I was there at this concert in Bournemouth and was nearly fourteen, I was determined not to scream but when Paul started singing screamed like everyone else!!! What a time that was
These tunes brought me back in the day, my musical awakening along with frankie ifield, pop star in those days..i lived in britain then, being canadian. Love paul and the beatles. Main man songwriter, and workoholic, paul.
"Their boyband roots" - would that include the 3 yrs playing dance halls around the UK and junky dives in Hamburg? Pretty much playing 6-7 days a week, inspired by rock and roll. Same boyband that went on to do Revolver and the White Album? Anyone that would define these guys as a boyband are out of their heads IMO.
@@KorpusV6 The term 'boyband' implies that they are just 4 pretty faces singing to music that somebody else has produced. The Beatles were a young Rock 'n' Roll band. Most rock 'n' roll bands were young when they started out, so in your terms they are all boybands? The term is an insult to real musicians.
There is no debate. These 4 fellas changed the world. Others came, some great, some not, who put their mark on the landscape. But the Beatles created the landscape on which they put their marks. And some day, in a future unfortunately not many decades away, they will all be remembered with love and reverence. Well deserved. And while Paul and Ringo still grace our world I suggest we never stop thanking them for this gift. It keeps on giving. It is almost a shame that we cannot, could not, make time sit still. It makes the loss of John and George that much sadder to know what we might have had but forever I will be a Beatles fan.
Tango Eliott Total agree with you!!, thanks for expressing so well my owners thoughts! sorry my poor English, but one thing is sure, the Beatles's lovers are around the world !
@@rossmelanson6999 No one said The Beatles caused any of what is happening now, non music wise. They changed the face of music, but they didn't cause the Coronavirus or almost cause WW3.
To be young and to have experienced the Beatles years, as I did, is an incomparable memory. It's great to have been in the '60s and to be in the 60s now!
@@perlasalinas8458 They played as often as they could get booked, it was their job and their pay! As long as they drew a crowd, the promoters wanted them. Which means the promoters wanted them. They did a ton of regularly repeating gigs in Liverpool, then Hamburg, then Liverpool AND Hamburg, then regionally, and by 62-63, all of England. And as their fame grew, they toured internationally. And the rest is history. If you want to know more about this time period, read Mark Lewisohn's excellent "Tune In."
Notice how even though the kids are screaming and crying, no one is hurting anyone and they're all wearing dresses or shirts or even jackets. No one is flashing the stage, acting slutty or punching, stabbing or shooting anyone. A more innocent time, indeed!
I saw the Beatles at the Gaumont in Bournemouth earlier that year in August, they played there for a week. It was definitely not as frenzied as that and there were plenty of empty seats - what a difference 3 months made!
They were saviors in a way after everything that was before them. It was an awakening. Everyone felt that. The beatles were the doorway to it. Look at what the 60's became. The Beatles were the captain of the ship that lead us into new territory. They had said that they were the only ones who really never appreciated Beatlemania because they were not the audience.
Unfortunately by late 1969 the '60's dream was definitely over. But yes, the early/mid 60's, in terms of music, fashion, the arts, etc., was an awesome and exciting time with, what seemed, endless possibilities.
I agree. To echo the words of Cynthia Lennon in her bio, they were "on the crest of a wave". They really were! And coming from the North, I appreciated them making northern accents cool, in a time when only the Queen's English (RP accent) was spoken on the telly. They were a breath of fresh air.
I work with a woman who worked at the Winter Gardens back in the sixties & remembers this concert very well. Apparently many of the seats had to be cleaned afterwards due to the very excitable fans who were sat in them. My father in law was a copper at that gig & saved George Harrison from a bunch of nutty girls. They went away with just a thick clump of his hair. The father in law & a few of his fellow officers ended up having tea & sandwiches with them at their hotel.
I cannot tell you how exciting it was back in the day I was very ill once and the Bettles was on T.V I had to get up and watch them it was a magic time.
The Winter Gardens in B'mouth was the most frequented venue outside of London during the Beatlemania epoch. Lennon bought his aunt a beach bungalow in Sandbanks for £25k in 1965.
