Hammersmith Odeon, London, England
Tour: Another Beatles Christmas Show
Hammersmith Odeon, London, England
Tour: Another Beatles Christmas Show
The #1 song on the UK Singles Chart on December 27, 1964
Hammersmith Odeon Theatre
The Beatles spent Christmas Day 1964 in a number of different ways. John and Cynthia Lennon were at home with their son Julian; Paul McCartney was with Jane Asher at her family's London home; while George Harrison and Ringo Starr remained in their home at flat 7, Whaddon House in London.
Odeon Cinema, Hammersmith, London
Following the previous year's seasonal extravaganza, Brian Epstein now presented "Another Beatles Christmas Show" at the Hammersmith Odeon, across town from Finsbury Park. The venue may have changed but the formula was much the same: music, pantomime, comedy and, of course, a constant barrage of screaming from the youthful audience. The Beatles appeared in two sketches, one with Freddie Garrity (of the Dreamers) and another with disc-jockey Jimmy Savile, and sang 11 songs, "Twist And Shout", "I'm A Loser", Baby's In Black", "Everybody's Trying To Be My Baby", "Can't Buy Me Love", "Honey Don't", "I Feel Fine", "She's A Woman", "A Hard Day's Night", "Rock And Roll Music" and "Long Tall Sally".
Rehearsals began on December 21st and the show ran for 20 nights, two "houses" each, until January 16, 1965, except for December 24th and 29th, where there was only one - a total of 38 performances. (There were no performances at all on December 25th and 27th and January 10th)
At some point during this first week (the precise date was not documented), radio broadcaster/DJ Chris Denning visited the Beatles in their dressing-room at the Odeon and interviewed them, unfortunately while they were eating dinner, for a new series on Radio Luxembourg. Called The Beatles, it was broadcast for 42 weeks every Sunday night (8:45-9:00 pm) from January 7th to October 17th, 1965. The Beatles did not record music sessions for this series. In fact they had little to do with it at all, Radio Luxembourg having to spread thinly what scant interview material the group gave Denning - taped on this date and on March 20th, April 29th and June 20, 1965. Most of each week's 15 minutes was given over to news items and listener's record requests.
The Beatles also read out listeners' letters during these interviews and dedicated songs to family and friends. This was especially revealing, and showed the group keen to maintain contact with their Liverpool past. In this first interview John dedicated records to Pete Shotton and to Nigel Whalley, Paul to Ivan Vaughan (Shotton, Walley and Vaughn were ex-Quarry Men) and to the boys at his former school the Liverpool Institute and girls at Blackburne House (across the road from the Institute), George dedicated records to school friends Arthur Kelly and Tony Workman, and Ringo to friend Roy Trafford and also to Ermie, Vi and Art Caldwell (Al Caldwell being Rory Storm, Ernie and Vi his parents).
Christmas recordings, with Christmas songs and messages from individual Beatles, were sent to fan club members in the U.K and U.S.
Although two previously-taped mimed music performances were already slotted into the program, Johnnie Stewart, the producer of Top Of The Pops '64 - the special year-end edition of the weekly show set for transmission between 7:25 and 8:25 pm on December 24th - was keen to feature something altogether new by the group. When he learned that one of the four hosts of his program, Jimmy Savile, would be appearing in the forthcoming "Another Beatles Christmas Show" production, he dispatched cameras to the nearby Hammersmith Odeon to film a brief interview during a rehearsal break on this day. Brief was the word - Savile and the Beatles were seen chatting for all of 1 minute, 23 seconds, the interview coming up into view after a few bars of "I Want To Hold Your Hand" and fading out again near to the end of the song, neatly obscuring the fact that the Beatles had never filmed/taped this song for the BBC's cameras.
The Complete Beatles Chronicle - Mark Lewisohn
The number one song in the US on December 21, 1964 was I Feel Fine by The Beatles.
In UK I Feel Fine by The Beatles was in the top 5 hits.
December 19, 1964 The album "Beatles For Sale" hit #1 in the U.K.
Another Beatles Christmas Record (UK/US: Fan Club/December 18, 1964)
Released December 18, 1964 to members of The Official Beatles Fan Club (UK). US Fan Club members ...
Top #5 songs in the USA
The number one song on the UK Singles Chart on December 16, 1964 was I Feel Fine by The Beatles.
WABC's All American Survey for Week of 15 December 1964
1. Come See About Me - The Supremes (Motown) 2. I Feel Fine - The Beatles (Capitol) 3. Mr. Lonely - Bobby Vinton (Epic) 4. She's Not There - The Zombies (Parrot) 5. Love Potion No. 9 - The Searchers (Kapp) 6. Goin' Out of My Head - Little Anthony & the Imperials (DCP) 7. She's a Woman - The Beatles (Capitol)
The number one song on the UK Singles Chart on December 14, 1964 was I Feel Fine by The Beatles.
No events occurred today.
No events occurred today.
No events occurred today.
No events occurred today.
No events occurred today.
Son of Oblomov
December 8, 1964 - Jane and Paul at the Comedy Theatre, in the West End of London, seeing Spike Milligan in the Frank Dunlop production of Son of Oblomov.
No events occurred today.
Beatles - I Feel Fine (UK Number 1 song)
No events occurred today.
Beatles for Sale is the fourth studio album by English rock band the Beatles, released on 4 December 1964 and produced by George Martin for Parlophone. The album marked a minor turning point in the evolution of the Lennon–McCartney partnership, John Lennon particularly now showing interest in composing songs of a more autobiographical nature. "I'm a Loser" shows Lennon for the first time coming under the influence of Bob Dylan,[3] whom he met in New York while on tour, on 28 August 1964.[4]
Beatles for Sale did not produce a single for the UK – the non-album tracks "I Feel Fine" and "She's a Woman" performed that role. Nevertheless, that coupling was followed up in the United States by "Eight Days a Week", which became their seventh number one in March 1965. In Australia, the only-ever non-original Beatles single (either side) went to Number One: Chuck Berry's "Rock and Roll Music" backed with Carl Perkins' "Honey, Don't", which held the summit for four weeks.
The album hit the UK number one spot and retained that position for 11 of the 46 weeks that it spent in the Top 20. Beatles for Sale did not surface as a regular album in the US until 1987. In its place was Beatles '65 which featured eight songs from Beatles for Sale, plus the A and B-side of "I Feel Fine" and "I'll Be Back" from the UK's A Hard Day's Night album. Beatles '65 enjoyed a nine-week run at the top of the US charts from January 1965.
No events occurred this day.
No events occurred today.
1 Dec 1964
Ringo Starr has his tonsils removed at the University College Hospital in London.
The Beatles will be relaxing for the next three weeks - as far as performing publicly.
Studio One, Television Centre, London
The second part of John's contribution to the opening edition of Not Only....But Also was taped this evening, from 8:30, before an audience at the BBC's Television centre in west London.
Several items from his book In His Own Write were read, mostly straight to camera. John alone read "About The Awful" - his own biography from the book's back-cover - he and Norman Rossington recited "Good Dog Nigel" and "The Wrestling Dog" and then John, Rossington and Dudley Moore delivered "All Abord Speeching". Additionally, Rossington and Moore, without John's involvement, read "Unhappy Frank". Right at the end of the programme, as the credits were rolling to Moore's signature tune, "Goodby-ee", John also flitted somewhat maniacally across the screen.
The Complete Beatles Chronicle - Mark Lewisohn