Category Archives: Beatles

John Lennon Meets Brandy Alexander

John Lennon Meets Brandy Alexander

March 13, 1973
“Remember” By Harry Nilsson

John Lennon Meets Brandy Alexander

The 1970s arrived and the Beatles departed. Each Beatle recording albums, releasing singles.

Separately.

After the commercial flop of his “Some Time in New York City” album, John Lennon’s post-Beatle life became reckless. Many continued to blame Yoko and him for the Beatle break-up. In reality, the seeds of disunion were from within. The band too often ignored gentle George Harrison’s musical contributions. They had put aside the affable Ringo Starr. “He was just lucky, not talented” was a common misconception. John and Paul, who had rarely truly collaborated on songs, had gone in different directions long before 1969.

John Lennon Meets Brandy Alexander

May Pang

John Lennon Meets Brandy AlexanderJohn and Yoko’s marriage was floundering and they mutually agreed to separate. In fact a separation that included John’s living with May Pang, their common assistant.

Lennon and Pang spent time in both New York City and Los Angeles. John referred to his and Yoko’s time of separation as “The Lost Weekend.”  [Wikipedia entry on movie]

John Lennon Meets Brandy Alexander

Harry Nilsson

The Beatles admired Harry Nilsson and John looked up Harry when he and May arrived in LA. Nilsson loved to party and was very good at getting others to party with him and equally good at getting others in trouble.

According to May Pang, John…”loved his energy; he loved his writing. What he loved in Harry was the beauty of his friendship and relaxed personality. That’s what he saw. Harry drank, a lot. But Harry was the type of guy that if you go out drinking with him, he’d be sure at the end of the night that there would be a big brawl and that you are the one who’s in trouble, even though he started it. Harry would keep feeding John drinks until it was too late.”

CBS TV had cancelled the Smothers brothers show and they were returning to live club performances. They were at the Troubadour on March 13, 1974. John Lennon was drunk on Brandy Alexanders (thank you Harry) and disrupted the brothers’ act with relentless heckling (thank you Harry who told John that the brothers worked best if heckled). Smothers’ manager Ken Fritz said, “I went over and asked Harry to try to shut up Lennon. Harry said, ‘I’m trying – don’t blame me!’ When Lennon continued, I told him to keep quiet. He swung and hit me in the jaw.

Lennon and Nilsson were hustled out of the Troubadour, knocking over a few tables in the process. “It was horrendous,” Tom Smothers recalled.

John Lennon Meets Brandy Alexander

The Last of Lennon-McCartney

The Troubadour incident was a wake-up call for Lennon and Nilsson. Lennon soon announced he would produce Nilsson’s next album, ‘Pussy Cats.’ They decided that the LP’s musicians should live together during the sessions. Lennon and Nilsson, along with Ringo Starr and Keith Moon, moved into a Santa Monica beach house.

Two weeks later on March 28, Stevie Wonder and Paul McCartney unexpectedly joined Lennon, Nilsson and others for a midnight jam. Ringo had been there, but left earlier, so McCartney sat in on drums and sang harmony to Lennon’s lead vocals. Lennon also played guitar with Wonder on electric piano. Despite the star-studded lineup, standards like ‘Lucille’ and ‘Stand By Me,’ marred by technical problems, were disappointing.

By evening’s end, Lennon and McCartney agreed to see each other again but it would be the last time the two ex-Beatles would play together in a studio.

John Lennon Meets Brandy Alexander

Four Preps Write Beatles

Four Preps Write Beatles

Four Preps Write Beatles

The Four Preps

“26 Miles”

The Four Preps formed in 1956 and sang great harmonies. Their biggest hit was in 1958:  26 Miles. They appeared on TV, on popular shows, and with popular stars.

But the 50s were finished and it was…

Four Preps Write Beatles

Beatlemania arrives

March 1964. The Beatles had arrived with their three consecutive weeks on the Ed Sullivan Show and their Meet the Beatles the #1 album (since February 15 and would  remain there until May 1).

Then The Beatles Second Album would hit #1 and remain there until June 5. Then from July 25 until October 30 those damn Beatles would have another #1 album, Hard Days Night, 

Between April 4 – May 8, five of their singles “Can’t Buy Me Love”, “Twist and Shout”, “She Loves You”, “I Want to Hold Your Hand,” and “Please Please Me” had been top five songs.