This is the concert I had tickets for but gave them to a friend so he could take his girlfriend. I have always regretted it but finally, 55 years later, I have got to see bits of the concert. Many thanks for that
I became a Beatles' fan in 1976, when I was 16 years old, in south Brazil. In that time, of course, there wasn't RUclips, or video tapes to see. In my country, you only had the original Long Playing vinil records or singles. So, we simply could dreamt how were the live shows of the Beatles. This footage, like the Ed Sullivan show appearances and the Royal Variety Performance in 1964 are a dream come true! The BBC albums were incredibile! Thanks, very much!
A young Tony Blackburn makes a brief appearance at 2:14. He lived in Bournemouth at that time, as I did. I remember the Beatles stayed at the Royal Court Hotel in Westover Road during their week's stint at the Winter Gardens. I believe the black & white photo on the cover of their 2nd album was taken in the Palace Court Hotel.
Myself from Seattle got in a band like 10's of thousands like me because of the FAB 4. My drum kit was like ringo's as much as i could make it, lots of fun never forget
6 days before poor Jack Kennedy was killed. That's why, for me, some of these songs have a terrible darkness to them. I'd gone home to listen to the new Beatles album featuring them when the news started to filter in.
They were playing The Globe in Stockton on tees on the night JFK died. News filtered in and, according to people who were there, very somber mood on the way. I actually spoke to the stage door man who told George what had happened. He then to,d the rest of the band... Quite astonishing if you think about it.... He didn't see the significance until it was pointed out to him
Not bad sound all things considered. All those screaming girls are in their twilight years now but they'll always have that night they had front row with the fabs.
11 days earlier they were at the Adelphi, Slough and I was there with my mates. Beatles had also been there in May 63 and we'd been to that show which had Gerry & The Pacemakers and then Roy Orbison headlining the first half. Happy days.
Audio problem: The songs are from the Washington '64 concert, except "You Really Got a Hold on Me," which is taken from a Swedish radio performance available on Anthology 1.
I was in boot camp with the Canadian military when the Beatles first appeared on Ed Sullivan. On my regular Sunday night phone call home, the first thing my Mom asked was "Did you see the Beatles on Ed Sullivan tonight?" Well, I had, but I was so tired I didn't pay a lot of attention. But soon became a huge fan!
the guitar work by john on "all my loving" makes that song. I heard somewhere that he used a banjo style strumming technique. it's really quite unique.
I was 8 - 9 when Beatlemania hit. Still thinking girls were "icky" and thinking that they were stupid for yelling and screaming, but now I have to admit they were 100% right. These days whenever I see the end of "A Hard Day's Night" or some such contemporary performance (like this one), I can't but help screaming myself! BEATLES FOREVER!
Tavistock (Woodstock?) paid teams of young women to go and scream at Beatles concerts (Bietel, another name for a chisel) to see if the rest of the ditzes would follow and they did. Monkey see monkey do (The Monkeys?) It was all mind control crap and to destroy society.... promote the drug culture and so on. Woodstock was designed to get the nation's youths into one area in order to get them all started on drugs. Seems so obvious now. Oh and that's the first Paul McCartney by the way. He was replaced in 1967. Notice the side to side head bobble is gone after 1966.
@jjcervantes2 The reaction The Beatles got in the winter of '64 made Justin Bieber look like nothing. Unless you were there, you have no idea how profound the reaction to The Beatles really was. And this was in the days when there was no MTV, computers, cell phones, and TV went off @ 10 pm EVERY mnight and was in black and white. Most people listened to radio to get their music. No I-Tunes, no downloads, just limited media. And The Beatles were HUGE!
Entirely too much of the audience and not enough of the Beatles. You should have spliced the Beatles footage together. If not enough, you could use other live Beatles footage to complete it.
Great footage from November of 1963, but I don't like it when people post videos and say something that isn't entirely true. The sound is from the Washington Concert the following February....not the concert featured in the clips.
CBS News bureau London - at the suggestion of Beatles’ manager Brian Epstein - sends a news crew to the British seaside resort of Bournemouth where they film a Beatles concert, thousands of screaming fans, and a few Beatles’ comments on camera. This film clip was later sent to New York. This was before The Beatles historic appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show in February 1964. Thank you for sharing this rare video.
The cover photograph for the With The Beatles and Meet The Beatles albums was taken in Bournemouth at what was then the Palace Court Hotel in Westover Road, now the Premier Inn.
