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Authors: Philip Norman

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The college provided only occasional gigs, for negligible payment, and John, at least, took them with not much more seriousness than public rehearsals. One day, Helen Anderson had to give him a bright yellow cable-stitch sweater she was wearing when he hadn’t bothered to put together a stage outfit for that evening’s show. In exchange, he gave her his Quarry Bank exercise book, with its carefully indexed cartoons of “Shortsighted John Wimple Lennon,” “Smell-type Smith,” and the rest.

Times became so slow for the Quarrymen that George Harrison took to sitting in with other small-scale groups, in particular one called the Les Stewart Quartet, who appeared regularly at the Lowlands coffee bar. George’s defection looked to become permanent when the Stewart Quartet were offered a residency at a club named the Casbah, which was about to open in the Liverpool suburb of West Derby. It belonged to an attractive, dark-eyed woman named Mona Best, whose husband, Johnny, had for many years been Liverpool’s main boxing promoter. At the outset it was not intended as a serious business venture, simply a meeting place for Mrs. Best’s sons
Rory and Peter and their friends in the basement of their rambling Victorian home in Hayman’s Green. But on the eve of opening night, August 28, the quartet broke up in acrimony, and Mrs. Best asked George if he knew any musicians who could take their place. He volunteered himself, John, and Paul.

The Casbah’s opening saw John graduate at last from the vermilion Gallotone Champion guitar (“Guaranteed not to split”) that his mother had bought two years previously. In August, he persuaded Mimi to stake him to a Hofner Club 40 semisolid model (i.e., playable both acoustically and electrically) with a fawn-colored cutaway body, a black scratchplate and an impressive cluster of tone-and volume-control knobs. The trip they made to collect it from Hessy’s in Whitechapel would be enshrined in Mimi’s memory as buying him his first guitar for the—to her—hefty sum of £17. In fact, that was merely a down payment: the Club 40’s retail price was £28 7s, which installment-plan charges (supposedly to be met by John) increased to £30 9s.

John, Paul, and George played at the Casbah for seven successive Saturday nights, still billed as the Quarrymen and augmented by a fourth guitarist named Ken Brown, a member of the disbanded Les Stewart Quartet. The club proved an instant hit, attracting such crowds that Mrs. Best had to hire a doorman to back up her own formidable presence behind the snack and soft drinks bar. West Derby’s weekly paper did a story headlined “Kasbah [
sic
] Has New Meaning for Local Teenagers,” accompanied by the first-ever press picture of John in performance with the new Club 40, supporting its cutaway body on one white-trousered knee and clearly glorying in his power to reach the topmost notes on the fretboard.

Among the Saturday-night regulars was Dorothy (Dot) Rhone, a petite sixteen-year-old from Childwall, whom John took to calling Bubbles, even though her hair didn’t have so much as a ringlet. Dot was drawn to his “rugged” looks the moment she set eyes on him but, learning that he already had a steady girlfriend, agreed to go out with Paul McCartney instead. Despite her extraordinary cuteness, she was even milder than Cynthia Powell and submitted without protest to the same rules from Paul that John imposed on Cyn—
total adoration, fidelity, availability, and revising her appearance and wardrobe to look as much as possible like Brigitte Bardot. “Paul was always supposed to be the charming one, but John was more compassionate,” she remembers. “When Paul and I had a row, he’d often tell Paul to be nicer to me.”

In Mona Best’s happy combination of club and Enid Blytonish secret den, the Quarrymen seemed to have found an ideal home. Mrs. Best made them part of her family circle, frequently inviting them upstairs for cups of tea or meals in the rambling house, which was crammed with exotic mementos of her Indian upbringing. They grew particularly friendly with her younger son, Peter, a strikingly handsome eighteen-year-old whose reserved manner and crisply styled hair earned him frequent comparison with the film star Jeff Chandler.

Then, on the Saturday night of October 10, everything suddenly turned sour. Ken Brown, the new fourth Quarryman, reported for duty with a bad cold. In her matriarchal fashion, Mrs. Best decided he wasn’t well enough to play and sent him upstairs to sit in the warm with her elderly mother. At the evening’s end, however, she still gave him his quarter share of the Quarrymen’s £3 fee. John, Paul, and George protested that, as Brown hadn’t performed, he shouldn’t be paid; when Mrs. Best stood firm, the three of them walked out in a huff.

