Nashville R&B singer Bobby Hebb ("Sunny"). The first show attracted 7,589 fans; the second, 12,539. Disc
Jockey George Klein and Johnny Dark acted as master of ceremonies. When The Beatles took the stage, "It kind of
reminded me of the movie "King Kong" when all the flashbulbs started going off," Dark later remembered. "There were so
many flashbulbs it was almost like a strobe light."  Onstage, the Beatles - wearing "modish dull/grey suits" in the afternoon
and "dark green creations with chartreuse shirts" at night, according to the local newspaper - exchanged such familiar hits
as "I Want To Hold Your Hand" and "A Hard Days Night" for mostly newer material.     The songs performed in Memphis
apparently were "Rock And Roll Music", "She's A Woman", "If I Needed Someone", "Day Tripper", "Baby's In Black", "I
Feel Fine", "Yesterday", "I Wanna Be Your Man", "Nowhere Man", "Paperback Writer", and "Long Tall Sally".              
The Commercial Appeal reported in a front-page story the next morning: "The musical performance of the long-haired
Englishmen was hard to judge as the shrieks and screams of the paying guest almost drowned them out."  During a
between-shows press conference, McCartney noted that "little things like money" had prevented the Beatles from
recording what would become the album "Revolver" at Stax in Memphis. Lennon said The Beatles admiration for the guitar
playing of Steve Cropper was one of the reasons they wanted to record in Memphis. However, Atlantic Vice President
Gerald Wexler told The Commercial Appeal that Beatles manager Brian Epstien cancelled tentative plans for a
two-week studio session at Stax because "he was not pleased with the security and housing plans he found during a
one-day visit to Memphis."  The anti-Beatles resolution which described Memphis as "a City of Churches" was inspired by
Lennon's then much-publicized remark that The Beatles were "more popular than Jesus now. ...I don't know which will go
first, rock and roll or Christianity."  In the days leading to the Memphis shows, The Commercial Appeal reported on
several "Beatle burnings" in reaction to Lennon - protest rallies in which Beatles records were broken and burned ("Foot in
Moptop's Mouth Is Hot One," stated a headline). Eighty police officers worked the show.
"I've never had so much security at an event, even Bob Hope," promoter Early Maxwell said.

JUNE 1970 NASHVILLE
Beatle
Ringo Starr records
his second solo album, called
"
Beaucoups Of Blues"  
Session musicians include:
Pete Drake, D.J. Fontana,
Jerry Reed,
Charlie McCoy and
Charlie Daniels

1974 :Paul McCartney &
Wings
Spend Six Weeks in
Nashville Tennessee
He wrote and recorded a song about
Printers Alley called Sally G., along with the flip
side
Juniors Farm & more. They were recorded
with
Wings (Linda McCartney, Denny Laine,
Jimmy McCoulloch
& Geoff Britton) during
their stay in Nashville. They were here to record
songs, and prepare for a
Paul McCartney &
Wings
world tour. Paul McCartney Midi Web Sight
Juniors Farm was named after the farm they stayed
at while in the Nashville area (Lebanon) owned by  
Curly "
Junior" Putnam    

1981: Beatle Movies double-feature in Nashville
Yellow Submarine & Let It Be
at the Hickory Hollow Cinemas on February 19, 1981

Signed by original Beatles drummer Pete Best while in Nashville
in the
1980's to give a speech at Opryland and
do a book signing for his book "
Beatle". Pete Best played
on ten songs on the
1996 Beatles Anthology 1

1997:
George Harrison
in Jackson TN at
singer
Carl Perkins
funeral.
The Beatles
recorded many
songs by Carl
Perkins and other
artists on
Sun Records.
Ringo
also recorded
an album at Sun
Records in Memphis

November 29, 2001:
Former Beatle George Harrison died in Los Angeles
at the age of 58 after a long battle with cancer
GEORGE HARRISON
1943-2001

An image from a T-shirt, I purchased at the
John Lennon Vigil, held at the 103.3 KDF
radio station soon after John Lennon was killed

Jerry Lee Lewis and George at
Carl Perkins funeral in Jackson TN

2000: Ringo Starr & his All-Starr Band
at the Gaylord Entertainment Center
in Nashville

NASHVILLE BEATLE FACTS:
1963: Soldier Of Love, written by Nashville's Buzz Cason
is recorded and ends up on The Beatles "Live At The BBC" album in 1994.
Buzz Cason
told me he found out about 1980, The Beatles had recorded his song, and remarked
"that was a big one".
Also on that album is a song written by Chuck Berry, Memphis TennesseeRingo Starr appeared in Nashville on the Johnny Cash Show while promoting his solo album
"Beaucoup of Blues" in 1970. He stayed at the downtown Ramada Inn.
John was here during "the lost summer" and stayed at the James Robertson Hotel.

A replica of a Beatles
Ticket Stub from the
last of two shows in
Memphis on Friday
August 19, 1966

It was 40 Years Ago Today,
The Beatles in Memphis TN
Memphis leaders gave icy reception
Audiences for shows had different reactionRead Details Below:Memphis officials did not want the Beatles to come

Read the song list, outfits & attendance figures
.
Opening acts  included Nashville's Bobby Hebb

They almost recorded "Revolver" in Tennessee

They admired Nashville guitarist Steve Cropper

And much more information!

