FIRST TIME HEARING The Beatles - Twist & Shout - Performed Live On The Ed Sullivan Show REACTION
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I’m now an old man but I remember this in 7th grade like it was yesterday. In fact, by April of that year, The Beatles held the top five spots on Billboard, as follows:
1. Can’t Buy Me Love
2. Twist And Shout
3. She Loves You
4. I Want To Hold Your Hand
5. Please Please Me
British Invasion? You bet!
And within a few months 90% of the boys had that haircut or you just weren’t cool. (And our dads hated our hair)
Hated the Doo! YUP, 😉😉😉😉😉.....
I watched the show, I was 9.
"I want to hold your hand" woke my musical interest.
The '60's and early '70's music was awesome.
I was in the 7th grade too, but I'm not an old woman. 😍
@@GinnyRobertsonLLC
So, you were in 7th grade by like age 3 or 4? Wow, that’s truly impressive, I was 12.
I was about 9 or 10 but this is the UK and it was a year or two before the USA got them. All
those listed were spread over maybe 2 years here. It started late 62.
This was all new. Long hair, all electric guitars, a band that played their own instruments and wrote their own songs, for the most part. Most rock music is just a continuation of what The Beatles started 60 years ago. It looks tame now, but was quite innovative.
In 1963 there were around 190 million people living in the US. 70 million of them tuned in to see this. It was the biggest audience in TV history at the time, and it took the 1969 moon landing to surpass it.
1964.
This was on the Ed Sullivan show. I grew up in Manhattan, and we would write in for tickets for the dress rehearsals, and got to see loads of great acts. Never got to see the Beatles though. As far as the screaming, that is one of the reasons the Beatles stop touring. Nobody could hear their music… Not even them!
There was absolutely NOTHING like the Beatles when they came to our shores.
I watched this live on our little black and white T.V. I was 11 years old!
The drummer is Ringo Star. He sang led to. So did George Harrison. The Beatles were and still are the best band ever.
Girls would actually faint at their concerts. They went totally nuts seeing the Beatles. Keep in mind that they were the first long hair boy bands and parents hated them. It was super thrilling to see them live.
According to security blokes in England, girls there were wetting themselves. American girls might have had more self control
Welcome to 1963/64. Beatles were trying to play only originals, but lennon's and Harrison/McCartney harmony in their cover, took off. Was on Introducing the Beatles album. Ed Sullivan Show Sunday night, with Beatles was big event time. Capital 45's of Beatles also big. Ringo Starr, drummer, real name Richard Starkey, was a very good drummer. He is a decent vocalist, but with voices of Harrison, McCartney, Lennon, he seldom sang in his Beatles days. The Beatles played in Hamburg, Germany like a year and developed a lot of polish.
The February 23rd show was NOT a live performance, but taped during the rehearsal for the February 9th performance for broadcast of a so called "3rd" performance they pretended it was live when it was broadcast. No one knew this for years lol. A 2nd show from Miami Fl was live at the moment and the first show that night on Feb 9 was also love. All three shows, thank GOD! were taped and preserved for history
I am seriously doubting you, but I will check your contention out.
My mom was 19 years old when the Beatles appeared on TV for the first time. She said all the parents in the room watching kept saying, “These guys will be a flash in the pan!”
"Twist & Shout" was wriiten in 1961 by Phil Medley & Bert Berns. It was originally recorded by the Top Notes but it didn't become a hit until it was recorded by the Isley Brothers in 1962. The Beatles version in 1963 is probably the most famous.
What you really gotta respect is the individuals, you knew John Lennon's name, he shared lead vocals with who you called “the Third guy” aka Sir Paul McCartney (also in a little band called Wings. “Band on the Run”) Then “the second guy” George Harrison who went on as a solo artist with hits like “My Sweet Lord” and “While My Guitar Gently Weeps”. Drummer Ringo Starr is still going strong.I’m 61 and they were before my generation but oh my, respect needs to be assigned to all four. If you want a real treat, watch their progression from their “original boy band” days to their classics! My fav will always be The White Album but there are just so many to enjoy!
