Showing posts with label Madrid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Madrid. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 2, 2021
Wednesday, October 7, 2020
Thursday, August 27, 2020
Thursday, July 2, 2015
Ole Los Beatles Espana (part 2 Madrid)
Here is the continuation of the information that I posted yesterday about the Beatles in Madrid. There is a lot of information here that was new to me! I had no idea that 6,000 fans could not get in to see the Beatles and that the police were so violent towards them! Wow!
Ole Los Beatles Espana
By Juan Agueras and Richardo Gil
Sgt. Beatles Fanclub
Many pictures were to be taken the following morning, Friday
July 2nd, during a pseudo-official reception organized by Bodegas
Sherry at the very Fenix hotel. The
Beatles were awarded with a gold badge and signed, using pieces of chalk, on
four casks brought especially from Jerez for the event. They tasted the wine, served by Julio Moreno,
a “venenciador” (a person who serves wine directly from the cask by means of a
long, thick stick). John tried to take
his first steps in the technique. Miguel
Primo de Rivera, Jerez’s Mayor, presented him with the exotic stick. Lennon exclaimed, “Ole!” Going on the clichés, flamengo dancing was
also scheduled. Ringo and Paul tried to
imitate the dancers, who later on became “Las Hermanas Hurtado,” a combo of
comedians. The Beatles’ bass player,
innate public relations, gave a wink to the TV cameras. This ceremony was to be registered in history
as having taken place in Andalusia, which is not true as it was held in
Madrid.
In the afternoon they were
interviewed in their rooms by Jose Luis Alvarez and Roberto Sanchez Miranda
from Fonorama magazine, a nice gesture of Brian Epstein whom they had talked on
the phone. They had met some month
before. “A record less record player,”
Roberto Sanchez remembers, “Paris Match magazine open showing a page which
featured themselves, a table with plenty of sorts of bottles and glasses. John woke up form a brief doze, the sheet
line printed on his face and fidgeting with a venencia. George went out of his room looking like
Adam. They made me sing ‘She Loves you’
in Spanish.” Jose comments, “John
suggested a picture of us all together. He
kicked off the table so that everything fell onto the floor.” The meeting was brightened up when some
English friends entered the room. The
two journalists summed up this overall impression, “four wonderful lads, really
natural and with no affectation at all.”
Friday July 2nd, Plaza de las Ventas. The surroundings of the venue began to become
stocked with people, mainly youngsters, who had been queuing since early in the
afternoon. Police forces, which had put
cordons around the place and which were on horse back, were busy repressing
those people who were too much enthused.
Likewise, those who looked suspicious were not allowed to enter. The show started at 9:30pm, just as it had
been scheduled, with 12,000 people assembled at the place (half the venue’s
capacity). The most expensive seats were
occupied by celebrities. Spanish
musicians and lots of Americans, the later’s presence being quite conspicuous
all along the show. Nevertheless, the
Beatles were to play much later on. The
host, Torrebruno remembers that due to the fact that the Beatles were due to
appear on stage at a really late hour, the audience got really excited. “They wanted to see the Beatles and nobody
else, just the Beatles.” The Fab four
got to the Plaza de Toros at about 9pm.
They went straight into the medical section, which had been prepared to
serve the purposes of a dressing room. While the four from Liverpool were waiting for
their performance to begin, and once the first part of their show was over,
special scenery was laid out. Yet the
set’s concept was closer to a variety show than to a Rock n Roll concert.
At 10pm Torrebruno, the host, delivered his
introduction. Meanwhile, the combo was
heading for the stage’s right side stairs.
They were carrying their own instruments. “And now the very moment has come” Torrebruno
said “Yes dear friends, here they are for the first time in Spain, the
wonderful ones, the unique ones, the Beatles!”
Once the introduction was over, Paul proved everyone that he had learnt
Spanish at school when he was a boy by means of presenting each song in the
language of the country they were playing.
The show went on with “She’s a Woman.”
John, who played bot h acoustic and electric guitar played harmonica on
“I’m a Loser.” Paul sang “Can’t buy me
love,” Lennon and McCartney sang together on “Baby’s in Black.” Then the people began to shout, “Ringo! Ringo!”
“I wanna be your man” was the next song, which the drummer played as he
shook his hair. “A Hard Day’s Night” was
given a tremendous hand just like “Everybody’s trying to be my baby,” sung by
George. When it came to “Rock and roll
music” (Ringo had written Rock and Roll Sausages on a paper attached to his
drums—it was an expression used in The Cavern era by someone who hated The
Beatles). “I Feel Fine” and “Ticket to
Ride” were the songs they played right afterwards. With “Long Tall Sally” the show was brought
to its end. It was song number 12. Then Paul said goodbye to everyone after 45
minutes on stage. Though people wanted more
numbers, no encores were played.
