The Beatles
Irrepressible and irresistible, they were — and
remain — the world's most astonishing rock-'n'-
roll band
By KURT LODER
Boomers can be tiresome when they natter on too
long about the fun-swollen fabulousness of the
1960s. I mean, I was there: "Flower power"?
Patchouli oil? Peter Max posters? Please. But
even the mistiest of such geezers is likely to be
right about the rock and soul music of that
decade: Who could overstate its distinctive
exuberance, its heady inventiveness, or the
thrill of its sheer abundance? And who could
overcelebrate those most emblematic of '60s pop
phenomena, the Beatles? For the Beatles were
then, and remain to this day, the world's most
astonishing rock-'n'-roll band.
I use the adjective advisedly. Unrelenting
astonishment is what I clearly recall feeling, as
a teenager myself back in the winter of 1964,
when "Beatlemania," an obscure hysteria that had
erupted in Britain the year before, suddenly
jumped the Atlantic and took instant root here.
First, in January, came the spine-tingling
arrival of I Want to Hold Your Hand — a great,
convulsive rock-'n'-roll record that, to the
bafflement of many a teen garage band across the
land, actually had more than three chords (five
more, to be exact — incredible). Then one week
later, She Loves You careened onto the charts —
wooo! The week after that came the headlong rush
of Please Please Me, and by April, the top five
singles in the country were all Beatles records.
By year's-end they had logged a head-spinning 29
hits on the U.S. charts. It is hard — no, it is
impossible — to imagine any of the gazillion or
so carefully marketed little bands of today
replicating a quarter of that feat. (Even a
contemporary English group such as Oasis, which
baldly appropriates the superficialities of the
Beatles' style, entirely misses the still-magical
heart of their music.)
Louis Armstrong
Lucille Ball
The Beatles
Marlon Brando
Coco Chanel
Charlie Chaplin
Le Corbusier
Bob Dylan
T.S. Eliot
Aretha Franklin
Martha Graham
Jim Henson
James Joyce
Pablo Picasso
Rodgers & Hammerstein
Bart Simpson
Frank Sinatra
Steven Spielberg
Igor Stravinsky
Oprah Winfrey
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Ed Sullivan, the poker-faced TV variety-show
host, having spotted the effervescent moptops in
mid-mob scene at London's Heathrow Airport the
previous October ("Who the hell are the Beatles?"
he'd asked excitedly), brought them over to play
his show early on, in February 1964, and 70
million people tuned in. A congratulatory
telegram from Elvis Presley, the great, lost god
of rockabilly, was read at the beginning of the
show, in what might have been seen as torch-
passing fashion, and Americans — or American
youth, at any rate — promptly fell in love. ("I
give them a year," said Sullivan's musical
director.)
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