Also, this was 1 day short of my 6th birthday... Lol the 60s were crazy. 70s too. I remember those better.
I was 13 yrs. old and in the lunchroom at school, when I first heard of the phenomenon called the Beatles, And Yes I acted just like those Girls!! :D
ya the audience screeching like that is in large part why they had to stop touring. In one stadium performance, John just gives up cause no one can hear them and starts playing the keyboard with his elbows.
Release date 1964, 2 years after first stepping into a recording studio.
They were babies. 20yr-old George, 21yr-old Paul, and John and Ringo only 23.
All they talked about, the Beatles and the press both, was 'how long will this last' and what they's do 'after the bubble bursts'. The Beatles thought this would only last 2 or 3 years, not a lifetime.
This was note for note from the Isley brothers arrangement. Check that out. But the song had actually been recorded even earlier by the “top notes”
Mike, don't feel too bad for the drummer Ringo Starr I did some research recently he's worth about 80 million. 😂. Actually this great song was a cover by the Isley Brothers. I love John on lead. Thankfully whoever owns the rights to old Ed Sullivan shows allows without blocking as many do. Probably hundreds of acts were on Eds show was on 1948 til 71. Very good show
Fun fact: When you hear Paul and George throw in that WOOOOOO part, it was in honor of one of their teenage heroes, Little Richard. He would do that same WOOOOOO sound on his hit singles. The Beatles even toured with Little Richard when he visited England some months before their ED SULLIVAN SHOW debut.❤
I saw the Beatles live in '63 in the UK. Saw them, but didn't hear a single note, such was the continuous screaming!
Wow! All of you who saw them live are so lucky! Even with the screaming - you are a part of history.
I think its amusing some comments here explaining who is who & which Beatle did what, & details of songs. I forget i saw the Sullivan appearances, where these commenters didnt.
I agree, watching Ringo on the drums was so great! He was having a fun time back there! And when John, George and Paul broke the chord apart and sang the 1st, 3rd, and 5th steps on the scale then they all came in on the 8th step, Yes, it would have been great if Ringo sang it. Also, remember that rock and roll was in it's infancy. When the Beatles came over from England, the response from America (especially the ladies!) was phenomenal!!! This music was so new to many of us! The Beatles hairstyle was considered way too long by the "older generation" and even their clothes, which by today's standards is very neat and grownup, were considered a little wild. When they came over to the USA, I was only in 2nd grade. But, I remember playing jump rope and singing "John, George, Paul and Ringo, don't get married stay...Single!". LOL!
Teeny Boppers had gone from the familiar clean cut singers like Buddy Holly and The Crickets (from which the idea for their name The Beatles came from) to the first time ever seeing long haired Mop Tops. It was a thrill to have them shake their hair in unison. And it was to die for🥰 seeing the drummer Ringo shake his hair with his big broad smile
A big part of why the Beatles or Elvis had fans screaming like this was because the whole idea of "pop star" was still a new thing, and this was before MTV or the internet so seeing a band perform was only something you'd do on a TV show like Ed Sullivan or in concert.
Regarding the whole "they look older back then" phenomenon - that's a known phenomenon and vsauce did a video about it. The basic idea is that if you look at your grandparents, you associate their hair styles and fashion with being old, so when you see their generation young with the same hair and fashion styles, your brain thinks "old". Also, food and lifestyles are healthier now, less people smoke, more people exercise, medicine is better now, so people look younger for longer now.
Now you have to watch Ferris Bueller's Day Off - this is the version of Twist and Shout that the main character lip syncs in a parade.
Cheers
This song always makes me think of Ferris Bueller! That was such a fun scene.
The "second guy" was George Harrison and the "third guy" is Paul McCartney. The drummer is Ringo Starr. Paul and Ringo are still living.
Remember being on the living room floor watching this on the black&white console tv.💕
I was 13 when we watched this on the Ed Sullivan show. We were living with my grandparents and everyone would sit around the tv on Sunday to watch Ed Sullivan. My Grandma would always call them "The Beagles" and we boys would always "no grandma it's The Beatles" . About 10 years ago my older brother told me, she was just messing with us because she liked to see us get so upset. Great memory of a prankster grandma!
