Today marks the 50th
anniversary of The Beatles US debut, the day they flew into New York to an
airport welcome not unlike what had been happening at Heathrow during the past
year, which must have set their pulses racing. It was the final item on last night’s 10 o’clock BBC TV
news, the now familiar b&w footage of them walking down the steps on to the
tarmac, the cops staring at them because they’d never seen hair like that before
on men, the press conference at which they charmed the media, the desperate girls with
their placards outside the Plaza Hotel and, of course, their iconic appearance
on the Ed Sullivan show, the moment when America saw them for the first time
and said yes. It’s still magic and always will be.
They
also showed some footage from the Washington show a few days later, that mad concert
where they played ‘in the round’ and had to shift the amps and drums after
every few songs so that everyone could see them. Paul sang 'I Saw Her Standing There' and John sang ‘Twist And Shout’,
shaking his head and trying to make himself heard above the screams, and the
more he shook the more they screamed. Although it wasn’t shown on TV last
night, Brian was at the back staring down at his boys, Neil and Mal were on
guard at the sides of the stage – yes The Beatles had just two roadies – and at
the end The Beatles bowed low, as they always did, that gesture of salute that became as fixed in the mind as Paul's violin bass, George's big, unwieldy Gretsch guitar and John's face-'em-down, legs-apart stance.
So
it was fit and proper that after the news Lisa and I went across to the
Compasses pub where my friend Al Duncan’s band The Beautiful Losers were
playing and they closed their set with ‘Twist And Shout’, played in the Fabs’
arrangement, and, at the end, they bowed low, just like John, Paul and George. It
was pre-rehearsed, Al told me, and it was a fine gesture to mark the day The
Beatles changed America.
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