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http://www.latimes.com/opinion/commentary/la-oe-beatles-quotes-20140209,0,4475060,full.story#axzz2svCqKhjh
Yikes. Out of touch.
Yikes. Out of touch.
in 1964, if you were to bet whose legacy would greater Ed Sullivan or The Beatles, I don't think you could have found anyone to bet on the lads from Liverpoolmpcincal said:The Parade magazine insert in my Sunday paper yesterday had a good piece on the Beatles' arrival and Ed Sullivan Show performance. Near the end they had an item where the show's musical director was quoted as saying he would give them a year, but no more.
Bob Cook said:To be fair to those critics, the history of groups or acts followed by screaming teens is thick with acts whose shelf life was pretty short. Sinatra had made the transition away from bobby soxers, and Elvis in '64 was in the thick of a movie career instead of a musical career, but they were among the few then, and now, who got an audience to grow with them.
In particular with the Beatles, who the hell could have known that they would be one act who were as musically great as they were popular? Or that they would symbolize the rise of a new, huge Baby Boomer generation? Of course, even taking that unknown into account, some of those reviews were pretty awful. I wonder if they were people who realized the kids weren't going to be hitting the symphony anymore -- that rock 'n' roll wasn't going to die.
No kidding. Talk about a moronic review.Stoney said:I'm shocked to learn that William F. Buckley was clueless as a rock critic.
it wasn't moronic, it was the general consensus of the establishment class. WFB Jr lacked insight and an open mind.TwoGloves said:No kidding. Talk about a moronic review.Stoney said:I'm shocked to learn that William F. Buckley was clueless as a rock critic.
Baron Scicluna said:It's before my time, but I can't help but think that must have been a real intense time with the JFK assassination followed by the Beatles just a couple of months later.
The Beatles' vocal quality can be described as hoarsely incoherent, with the minimal enunciation necessary to communicate the schematic texts.