I was 13 too. My dad hated them, hated their hair and hated even more that I just had to have that haircut too (after having a flat top crew cut my whole life), so to reflect his dislike for them he called them The Cockroaches haha.
fyi:
Ringo Starr on drums, Paul McCartney (left) and George Harrison (right) on backup, and John Lennon on lead.
For the _Ed Sullivan_ episode date Feb 23, 1964, the Beatles performing this "live", it's yes and no. They did indeed give this rendition live before an audience, but that was back on Feb 9, shortly BEFORE 8 pm, when THAT night's episode would go out actually _LIVE_ with other renditions of theirs. THIS performance did not get aired until, as it says, Feb 23, two weeks AFTER being "performed live" (and the Beatles had gone home). When they played this on Feb 9, that was little more than a month after America had even first HEARD OF the Beatles through one of their releases ("I Want to Hold Your Hand"), during which pretty short time the country's youth, girls affected especially hard, went bonkers for these boys (after UK youth had similarly succumbed in the months prior to that!). In the 1940s there was Sinatra; in the 1950s there was Elvis, who accomplished the stunning achievement of having all top three songs on the _Billboard_ chart at one point. Surely nobody would ever match this feat - well, until the Beatles got all of the top FIVE in April 1964!
Actually the Feb. 23, 1964 appearance was taped in the AFTERNOON of FEB. 9, 1964. The truly "Live" performance was that night during the regular 8 pm time slot on Sundays, for the Ed Sullivan Show. For the Beatles Feb. 16th, 1964 appearance, the Ed Sullivan Show went down to Miami and held it at the Deauville Hotel. A few days after that, the Beatles flew back to England.
@@patticrichton1135 Well, I knew, as I said, that "Twist and Shout" was performed BEFORE the live broadcast began at 8 pm on the 9th.
I’m late finding this. I love your reaction. The parents of those girls in the audience were completely flummoxed over this-they didn’t like it but how to stop it??? LOL. The long hair, that Rock n Roll scream… corrupting the youth! They didn’t even know what was coming!
I loved them. I got to see them perform live at Shea Stadium. I was just 8, but I was already addicted to their music. Had seats way up in the bleachers, and every single girl in metro NY was there screaming their lungs out, but hey, I was there.
Mom & Dad Got us 3 & 4 Year olds out of Bed so we could watch this. IT WAS HUGE! My Brother and I had the 45's and Mom & Dad Had the Album Meet the Beatles, It's now mine btw. Fashion was lame back then. WE dressed for everything. Grocery Shopping, Suit, Sears or Montgomery Wards, Higbees, Halle's, May Co, Kressgee, Suits. Church Suits, Grandma's House Suits. It was standard! Ladies had Dresses Men had Suits, Dungaree's were for Outside. Slacks, and Button down shirts was casual were worn for around the house. Late 60's things began changing a lot! Flower Power, Peace, Love, Hippies. That all happened because of this Night.
The Beatles, changed the World, Culture, and Music as we know it. History is supposed to repeat itself. I can't wait for the upcoming Rock & Roll Revolution.
The best song is I want to hold your hand x
"Twist and Shout" was the song they used to begin their concerts in 1964 & 1965. In 1965, their last year they performed live in concert was Chuck Berry's "Rock and Roll Music".
The drummer, Ringo, sang many songs. He was happy to sit back and just drum on songs like this. notice he is on a raised platform, given equal billing. That was unique for the Beatles. Bands of that time put their rhythm section in the back behind everything. All Beatles wrote and sang lead on some songs. That was one of their strengths.
One of my favorite Beatles song!
I was born in 1956 so I was about 7 or 8 when they were on Ed Sullivan show. I wasn't allowed to stay up and watch but I snuck out of bed and watched a couple minutes looking around the corner into the tv room from my bedroom. I was amazed~! This was all new to everyone! We were mesmerized.
'The drummer in the back, ie Ringo, got more fan mail than the rest of the band put together.
The drummer Ringo did sing a solo, Act Naturally.
Watch A Hard Days Night...the movie!
Story about the Beatles. When asked to describe the beatless a friend said.
