Showing posts with label Mal Evans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mal Evans. Show all posts

Monday, November 13, 2023

Beatle George Meets Sinatra









 November 13, 1968

This is a newspaper article written by none other than the lovely Ivor Davis after George and Pattie met with Frank.  


Beatle George Meets Sinatra

Written by Ivor Davis

(Hollywood)

Frank Sinatra, Hollywood's unchallenged king of show business met a Beatle -- and they got along like a couple of old pals. 

Actually, they have quite a lot in common.  Bobbysoxers swooned and screamed when Sinatra, as a skinny young man, sang some 30 years ago, and The Beatles got the same treatment a generation later. 

And Sinatra, who admitted he is also a Beatle fan, reminisced with George about the slogging life of a performer on the road -- Sinatra at his one-night stands with Harry James and the old Tommy Dorsey orchestra, Harrison of his early days with the mop haired quartet in Hamburg and at the Liverpool Cavern.  

They got along so well that Harrison promised to write some music for Sinatra's next album (his latest, all ballads is called 'Cycles.') which the singer may record in London. 

In fact, Beatle George Harrison admitted he was quite overawed when he sat in at a record happening in Hollywood - a Frank Sinatra session.

With wife, Pattie Harrison sat with the small select group of goggle-eyed admirers as Sinatra polished off his latest album in three days. And these days not much impresses the Liverpool millionare.  

Afterwards, Harrison asked the 52-year old veteran of more than 100 albums, "How do you do it? It takes us months just to do one album."  Then Harrison and the "Chairman of the Board" as Sinatra is known, went to dinner to Steffanios the singer's favorite Hollywood hangout and they chatted until the early hours of the morning. 

Monday, October 30, 2023

Paul in a pram


 October 30, 1963 

I know this is a well-known photograph, but it is such a great one and it was taken 60 years ago today.  

Sunday, October 15, 2023

Remembering Jack Oliver




 Former President of Apple Records (1969-1971), Jack Oliver passed away this weekend.    I met Jack in 2015 at the Chicago Fest for Beatle fans and he was a very nice man.   I recall him talking about how he survived the "wrath of Klein" and was not fired.   Must love and sympathy to his family and friends. 


Thursday, August 24, 2023

From sorting fan mail to seeing Abbey Road being made: my life as a teenage Beatles employee

 https://www.theguardian.com/music/2023/aug/24/from-sorting-fan-mail-to-seeing-abbey-road-being-made-my-life-as-a-teenage-beatles-employee?fbclid=IwAR1poeeJzUNdEe3gge4YOLIC-67vAPZkGv9fjRXH5E7ck0OiFJPQIr69hjQ


Merele sitting at John's desk in his Apple Office on Savile Row in 1969.



I briefly spoke to the author of this artile, Merele Frimark when I was writing my current book "Dear Beatle People:  The Story of the Beatles North American Fan Club."  I thought her story was extremely interesting and I am happy to see that she has written some of her story for The Guardian and also publish some of the photos she took for the Official Beatles Fan Club in the United States.   Only 2 of her photos (2 of John Lennon) were sold through the club.   Other photos she has taken have been leaked over the years (incorrectly said to have been taken from Yoko Ono's stolen camera).  So few photos are available of The Beatles recording Abbey Road, so these are amazing.   

Merele had a very interesting story in the Official Beatles Fan Club in the United States.   If this story interests you, then you might be interested in buying a copy of my book.   I currently have hardcopies and paperbacks available directly from me.   Let me know if you are interested in buying one.   beatlesbusch66@gmail.com







Photos are taken and belong to Merle Frimark

From sorting fan mail to seeing Abbey Road being made:  my life as a teenage Beatles employee

Written by Merele Frimark

The Guardian

August 24, 2023

On the afternoon of 23 July 1969, I was a nervous 18-year-old American on my way to EMI Recording Studios on Abbey Road in St John’s Wood. Inside, the Beatles were putting the finishing touches on the song Come Together which would end up on Abbey Road . An endless stream of pilgrims would soon arrive at the pedestrian crossing on the cover, and the studios would be renamed to match.

As I entered, I heard voices and wailing guitars. Their assistant Mal Evans greeted me and put me at ease. John, Paul, George and Ringo were scattered around the studio. The place was bustling, with crew setting up, moving equipment and microphones, placing towels over the drum heads. Then came the introduction. The boys – as everyone seemed to refer to them – were reminded that I was from the New York office. They all smiled; I felt warmly welcomed. Then they got down to business. Not wanting to be intrusive, I took some candid photos; I was by no means a professional photographer, and this is the first time they’ve been published.