Nice job, thanks for the video, looks like someone went to a lot of work matching different audio to the footage.. Sounds like "You Really Got A Hold on Me" was live. Didn't know they did that song live.. Nice. Great to have any footage, but I sure wish the Beatles had performed ALL of their songs in concert instead of the same ones all the time.. That's what happens when concerts were only 25 minutes..Shame
I was born far too late to be able to attend this concert but what really hurts is my mother saying, “If they came to Bournemouth I may have seen them”. How can one not remember, totally beyond me. I have been a massive Beatles fan since I was very young just wish I’d had the chance to see them live and I certainly wouldn’t have forgotten.
Why so many "jumps" in the video/film? It would be nice if you had complete performances of the songs, if they're available. I would have given anything to be at one of these shows to see them during this time.
@kenfig EVERYTHING has an effect. Since the Beatles were so incredibly huge, they had a bigger effect on where we are today than other groups. We didn't suddenly make a u-turn after the Beatles to arrive at today. They and Elvis were the biggest reasons for the cultural changes that gave us what we now have.
Some of this Audio is from different concerts from 1964 at different locations. The first few seconds is from their Washington DC concert in Feb. 1964, that's for sure!
@kenfig Ironic. Beatles fans complaining that the world has changed too much? You guys do realize that the Beatles, along with Elvis, were the primary reason the world changed, right? Do you not remember your parents voicing the same complaints when Elvis and the Beatles were changing things?
@kenfig Well naturally a Beatles fan is going to think "everything changed for the better"....you'll get the same response from someone who came of age in the 80s.....and a kid today. But the parents at the time didn't think so....just like parents today (you?) don't think so. Nothing changes....everyone has good ole days syndrome.
This theater kind of intrigues me. I hadn't realized the Beatles played there, but I know another band of comparable power and artistry had, the great Joy Division. If walls could talk, some of the amazing things these old theaters have seen. Anyway, I worked with a girl who'd seen the Beatles in the winter of '63 (at the Royal Variety Performance, no less!), I envied the living hell out of her. "Beatles Forever," it ain't just a slogan, kids!
@kenfig NO ONE advocates violence or disrespect. And though YOUR parents loved the Beatles...most parents didn't. The haircuts were seen in a negative light. It wasn't long before they were seen as endorsing drug use and of course they eventually questioned religion ("Imagine there's no heaven"). A LOT of people considered that to be a negative effect on society. There is a reason so many consider the 50s as "the good old days"...the Beatles were a part of the change, credit for good/bad.
For a first-hand account of the Beatles in Bournemouth 1963, including the story of 'The Men From Rickenbacker' and a song by song review of their set list, try 'Bournemouth A Go! Go!' (Natula Publications).
Saw " A hard days night " at the cinema when l was 10 years old in 1964 . Even at the film girls were screaming and hysterical . Happy days the '60's . What a great time to be young .
@sunsungoaway I'm thankful to have experienced the most sensational group around! The British Invasion and Motown-musical magic. Today's music has NO soul.
It used to irk me when the media people use to compare the beatles to the boybands in the 90's.The bealtes had just as many guy fans as girl fans.The Bealtes were multi-instrumentalist.The boybands did not play their own music.The only things the beatles had in common with the boybands was the screaming girls.
Bournemouth Winter Gardens closed in 2002 and was demolished four years later. Today it's a car park, the council say they have some plans to redevelop the site.
I was there at this concert in Bournemouth and was nearly fourteen, I was determined not to scream but when Paul started singing screamed like everyone else!!! What a time that was
This shows up in my RUclips feed 9 years later.
I’m sincerely jealous.That’s a moment in history you watched there.
Still rockin at 73 well done
These tunes brought me back in the day, my musical awakening along with frankie ifield, pop star in those days..i lived in britain then, being canadian. Love paul and the beatles. Main man songwriter, and workoholic, paul.
Nice !
There is no resisting Beatlemania.
God, even with such a crappy video and sound system, you can STILL feel the energy and vibe from this over a half century later. Electric!!!
yup
How do you know that the sound is from Bournmouth, it does not match.
Yes
"Their boyband roots" - would that include the 3 yrs playing dance halls around the UK and junky dives in Hamburg? Pretty much playing 6-7 days a week, inspired by rock and roll. Same boyband that went on to do Revolver and the White Album? Anyone that would define these guys as a boyband are out of their heads IMO.