John was always doing something artsy. Going to an exhibit or something.
Paul was always busy. working on the money aspect constantly.
George was always seeking enlightenment. Going all over to learn more.
Ringo was painting his house.
The Beatles were in the studio finishing songs for their first album, and at 10 p.m. were ready to wrap it up. But producer George Martin wanted one more killer track, and the boys trotted out "Twist and Shout," which they had performed live. It required John to shred his voice, and he gave it his all. This was recorded in one take, and John had nothing left. It is an absolutely perfect track.
I saw this when it aired and the future ones. Ed Sullivan was one of the few shows broadcast in color so I watched at a friends house who had a color tv. I then went to their concerts in '64, '65 & '66.
I doubt any modern group could sing naturally on par with The Beatles.
I've been twistin' and shoutin' since I first heard them as a 5 year old back in 1966.
I saw them 1963 in Sweden and the same there, you could hardly hear what they were singing but we got a good look at them. I was 13 then and the teenage era had not quite begun.
I was 9 y. old when this aired on television. I remember My older Sister Linda and friends being there. It was an epic day in the history of Family memories!
Great performance!
Happy Day to You!
😄😄😄😄😄.....
I saw this performance on the Ed Sullivan show at the age of 6. We all had a crush on the Beatles at that time, because everything was so new! Their sound, hair, accents and good looks! You are right about people looking older back then. People just started looking younger somewhere along the way. It was a great time to be alive and there was an innocence, that I believe unfortunately cannot ever be recaptured.
the version they performed in front of the queen....so much better....John's singing his lungs out.
It was this track that turned me on to the Beatles when I was a boy in junior school in the sixties. They've given me a whole lifetime of pleasure ever since.
Like it was yesterday (no pun intended .. well, maybe). I was 8 years old and my mom was so excited about the Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show that she allowed us kids to eat dinner in the living room. And, we ate TV dinners (fried chicken, of course) on our table chairs watching the black & white TV (no color). My mom was all giggly about Paul. I loved John Lennon .. so cute!!! 🥰
The Beatles group working style was, that when they were for example composing or deciding about the matters in performances etc etc they did not think about their personal egos in a way that "This is my idea, I've got to get it through, but they just picked up the best suggestion no matter who presented it. I've tried to bring that approach to the group dynamics I have worked with. No ego, but best suggestion presented. What comes to drummer Ringo, the others were usually kind enough to compose or pick up one song for Ringo to each album: "With The Little Help From Friends", "Act Naturally", "Yellow Submarine", "Baby Don't", "Boys", "What Goes On". "Octopussy's Garden" was Ringo's own composition.
this was an iconic performance.
I was 6 years old and fell in love with the Beatles!
For a great glimpse into the whole Beatlemania phenomenon, you have to watch the movie, A Hard Days Night. It is GREAT! Won awards, great music and just so much fun.
You have no idea the hysteria surrounding the Beatles was happening at that time in history! I’m 70 now but I was crazy about them and am still a huge fan. My husband, who died in 2020, and I loved the Beatles and we were able to see Paul McCartney’s 2005 concert in Houston. Paul was my favorite of the four. Wonderful memories I’ll treasure always. Enjoying your reactions Michael☺️
I teach my class of 10 year olds about the Beatles every autumn and they love it. We watch a clip from the Beatles at the Cavern Club when they looked more raw with their hair, leather jackets etc. Their manager, Brian Epstein, tidied up their look with suits and the Beatles mop-top hair. Ringo on drums was voted the most popular Beatle in America in the mid-60s and is still going strong now. Worth checking out the earliest Beatles footage and the songs where Ringo takes the lead with Octopus's Garden and With A Little Help From My Friends.
Their hair styles were down to Astrid, the German girlfriend of Stuart Sutcliffe, the band's original bass player who died of a brain hemorrage. The suits were down to Brian Epstein.
@@bobknightfolk Quite so - that longer, brushed forward style was the latest look favoured by some European existentialists and artists at the time, both male and female. Astrid was an art student they met at one of the Hamburg clubs they played at, and had the cut herself, persuading them to give up the rocker quiffs and let her give them the beatnik chop.