How did I get here? Two years earlier, I was a young fearless teen growing up in Queens, New York, who wanted to be Grace Slick of Jefferson Airplane.  I had been to both Beatles concerts at Shea Stadium in 1965 and 1966, and was totally enamoured the minute their songs began playing on the radio and their now historic February 1964 appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show. Mine and so many other lives changed forever in that moment.

In high school, I heard the Beatles had an office in Manhattan. I took the subway to the office building in the heart of Times Square and took the elevator to the 18th floor. The sign on the door read Beatles (USA) Limited and Nemperor Artists, Ltd. I knocked and went inside. “Hi, are you here to be interviewed?” asked the woman at reception and I immediately said yes, having no idea what I would be interviewed for.

They were looking for teens to help sort the sacks of fan mail and hired me immediately. Each day after school I would hop on the subway and go to the office, and after graduating high school in 1968, they offered me a full-time job. I will never forget the excitement the day the demo of Back in the USSR arrived in the office before it was released – we were all so thrilled and played it immediately, over and over, blasting it out.

In July 1969, I paid to take a two-week vacation to London. I spent time in the Savile Row HQ of Apple Corps, with fans waiting outside for a glimpse of any Beatle that might pop in. I watched the moon landing on a small black and white TV at the office alongside Donovan.

Then Derek Taylor, the Beatles’ press officer and a great mentor to me, arranged for me to go to EMI Studios, and in I wandered. Bearded George, dressed in blue jeans and matching shirt sat atop the organ; John in all white, with beard and beads, sat in front of the drum kit area; Paul was dressed casually in a white T-shirt and barefoot, constantly moving around the studio, with Ringo in bright red trousers at his drums. George Martin was there too, checking just about everything.

As they began to rehearse sections of Come Together, Paul seemed to be taking the lead. At certain points he would stop, suggesting “it’s four beats, Ringo,” and walk over for a pow-wow: “All good.” Paul and George harmonised together as George worked on his wailing guitar solos. John ran his fingers along the neck of his guitar as he tuned up.

Paul was the most animated that day; John was rather quiet as he had recently returned to the studio following a car accident in Scotland. I brought some white flowers for him and he placed one on the amp next to him. George remained rather pensive, while Ringo had great patience and calm.

I continued to tiptoe around. Trying to take it all in, listen to what they were playing while being invisible. I made eye contact with John and Paul a few times. I remained cool and smiled. Time stood still.

It was time to leave. I waved goodbye and ventured out and down those famed steps.

At that time, I had no idea what was to come: Within a year the band would split up.

In 1970, with the breakup imminent, I left the New York office (though I remain in touch with my former office mates to this day). Fate continued to shine on me, as my maternal grandfather predicted. A Russian immigrant and musician in the early 1900s, he would tell fortunes and read tea leaves, and my mother asked him if her very active little girl would be a musician. He replied: “No, she’ll be involved in show business, but behind the scenes.” Not wanting to influence me, my mother hadn’t told me this. I then took a job at one of the city’s top theatrical PR firms, working on the original Broadway production of the musical Hair and more – the start of a successful career in entertainment marketing and PR.

Later, in August 1980 while biking in Central Park, I happened upon John sitting on a bench with his baby son, Sean. I approached, said hello and chatted for a bit. He was so very happy. Four months later he was gone. What a privilege and honour to have come together with him and his bandmates for that brief, momentous time in history.

Sunday, June 25, 2023

Rest in Peace Lily Evans

Mal, Lily and Gary 

This  (edited)picture of Lily with Paul and John at the Y.S. premiere was printed in Beatle Book monthly

The Beatle Book has its watermark on this, but this is the entire version of the photo.

 

Sad news to report this weekend.   Lily Evans, the beautiful wife of Mal Evans, passed away this weekend.  I believe she was 87.    You never hear very much about Lily.  But when you think about it, she went through the same things a Beatles' wife went through (only without the money).   Mal was gone with all of the tours and super late nights at the recording studio.  She had to sacrifice so much for Mal to work for The Beatles.    I always think of the time when Mal was pulled off the plane in Manila, and thinking he was going to die, he said, "Tell Lil I love her."  

She lived a quiet but happy life with her children and grandchildren.   She continued to love the music of her and her husband's favorite singer, Elvis Presley, until the end of her life.  

My condolences to the Evans family.  Losing a loved one is never easy.  I hope your photographs and memories bring you some peace.