The Beatles: From Liverpool to San Francisco is a 2005 documentary that is now available on streaming service Qello.
This presentation features footage of the group from their early days in their hometown to their final live performance in Candlestick Park. This documentary consists primarily of interview footage, television appearances, and lots of archival footage of adoring fans screaming for the Fab Four.
The documentary explores the career of The Beatles, including their
daily busy schedules and the rise of Beatlemania. Viewers can see the
actual calendar events of the band beginning in autumn 1963, when they
had either a TV show, live concert or studio recording to take care of
on a daily basis – even before their appeal had made it to the United
States.
In fact, the program begins with an explanation of how each of The
Beatles grew up in varied, but mostly ordinary, circumstances in
Liverpool, pointing out that they were a sensation as a group, not
individually. The Beatles: From Liverpool to San Francisco
features a lot of footage of fans going crazy over the Fab Four, in true
Beatlemania fashion, both in Europe and the United States.
There are plenty of old interviews with The Beatles included in the
2005 documentary, where they talk about subjects like their fans, their
first U.S. tour and their influence on the world. As fans might expect,
the four musicians make a lot of jokes during their interviews. In one
instance, an interviewer mentions to The Beatles that some people in the
United States thought the group’s hairstyles were “un-American.” To
that, John Lennon replies that The Beatles are, in fact, not from
America, making it an accurate statement.
It wasn’t all good news for The Beatles from the beginning of their
career – the group also had issues with management and making money.
They realized that their deal with EMI was preventing them from earning
as much as they deserved, with the label only giving the band a small
fraction of the huge sales that each of their records made.
Within a year of The Beatles first making waves on the music scene,
they began making films as well. They made their mock documentary, A Hard Day’s Night, in 1964, beginning their careers as movie stars in addition to being rock stars.
The Beatles: From Liverpool to San Francisco runs a little
less than an hour long, so if you’re interested in seeing footage of the
band’s rise to fame in the early and mid-1960s, as well as learning
more about the worldview at that time and how it affected The Beatles, check out the documentary on Qello.
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