LOL I can't believe you did this one 😊 when I was 5, my father was a DJ in big radio station in Indianapolis. They came to his studio for talk interview while they were on tour in America promoting this albumn. They gave him sweatshirts with pics of them and radio station, which was WKPC... I THINK? I can't remember now but my mom wore it for years. WOW
Ringo Starr, the drummer, was on tour all over North America last year at age 82.
Brought back a lot of memories❤
Those girls are all grandmothers and great grandmothers now.
The great thing is that Paul the bass player and Ringo the drummer are still playing!
While it's true that the girls screamed a little on the _Ed Sullivan Show_, these 3 Sunday nights total in 1964 were one of the few times where you actually _could_ hear the band. I was 13 when this happened. We guys didn't scream - we were too busy studying the group and trying to learn how they were playing. (There is a shot somewhere in one of these _Sullivan_ performances of a guy in the audience, all serious and scowling!)
John said he barely made it through the song, could hardly speak for days after😂
The One and Only BEATLES! 😎🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Not a dry seat in the house. haha
You have to realize how music changed forever after Elvis and the Beatles. We take rock music for granted now.
Just watch a few documentaries on YT to bring yourself up to speed on the importance of this group. They wrote about 250 songs over their career and the quality was very high across most of their output. Quite a few are considered classics like "Something" that was recorded by others like Sinatra. Today's so called music by comparison has zero output in terms of memorable tunes and melodies. They were the classical musicians of popular music and innovated much in the way of arrangement, production and style. The sophistication just got better over the years. Quality always matters, shines through and has had over 60 years of longevity.
Right wround my 13th birthday, 72 now.
I was actually watching Ringostar and amazed how simple his drum setup is.
Ringo enjoyed being the drummer.
This audience was actually quite subdued compared to other performances (watch the Beatles at Shea Stadium). Ed Sullivan insisted that his audience remain under control
i remember when the Beatles first appeared on The Ed Sullivan show when i was age 6, i'm 64 now, the Beatles made the big change from doo wop music to pop, then the 60's music came along and the rest is history lol.
Very often Beatles couldn’t hear themselves over the screaming. Ringo only knew from the other guys wiggling.
Other great performances from this show include…..
The Bee Gees - “Words”
Elvis Presley- “When My Blue Moon Turns To Gold Again”
The Doors - “Light My Fire” (official video).
All three are top notch, especially that Bee Gees one.
Well done Michael. ✌️
My older sister, then 16, saw the Beatles in a 1966 concert in Detroit. A rumor came out that Ringo (drummer) loved jellybeans so girls would throw them up onstage towards him. My sister got one (that brushed his foot) and kept it under a glass dome until our little sister got to it and ate it. My mom drove all over town to find a bag of jellybeans to find a black one to replace it. My sister never knew the difference. The Beatles took the world by storm causing hysteria everywhere they went.
It was GEORGE that made the comment that his favorite candy was "Jelly BABIES" (not beans....they didn't have jelly beans in England at that time) Ringo didn't make that comment. We in the U.S. just assumed that "Jelly BABIES" was the British term for "jelly Beans." George explained after they were getting tired of jelly beans being thrown at them, that Jelly BABIES are soft, NOT hard like Jelly Beans. He said the beans US fans were throwing hurt when they hit , and he was concerned that it might get one of them in the eye. I went to Liverpool in 1968 for the first time (where the Beatles are from) for 5 weeks. While there I went and bought some "Jelly BABIES" and they were like Gummy Bears, only shaped like a baby, and a little bit of a powdered sugar type coating on them. They were indeed SOFT. But if they sat out in the air for any length of time, they would get hard. But again, they were definitely NOT like jelly BEANS. 😊
@@patticrichton1135 I assumed it was Ringo because that was the one my sister got. As for Jelly Babies vs Jellybeans, it's been said that England and the US are divided by a common language. "Lost in translation". Although I came to love the Beatles, I was a bit too young to have been a fan when they first played on Ed Sullivan. I remember the trading cards, large head plastic figurines and "Beatle wigs" selling for about 50 cents at the 5 & Dime store. I was more a fan of The Monkees when I hit puberty but really came to appreciate the Beatles when I was in my 20's.