They are boys in a band so they're a boyband. They're not cheesy but they're a boyband
@@KorpusV6 The term 'boyband' implies that they are just 4 pretty faces singing to music that somebody else has produced. The Beatles were a young Rock 'n' Roll band. Most rock 'n' roll bands were young when they started out, so in your terms they are all boybands? The term is an insult to real musicians.
That's the very reqson I want to clock somebody making that "boyband" reference.
They are/were not like the barbershop groups one sees today.
@@KorpusV6
Your motivation for calling them a boy band....
JEALOUSY.
And dont forget they're playing their own instruments ...no lip sync....boy band....words of an idiot.
There is no debate. These 4 fellas changed the world. Others came, some great, some not, who put their mark on the landscape. But the Beatles created the landscape on which they put their marks. And some day, in a future unfortunately not many decades away, they will all be remembered with love and reverence. Well deserved. And while Paul and Ringo still grace our world I suggest we never stop thanking them for this gift. It keeps on giving. It is almost a shame that we cannot, could not, make time sit still. It makes the loss of John and George that much sadder to know what we might have had but forever I will be a Beatles fan.
+Tango Eliott All so true thank you great words
Tango Eliott Total agree with you!!, thanks for expressing so well my owners thoughts! sorry my poor English, but one thing is sure, the Beatles's lovers are around the world !
@tango eliott - nice sentiment, I would agree with those sentiments, but if I were you I wouldn't leave the day job to write.
Tango Eliott Changed the world??? It’s a much worse place now!!!!!
@@rossmelanson6999 No one said The Beatles caused any of what is happening now, non music wise. They changed the face of music, but they didn't cause the Coronavirus or almost cause WW3.
The greatest band of all time.
それは間違いないです
Bar none.
To be young and to have experienced the Beatles years, as I did, is an incomparable memory. It's great to have been in the '60s and to be in the 60s now!
Que privilégio! ❤❤❤
OMG.... I was there and at all the other concerts they did in Bournemouth.... They certainly were something...!!!
I'm envious.
Mordown, Bournemouth resident these days
The Beatles, the best group of all time!!! There will be no other like it
I have a British cousin who saw them in Bournemouth in 1963. I'm assuming this show....
@Charlotte Taylor really? I didnt know that do you know the reason why?
@@perlasalinas8458 They played as often as they could get booked, it was their job and their pay! As long as they drew a crowd, the promoters wanted them. Which means the promoters wanted them. They did a ton of regularly repeating gigs in Liverpool, then Hamburg, then Liverpool AND Hamburg, then regionally, and by 62-63, all of England. And as their fame grew, they toured internationally. And the rest is history. If you want to know more about this time period, read Mark Lewisohn's excellent "Tune In."
Beatles the best band of all time. Nobody comes close to them!!
"Any one of them could of started their own band and been successful. But the four of them together......mind blowing!".........Paul McCartney
My dad was at this concert. I'll forever be jealous.
Notice how even though the kids are screaming and crying, no one is hurting anyone and they're all wearing dresses or shirts or even jackets. No one is flashing the stage, acting slutty or punching, stabbing or shooting anyone.
A more innocent time, indeed!
Just one of the reasons why the 60s was the best decade ever.' for all ages.
Why did it have to end?
I saw the Beatles at the Gaumont in Bournemouth earlier that year in August, they played there for a week.
It was definitely not as frenzied as that and there were plenty of empty seats - what a difference 3 months made!
They were saviors in a way after everything that was before them. It was an awakening. Everyone felt that. The beatles were the doorway to it. Look at what the 60's became. The Beatles were the captain of the ship that lead us into new territory. They had said that they were the only ones who really never appreciated Beatlemania because they were not the audience.
Unfortunately by late 1969 the '60's dream was definitely over. But yes, the early/mid 60's, in terms of music, fashion, the arts, etc., was an awesome and exciting time with, what seemed, endless possibilities.
Patrick McMullen A MESS!!!!
I agree. To echo the words of Cynthia Lennon in her bio, they were "on the crest of a wave". They really were! And coming from the North, I appreciated them making northern accents cool, in a time when only the Queen's English (RP accent) was spoken on the telly. They were a breath of fresh air.
