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| AUTHOR: | Hunter Davies |
| CATEGORY: | Book |
| MANUFACTURER: | W.W. Norton & Company |
| ISBN: | 0393315711 |
| TYPE: | Beatles, Biography, Biography & Autobiography, Biography/Autobiography, Composers & Musicians - General, England, Entertainment & Performing Arts - General, General, Genres & Styles - Rock, Pop Arts / Pop Culture, Rock Music, Rock musicians, Biography: film, television & music |
| MEDIA: | Paperback |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
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Customer Reviews of The Beatles
One of the 1st True Books on the Beatles! I'm sure there were books about the Beatles written before this, but this book was written with the Beatles (complete with interviews). Hunter Davies includes some of his own opinions in later editions but this is about the Fab 4, their rise, and where they were in 1968 when this book originally came out (John admits to be bored with life as Yoko Ono had not yet been a household name to us and George was already sick of being a Beatle at the time). The later editions have a section about the breakup, what they did individually in the 1970's, the tragedy of John Lennon in 1980 and more recent interviews with Paul, George, and Ringo. You can trust Davies since he got the Beatles' authorization and respected their privacy (he mentions that George Harrison asked that certain things not be printed). As Davies points out, this story is about the rise and not the fall.
THE BEATLES' OWN LONG AND WINDING ROADS
This is truly an excellent biography of the Beatles. First published in 1967, it was merely regarded as a "pop star story" as opposed to the serious and comprehensive biography it really is. This is a must have for any die hard Beatles' fan and for folks who plain love their music. This is a book for everyone.
Hoffman chronicles each Beatle's life, his own personal input and experiences. In so doing, he guides his readers to how each Beatle became members of the world's most influential band in history. Quotes from relatives, folks who knew the Beatles and the Beatles themselves round out the book so that readers get a "feel" for, a "sense" of each Beatle. Photographs of the Beatles as boys are an added treat. Readers get to travel down the long and winding road with the Beatles from Liverpool to world wide fame.
The writing style is fast paced and Hoffman is quite skilled at maintaining his readers' interest. I am so glad this has been reissued and updated. This is a keeper.
Great bio of the legendary band
This is the only biography authorized by the Beatles themselves, and it gives a detailed account of the rise to fame of the Fab Four, and many details of each band member's life. Davies was asked by Harrison not to print certain details, and an aunt suggested he revise some of the account of John's early life to make it sound better. Some details couldn't be divulged at the time, such as Brian Epstein's gay orientation, and the extent to which John was into drugs, although you get a sense of this from some brief passages in the book although Davies obviously avoids dwelling for too long on these issues. Still, despite glossing over a few negatives like these, Davies nevertheless had access to information that no other writer had, and no doubt the book benefits from that despite its being slightly sanitized.
One thing that distinguises this book from all the other bios is Davies spent a year living and travelling with the Beatles and observing them in their day-to-day lives. The year was 1967, and although the group was soon to break-up, 1967 was still a great year for the band and Davies gives many fine insights and details into the life of the group during this period. Davies enlivens the account with anecdotes and stories from many relatives and friends who knew the Beatles best.
I want to take a brief detour here to tell you about a funny piece of Beatles trivia I discovered recently, and I just have to mention it here, since I don't recall seeing it in the book. Supposedly The Beatles loved cartoons, and a friend of mine who is a big Beatles fan and trivia buff and I got to talking about it, and since I'm sort of a trivia nut myself, he suggested an unlikely cartoon, which was Popeye the Sailor, and challenged me to find a connection to the Beatles. Well, it's not known if this was a cartoon the Beatles liked or not, but after doing only about an hour of research on the web, I came up with a funny but true connection.
I found out one of the songs the Beatles often performed during their Hamburg years, before they were writing all their own songs, was "Falling in Love Again," by Sammy Lerner, an important songwriter of the 40s and 50s. But it so happens that Lerner also was enlisted to write the theme song for the Popeye the Sailor cartoon, which he did. So it turns out that there is indeed a connection between the Beatles and Popeye in that Lerner composed songs for, shall we say, both groups of singers. :-)
Anyway, I hope you didn't mind my little digression, but getting back to the book, this is a fine biography of the Beatles and is especially strong in its treatment of their early years and rise to fame. Although updated in the later edition, there isn't as much information about the post-1970 years, but as others have pointed out about the book, it's about the famous band's rise, not about their fall.