 

 

H
owever John might blag about the rhythm being “in the guitars,” it was clear that if his group was to go on playing anywhere outside the art college’s basement, they had to find a drummer to replace Colin Hanton. But the task seemed a hopeless one. All the good players around were already comfortably ensconced in prestigious groups like Cass and the Cassanovas or Rory Storm and the Hurricanes, where their personalities as well as percussive showmanship often proved as great a draw as the singers. The Cassanovas had upholsterer John Hutchinson, aka Johnny Hutch, a famous tough guy, known to hit equally hard whether the skin in question covered drum or human jaw. The Hurricanes had Ritchie Starkey, a sad-eyed boy from the tougher-than-tough Dingle area whose love of flashy finger ornamentation had led him to adopt the stage name Ringo Starr.

Musical nobodies John, Paul, and George might be, yet they still had the chutzpah to enter their names against the cream of Liverpool’s drummer-enhanced groups when heats for another Carroll Levis “Nationwide Search for a Star” competition was held at the Liverpool Empire. To camouflage the drummer problem, they appeared as a vocal trio with John in the center, minus guitar, resting one hand on Paul’s shoulder and one on George’s. It was an effective and rather daring idea, since Paul’s and George’s left-and right-handed guitar necks pointed neatly in opposite directions, and physical contact between young males, onstage or off, was still taboo.

The need to pull out something special for Carroll Levis also finally extinguished that tired old skiffle handle, the Quarrymen. For days beforehand, John and Paul racked their brains for a new name with an American lilt that hadn’t already been taken by some other group, national or local. Their final choice was a nod to a currently successful U.S. instrumental act, Johnny and the Hurricanes, and also to rock ’n’ roll’s founding father, Alan “Moondog” Freed. When they took the stage for their first heat at the Empire, it was as Johnny and the Moondogs.

They performed two Buddy Holly songs, “Think It Over” and “Rave On,” with enough panache to reach the area semifinals at the Hippodrome theater in Manchester on Sunday, November 15. As with John’s previous Carroll Levis experience, the winners were decided in an end-of-show finale, when the applause for each contestant was measured on Levis’s Clapometer. Unluckily, however, this climax came at a much later hour in Manchester than it had in Liverpool. Too poor to afford an overnight hotel stay, Johnny and the Moondogs had to leave before the finale to catch their last bus and train home. All three of them felt bitterly disappointed and cheated, though only John actively expressed his resentment of the competitors who were able to stay. “That night,” Paul remembers, “someone [in a rival group] was relieved of his guitar.”

With no drummer in prospect, an easier and slightly cheaper way of strengthening the beat was to add one of the electric bass guitars now in general use around Merseyside bandstands. The electric bass with its fretted neck being relatively easy to play, John did not have to break in another outsider, but could simply invite one of his art col
lege friends to make up a fourth with Paul, George, and him. During another late-night jam session at 9 Percy Street, he threw the bass player’s job open to both Stu Sutcliffe and Rod Murray—whichever was first to get hold of the requisite instrument. Rod set to work to build his own, using equipment in the college woodworking department to cut out its body and neck. He was just pondering how to electrify and string it when he found he’d been beaten to the post.

Every two years, the Littlewoods football-pool magnate John Moores sponsored an exhibition at Liverpool’s illustrious Walker Art Gallery to which local painters and sculptors were invited to submit works. For the John Moores show of November 1959, Stu intended to offer one of his outsize abstracts, consisting of two eight-by-four-foot panels. With Rod Murray’s help, he took the first of the finished canvases to the exhibits’ assembly point, then got sidetracked by John and the others at Ye Cracke, and somehow never got around to delivering the second panel. Unaware that they were looking at only half the intended picture, the judges included it among only a handful of local entries to hang at the Walker. So enamored of Stu’s technique was the great John Moores that he bought the single panel for an impressive £65.

The windfall allowed Stu to splash out on an impressive Hofner President bass guitar and step into the vacancy in John’s group. John reassured him that he’d soon pick up bass playing, since it didn’t involve learning “chords and stuff,” just simple, repetitive patterns over four strings rather than six. A friendly bassist with a rival group, Dave May of the Silhouettes, agreed to coach him in the rudiments.

His college tutors, and several of his friends, felt that Stu was making a disastrous wrong turn. No one could have been a stronger supporter of John’s music than Bill Harry—as he would one day prove in spades. Yet he felt mystified, and rather let down, that someone at such exalted level in the visual medium should wish to start at the very bottom of rock ’n’ roll. “The image was what appealed to Stuart more than the music,” Harry says. “He loved the romance of it. And the fact that John wanted him in the group. He just couldn’t say no to John.”