These days it is for sure difficult to understand the Beatles Phenomena. To do so, one must place themselves back in to the 1960's before the Beatles appeared on the Ed Sullivan show. For example one needs to look at the culture, mindset and attitudes and fashions of the day. When the Beatles showed up the people of America had never seen or heard anything like it.
Nothing was ever the same. Many books and movies cover the phenomena
That’s Ringo Starr on the drums, Paul
McCartney on the left in the middle George Harrison and then John Lennon the best.
Looking good bro. Keep up the good work 👍
I was 7 years old when this aired, I remember it well. I have two brothers two sisters, I was the youngest. My oldest sister was 13. She was all excited about the Beatles coming on the Ed Sullivan show. All 7 of us sat down to watch it. My father was laughing at their hair cuts and the way they sang, my mother wasn’t saying anything but seemed to enjoy their singing and energy, my older brothers could care less they would laugh when the girls on tv would scream. My two sisters were mostly telling my father to shut up, (in a very nice way) so they could enjoy the show. I thought the more interesting show was at my home watching my sisters slight fight defending the haircuts and loving the music and singing. One thing for sure the Beatles did mark my thinking. Great reaction Michael you have a way of making watching your reactions fun and interesting. Keep up the great work. Steven
Lennons vocals were masterful here
Check out this other black-and-white footage of them doing their hit Long Tall Sally live. There is multiple footage available but there is one that is inside a medium-sized Arena but it's pretty intimate and Ringo had been absent for a little bit and so they are welcoming him back on the drums, and it's such an amazing live performance. However, the studio version is fantastic as well. Paul McCartney takes lead and just totally kills that Little Richard five.
You should look up Beatles Drop-in 1963 Sweden Another good show!
You just experienced first hand Beatlemania!
this fact this gives me chills today, it must have blown peoples brains back then lol
Watched some of your videos. I decided to subscribe. Thanks for the reaction. 👍
Thanks Rhonda !!!
And the girls screaming? Probably one of the reasons The Beatles stopped touring...They couldn't hear themselves play...Ringo would watch their movements from behind to know which song to play....
I remember when they came to Australia in the 60’s. There were hundreds of screaming girls at the airport waiting for them. It was absolutely bucketing down rain and they decided to put them on the back of a truck and drive them around so the fans could see them! They had umbrellas that blew inside out, they got soaked and the suits that they were wearing that they had made in Singapore shrunk! The Beatles were like the One Direction of their day. The drummer is Ringo Starr.
👏👏👏
Michael...please listen to Strawberry Fields Forever, the summit of creation, perfection, musical new sounds on its time. Really a timeless song!!
John Lennon ripped out his vocal cords singing this song.
In the recording session it was left till last as he wouldn't be able to sing anything else after .
How about some Johnny Winter, Highway 61 Revisited from Johnny Winter Captured Live
That night the crime rate dropped massively because even criminals were home to watch them on tv
This version was prominently played during a parade in the movie, Ferris Bueller’s Day Off. Great song!
No, it wasnt.
@@Mister8224 then tell me which version.
@StevenW1958 Ferris had studio version w/o Lennon trailing off vocally after he sings "twist and shout"......this version has Lennon vocal addition after the "twist & shout" .
@@Mister8224 thank you. I’m always willing to learn something new. God Bless You.
You'd say it's time to Grow my hair Long,Like We Did!
Love this song!
In the beginning, they were primarily a band young girls loved. As their music evolved, more guys liked them, too. You're noticing the difference of hair & clothes styles the girls wore. I wasn't allowed to wear nice pants to school until Jr. HS & couldn't wear jeans until HS. The Beatles look was completely different. Most guys had crew cuts. So the Beatles hair style was considered to be very, very long! If you'd be jealous over just a teen idol, you wouldn't be worth my time. Too insecure & jealous. I ran a fan club for David Cassidy & none of my former boyfriends or husband cared.
I always think of Ferris Bueller’s Day Off
Much better than your shorts, am I right? Your grandparents and great-grandparents knew how to have a good time.
That’s for sure 🤣