Oh, the shear unalloyed joy of those youngsters; lifetime memories seared into their souls right there.
Yes!!
In a beautiful South Coast town as well
I work with a woman who worked at the Winter Gardens back in the sixties & remembers this concert very well. Apparently many of the seats had to be cleaned afterwards due to the very excitable fans who were sat in them.
My father in law was a copper at that gig & saved George Harrison from a bunch of nutty girls. They went away with just a thick clump of his hair. The father in law & a few of his fellow officers ended up having tea & sandwiches with them at their hotel.
They say you could see the rivulets of pee creep towards the stage( seats on an inclined plane)
This is history. The beginning of it all. Thank you , Brian Epstein, for the ride of our lives.
I cannot tell you how exciting it was back in the day I was very ill once and the Bettles was on T.V I had to get up and watch them it was a magic time.
The Winter Gardens in B'mouth was the most frequented venue outside of London during the Beatlemania epoch. Lennon bought his aunt a beach bungalow in Sandbanks for £25k in 1965.
Now it's a car park
If they play their cards right, these boys could really be going somewhere.
They haven't even passed the Columbia Records audition yet.
That woman in the front row made it clear she had no enthusiasm for them whatever!!!
This is the concert I had tickets for but gave them to a friend so he could take his girlfriend. I have always regretted it but finally, 55 years later, I have got to see bits of the concert.
Many thanks for that
You were an awesome, true friend, though. That is touching- thank you for sharing that. :-)
I became a Beatles' fan in 1976, when I was 16 years old, in south Brazil.
In that time, of course, there wasn't RUclips, or video tapes to see.
In my country, you only had the original Long Playing vinil records or singles.
So, we simply could dreamt how were the live shows of the Beatles.
This footage, like the Ed Sullivan show appearances and the Royal Variety Performance in 1964 are a dream come true!
The BBC albums were incredibile!
Thanks, very much!
It's still amazing or may be not, their just so good after all this time.
Wow….now that is some great footage, and they performed some songs that I don’t remember seeing them perform in concert before. Quite rare, indeed! 🙂
A young Tony Blackburn makes a brief appearance at 2:14. He lived in Bournemouth at that time, as I did. I remember the Beatles stayed at the Royal Court Hotel in Westover Road during their week's stint at the Winter Gardens. I believe the black & white photo on the cover of their 2nd album was taken in the Palace Court Hotel.
Thanks for posting this.
Really nice to hear a live version of 'You Really Got A Hold On Me'
Look at there mouths singing, the sound you here was not from there.
CBS coverage. I live in Bournemouth these days.
Myself from Seattle got in a band like 10's of thousands like me because of the FAB 4.
My drum kit was like ringo's as much as i could make it, lots of fun never forget
WOW. Was never and will never be a rock and roll band with this much long lasting, far reaching impact of any generation.
The Beatles the best rock group. I love them. I am fan since 1964. From Lima Perú.
No one ever generated such fandom before or since with the possible exception of Elvis??
thank you so much for posting this..its just heaven on earth to be able to enjoy a REAL band...these guys will never go out of style...
I lived in Bournemouth when this was happening.. about 10 minute walk to the Winter Gardens..was too young to go..6
An early appearance of Tony Blackburn at 2.13 who was living in Bournemouth at the time.
Well spotted. Thought the guy looked familiar.
6 days before poor Jack Kennedy was killed. That's why, for me, some of these songs have a terrible darkness to them. I'd gone home to listen to the new Beatles album featuring them when the news started to filter in.
They were playing The Globe in Stockton on tees on the night JFK died. News filtered in and, according to people who were there, very somber mood on the way. I actually spoke to the stage door man who told George what had happened. He then to,d the rest of the band... Quite astonishing if you think about it.... He didn't see the significance until it was pointed out to him
Beatles=Hope
Ringo kicking ass on the drums
Sweet. They had such amazing energy in '63. By '64 they were really grinding - their schedule was horrendous.
John's rythmn guitar on All My Loving starting @ 1:54 is incredible
Not bad sound all things considered. All those screaming girls are in their twilight years now but they'll always have that night they had front row with the fabs.