AND the week of April 11, the Beatles had 14 songs in the top 100:

  1. Can’t Buy Me Love
  2. Twist & Shout
  3. She Loves You
  4. I Want To Hold Your Hand
  5. Please Please Me
  6. Do You Want to Know a Secret
  7.  I Saw Her Standing There
  8. You Can’t Do That
  9. All My Loving
  10. From Me To You
  11. Thank You Girl
  12. There’s A Place
  13. Roll Over Beethoven
  14. Love Me Do

In total, The Beatles will have five #1 singles in 1964.

Four Preps Write Beatles

Four Prep strategy

Four Preps Write Beatles
The Four Preps

So it was completely understandable when on March 9, 1964 Capitol Records, the company that released almost all of the Beatles’ songs in the US, decided to cash in on such a gold mine. Written by Ivan Ulz, Glen Larson, and Bruce Bellard, Letter to the Beatles was a novelty song in which a boyfriend wishes his Beatle-maniac girlfriend would get her mind off of those Beatles.

My girl fell in love with a singing group
From England far away.
She lost her mind, she lost her heart,
When they began to play,
“I want to hold your hand,
I want to hold your hand,
I want to hold your hand. “And so my girl wrote a letter to The Beatles,
Saying “You’re so fine.
You can have my love to keep,
Take this heart of mine. ” (Well)
“Beatles, I’d give you anything,
All of my true love. “But they wrote a letter back to her,
Sayin’ that ain’t enough.
You gotta send us twenty-five cents for an autographed picture,
One dollar bill for a fan club card.
And if you send in right away
You get a lock of hair from our St. Bernard. (oh no)
I want to hold your hand.

On April 11, 1964 Billboard magazine reported that Capital Records has stopped pressing the Four Preps single of “A Letter to the Beatles” because Duchess Music, the American licensor, refused to give Capital permission to cover a parody of an actual Beatles disk…”The song burst out of the gates and did well until Duchess Music, the publisher of “I Want to Hold Your Hand,” refused to give permission to used the song in their song (which they had).

So close!

Four Preps Write Beatles

Have a listen

For those (many) of you who have never hear the song, here you go.

Four Preps Write Beatles

Four Preps Write Beatles

Ironically, the Four Preps continue (mostly) today while the Beatles broke up more than 50 years ago. And in 2007 “The clean-cut West Coast-based” band was inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame.

Four Preps Write Beatles

Beatles Back In UUUK

Beatles Back In UUUK

February 22, 1964

The Beatles flew from sunny warm Miami, to wintry New York, and then to dreary London. Their British Beatlemaniacs swarmed the airport (a time in history when swarming the tarmac was possible) to greet their returning heroes, the conquerors of America. Getting off the plane, they carried a bunch of albums and I’d love to know what they were.

An interview was conducted and during it they refer to meeting Cassius (three syllables) Clay and Sonny Liston. It had been on February 18 that they visited Ali at his training facility. As famous as the Beatles had become, Ali was not that yet. He soon would be. Ali was 22. Ringo and John 23. Paul and George 21. Yikes!

Here’s the transcript from that part of David Colman’s interview.

DC: We’d like to hear what you thought about Mr [Cassius] Clay.

John: Very tall.

Ringo: Oh, he’s a big lad.

Paul: He’s a great laugh, more than anything.  He’s a big lad.

George: He’s gonna get Sonny Liston in three.

John: He said.

Ringo: So he said.

Paul: That’s what he said. I don’t think he will, though.

Beatles Back In UUUK

Beatles Back in the UK

The whole interview is wonderful.  Part of the Beatle charm was their charisma: a delightful sandwich that included some respect, humor, and sarcasm. Among other highlights of the Coleman interview are:

  • an inopportune reference to John’s wife. It was still supposed to be a “secret” that he was married. Such an image fit in better.
  • Coleman asks Paul about “the tastes of fans over there” and John responds “He never bit any.”
  • the difficulty of their concert in Washington, DC
  • Ringo’s use of his “Ringo-ism” Tomorrow never knows. In two years, it will, of course, become the closing title on the Revolver album.
Beatles Back In UUUK