THE BIRTH OF
THE BEATLES
G'day folks,
We've all heard rumours over the years, but here is a good one laid to rest.
January 1, 1962 — On this day, the Beatles – scruffy, clad in leather and unknown outside their home town of Liverpool – travelled through snow in a van for 220 miles to make a recording audition in London. And they were turned down.
In charge at the Decca studios where the audition was held was senior A&R man Dick Rowe. His assistant, Mike Smith, had seen the Beatles perform at what was to become the famous Cavern Club and had put forward the audition suggestion to their manager, Brian Epstein.
It lasted about an
hour and the Beatles – John
Lennon, George
Harrison, Paul
McCartney and the original drummer, Pete Best – performed 15
songs. They were nervous and the session did not go particularly well but Smith
told them afterwards that he “saw no problems” and they would have a decision
“in a few weeks”.
Epstein let the “few weeks” pass, then, fed up with waiting, phoned Rowe and
asked for a decision. It was not what he expected. “Groups with guitars are on
the way out,” Rowe allegedly said, adding that he believed “the Beatles have no
future in show business”.
Rowe, who died in 1986, always denied the story, saying it was actually Mike Smith who turned down the Fab Four. Another group, Brian Poole and the Tremeloes, also had an audition on the same day and according to Rowe: "I told Mike he'd have to decide between them. It was up to him – the Beatles or the Tremeloes. He said, 'They're both good, but one's a local group, the other comes from Liverpool.' We decided it was better to take the local group. We could work with them more easily and stay closer in touch."
Whoever made the decision, Rowe went on to redeem himself
by subsequently signing, among others, the Rolling Stones, the Animals, the
Moody Blues, the Small Faces and Tom Jones.
And on musical grounds, maybe it was the right verdict. Years later, George Martin, the
Beatles’ legendary producer at EMI, said that he, too, would have turned them
down on the basis of the mediocre Decca audition tape.
Clancy's comment: I still think they were one of the best. Just sayin' ...
I'm ...
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