Title: The Beatles and the British Invasion
1The Beatles and the British Invasion
2British pop between 1964 and 1966
- American business taken by surprise in early 1964
by the Beatles - An American fad for British music ensued
- Two important strains of the story
- Chronicle of British pop
- Influence of British pop on American pop
3British pop from WWII to 1963
- Prior to 1964 British music was considered
inferior in America - In contrast, American Culture was interesting to
Britons - Result of American involvement in WWII
- British labels licensed music from American
independents - Facilitated the spread of American black pop
4British pop from WWII to 1963
- History of British interest in American music
includes folk and jazz - Trad jazz
- Skiffle
- Cliff Richard, early rock
5Lonnie Donegan
6The Beatles, 1960-1962
- Early years
- Formed out of the skiffle-based Quarrymen
- Among the first generation of musicians who
listened to rock as youth - Began performing live actively in 1960
7The Beatles, 1960-1962
- Hamburg
- Played six and seven hour evenings
- Refined performing skills and repertoire
8Beatles at the Cavern Club, 1961
9The Beatles, 1960-1962
- Liverpool
- Played at the Cavern nearly 300 times through
1962 - Met future manager Brian Epstein in 1961
- Secured Parlophone recording contract in 1962
- First single (Love Me Do) goes to 17 on
British charts
10Beatles at the Cavern Club, 1963
11The Beatles, 1960-1962
- Influences
- Beatles learned from cover songs performed in
early period - Songs performed at Star Club and BBC, 1962-1965
- American pop dominates
- Elvis, Chuck Berry, Little Richard, Carl Perkins,
Lieber and Stoller, Spector, Motown
12The Beatles 1963-1966
- Success in England in 1963
- Two high-profile television performances
- Four consecutive hits
- Led wave of British-based hits in England
13Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show
14The Beatles 1963-1966
- Success in America in 1964
- Performed on Ed Sullivan in February
- 30 Top Ten pop hits between 1964 and 1966
- All studio albums went to number 1 in both UK and
U.S. - Feature films
- Hard Days Night (1964)
- Help! (1965)
- Controversy over bigger than Jesus remark in
1966 - Final public concert in San Francisco, August 1966
15The Beatles 1963-1966
- Musical development, 1964-1966
- Imitated and extended American models in early
music - Used songwriting techniques from Brill Building,
1963-1964 - Found variety in solving compositional problems
- I Want To Hold Your Hand
- Moved from craft to artistic approach, 1964-1966
- Experimented with studio effects, stylistic
juxtapositions, and timbre, and structure - Tomorrow Never Knows
16The Beatles 1963-1966
- Importance of lyrics
- Teenage love in early years
- Unconventional in later music
- Self-confidence
- Sexual frustration
- Alienation
- Stylistic range
- Widens in 1965 with Help!
- Novel instrumentation
- Stylistic eclecticism
17The British Invasion
- Beatles led the surge of British music in the
United States in 1964 - Groups were British, played guitars, and had long
hair - Broad stylistic range
- Had many hits on the U.S. charts between 1964 and
1966 - Two strains modeled after Beatles and Stones
18The British Invasion (Beatles-type)
- Charming, cute, friendly
- First wave, 1964
- Gerry and the Pacemakers
- Dave Clark Five
- Billy J. Kramer and the Dakotas
- Searchers
19Gerry and the Pacemakers
20The British Invasion (Beatles-type)
- Second wave, 1965
- Hermans Hermits
- Freddy and the Dreamers
- Hollies
21The British Blues Revival (Stones-Type)
- Bad boys, in contrast to the Beatles-type image
- Followed the lead of the Rolling Stones
- Drew on tradition of Chicago electric blues from
1950s - Spawned a wave of enthusiasm for collecting and
performing American blues
22Rolling Stones, Zurich, 1967
23The British Blues Revival (Stones-Type)
- Rolling Stones, 1962-1966
- Formed by guitarist Brian Jones as a blues band
- Managed by Andrew Loog Oldham and Eric Easton,
1963 - Started move toward pop in 1963
- Early recordings
- Covered songs by American artists
- I Wanna Be Your Man by Lennon and McCartney
- Jagger and Richards achieve success as
songwriters in 1964 - Did not achieve widespread success in America
until 1965 - Preferred contrasting verse-chorus rather than
AABA
24The British Blues Revival (Stones-Type)
- Yardbirds
- Guitarists included Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, and
Jimmy Page - Used studio musicians on early records
- Recorded in Chicago at Chess
25Yardbirds
26The British Blues Revival (Stones-Type)
- Animals
- Reputation from wild stage act
- House of the Rising Sun (1964)
- Bassist Chas Chandler became manager for Jimi
Hendrix in 1966 - Spencer Davis Group
27Animals (Eric Burdon)
28The British Blues Revival
- Other British groups did not fit into
Beatles/Stones categories - Kinks
- Formed in 1963
- Aggressive pop approach
- You Really Got Me (1964)
- Mirrored the Beatles move into artistic
songwriting, 1965
29The Kinks
30The British Blues Revival
- Who
- Not influential until the late 1960s
- Never made the U.S. Top 40 during the mid-1960s
- Representative of the Mod subculture in London
31The Who, 1967
32Transformation of American Popular Music
- Rise of the Beatles transformed popular music
- Opened doors for British acts within the UK
- Opened new opportunities for British acts outside
the UK - British Invasion established a cross
fertilization between U.S. and UK