UNDER THE JACARANDA
 

I was never—repeat NEVER—known as Johnny Silver.

 

J
ust before Christmas, Mrs. Plant, the long-suffering owner of 9 Percy Street, had paid her property a surprise visit and been horrified by what she found. A cache of antique furniture awaiting renovation in the basement had been chopped up and used as firewood to warm the ex-Quarrymen’s practice sessions and John’s illicit nights with Cynthia. The Adam fireplace in Stu Sutcliffe’s studio had been torn out to create a contemporary open-hearth effect, and had since disappeared. (“We left bits of it all over town,” Rod Murray admits. “Like getting rid of a dead body….”) So outraged was Mrs. Plant by this wholesale vandalism that she gave every tenant in the building an eviction notice.

By early January, Rod and Stu had found new accommodations at 3 Hillary Mansions, Gambier Terrace, a handsome Georgian-style block overlooking the unfinished Anglican cathedral. To share the spacious first-floor flat they enlisted three other college friends, Margaret Morris (known as Diz), Margaret Duxbury (known as Ducky), and John.

Aunt Mimi was informed of his decision to leave Mendips with typical bluntness. “He told me, ‘Mimi, all the others have flats on their own…and anyway, I don’t like your cooking,’” she recalled. “He’d had it soft with me around to do all the cooking and washing for him. I knew even before he went that he couldn’t cope on his own. He didn’t even know how to light a gas-cooker, let alone cook a tin of beans. He told me he could live off ‘Chink food.’ I said to myself, ‘We’ll see, John Lennon, we’ll see.’”

The flat consisted of three oversize bed-sitting-rooms, a kitchen, and a bathroom with a Geyser water heater, lit by a flame that responded with a threatening
Woomph!
if anyone tried to light it. As signatory of the lease, Rod chose the best quarters, at the front, with the cathedral view and fancy iron balustrade; John and Stu took the barnlike room at the rear.

For John, the Gambier Terrace flat served two equally important purposes. It provided a place for him, Paul, and George to rehearse with their new bass player, his new flatmate. And it allowed him to spend unrestricted nights with Cynthia, albeit in conditions even more rough-and-ready than at Percy Street. The room he shared with Stu was also a communal art studio for the other tenants, and so permanently littered with shabby easels, half-squeezed paint tubes, empty bottles, misappropriated traffic signs, old fish-and-chips wrappings, and cigarette butts. “The floor was filthy,” Cynthia recalled. “Everything was covered with muck.” On mornings when the Geyser failed and they had to wash in cold water, they would arrive at college “looking like a couple of chimney sweeps.”

But, as Mimi had predicted, it wasn’t long before John’s appetite for self-reliance waned and he began to miss the home comforts he had always taken for granted. “For about three weeks I didn’t hear from him. Then one night he arrived back on the doorstep looking very sorry for himself. I said to him, ‘I’m cooking dinner, do you want some?’ but he was too proud to admit that he was hungry or that he couldn’t stand living away. He went away again that night, but about a week later he turned up again. This time I was cooking a steak pie, and I didn’t bother asking whether he wanted any or not. That got him mad. He could smell the food and yet he was too stub
born, too proud, typical John really, to let on that he was hungry or that he’d made a mistake.

“In the end the smell got too much for him and he burst in on me, saying, ‘I’ll have you know, woman, I’m starving!’ He wolfed his food down and then he decided it was getting late and that he wanted to stay in his room for the night. It was his way of coming back without admitting he was wrong to leave.” From then on, he made regular trips home to get his washing done and fill up on Mimi’s cooking. But even the most succulent of her steak pies couldn’t lure him back permanently from Gambier Terrace, Rod, Diz, Ducky, and Stu.

The idea had been that Stu would master the bass within a week or so, then take his place as an equal among John’s onstage brotherhood. Unfortunately, it was not as simple as that. Stu’s small hands, so quick and sure while painting, drawing, or sculpting, showed none of the same deftness with his shiny new Hofner President. Even the most basic underlay patterns of rock ’n’ roll were laborious for him to learn and troublesome to execute. He was angered and frustrated by his slow progress and would have given up altogether had not John sat with him for hours in their huge back room at Gambier Terrace, demonstrating the patterns time and again on the bass strings of his own Club 40. Just as Stu had made John believe in himself as an artist, so he was now determined Stu should believe in himself as a musician, whatever the evidence might be to the contrary.