Torrebruno returned to the stage and put an end to the night.
One of the guest artists, Phil Trim, Trinidad Steel Band’s
vocalist recalls how John Lennon asked him about “What the Eastern audiences
were like. We had just returned from
Japan and Australia and they were about to visit those places.” Pedro Ruiz Bermejo, a DJ evokes that “as
nobody could speak English, I was commissioned to go and interview them. I talked to George Harrison in Las
Ventas. It was sort of eating from a
forbidden tree.” Enrique Gines, journalist,
was shocked when he could spot Ava Gardner among the people gathered to watch
the show. Miguel Rios, Spanish rocker,
said he will never forget a man standing at the doorway with a gigantic pair of
scissors and with a banner asking for a chance to shave the Beatles’ heads. By the way, a rumor went that a gang of
students had made plans to kidnap George Harrison so as to get his hair
cut. “I was literally having a trance,”
Miguel Rios tells us, “I just remembered how shocked I was by that music, by
their control upon everything. It all
was wonderful. At the beginning of the
show, they rushed their way onto the stage.
Quite the same happened at the end, after twelve songs they disappeared
all of a sudden. People were as if
mesmerized.”
Rosa Montero, then a 14 year old daring girl, watched the
show from a distant point. “I remember
the stage was mute and vulgar. On it
four fleas in black, always jumping to the rhythm. A cold atmosphere. Definitely, the people were not accustomed to
this kind of show. Everything seemed to
be too big. The Plaza de Torros was
empty and it was too expensive. The
Beatles were too much for those people.
But getting into that place was like getting in touch with my
generation.”
Paul was shocked by the amount of people that could not
enter the place (there were 6,000 of them outside and they made more noise than
those listening to the concert). Ringo
was shocked by the violence used by the police officers. Even Francisco Bermudez, the one who had organized
the Beatles to come to Spain, suffered from this erroneous police force’s
attitude. An officer mistook him for a
fan when Bermudez was trying to make his way towards the back part of the
stage. Fortunately, it was but verbal
violence. “They sent three police
brigades. It was not a sell out, because
people were afraid of the repression.
And that’s it. I paid more
attention to the security forces than to the show itself. I could not even watch them play. If the policemen saw someone stand up, then
they rushed forward and took that poor fellow into a lorry. They jailed about 300 youngsters that night
and what were they guilty of? Ignacio
Matinez, a member of Los Pekenikes, a guest combo says, “There was a police
officer for each of the members of the audience. Just one more office and we could have
conquered Gibraltar.” Rosa Montero
evokes events which took place after the concert in an underground
station. “As I was a bay, the despised
me, but I could see them hit the young people there with unusual rage. The
officers seemed to be crazy. They were
fighting against what they thought the Beatles stood for: silent individual rebellions, revolutionary
fringes, anxiety to change the situation.
It was the very first time I could see the grey ones at work. Then I realized what being a Beatlemaniac
really meant: it was a fight against the
values epitomized by those officers. It
made me understand that rock was not only music but a change to think about a
different world.”
After the concert, The Beatles and their court returned to
the Fenix Hotel. Antonio Fernadez, a member
of the building staff at the time, was taken aback by their being isolated from
the rest of the world, “They hardly left the room save for the show. They spent the rest of the time indoors—in
their rooms.” If they managed to get
away from their cloistering, nobody ever noticed. Enrique Bartolome, the hotel manager hints
that they might have gone out for a walk with beards and mustaches. But as a matter of fact, the Beatles stayed
sleeping, “the favorite activity” some magazines said, whereas Brian did
not. He had an appointment which had
been arranged discretely. According to
the magazine Fonorama, it did not take place.
Eventually, Brian expressed his desire for knowing late night
spots. He was seen at Bourbon Street, a
club visited by homosexuals. All the
reviews published the next morning had a common point: the feared riots had not taken place. This is an excerpt from the newspaper ABC,
“Had it not been for the records and musical magazines, we would not have the
slightest clue of the abilities of the Beatles.
The uproar prevented us from hearing them.”
Labels:
1965,
article,
John Lennon,
Madrid,
Spain,
The Beatles
Sherry Barrels
The Beatles signed barrels of sherry with chalk and apparently they are still on display. Although, obviously these are some sort of reproduction, because how could chalk writing still be around 50 years later?
