The Beatles returned to the U.S. in 1965 and 1966 as well. And America survived. John Lennon, the band’s composer and vocalist, died in 1980 after he was shot and killed in New York. George Harrison, ...
On Christmas Day 1963, practically nobody in America had heard of The Beatles. And yet ... The laws of celebrity physics are: You come along, you're successful for a few years, you fade away.
Shortly before The Beatles’ history-making Stateside visit, Capitol Records secured exclusive U.S. rights to release the band ...
The influence of The Beatles' John Lennon on music cannot be overstated, but he seemed to have a particular impact on the ...
As the old adage goes, “All press is good press,” which we suppose we could apply to one of the Beatles’ wildest interviews from 1963 when their star was quickly ascending across the U.K ...
America was in the grip of Beatlemania — and on September 13, 1964, Charm City was the epicenter, as screaming kids packed Baltimore’s two-year-old Civic Center.
A group at the store came up with an idea to meet their idols when the Beatles performed at Met Stadium in August 1965.
The Beatles’ American-released albums between January 1964 and March 1965 will be boxed for a new mono 180-gram vinyl set cut ...
It may have been “20 years ago today” that “Sgt. Pepper taught the band to play,” but it’s been 60 years since The Beatles ...
It was a series of begats (Elvis begat the Beatles, the Beatles begat Jann Wenner, etc.) involving identity-famished ...
“For all Irish whiskey companies, it’s like The Beatles – you have to go to America ... the relationships we have here… when people come over, or people are here, they see McConnell ...