Sunday, January 4, 2026

Disaster Nearly Struck the Beatles! (1963)



 Disaster Nearly Struck the Beatles!

By June Harris

Disc

May 25. 1963

    Just over a week ago, the Beatles got back from a great holiday in the Canary Isles and Spain. But you'll never believe how close the four of them came to becoming a duo! For George Harrison and Paul McCartney both had incredibly narrow escapes from drowning. 

    The boys told me all about it when I met them in their manager's London office last week, and although they treated it as a huge joke, it couldn't have been very funny at the time. 

    "I got the worst end of the deal," said Paul McCartney, who had gone to Tenerife with George Harrison and Ringo Starr, while John Lennon went to Spain with manager Brian Epstein. "I left George and Ringo on the beach and went for a swim. When I got past a reef, the waves started looking murderous, so I turned back, but got washed out. I started waving frantically to the boys, but they just grinned back.

     "Suddenly, I felt miserable. Here was everything just happening, and no Paul McCartney to share in the benefits. I whacked the hell out of them when I eventually got back on the beach."

    " As for me, I got my foot caught in a rock," said George, "and I can hardly swim at all. Those currents look a darn sight more dangerous when you think you're drowning. Ringo wouldn't have laughed so much if it had happened to him!"
     

    Surprisingly, most of the time the Beatles had bad weather. But this didn't deter them from having a real ball. "We stayed with some German friends. Well, what decent hotel would have us?"said Ringo, "and we hired a car, a Hillman Minx, but your readers can be told it was a Rolls Bentley.

     "We drove all around the island, which is about three feet square, decided there wasn't enough room for all of us and dropped George on top of a mountain."

     "That bit about me on top of the mountain is quite true," admitted George. "When it's cloudy on the island, you drive up the mountain and through the clouds. When you reach the top, the sky is a fabulous colour blue, and the sun just beats down on you.

     "We didn't take coats or anything, because everyone said the weather would be just great. But we got out at Barcelona airport, and we had to start searching for the sun. Then we were told our flight to Tenerife had been canceled because of bad weather. We tried to make the receptionist understand that they just couldn't have bad weather there, but all she did was direct us to the nearest hotel. 

    "We finally arrived at the Canaries a day later."

     They still managed to get in some sunbathing, however, and have returned with gloriously tanned bodies and white faces (which they couldn't explain.)

     On one occasion, they attended a bull fight. This gave rise to a particularly colorful scene in their London office, with three of them playing Matador, Picador, and bull. "They made this big production scene even when the most frightened of amateur Matadors comes out," said Ringo. "The trumpets play, everyone shouts, 'Olay'. And if the matador shows a yellow streak, they start throwing Coca-Cola bottles at him.

     "The first bull came in the area with such a cool look. It was unbelievable. It then glanced up at the matador with the expression, 'Okay, Buster, get in there and pitch.' And the poor guy had a hell of a job after that. When the star bullfighter comes on, there's as much fuss as if it's Cliff appearing on the Palladium.

     "Finally, this bloke managed to stab the bull a couple of times, and then just when you thought it was dead, it stuck its face on one side and groaned."

     Apart from making a financial bid for the island, the three Beatles came home laden with the usual kind of presents for the family. George Harrison bought a new washable suede coat. Paul McCartney bought some shirts, but Ringo pipped the lot of them, buying 36 China bulls, a dozen swords, and some torador miniatures. 

    But they were still relieved to get home. "Next time we'll go somewhere in the sun," they said. "Maybe like the Caribbean."

Remembering Mal 50 years later

Photo taken by Paul McCartney 

 

I am glad that, since the Get Back Documentary, Mal Evans has been receiving more recognition among Beatles fans.  If you are a long-time follower of this site, then you will already know that I have been a big lover and supporter of Mal for a very long time.   I am glad that other people have finally discovered how interesting he was.   Sadly, Mal's life ended 50 years ago today.  If you or someone you love is having mental health issues, please seek help today. Take a lesson from Mal Evans, who ended his life way too soon.  Even if everything appears helpless in that moment -- there are always brighter days ahead.  


Here is how the news reported Mal's death 50 years ago:

Beatles' Aid Shot to Death by Cops

UPI

January 7, 1976

    Malcolm F Evans, the Beatles' longtime road manager and a personal friend of the singing group's members, was shot and killed when he allegedly pointed a rifle at two policemen, the police department said yesterday. 

    Evans, 40, was shot Sunday night at the home of Francis Hughes, where he had been living. Investigators said Miss Hughes, who was unemployed, told them she got into an argument with Evans, who was having business problems, and Evans went to an upstairs bedroom taking a jar of pills and a rifle with him. 

    She called the police, an officer, David D Krempa, 30, and Robedt E Brannon, 27, responded to a man with a gun suicide attempt call. The two officers went to the bedroom where they saw Evans sitting on the floor, allegedly pointing a rifle at them. 

    They fired six shots, killing Evans instantly, investigators said. Evans had been the Beatles' road manager since their earliest days in Liverpool, England, and joined Ringo Starr when the group broke up. Friends said he had been depressed recently because he was out of a job.

     Starr was reported to be "stunned by the death", and a spokesman for Paul McCartney said "Paul is very disturbed at the loss of a close friend."

With Baby James


 

The launch of the Yellow Submarine




 

Thursday, January 1, 2026

Green Card Photo Shoot



 January 1, 1976 

New Year's Day at Friar Park





 January 1, 1991 

George's two guitars


 

Best mates


 

Blues Singer (1966)

This terrible quality photograph shows the Beatles with Beryl in the hotel room in Barcelona

 

Blues Singer

By Steve James

The Eastern Evening News

January 1, 1966

    Christmas usually sees blue singer Beryl Bryden paying a visit to Norwich to see her folk in Branksome Road, and she managed to fit in her usual stay this time, though her engagements made it a bit more fleeting than usual. 

    I managed to get a few words with her before she left on her way to sing in an American Air Force camp. Though she's getting plenty of work, particularly in the clubs up north, she mourned that "nobody wants to record jazz now", and when I asked her about TV and radio dates, I was a bit surprised to hear her say she's had only a couple or so of these in the past year-- for she's one of the country's leading blue singers, after all.

     But whatever the situation over here, they certainly appreciate the Bryden Blues on the continent. Why? Beryl has been taped for the Dutch pirate radio, Radio Veronica! "We did five numbers in three hours," she recalled.

     I've seen Beryl praised in French, Belgian, Dutch, and German papers before, but this time she's added another language to her cutting book. It's Spanish. "Una cantate de mucho peso" ran one headline following Beryl's appearance in Spain. She told me that the words meant "a weighty singer" the reference being to her not inconsiderable poundage, rather than to the nature of her songs. 

    I also noticed a reference to "Una tablar de laver" which is the washboard on which Beryl makes the rhythm sizzle. Another headline was an odd mixture of German and English, "Happy jazz mit Beryl Bryden". No translation needed!

     But Beryl's outstanding memory of recent months is meeting the Beatles when they sang in Barcelona and hearing one of them greet her with, "Hi, Beryl, where's your washboard?"

     They remembered seeing her in the Hamburg club at which they were playing in the days before they found fame. 

    After their performance in the Barcelona bullring, The Beatles invited Beryl to join them at their hotel. There, they got her to sing "Moving On" and persuaded her to fetch her washboard from her own hotel and join them in an informal session. George and Paul were on guitars, John on harmonica, and Ringo played the maracas. 

    Beryl gave me a crisp summary of the personalities of the individual Beatles. "John-- intelligent, witty. Paul --he's sweet, a charmer. George --rather quiet until he opens up. Ringo-- makes dry remarks."