Beatles vs. Stones (17 page)

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Authors: John McMillian

Tags: #Music, #General, #History & Criticism, #Genres & Styles, #Rock, #Social Science, #Popular Culture

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The Stones were the cool group because they valorized youth in ways that the Beatles did not. That’s one of the reasons they wore their reverence for bawdy American blues like a badge: it drew a distance between themselves and polite adult society. Blues music was gritty, earthy, and true to real life; it dealt with hardship and exploitation, of course, but also with themes that have always been on the minds of bohemian youths, like disillusionment, traveling, and sex. That sort of material was anathema to the commercial pop music that the older generations sanctioned.

Meanwhile, the Stones found that by simply exaggerating their already ingrained haughtiness, they could provoke a considerable amount of consternation among their elders. It was self-intensifying: the more parents obsessed over the Stones—the more adults griped and complained about their hair, their clothes, their hygiene, and their bad manners—the more they fueled the group’s popularity among disaffected teens. And so the Stones had an incentive to just go on behaving badly.
“We were encouraged, especially by Andrew, to be a little more outrageous than we even felt,” Keith Richards later confessed. “Since then it’s become a well-known scam.”

In contrast, the Beatles had won acclaim from the highest stratum of British society. Beatlemania was a
“multigenerational psychosis,” said one smart observer. A lighthearted
Daily Mirror
editorial following their triumphant performance at the Royal Variety Show (the one where Lennon said “rattle your jewelry”) had made that resoundingly clear. “You’d have to be a real square not to love the noisy, happy, handsome Beatles,” the national tabloid said. It was even “refreshing” to see the Beatles generating such enthusiasm from a “middle-aged” audience. The
Daily Mirror
continued:

Fact is that Beatle People are everywhere: From Wapping to Windsor. Aged Seven to Seventy. And it’s plain to see why these four energetic, cheeky lads from Liverpool go down so big. They’re young, new. They’re high-spirited, cheerful. . . . They wear their hair like a mop—but it’s WASHED, it’s super-clean. So is their fresh young act. Youngsters like the Beatles . . . are doing a good turn for show business—and the rest of us—with their new sounds, new looks. GOOD LUCK, BEATLES!

•  •  •

At the end of 1963, the London
Evening Standard
issued a special supplement, “The Year of the Beatles.”
“An examination of the heart of the nation at this moment would reveal the word BEATLES engraved upon it,” the paper said.

These were the types of accolades that made certain disaffected teens skeptical of the Beatles. The first wave of Stones fans thought of themselves as cultural savants. At the same time they admired the supposedly “authentic” and “iconoclastic” Rolling Stones, they formulated a set of aesthetic criteria that held that
only
acts like the Stones—only those who could be considered daring, stylish, and edgy—were really worthy of their fandom. There was something wrong, they thought, about the way the Beatles succumbed to the Establishment’s pampering. That made them “sell-outs.” No one put it quite that way, of course, but that was the idea: the Beatles couldn’t be taken too seriously, because they catered to the naïve romantic fantasies of early adolescent girls.

It was always a flimsy complaint. Sure, the Beatles did everything they could to advance their careers and please their fans, but then again, they never pretended to be doing otherwise. “Selling out,” in fact, is where many show business professionals thought that the Beatles were headed. When everyone got a bit older, and all the frenzy died down, it was very widely assumed that the Beatles would be forced to leave their teen idol reputations behind, at which point the most they could hope for would be to occupy a more traditional role in showbiz, as schmaltzy, low-key, all-around entertainers. Perhaps, like Elvis, they would begin starring in a succession of vapid,
formulaic movies? Or host a variety program on television or radio, featuring skits and light comedy? Maybe Lennon and McCartney would reinvent themselves as Denmark Street songsmiths (England’s equivalent of Tin Pan Alley)? Unless they retired, these seemed to be their options. There simply wasn’t any precedent for pop stars doing anything else.

The Beatles had heard all this, of course. Murray “the K” Kaufman, New York City’s eccentric, fast-talking deejay—the one who had done so much to promote the Beatles when they first came to America—remembers sitting around with the group in February 1965, in Nassau, while they were on a break from making their motion picture
Help!
Probably they were all stoned out of their gourds. At one point, Paul played some of the Beatles’ own recent records.

