I Saw The Beatles – Episode 14 with Ivor Davis (Part 2)

Welcome back to episode 14 of I Saw The Beatles! This week is Part 2 of our conversation with reporter Ivor Davis who accompanied The Beatles on their tours of the United States in the mid 1960s and was with them when they met Elvis Presley in 1964. Check out Ivor’s book about his experience – The Beatles and Me On Tour

Podcast:  I Saw The Beatles – Episode 14 with Ivor Davis (pt 2) 09/20 by I Saw The Beatles | Pop Culture

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I Saw The Beatles – Episode 13 with Ivor Davis (pt 1) | Pop Culture

Welcome back to episode 13 of I Saw The Beatles! This week is Part 1 of our conversation with reporter Ivor Davis who accompanied The Beatles on their tours of the United States in the mid 1960s and was with them when they met Elvis Presley in 1964. Check out Ivor’s book about his experience – The Beatles and Me On Tour

Source: I Saw The Beatles – Episode 13 with Ivor Davis (pt 1) 08/30 by I Saw The Beatles | Pop Culture

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I Saw The Beatles – Episode 12 with Dee Elias 

Welcome to Episode 12 of I Saw The Beatles! This week’s special guest is Dee Elias who not only saw The Beatles 3 times, she managed to sneak up to their hotel room and meet John Lennon and Paul McCartney! Dee also wrote a book about her teenage adventures that had her meeting all types of celebrities while chasing after the Fab Four – Confessions of a Beatlemaniac!!

I Saw The Beatles – Episode 12 with Dee Elias 08/08 by I Saw The Beatles | Pop Culture

 

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From Hemingway to Lennon and back again…

I’ve spent the last several months slowly reading my way through The Letters of Ernest Hemingway: Volume 4. A friend of mine had sent me an article back in April 2020 that talked about some of the letters between Hemingway and his U.K. publisher, Jonathan Cape Publishing, contained in the book.

Jonathan Cape publishing was founded in London in 1921 by Herbert Jonathan Cape and his partner Wren Howard.  They would publish many notable and award winning authors, including: Robert Frost, Ian Fleming and James Joyce. The publishing house still exists today and is an imprint for Penguin/Random House.

In 1925, Jonathan Cape became Ernest Hemingway’s U.K. publisher and would publish the British editions of Hemingway’s In Our Time in 1926, followed by The Sun Also Rises, Men Without Women, A Farewell to Arms and Death in the Afternoon. But Hemingway was very open about his hatred of the publishing house’s namesake. Cape would often make edits and publish Hemingway’s works without asking the author’s permission, something Hemingway was very strict about. Once Hemingway was done writing and editing a book that was it. It was finished. Period. He hated changes of any sorts, especially when they tried to remove “dirty” works or rewrite scenes that were of the deeply intimate type. Many publishers, including his own would warn him that his books could be censored due to the questionable language, but he insisted that the words remain exactly as he wrote the or the whole story would go to hell.

On page 363 of The Letters of Ernest Hemingway dated 12 September 1930 from Ernest to Jonathan Cape, Ernest is busy discussing royalty payments & publishing details, along with his successful hunting expeditions (he was in Montana at the time) and writing his latest book. Paragraph 4 (out of 5) of the letter reads as follows:

With best wishes for the season, – it seems Christmas weather; snowing hard in the mountains – to you and to Mrs. Cape and, if you see her, to Norah James, and to Mr. Wren Howard-

Norah Cordner James worked for Jonathan Cape overseeing the advertising for his firm from 1921-1929. Though this is the only time in all the 5 volumes of Hemingway’s letters that Norah is mentioned, there is no doubt Hemingway would have known about her work at Cape, since he often would remark to his publisher how horribly Jonathan Cape was advertising his books, even insisting that certain ads were to be taken down or reworded.

Norah was born in Hampstead, England in September 1895, would go on to be famous author herself after leaving Jonathan Cape Publishing. Her first book, The Sleeveless Errand, garnered a lot of publicity when it was immediately banned in England for being obscene before it even hit the shelves in 1929.

In 1939, Norah wrote her autobiography – I Lived in a Democracy. In this book, she says her family moved to St. John’s Wood in 1912 when she was 17. They were the 5th family to occupy the house at 3 Abbey Road…or as it has come to be known – Abbey Road Studios. One particularly amusing story Norah tells about her time living in the house, goes like this: Once my father refused to leave his room for twenty-four hours and I caught Mother throwing little packages of sandwiches into his window from the window in the passage above.

The Cordner-James’ moved from Abbey Road in 1920 and there would be two more owners of 3 Abbey Road before Gramophone would purchase the 103 year old house on Friday, June 28, 1929 and turn it into a recording studio. On June 6, 1962, The Beatles – John, Paul, George and Ringo strolled through the doors for the very first time to audition for George Martin.

In 1964, while The Beatles were busy becoming the greatest band the world has ever known, their leader, John Lennon published his first book – In His Own Write. His publisher was Jonathan Cape.

 

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I Saw The Beatles: Episode 11 with Mike Harper 

Welcome back to episode 11 of I Saw The Beatles! This week’s very special guest is Mike Harper – an on-air personality at christian radio station 89.5 KVNE in Tyler, TX. When Mike was 8 years old, he and his older siblings attended the rained out Beatles concert at Crosley Field in Cincinnati, OH in August 1966. Hear about his experience and his thoughts on John Lennon’s 1966 controversial comments about The Beatles and Jesus.

