AND NOW...
A compilation of utterly useless information brought to you by www.about.com and THE NATIONAL NEWSPICKER™.
Following is a veritable cesspool teeming with trivial items to use in pick-up lines in bars, to fill awkward silences in credit committee meetings, and to forward (via email) to the spam filters of Oprah, Bill O’Reilly, Bono, Paris Hilton, Harry Potter [either one], any member of the board of directors of Bank of America, the president or prime minister of your home nation, or one or more of your many friends, family members and people who have far too much time on their hands.
Here goes:
Commemorating the release of the Beatles' first record, Love Me Do on October 5th, 1962 we proudly present:
Amazing Facts About the Beatles' Love Me Do
Written by: Paul McCartney (credited as Lennon-McCartney)
Recorded: September 4th and 11th, 1962 (Studio 2, Abbey Road Studios, London, England)
Length: 2:17
Takes: 33
Musicians: Paul McCartney: lead vocal, bass guitar (1961 Hofner 500/1)
John Lennon: harmonica, rhythm guitar, backing vocals (Gibson J160E)
George Harrison: acoustic guitar, backing vocals
Ringo Starr: drums (version 1), tambourine (version 2)
Alan White: drums (version 2)
First released: October 5th, 1962 (UK: Parlophone 45-R 4949) version 1; April 27th, 1964 (US: Tollie 9008) version 2
Available on: Past Masters, Volume 1, (Parlophone CDP 90043-2)version 1 Please Please Me, (UK: Parlophone CDP7 46435-2; US: Capitol CLJ 46435) version 2
Highest chart position: 17 (UK: December 27, 1962), 1 (1 week) (US: May 30, 1964)
Live versions: February 20, 1963, for BBC radio's Parade Of The Pops.
BBC versions: Eight (for the BBC radio programs Here We Go, Talent Spot, Saturday Club, Side By Side, Pop Go The Beatles, and Easy Beat.
History:
- An attempt at a straight blues that dates all the way back to the Quarrymen days of 1958.
- Originally, the song was sung as a Everly Brothers-style duet, with John taking the solo "Love Me Do" at the end of each verse. However, John decided to add harmonica to the song at some point, having been directly inspired by Bruce Channel's recent hit "Hey Baby." Since he couldn't play the harmonica riff and sing the last line of verse at the time, producer George Martin ordered Paul to do it instead, on the spot. You can hear the nervousness in his shaky spotlight.
- There are two versions of this song. Version 1 features Ringo on drums and was recorded first. When the Beatles reconvened to cut the song again on September 11, 1962, however, producer George Martin, still unsure of the new kid Ringo's ability, substituted session drummer Alan White. This "version 2," on which Ringo merely plays a tambourine, remains the best-known (and, frankly, better quality) version: it was released as a single in the US, as opposed to the original single in the UK, which was taken from version 1 (although subsequent UK pressings used version 2). Version 2 was also kept off the Please Please Me album in favor of 1, although Martin claims this was probably not done on purpose.
- Although this was never a favorite among most Beatles fans, John and Paul have both stood by the song in interviews.
- This song was actually recorded first on June 6, 1962 during the group's first audition with EMI. At that time, Pete Best was still the drummer. This version, thought lost for years, turned up in George Martin's home and can no be found on the CD Anthology 1 (Apple 34445).
- George Martin originally wanted the band's first single to be an outside composition called "How Do You Do It," but although the band recorded it, they eventually won the right to release this instead. Gerry and the Pacemakers later had a hit with a cover of "How Do You Do It" modeled very closely after the Beatles' version.
- Rumor has been spread for years that this, the Beatles' first UK single, only made it onto the charts because manager Brian Epstein personally purchased 10,000 copies of it. No evidence of this has ever been found, however, and John Lennon, for one, has publicly branded the rumor as false.
- This song was reissued as a single in the UK in 1984, and this time climbed to #4.
Video: The Beatles: Love Me Do
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
HEY YOU! Yes you. You are invited to submit your own favorite amazing fact or statistic. If you’d like, we’ll even publish your name (or your organization’s name) and give you credit for your contribution. Note: Unless you are particularly dense, you will recognize that we are actually offering you FREE PUBLICITY in exchange for a mere tidbit of information.
Simply click on the hyperlink below to submit your gem:
Capital, Traffic Building, International Customers and unique SERVICES.
The National Networker Publications™ produced by TNNWC Group, LLC
Resources for Business Planning, Development, Capital and Growth
Forward/Share This Article With Colleagues And Social Media:
No comments:
Post a Comment