Murray remembers the dialogue going like this:

PAUL:
I bet that about ten years from now, when someone mentions the Beatles, some young kid will say, “Go on now. Here’s your Beatles [pointing both his thumbs down]. Don’t go palming off those old groups from the olden times.” So, you see, we’re just temporary, Murray, babe. Just temporary.
GEORGE:
[smiling] Yeah, that’s right.
JOHN:
Oh well.
RINGO:
Who’s got a cigarette?

In other words, they did not seem too concerned. Instead of petering out, the Beatles decided to outmaneuver everyone: They grew more, rather than less, ambitious. They started recording material that challenged their audiences with unfamiliar and disorienting words, sounds, attitudes, and images. In the process, they helped to transform pop into art. They pointed to a new future for popular music, and they had a galvanizing effect upon virtually all of their contemporaries. Including, of course, the Rolling Stones.

I
. Some listeners hear Jagger sing, “baby better come back,
later
next week.”

CHAPTER FOUR

YANKOPHILIA

The number of people who
can remember what it was like when the Beatles made their first few visits to the United States is dwindling every year. Find an American who
can
recall their first encounters with the Beatles, however, and they’re likely to rhapsodize about how fun and exciting it always was. Along with some other sainted and iconic figures from the ’60s—Martin Luther King, Jr., and Muhammad Ali both come to mind—the Beatles have become almost immune from baby boomer criticism. It bears remembering, though, that the Beatles were responsible for an awful lot of unpleasant commotion back in their day. Consider what it took just to host them at a New York City hotel.

In February 1964, when they showed up at the Plaza on their first visit to the United States, it took one hundred city cops, a squad of mounted policemen, and a fleet of hired private detectives just to ensure everyone’s safety. Throngs of teenagers congregated outside, singing, shouting, and waving placards. Fan mail poured in by the heavy bag load. The hotel lobby, normally sedate and luxurious, looked like a battle camp headquarters. To get in and out of the building, the Beatles had to wind their way through the kitchen and use the service elevator, and after they left for good, the Plaza’s management issued an
apology for allowing them to stay there. Their rooms had been booked months earlier, they explained, before anyone in the United States had even heard of the Fab Four.

The following August, the Beatles stayed at the Delmonico. Their exact location was supposed to be kept secret, but when they arrived in the wee hours of the morning, hundreds of fans already stood waiting for them on Park Avenue and Fifty-Ninth Street. Soon after daybreak, thousands more teenagers joined them. Penned behind police barricades, they listened to radio updates about the Beatles, tried to slip past security, and screamed insanely whenever anyone inside the hotel so much as passed by a window. Finally, the chief of police asked the Beatles to stay well inside their hotel rooms and keep the lights down. Nevertheless, some Beatlemaniacs stayed outside hollering until 4:00 in the morning.

A year later, they made their third visit to New York, spending four nights at the Warwick Hotel, where they had rented the entire thirty-third floor. If anything, the situation there was even worse.
“The mop-haired singers were the cause of considerable exasperation among more than 100 policemen, who spent the day trying to hold in check about 1,500 adolescent adorers,” said the
New York Times
. Police erected barriers on the nearby streets, and to get within about a half mile of the hotel, you had to either prove that you were a guest there or explain that you had business visiting a nearby building. The Beatles were dazzled by Manhattan, and they ached to see more of it, but they could not leave their rooms the entire time they were there, except for two important engagements.

They were in town, first, to record their third (and final) appearance on
The
Ed Sullivan Show
. They headed over to CBS Studio 50 at about 11:00 a.m., and they spent the whole day there, rehearsing just six songs. They made their final taping at 8:30, and except for when Lennon seemed to stumble briefly over one of the lyrics in “Help,” their performance was masterful.

