Showing posts with label Hamburg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hamburg. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 27, 2019

The Star Club




I love photos like this!   Here is a guy standing by a poster advertising Little Richard at the Star Club in Hamburg, Germany on October 29.     You can also spot an Elvis poster and a Beatles poster on the wall as well!    The Beatles began playing the Star Club on November 1, 1962. 

Tuesday, June 12, 2018

Klaus and Ringo in Hamburg



Ringo and Klaus were  seen at the Kaiserkeller in Hamburg
photo by Stefanie Hempel

Klaus joined in on singing "With a little help from my friends"


Nothing warms the heart as much as seeing one of the Beatles spending time with an old pal from the Beatles circle.   I love that when Ringo was in Hamburg, Germany yesterday and today, he hung out with Klaus Voormann!   

Thursday, May 31, 2018

A fan that meets the Beatles for Real in Hamburg in '66


I am out of town for the day and so I am having a guest blogger fill in for me.    I hope you all give Thorsten Knublauch a warm MTBFR welcome!    Thorsten is a long time friend of this site and has written several books about the Beatles, including one that I really enjoy about the Beatles German tour in 1966.     Thanks, Thorsten for sharing with us while I am out of town!   Peace and Love -- Sara S. 





The Beatles arrival for their Hamburg concerts during their German “Bravo-Beatles-Blitztournee” at a small suburb station in Ahrensburg on June 26th 1966, a few miles outside Hamburg, is probably my favourite Beatles “event” ever.




The Beatles traveled by special train from their concerts in Munich to Essen (actually to the station in Mülheim near Essen) and overnight to Hamburg.  Having played two shows in Munich on June 24th, they were starting on June 25th at around 8.15 a.m. to arrive in Mülheim around 4.30 pm to play to shows in Essen.  After leaving at midnight they arrived in Ahrensburg around 5.30 a.m.

 The train stations were “secret” to avoid any trouble, but even the arrival in Mülheim brought at least 1.000 fans to the gates. Someone leaked the police plan to the press. The arrival in Ahrensburg was more secret and probably only a rumor among the fans but a few hundred fans were also there around the station and very few fans and several press were on the platform. Also on the platform were some former friends from their Hamburg days club days as Bettina Derlien and Hans-Walter “Icke” Braun. The security was nearly nonexistent. Only a few police officers and the Beatles entourage of Neil Aspinall, Tony Barrow, Alf Bicknall, and Robert Whitaker where on hand to protect the safe departure. 

As seen on the footage and photos, the Beatles had to run from the train to the entrance hall, talked for some minutes to the fans and friends and then had to run out of the hall down the small stairs through the waiting fans inside their car and off they went to their castle hotel in a little village nearby called Tremsbüttel.

I always liked the scene and the photos and still wonder how on earth this happened like this. What could have happened....? When I heard that my favorite photos came on the market I bought the negatives with copyright and an unpublished one to my collection of negatives from the tour.

I`d like to present my most favorite photo of that morning and probably my most favorite picture of the tour. It shows George and Ringo carrying their small suitcases and wearing their cool 1966 sunglasses being “photobombed” by a fan they knew a bit from their Hamburg days in the early Sixties. He is called Jochen von Bredow, was at the time a journalist, and could be seen in between George and Ringo wearing a sweater with a picture of the support group of the tour a German band called “The Rattles” from Hamburg. How cool is that…? I love the impression on the Beatles faces.

In between the two shows in Hamburg, Jochen von Bredow and many other friends from the old days managed to visit the Beatles backstage and can be seen on several photos where I show a few here.






If you are interested in the full story please check my video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mfbkCP9HCvM.

I am planning to sell a set of my 4 new photos as shown here. Drop me a line to be informed soon. You`ll find my email address on my website www.bravo-beatles-blitztournee.de
Enjoy.


Monday, April 10, 2017

Remembering Stuart

55 years ago today, the Beatles' original bass guitarist, artist, and friend Stuart Sutcliffe died at the age of 21.  
Photo by Sara Schmidt 


Stuart's death is part of the sad tragedy that is woven into the Beatles' story.    And unfortunately, because Stu died at such a young age, we as Beatle fans never really got the chance to know him.  He has always remained sort of a mysterious figure that is overshadowed by his early death.   Sure we know about the love story of Stu and Astrid and that they were engaged to be married, but even that is punctuated by the sad ending that Stu died in Astrid arms before the wedding ever took place. 

And we know that Stu was a talented artist and John met him in Art College.   There are books that tell about his life, and yet I still feel like we lost the chance to truly get to know him.   It is such a shame because I think as Beatle fans we really would have loved him. 

Imagine if Stu had lived.  Would he and John remained friend thoughout Beatlemania?    Would Stu and Astrid go on holidays with John and Cynthia?    Would Stu's art become well known and loved and hanging in some gallery that Yoko was involved in?   Would John have talked Stu into playing bass again on the Live Peace in Toronto gig?   Today would he be a favorite guest at Beatle conventions?   Talking about the old days in Hamburg and selling his art?   

Like so many in the Beatles story, we lost Stu way too soon---way before he could really make the impact that he could have made on this world. 



Tuesday, September 6, 2016

The bass player and the photographer



I wish this photo wasn't so "washed out," but it is the only photo that I know of of Paul and Jeurgan

Monday, June 27, 2016

Leaving in the Rain

The Beatles left Hamburg for Japan on a rainy day, which didn't stop any fans!












Meet the Rattles

Before the Beatles left Hamburg on June 27, 1966, they stopped and had photos taken on the steps of the hotel with members of one of the opening acts on the tour, The Rattles.



Sunday, June 26, 2016

The last performance in Hamburg

These photos could be from the afternoon or evening Hamburg 1966 concert







A little rest and relaxation

If all of the meeting with old friends wasn't enough, the Beatles also took a little time to relax backstage before the last concert in Germany.    It was said that people were calling the Beatles backstage nonstop and John ripped the phone out of the wall to get some peace and quiet.  Not sure how true that story is, but I could see it happening.






The Tubon

Paul (and John) played around with an instrument called a Tubon, which is a cylinder shaped instrument that had a keyboard on it.   Kathia Berger said that Bert Kaempfert brought it with him,  however it was Frank Dostal of the German Band the Faces that brought it.   His band had won a Beat Band contest in Feb. 1966 at the Star Club.   The winning prize was a guitar from George Harrison's collection signed by all four Beatles  (recently it has been discovered that the autographs are Neil Aspinall signatures and not really from the Beatles themselves).      I have read that originally the beginning of Strawberry Fields Forever was to be played on the Tubon.