THEY labelled it one of the “worst first-nights ever” but it did not
stop their rise to becoming the most well known band of all time.
And this weekend marks the 50th anniversary of The Beatles’ first ever visit to Coventry. Steve Carpenter looks back...
John, Paul, George and Ringo enjoyed a world-wide dominance during the 1960s.
But not many people will recall their humbling beginnings.
The
Beatles struggled to make a name for themselves in their early years,
touring up and down the country in-between jetting off to play regular
low-key music venues in the red light district of Hamburg, Germany.
And
50 years ago to the day on Saturday November 17, 1962, just two days
after returning from a two-week stint in Germany and weeks after
releasing their debut single Love Me Do, the they took to the stage in
Tile Hill.
The venue was a works canteen in the old Matrix Hall
building on Fletchamstead Highway, a site which is now occupied by a
tool hire firm.
It was a popular music venue spanning over three
decades and played host to several other high profile names including
The Searchers and The Rolling Stones as its profile increased.
After
returning from Hamburg on Thursday, November 15 this was to be The
Beatles’ first gig back on British soil and although it may be hard to
believe, the band suffered from nerves, none more so than recent
addition, drummer Ringo Starr.
Indeed perhaps nerves were to blame
for their performance that night because despite playing what would
become a host of timeless hits including I saw Her Standing There and
Twist and Shout to the 100-strong crowd, Paul later revealed his
displeasure of the gig in the film Let It Be.
During a
conversation with John in which he mistakenly spoke of the venue as
being De Montfort Hall in Leicester, he said: “When we came back from
Hamburg and did Leicester De Montfort Hall or whatever it was, Coventry!
“We played the ballroom and had the worst first night thing, we were all nervous, it was terrible.”
But
despite their displeasure and immediate rise to fame the following
year, The Beatles found time to return to Coventry just three months
later when they played at the Coventry Theatre on February 24, 1963 and
returned a third and final time, exactly one year after their first show
in the city.
Nobody in the crowd could have predicted just how
big this four-piece band were to be that night in November half a
century ago, but Coventry, like most of the nation, was soon to be
gripped Beatlemania and will always remain a part of Fab Four’s amazing
rise to fame.
More information about The Beatles’ link to the city
can be found in a book written by Pete Chambers, The Beatles Sent to
Coventry, which can be purchased from the Herbert Art Gallery.
The Beatles preparing backstage for their 1963 gig in Coventry.
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