October 26: TODAY IN BEATLES HISTORY 1962 Concert at the - TopicsExpress



          

October 26: TODAY IN BEATLES HISTORY 1962 Concert at the Liverpool Empire, with Little Richard. 5:00-5:29pm. BBCs Here We Go broadcast (October 25, 1962 session, except Sheila). Love Me Do enters the UK ranking. 1963 Please Please Me LP number 1, 25th week (UK Record Retailer). Two concerts at the Kungliga Tennishallen, Stockholm. Broadcast of ABC-TVs Thank Your Lucky Stars, with a performance recorded October 20, 1963, in Birmingham. Brians first appearance on Juke Box Jury, with Jimmy Henney and Barbara Young. After the show, Brian has dinner with Lionel Bart. 1964 Studio 2 (control room only). 10:00am-12:45pm. Mono mixing: I Dont Want To Spoil The Party (from take 19); Rock And Roll Music (from take 1); Words Of Love (from take 3); Babys In Black (remix 2, from take 14); Im A Loser (remix 2, from take 8); Kansas City/Hey-Hey-Hey-Hey! (from take 1). Studio 2 (control room only). 12:45-1:05pm. Stereo mixing: Kansas City/Hey-Hey-Hey-Hey! (from take 1). Studio 2. 4:30-6:30pm. Recording: Honey Dont (takes 1-5). Studio 2. 7:30-10:00pm. Recording: What Youre Doing [re-make] (takes 13-19); Another Beatles Christmas Record (takes 1-5). Editing: Another Beatles Christmas Record (of takes 1-5). Producer: George Martin; Engineer: Norman Smith; 2nd Engineer: A. B. Lincoln. Last day of recordings for Beatles For Sale. 1965 Studio 2 (control room only). 10:00am-12:30pm. Stereo mixing: Drive My Car (from take 4); Day Tripper (from take 3); In My Life (from take 3); If I Needed Someone (from take 1); Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown) (from take 4); Nowhere Man (from take 4). Producer: George Martin; Engineer: Norman Smith; 2nd Engineer: Ron Pender. 11:15am. The Beatles enter Buckingham Palace. Morning: the Beatles receive the MBE medals from Queen Elizabeth II, at Buckingham Palace. Press conference at the Saville Theatre. Brian and Dezo Hoffmann attend. 1968 Hey Jude number 1, 5th week, 9th week in the Top 30 (US Billboard). Hey Jude/Revolution number 1, 4th week (Australia Kent Music Report). 1970 Just days after George announced that My Sweet Lord would be released, he decides not to do so, stating I dont want the single to detract from the impact of the All Things Must Pass triple album. 1971 Yokos exhibition This Is Not Here shown at the Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, New York. At their Greenwich Village apartment, John and Yoko record a demo version of Happy Xmas (War Is Over). 1973 UK single release: Helen Wheels/Country Dreamer (Apple R 5993). 1977 Additional recording sessions for London Town LP, at Abbey Road Studios. 1981 In Los Angeles, Ringo appears onthe KLOS radio show Rockline, promoting his album Stop And Smell The Roses and taking calls from listeners. 1984 In the US, Paul appears on the ABC TV morning program Good Morning America to promote his film Give My Regards To Broad Street and its soundtrack album. In the US, Give My Regards To Broad Street opens nationwide. 1985 At the Cuts Gallery in London, an exhibition of Dezo Hoffmans photographs from his book John Lennon is shown. The ITV network airs the London Weekend Television program An Audience With Billy Connolly, featuring a star-studded audience including Ringo and Barbara. (recorded October 21, 1985). 1987 The Beatle City exhibition runs at the West End marketplace in Dallas, Texas. 1988 In the US, the Beatles 1967 film Magical Mystery Tour is released on home video. Paul makes an appearance on the BBC1 documentary program The Power Of Music. 1989 Paul performs in concert at Palatrussardi, Milan, Italy (Get Back Tour). Backstage at todays concert, Nancy Duff, of CBS News in the US, meets Paul to arrange a special edition of CBS news magazine program 48 Hours. In Tokyo, Ringo holds a press conference to announce his upcoming Japanese tour. 1990 In Los Angeles, Paul appears on the radio program Rockline. 1993 Paul performs in concert at Palau San Jordi, Barcelona, Spain (The New World Tour). 1998 UK album release: Wide Prairie (Parlophone 4 97910 1). 2004 Forbes listed the Top 5 dead music earners. John Lennon was second with $21m and George Harrison was third with $7m. 2010 Forbes Magazine released its annual list of the Top Earning Dead Celebrities. John Lennon was fifth at $17 million.
Posted on: Sat, 26 Oct 2013 14:14:22 +0000

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