The following day, the Beatles headed to Shea Stadium, in Flushing,
Queens, for their historic performance there. At the time, it was by far the largest concert in history: 55,600 people attended.
“We spent weeks drawing up plans, as if they were battle plans, trying to ensure the Beatles’ safety,” said promoter Sid Bernstein. First, a limousine whisked the Beatles away from their hotel. Since city officials had completely shut down the major streets along their route, their limo barreled through every intersection and stoplight in its path. Upon reaching the Pan Am building, about a mile away, they ascended to the rooftop and boarded a waiting Boeing Vertol 107-II—a large, dual-propeller helicopter. The chopper’s pilot treated the Beatles to a brief aerial tour of the city (which the Beatles did not particularly want) and then veered toward Shea. When the chopper lulled briefly over the parking lot, a disc jockey seized the stadium’s PA system:
“You hear that up there? Listen . . .
it’s the Beatles!
They’re
here!
” So many flashbulbs went off simultaneously that the Beatles’ chopper appeared bathed in the incandescent wash.

The Beatles landed at a nearby heliport and then clambered into a Wells Fargo armored van that sped them the final distance into the stadium. When Ed Sullivan called them to the stage, the roar at Shea had never been louder. Thousands of teenagers screamed, swooned, fainted, sobbed, and watched in rapturous agony as the Beatles trotted onto the field, smiling and waving.
It remains one of the most breathtaking scenes in pop music history.

Taking all of this in from the opposing team’s dugout were four special guests: Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, along with the Stones’ manager, Andrew Oldham, and journalist Chris Hutchins, who covered the show for
NME
. All of them were amazed by the frenzy the Beatles created.

“It’s frightening,” Jagger said.

“It’s deafening,” Richards replied.

“Without a doubt,” Hutchins wrote, “it was the greatest, most awe-inspiring night any of us had ever witnessed.”

Earlier that day, however, Jagger had stressed that he did not desire
the Beatles’ unprecedented popular success for himself.
“I don’t envy those Beatles,” he remarked. He made the statement while lounging around in the Hudson River basin on a luxury yacht named
Princess
, which belonged to Allen Klein, the American music executive who was soon to become the Stones’ manager. “Look how much freedom we have, and they’re locked up in their hotel bedrooms without being able to take a car ride, let alone do something like this.”

It was true: the Beatles felt trapped, besieged, stressed out, and exhausted. They were also often quite terrified by the bedlam that went on around them. They worried about creating a scandal, a riot, an accident, or being assassinated. And when they weren’t anxious, they were frequently bored. Sure, a show like Shea could be thrilling—it
was
thrilling!—and yet shortly after it was over, the Beatles were sequestered yet again in their hotel rooms. The whole next day had been left “open” on their schedule (a rare thing), but they could barely afford to crack a window. And so they just sat around, smoking weed and watching television. True, they must have enjoyed the company of some of their visitors, including the Ronettes and Bob Dylan. But Mary Wilson, of the Supremes, remembers that when she showed up along with group mates Diana Ross and Flo Ballard, the Beatles were so surly and unpleasant that they all wanted to leave just as soon as they had arrived.

The rivalry between the Beatles and the Stones, however, was not just about who had the more appealing lifestyle or the greater freedom of movement. It was also increasingly about talent, craft, and influence. And as the Beatles became more creatively ambitious in the mid-1960s, they started functioning a bit like generational pied pipers, inspiring the jealous admiration of their peers as well as legions of imitators.

It’s almost enough to make one wonder whether Jagger might have envied the Beatles after all. That was the impression that a journalist on assignment for the American pop magazine
Hullabaloo
arrived at in the summer of 1966. The writer doesn’t identify himself by name, but on the eve of the Stones’ fifth American tour he got a
chance to spend three days with the group.
At first, they received him coolly. But on the second day, he at least shared a quick car ride with Jagger as the Stones traveled from their hotel to a press event that they held on a yacht, the SS
Sea Panther
, which was moored up at West Seventy-Ninth Street. En route, they passed an unusual poster advertisement: it was for a car rental company that boasted it was
second
best in the land. Only one other rent-a-car service was ranked higher. Jagger noticed the sign, then turned, unbidden, and said
“That’s us . . . We have to be better because we’re only number two.”

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