He therefore insisted that Stu should join Paul, George, and him onstage when still all too obviously the rawest of beginners. The principal object was to show off the Hofner President: as George later recalled, “Having a bass player who couldn’t play was better than not having a bass player at all.” To hide his embarrassment, Stu would turn on his James Dean persona, wearing dark glasses and standing with his back half-turned to the audience as if lost in some mystic communion with his fretboard, rather than just lost.

Apart from getting Stu up to standard, the most urgent task was finding a name for the new lineup. Johnny and the Moondogs had been no more than a hasty improvisation for Carroll Levis and was now too much redolent of lost chances and premature homeward trains. Rather than the modish formula of such-and-such and the
so-and-so’s, Stu suggested they should revert to another plain collective noun, ideally one with the chirpy unpretentiousness of Buddy Holly’s Crickets. Pursuing this entomological theme, they came up with the Beetles, unaware that it had been Holly’s own original choice. (Contrary to myth, it had nothing to do the Beetles motorcycle gang in Marlon Brando’s
The Wild One
, which none of John’s circle had seen.) To avoid an off-putting image of crawly black bugs, John changed it to Beatals—not a pun on “beat” music at this stage, but on beating all competition.

Stu also acted as their manager, insofar as there was anything to manage, and during March drafted a weightily worded and not overly truthful appeal for bookings to an unnamed promoter or club manager. “As it is your policy to present entertainment to the habitues of your establishment, I would like to draw your attention to the Quar [crossed out] ‘Beatals.’ This is a promising group of young musicians who play music for all tastes, preferably rock and roll….” But their gigs remained mostly stuck at the piffling level of student dances and socials, where they were usually known as “the college band.” Stu’s painting tutor, Austin Davis, had them to play at a party he gave at his Huskisson Street flat early in 1959. The event went on for about two days and was so riotous that Davis’s wife, the future novelist and Dame of the British Empire Beryl Bainbridge, had to remove their two young children from the premises. (Later, it would even be cited among the grounds for the couple’s divorce.)

Outside pub hours, John and Stu were generally to be found at a little coffee bar in Slater Street, on the fringes of Chinatown, called the Jacaranda. At night, its basement became a club, attracting crowds from all the surrounding black and Asian quarters, with dancing to a West Indian steel band and liberal consumption of spiked soft drinks and the substance still known, if at all, as Indian hemp. “The Jac” was also a haunt of heavyweight local groups—Rory Storm and the Hurricanes, Kingsize Taylor and the Dominoes, Cass and Cassanovas, and others—who would meet there after their night’s gigs around town.

To John, these were almost godlike figures, with their carefully blow-waved hair, matching Italian suits, flashy guitars, and so-envi
able drummers. Each group pumped out its American rock-’n’-roll repertoire with Liverpudlian eccentricity and flamboyance. Ted “Kingsize” Taylor, a brawny apprentice butcher, kiss curled and plaid jacketed, combined the personae of Solomon Burke and the Big Bopper. “Cass,” aka Brian Casser, and his three sidemen wore shawl-collared tuxedos with Chicago gangster–style black shirts and white ties, and hung up their own special banner on the stage behind them. Most extrovert by far was blond, suntanned Rory Storm, aka Alan Caldwell, a mountaineer manqué who during his set would clamber up one side of the stage proscenium, not stopping until he clung precariously forty or more feet above his audience. Even so, he was not selfish with the limelight, granting his drummer Ringo Starr a special solo spot billed as Starr Time.

The star groups’ foot soldiers often proved more approachable than their commanders. At the Jacaranda, John struck up a friendship with the Cassanovas’ bass guitarist, nineteen-year-old John Gustafson, aka Johnny Gus. Generous about sharing bass-playing tips, Gustafson also became a willing accomplice to John’s love of exhibitionistic sick humor. “When we walked round town,” he remembers, “we’d pretend to be two old cripples, helping each other across the road.” One day he went back to the Gambier Terrace flat with John and Stu to hear John play the latest Lennon-McCartney composition, “The One After 909.”

Johnny Gus’s friendliness was counterpointed by the Cassanovas’ hard-man drummer, Johnny Hutch, who intimidated even members of his own group, and made no secret of regarding musicians who were also art students and grammar-school boys as “a bunch of posers.” “John was always terrified of Johnny Hutch,” Gustafson says. It didn’t stop him from going down to the Jacaranda’s basement when Cass and the Cassanovas were setting up, and asking to sit in with them on a couple of numbers. “He played “Ramrod,” the Duane Eddy instrumental,” Gustafson remembers. “And Ray Charles’s “Hallelujah, I Love Her So,” doing the guitar breaks as well as the vocal. We had to admire his nerve.”