Source: I Saw The Beatles: Episode 11 with Mike Harper 07/30 by I Saw The Beatles | Pop Culture

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I Saw The Beatles – Episode 10 with Linda Cooper 

Welcome back to episode 10 of I Saw The Beatles! This week’s guest is Beatle fan Linda Cooper who saw The Beatles perform live three times! And she got her picture in the paper while shrieking during one of the concerts. Linda is also featured in the book, We’re Going to See The Beatles! by Garry Berman.

Source: I Saw The Beatles – Episode 10 with Linda Cooper 07/14 by I Saw The Beatles | Pop Culture

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I Saw The Beatles – Episode 9 with Marti Carver 

Welcome back to episode 9 of I Saw The Beatles. This week, we talk to Marti Carver who got to see The Beatles play live in 1966 at Olympia Stadium in Detroit on Aug 13th and then at Crosley Field in Cincinnati a couple weeks later. ————————————– Intro music by Cliff Hillis

Source: I Saw The Beatles – Episode 9 with Marti Carver 07/12 by I Saw The Beatles | Pop Culture

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I Saw The Beatles – Episode 8 with Don Dannemann Part 3 

Welcome back to episode 8 of I Saw The Beatles. This week is Part 3 (finale) of our conversation with Don Dannemann, the lead singer of The Cyrkle. The Cyrkle, an east coast band, was managed by Brian Epstein and opened for The Beatles during their 1966 U.S. tour. Their song Red Rubber Ball hit #2 on the Billboard charts the same week in July 1966 that The Beatles’ Paperback Writer was #1. For more information on Don Dannemann and The Cyrkle (including upcoming tour dates)

The Cyrkle website: http://www.TheCyrkle.com

The Cyrkle Facebook: www.facebook.com/TheCyrkle

Source: I Saw The Beatles – Episode 8 with Don Dannemann Part 3 08/09 by I Saw The Beatles | Entertainment

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Book Review: “Dear Prudence: The Story Behind The Song” by Prudence Farrow Bruns

Dear Prudence: The Story Behind the Song: Bruns, Prudence Farrow ...I’m a person who loves numbers and statistics. Every morning I check various stats on several of my websites. I like to know that my efforts aren’t going unnoticed and that I’m not wasting my time doing all this reading and writing. One of my stat pages likes to tell me keywords that I should be using to attract more readers. One of them was “prudence bury”. Not sure where the “bury” came from, but I decided to look on Amazon to see if Prudence Farrow Bruns had written a book. Sure enough, I found Dear Prudence: The Story Behind The Song, a self-published book by Prudence Farrow Bruns put out in July 2015.

Anyone that reads this blog on a regular basis knows by now that I’m not a fan of spending a lot of money on some of the books I read. Unless they are a signed first edition, I usually find a cheap used copy somewhere. In this case, there were no inexpensive used copies of this book, so I had to devise another plan. Turns out, Amazon is offering free trials of their Kindle Unlimited plan. I believe I get the first two weeks (or months) free before I have to cancel to avoid being charged, but I decided this was the best way to read a book that I wasn’t sure I was going to like.

For those that don’t know, The Beatles wrote the song Dear Prudence about Prudence Farrow after meeting her in India in 1968…

Turns out, the dramatic stories that I had heard about why the Beatles wrote this song for Prudence aren’t quite true…at least not according to Prudence herself. Or was she holding back in this book? Well, she kind of leaves it all up to the reader to interpret.

This book is basically a memoir of her life from start to finish. And there were moments while reading it that the words, “spoiled brat”, “poor little rich girl” and “first world problems” all went through my mind as she proceeded to destroy her life throughout her teenage years. But upon closer examination, where were her parents? Both  actors/directors, her parents spent vast amounts of time away on location while Prudence and her FIVE siblings were left with governesses and maids. Finally deciding she needed to pull her life together after a bad acid trip, she discovered meditation and yoga and heard of a guru in India that she desperately wanted to meet.

Prudence finally sets foot at the ashram of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi with her famous sister Mia on page 199 of this 224 page book. That leaves just 1/5 of the book for her to meet the Beatles and have a song written about her (John and George arrive on page 204). And as predicted, the whole actual story behind the song is uneventful and there isn’t really a whole lot to tell about John, Paul, George and Ringo except small talk or to say they told her they wrote a song about her and that she didn’t actually hear it until the White Album came out.

I guess I came out of this book thinking, “If she wanted to write her memoir, why didn’t she just do that?!” Why hide it behind a song? Because…then she couldn’t cash in on the Beatles link and sell more books! And for that reason…

I rate this book, 3 out of 4 Beetles!

 

 

 

 

 

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I Saw The Beatles – Episode 7 with Don Dannemann Part 2 

Welcome back to episode 6 of I Saw The Beatles. Our very special guest today is Don Dannemann, the lead singer of The Cyrkle. The Cyrkle, an east coast band, was managed by Brian Epstein and opened for The Beatles during their 1966 U.S. tour. Their song Red Rubber Ball hit #2 on the Billboard charts the same week in July 1966 that The Beatles’ Paperback Writer was #1. For more information on Don Dannemann and The Cyrkle (including upcoming tour dates) The Cyrkle website: http://www.TheCyrkle.com The Cyrkle Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/TheCyrkle

Source: I Saw The Beatles – Episode 7 with Don Dannemann Part 2 08/02 by I Saw The Beatles | Entertainment

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