![]() |
| "WilliamsHumbert601" by El Pantera - Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:WilliamsHumbert599.jpg#/media/File:WilliamsHumbert599.jpg |
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| "WilliamsHumbert601" by El Pantera - Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:WilliamsHumbert601.jpg#/media/File:WilliamsHumbert601.jpg |
![]() |
| "WilliamsHumbert601" by El Pantera - Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:WilliamsHumbert597.jpg#/media/File:WilliamsHumbert597.jpg |
![]() |
| "WilliamsHumbert601" by El Pantera - Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:WilliamsHumbert603.jpg#/media/File:WilliamsHumbert603.jpg |
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
Ole Los Beatles Espana (part 1 Madrid)
The only information I could locate about the Beatles European tour was about the dates in Spain. A wonderful article that found in the September/October 1995 issue of Beatles Unlimited magazine about the Spanish concerts. The article must have been translated into English from Spanish for the publication because the words don't really "flow" at times. However, I typed it up like it was (although I did fix some spelling mistakes). Over the next few days I will share the entire article. Here is the information from July 1, 1965 in Madrid.
Ole Los Beatles Espana
By Juan Agueras and Richardo Gil
Sgt. Beatles Fanclub
(Found in September/October 1995 issue of Beatles Unlimited)
Blinded by the Spanish sun and escorted by acolytes and
bodyguards (Neil Aspinall and Mal Evans among others,) they went off the plane
chewing gum and dressed in a casual style.
John was wearing a black and white squared cap matching his trousers, a
white jacket and a black T-shirt. Paul,
a dark suede jacket, a white shirt and black trousers. George, just like Paul but with a t-shirt on
instead. Ringo was wearing a white
jacket, and black trousers and a T-Shirt.
“Saludos amigos!” (Hi friends!) said Paul in perfect Spanish one John
had said the same by means of making faces and bizarre slices of hand. Then they got into two black Cadillacs. Authorities, in order to show their contempt
for the band ordered them and all the staff to undergo the customary proceedings: they had to go through the “something to
declare” counter, though all their 22 pieces of luggage and assorted musical
equipment were ignored. Ringo had to
suffer on the raw of the disdain: the
drummer lagged behind as he was asked for an autograph by an Iberia airhost. When Ringo tried to return to his friends, a
police officer took him for a fan and thereby was shoved aside regardless of
his actual identity. Eventually, the
Beatles stumbled their way to the cars. “They
definitely know where country they were coming to,” Bermudez said.
![]() |
| The Beatles at the customs window in Madrid |
The retinue, which included some foreign journalists, drove
off towards the Fenix Hotel, placed in Paseo de la Castellana, Plaza de Colon,
where the Beatles stayed in rooms 122, 123 and 124, the three of them linked by
means of a common sitting room which was provided with two balconies over a
garden and a street. Brian Epstein, who
had not been seen since the days the group had been touring around Roma,
arrived at Madrid in a different flight and later made a public appearance
with, as Peter Brown recalls—a black eye and telling everybody he had stumbled
on a wardrobe’s door! The management of
the hotel did not send an invoice as part of a promotional campaign.
The building was besieged by fans, crowded with people from
the media and escorted by twenty police officers. “The pressure exerted by the people wanted to
gain access to the hotel and to see them and even to touch them – the inn-keeper
Enrique Bartolome comments, “was so tremendous that the exterior windows were
about to shatter.” Moreover, secret passwords were used by the employees so as
not to reveal the whereabouts of the famous guests. The employees saw themselves in the situation
of having to satisfy Paul’s whim: he
wanted to meet a girl but served on a tray by a waiter. Just a joke!
Two hours were enough to have a rest and to recover. Then, a chaotic press conference began. The four lads were sitting on a striped divan
and over a hundred press men piled up almost on top of the Beatles very
heads. Though a loud speaker the people
from the media were told to be quite and they were likewise reminded that they
were just minutes to take photographs.
Ringo and George stayed in the same pose all along the brief photo call,
whereas John and Paul in the end appeared sitting on the divan’s back. The latter posed with a carnation in his
mouth and it remained there through the press conference. Most of the questions were translated by a
woman and were actually silly. The
thematic repertoire showed that nobody there knew whom they were talking
to: their long hair, their millions,
whether they liked Spain and the like were central topics. Someone asked them if “Are you afraid of
meeting Delilah?” A supposedly funny mention to the Biblical character who
shaved Samson’s head. Foreigner media
thought the Liverpudlians were being asked about Dali – the Spanish painter, or
the singer Dalida. Spanish journalist
payed more attention to the fact that no alcoholic drinks were served due to
Francisco Bermudez’s prescription.
Afterwards, the musicians returned to their rooms and had a
rest. They did not leave their place
until the following day. Later that same
day, after midnight, El Cordobes, with a photographer from the Pueblo
newspaper, popped in the hotel so as to get an exclusive, but it had been told
that the boys should not be awakened.
Just like El Codobes, Francisco Bermudez could not get a snap for
posterity, though he said he did not care as he had done it on purpose, “it was
a misunderstood proof of humbleness.”
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