The Jacaranda’s owner, Allan Williams, was one of the more colorful figures to be found around Liverpool 8. A stocky Welshman,
with curly hair and a piratical black beard, he had worked as a door-to-door salesman and artificial jewelry manufacturer before starting his coffee bar, with his Chinese wife, Beryl, on capital of just £100. At twenty-nine, Williams had no particular interest in teenage music, preferring the Welsh hymns and thirties ballads for whose dramatic tenor rendition he was famous in pubs from Canning Square to Upper Parliament Street. But, like many another small provincial entrepreneur, he was attracted by its increasingly powerful scent of easy money.

John was familiar to Allan Williams as leader of the “right crowd of layabouts” from art college who sat around the Jac, nursing the same frothy coffee or fivepenny (2p) portion of toast and jam for hour after hour of conversation about Kierkegaard or Chuck Berry. To begin with, however, his entrepreneurial eye focused on Stu Sutcliffe’s art rather than John’s music. Among Stu’s recent projects were a series of vivid abstract murals, designed and painted in partnership with Rod Murray, one of which now adorned the front window of Ye Cracke, another the interior of a Territorial Army hall in Norris Green. Williams commissioned the pair to do the same for the Jac’s street window and the walls of its basement club. For the latter, they created a garish voodoo-inspired design, then roped in John and another sometime flatmate, Rod Jones, to help them paint it.

Britain in 1960 had only one nationally known pop manager. This was Larry Parnes, a young Londoner, originally in the dress business, who had helped launch the nation’s first teenage idol, Tommy Steele. Since striking gold with Steele, Parnes had gone about the country seeking out handsome young men and turning them into rock singers under American-flavored pseudonyms that blended the cute with the suggestive: Marty Wilde, Vince Eager, Duffy Power, Dickie Pride. From among this so-called Larry Parnes Stable, the most successful was Billy Fury, who, as Ron Wycherly, had previously worked as a deckhand on a Liverpool tugboat—though, of course, that unglamorous fact was always played down by his publicists.

As well as manufacturing homegrown teen idols, Parnes was also the principal importer of American rock-’n’-roll stars to their ever-faithful British constituency. That first spring of the brand-new
decade, he brought over Gene Vincent and Eddie Cochran to costar with indigenous acts in a touring spectacular billed as the Fast-Moving Anglo-American Beat Show. Vincent in the flesh proved a disconcerting figure, weasely and emaciated, though still aged only twenty-five, with one leg in braces following a near-fatal motorcycle accident. Cochran looked much the same glossy young hunk who’d inspired Paul McCartney to sing “Twenty Flight Rock” but was secretly prey to the darkest fears and neuroses. He had been hit hard by the death of his close friend Buddy Holly a year earlier, and now believed himself fated to meet a similarly premature end.

The Fast Moving Anglo-American Beat Show came to the Liverpool Empire for a week in mid-March, playing to rapturous capacity audiences that included John, Cynthia, Paul McCartney—and Allan Williams. Paul would always remember the demented female shriek that went up as the curtains opened to reveal Eddie Cochran with his back turned, nonchalantly running a comb through his hair. John, however, was furious when the screaming drowned out Cochran’s virtuoso playing of his wafer-thin red guitar.

After the show, Williams sought out Larry Parnes and suggested how Liverpool’s evidently fathomless adoration of Gene Vincent and Eddie Cochran might be exploited still further. Williams’s grandiose idea was a joint promotion between Parnes and himself that would combine the American stars and other Parnes acts with the best of Merseyside’s own rock-’n’-roll talent. Parnes took the bait, agreeing to bring Vincent and Cochran back for a second appearance, supported by other nationally known groups like the Viscounts and Nero and the Gladiators, while Williams supplied local crowd-pullers like Rory Storm and the Hurricanes and Cass and the Cassanovas. The spectacular would be for one night only at the city’s boxing stadium, behind the Exchange railway station, on May 3.

Thanks to the combined rival attractions of Cynthia and Stu, Paul McCartney had recently felt himself taking “a bit of a back seat” with John. But the Easter vacation of 1960 brought a major rebonding between them. Packing up a few clothes and their guitars, the pair hitchhiked two hundred miles south to stay with Paul’s relatives Mike and Bett Robbins, who were now running a pub, the Fox
and Hounds, in Caversham, Berkshire. They spent a week helping out at the pub, sharing a bed in an upstairs room as innocently as children.

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