11 days earlier they were at the Adelphi, Slough and I was there with my mates. Beatles had also been there in May 63 and we'd been to that show which had Gerry & The Pacemakers and then Roy Orbison headlining the first half. Happy days.
Audio problem:
The songs are from the Washington '64 concert, except "You Really Got a Hold on Me," which is taken from a Swedish radio performance available on Anthology 1.
oh, and george's voice is AMAZING on All My Loving
I was in boot camp with the Canadian military when the Beatles first appeared on Ed Sullivan. On my regular Sunday night phone call home, the first thing my Mom asked was "Did you see the Beatles on Ed Sullivan tonight?" Well, I had, but I was so tired I didn't pay a lot of attention. But soon became a huge fan!
I was 9 months old when they played this... I'm old now...
I was 4 months old. Chin up buddy, there's life in us old dogs yet!
the guitar work by john on "all my loving" makes that song. I heard somewhere that he used a banjo style strumming technique. it's really quite unique.
He played triplets.
You've got British cops in Washington have you??
I was there (1.52, between the two girls>) I was in Bournemouth.
WOW ! That was indeed a pleasure to watch...
I was born and live in Bournemouth and it's great to see some footage like this!
Bellissime foto grazie....bei tempi quando si osannava veri cantanti
Thank You for these rare clips❗❗
I was 8 - 9 when Beatlemania hit. Still thinking girls were "icky" and thinking that they were stupid for yelling and screaming, but now I have to admit they were 100% right. These days whenever I see the end of "A Hard Day's Night" or some such contemporary performance (like this one), I can't but help screaming myself! BEATLES FOREVER!
Tavistock (Woodstock?) paid teams of young women to go and scream at Beatles concerts (Bietel, another name for a chisel) to see if the rest of the ditzes would follow and they did. Monkey see monkey do (The Monkeys?) It was all mind control crap and to destroy society.... promote the drug culture and so on. Woodstock was designed to get the nation's youths into one area in order to get them all started on drugs. Seems so obvious now. Oh and that's the first Paul McCartney by the way. He was replaced in 1967. Notice the side to side head bobble is gone after 1966.
@jjcervantes2 The reaction The Beatles got in the winter of '64 made Justin Bieber look like nothing. Unless you were there, you have no idea how profound the reaction to The Beatles really was. And this was in the days when there was no MTV, computers, cell phones, and TV went off @ 10 pm EVERY mnight and was in black and white. Most people listened to radio to get their music. No I-Tunes, no downloads, just limited media. And The Beatles were HUGE!
THE BEST BAND EVER
Entirely too much of the audience and not enough of the Beatles. You should have spliced the Beatles footage together. If not enough, you could use other live Beatles footage to complete it.
i was there at this very concert in Bournemouth.....an you could hear very little of the concert !!!
Great footage from November of 1963, but I don't like it when people post videos and say something that isn't entirely true. The sound is from the Washington Concert the following February....not the concert featured in the clips.
except you really got a hold on me. Today so many Beatles video clips have different sound source.
does it really matter?
Thank you for posting this.😃👍👍👍
My friend saw the beatles at the winter gardens and the Gaumont in Bournemouth...fantastic show he said
I hope he snuck his movie camera in!
didn't have movie cameras in those days
CBS News bureau London - at the suggestion of Beatles’ manager Brian Epstein - sends a news crew to the British seaside resort of Bournemouth where they film a Beatles concert, thousands of screaming fans, and a few Beatles’ comments on camera. This film clip was later sent to New York. This was before The Beatles historic appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show in February 1964. Thank you for sharing this rare video.
Footage is from Bournemouth but the sound is from their washington performance
The cover photograph for the With The Beatles and Meet The Beatles albums was taken in Bournemouth at what was then the Palace Court Hotel in Westover Road, now the Premier Inn.
These recordings are from the Washington Coliseum on February 11, 1964 during their first trip to America. I heard this 100 times.
I know this is Washington DC concert !
I saw them on this tour in North Wales.
Nice job, thanks for the video, looks like someone went to a lot of work matching different audio to the footage.. Sounds like "You Really Got A Hold on Me" was live. Didn't know they did that song live.. Nice. Great to have any footage, but I sure wish the Beatles had performed ALL of their songs in concert instead of the same ones all the time.. That's what happens when concerts were only 25 minutes..Shame
I was born far too late to be able to attend this concert but what really hurts is my mother saying, “If they came to Bournemouth I may have seen them”. How can one not remember, totally beyond me. I have been a massive Beatles fan since I was very young just wish I’d had the chance to see them live and I certainly wouldn’t have forgotten.
