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Sunday, May 29, 2011

Beatles encounter Elvis in exhibit

Graceland and the British museum devoted to The Beatles are jointly curating an exhibit on Elvis Presley's influence on the upstart foursome who became the world's best-known rock-and-roll band.
The exhibit, "Elvis and Us," opening Sept. 28 in The Beatles' hometown of Liverpool, will be the first meeting of the two cornerstones of rock and roll since The Beatles dropped by Elvis' Bel Air, Calif., home in 1965 as they prepared for concerts at the Hollywood Bowl.
The meeting helped engender the famous John Lennon reflection: "Before Elvis there was nothing. ... If there hadn't been an Elvis, there wouldn't have been The Beatles."
Graceland is loaning the Liverpool museum, called The Beatles Story, about 50 items, including a guitar that Elvis played that night. "He pulled out a white Fender bass and played the bass line to Charlie Rich's 'Mohair Sam,'" said Scott Williams, vice president of marketing for Elvis Presley Enterprises.
Williams said other items on loan will include Elvis' high school diploma and his first paycheck as a truck driver for Crown Electric Co.
There were no photographs or recordings during the 1965 meeting arranged by Elvis' manager Col. Tom Parker and Beatles manager Brian Epstein. "It was just intended as a personal meeting out of The Beatles' admiration for Elvis," said Jerry Schilling, a member of Elvis' Memphis Mafia.
Schilling, who played pool with drummer Ringo Starr that night, said the meeting began awkwardly, with The Beatles "just looking at Elvis." He broke the ice by saying, "If you're going to sit and look at me, I'm going to leave."
The night began at 10 p.m., included a game of roulette, and ended about 2 or 3 a.m., with Elvis standing at the front door with a big smile on his face as he bid farewell by saying, "Bye, limeys."
-- Michael Lollar
    comercialappeal.com/news

Beatles Fan shows bedroom memorabilia

BEATLES fan Brian Mcintire has turned his home into a shrine to the Fab Four – yeah, yeah, yeah!
Memorabilia of the band’s ’60s heyday lines the walls and floors – including a replica set of guitars, drum set and amps.
Dad-of-three Brian proudly shows off a framed card sent from America by Yoko Ono in his living room but the bulk of his collection is kept upstairs.
The band’s LPs are displayed in chronological order and hordes of DVDs and CDs fill shelves around the room.
Taxi driver Brian has a Beatles mop-top wig as well as lighters, watches, phone cases and iTunes vouchers styled with the band’s logo.
And it is a good job no-one needs to sleep in the spare room, because the single bed does a good impression of a library as it overflows with books on The Beatles.
The centrepiece of Brian’s shrine is a full band’s worth of kit complete with a drum kit and amp which cost him around £2,000.
Brian, 59, got in touch with the Chronicle after seeing our story on Chester-le- Street couple Mike and Wendy Scott who have a framed Frisbee on their wall thrown into the crowd by Paul McCartney during a Newcastle City Hall gig in 1973.
Mike and Wendy named their children Paul and Michelle after Macca and the classic song from the Rubber Soul album.
And it is a case of snap for Brian who also has children called Paul, 31, and Michelle, 38, while he was only just overruled on naming his other son Craig, 35, after his hero John Lennon.
“I saw the story and thought people might like to have a look at all my stuff,” Brian said from his home in North Shields.

Brian’s most unique piece of memorabilia is proudly displayed on his living room wall.
John’s wife Yoko Ono sent him a card along with a golden disc commemorating one million sales of the Baby, It’s You EP.
“I wrote to Paul McCartney in 2002 and asked if he had any photos or an autograph,” he said.
“Yoko One replied, he must have passed it on to her. I was over the moon when it came back, I was jumping around.
“The envelope has a New York City postmark and the card says ‘let’s meet up in 10 years’, I know she came to the Baltic but it hasn’t happened yet.
“I’ve been a fan since 1962 but I really started to collect in about 1998.
“They were the best band in the world, the music is timeless.”
Brian’s collection is often bolstered with presents from daughter Michelle at birthdays or Christmas and he admits he is fast running out of space.
“I could do with expanding – the room’s not really big enough,” he said.
“I can just come up here and look through the books, I put the film A Hard Day’s Night on and then the voices of Paul, John, George and Ringo are in the room.
“It’s very relaxing.”