CLICK ON NEWSPAPER ARTICLE TO ENLARGE

The Beatles only
concerts in Tennessee
took place at the
Mid-South Coliseum
in Memphis Tennessee

TENNESSEE CONCERTS SEARCH ENGINE
Search this websiteWebsite by Pat Adams. pat@tennesseeconcerts.com

Ringo Starr from The Beatles in Nashville in 2008

See our pictures of Ringo Starr at the Wildhorse Saloon from July 6, 2008
Ringo Starr at the Wildhorse Saloon in Nashville Tennessee
We had the best table in the place (front/center) and got some great pictures of Ringo, Edgar Winter, Gary Wright,
Billy Squire and others. What a show,
Act Naturally, It Don't Come Easy, What Goes On, Photograph,
Oh My My, Boys, I Wanna Be Your Man, Liverpool 8, With A Little Help from My Friends
and more. Speaking
of help from friends,
Edgar Winter did an 8 minute version of Frankenstein (playing keyboards/sax/drums),
Gary Wright with Dream Weaver, Billy Squire did The Stroke, Colin Hay performed Who Can It Be Now, and
Hamish Stuart played Pick Up The Pieces. The band did more of their hits, also.

See my own video of the line to see Ringo Starr in Nashville
July 6, 2008 at the Wildhorse Saloon in Nashville Tennessee

Ringo Starr ask for Peace & Love for his birthday in Nashville
My own video, on the eve of his July 7th birthday, Ringo Starr in
Nashville Tennessee, wants "Peace & Love" for his 68th birthday.

See our own YouTube video of Paul McCartney in Nashville
Paul McCartney walks out on stage for his very first Nashville concert.


Find & Buy Tickets
in Tennessee
and the USA
Click on pages below

TennesseeConcerts
Pat Adams - Editor
Email: pat@tennesseconcerts.com
Nashville Tennessee

Our Beatles
Nashville Menu

THE BEATLES
Years active 1960–70Labels
Parlophone, Swan, Vee-
Jay, Capitol, United
Artists, Apple
Associated acts
The Quarrymen, Billy
Preston, Badfinger,
Jackie Lomax, Plastic
Ono Band
Website
thebeatles.comMembers
John Lennon
Paul McCartney
George Harrison
Ringo Starr
Past members
Pete Best
Stuart Sutcliffe
Biography
The Beatles were an
English rock band that
formed in Liverpool, in
1960. With John Lennon,
Paul McCartney, George
Harrison and Ringo Starr,
they became widely
regarded as the greatest
and most influential act of
the rock era. Rooted in
skiffle, beat and 1950s
rock and roll, the Beatles
later experimented with
several genres, ranging
from pop ballads and
Indian music to
psychedelic and hard
rock, often incorporating
classical elements in
innovative ways. In the
early 1960s, their
enormous popularity first
emerged as
"Beatlemania", but as
their songwriting grew in
sophistication they came
to be perceived as an
embodiment of the ideals
shared by the era's
sociocultural revolutions.

The Beatles built their
reputation playing clubs
in Liverpool and
Hamburg over a three-
year period from 1960.
Manager Brian Epstein
moulded them into a
professional act and
producer George Martin
enhanced their musical
potential. They gained
popularity in the United
Kingdom after their first
hit, "Love Me Do", in
late 1962. They acquired
the nickname "the Fab
Four" as Beatlemania
grew in Britain over the
following year, and by
early 1964 they had
become international
stars, leading the "British
Invasion" of the United
States pop market. From
1965 onwards, the
Beatles produced what
many critics consider
their finest material,
including the innovative
and widely influential
albums Rubber Soul
(1965), Revolver (1966),
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely
Hearts Club Band (1967),
The Beatles (commonly
known as the White
Album, 1968) and Abbey
Road (1969). After their
break-up in 1970, they
each enjoyed successful
musical careers. Lennon
was shot and killed in
December 1980, and
Harrison died of lung
cancer in November
2001. McCartney and
Starr, the surviving
members, remain
musically active.

According to the RIAA,
the Beatles are the best-
selling music artists in the
United States, with 178
million certified units.
They have had more
number-one albums on
the British charts and sold
more singles in the UK
than any other act. In
2008, the group topped
Billboard magazine's list
of the all-time most
successful "Hot 100"
artists; as of 2014, they
hold the record for most
number-one hits on the
Hot 100 chart with
twenty. They have
received ten Grammy
Awards, an Academy
Award for Best Original
Score and fifteen Ivor
Novello Awards.
Collectively included in
Time magazine's
compilation of the
twentieth century's 100
most influential people,
they are the best-selling
band in history, with
estimated sales of over
600 million records
worldwide.

John Lennon, George Harrison, Paul McCartney & Pete Best
1962: Early picture of The Beatles, signed by original drummer Pete Best
while in Nashville in the 1980s. (Ringo Starr took his place later in 1962)