Ladies and gentlemen, The Beatles! It's rock and roll, baby!
It was an experience but I couldn't hear a thing! You can see by the look on my face in the clip!
Why so many "jumps" in the video/film? It would be nice if you had complete performances of the songs, if they're available. I would have given anything to be at one of these shows to see them during this time.
@kenfig EVERYTHING has an effect. Since the Beatles were so incredibly huge, they had a bigger effect on where we are today than other groups. We didn't suddenly make a u-turn after the Beatles to arrive at today. They and Elvis were the biggest reasons for the cultural changes that gave us what we now have.
Some of this Audio is from different concerts from 1964 at different locations. The first few seconds is from their Washington DC concert in Feb. 1964, that's for sure!
@kenfig Ironic. Beatles fans complaining that the world has changed too much? You guys do realize that the Beatles, along with Elvis, were the primary reason the world changed, right?
Do you not remember your parents voicing the same complaints when Elvis and the Beatles were changing things?
The Band Who Changed The World .
Although, again cut up clips, but nice attempt to sync up video with audio !!
It gives you the feel of really watching video.
@kenfig Well naturally a Beatles fan is going to think "everything changed for the better"....you'll get the same response from someone who came of age in the 80s.....and a kid today.
But the parents at the time didn't think so....just like parents today (you?) don't think so.
Nothing changes....everyone has good ole days syndrome.
This theater kind of intrigues me. I hadn't realized the Beatles played there, but I know another band of comparable power and artistry had, the great Joy Division. If walls could talk, some of the amazing things these old theaters have seen. Anyway, I worked with a girl who'd seen the Beatles in the winter of '63 (at the Royal Variety Performance, no less!), I envied the living hell out of her. "Beatles Forever," it ain't just a slogan, kids!
Excellent rhythm guitar by John
for All My Loving.
i really love this guys... smashing emotions!!!
@kenfig NO ONE advocates violence or disrespect. And though YOUR parents loved the Beatles...most parents didn't. The haircuts were seen in a negative light. It wasn't long before they were seen as endorsing drug use and of course they eventually questioned religion ("Imagine there's no heaven"). A LOT of people considered that to be a negative effect on society.
There is a reason so many consider the 50s as "the good old days"...the Beatles were a part of the change, credit for good/bad.
Excellent footage! And audio! Great!
For a first-hand account of the Beatles in Bournemouth 1963, including the story of 'The Men From Rickenbacker' and a song by song review of their set list, try 'Bournemouth A Go! Go!' (Natula Publications).
Is That Tony Blackburn at 2.15
Wonderful❤
When studying the history of the 20th century, this social and cultural phenomenon will be a subject.
Saw " A hard days night " at the cinema when l was 10 years old in 1964 . Even at the film girls were screaming and hysterical . Happy days the '60's . What a great time to be young .
that was really well edited, captured the moment, thanks
Sounds like it has been slowed down, example:- All My Loving is normally in E it is in Eb on here, all the others are flat by a semitone too
My Mum was at this concert!
I was only 3. I so wish I was old enough to have been there. Lovely place is Bournemouth. Historically in Hampshire..
God was it good to be young.
Its like , another world .. really over populated .
I spotted a young Tony Blackburn in the audience for a few seconds!
@sunsungoaway I'm thankful to have experienced the most sensational group around! The British Invasion and Motown-musical magic. Today's music has NO soul.
It used to irk me when the media people use to compare the beatles to the boybands in the 90's.The bealtes had just as many guy fans as girl fans.The Bealtes were multi-instrumentalist.The boybands did not play their own music.The only things the beatles had in common with the boybands was the screaming girls.
Bournemouth Winter Gardens closed in 2002 and was demolished four years later. Today it's a car park, the council say they have some plans to redevelop the site.
the "from me to you" is from washington!
This audio is Washington (From me To You)
John was influenced by early Rock n roll..Elvis first then Chuck Berry,Little Richard..Beatles went on to influence thousands of bands