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Thursday, June 30, 2011

All Things Beatles

What better way to get to know and understad the Beatles than to spend a few days in Liverpool. Being in the area where the Beatles started let me see more into the Beatles and who they were. I think it made me appreciate and understand them so much more than I did before.

The Beatles Story museum was very interesting. It was interesting to hear some of the people who were a part of the Beatles lives tell bits and pieces about them and hear the personal stories behind them as well. Walking through the museum, looking at all the pictures and things, and listening to the audio tour I think really helped make the experience all the more fun and allowed me to get the most out of it. Seeing and hearing their story gave me a better understanding of who they were. For me I think their early years when they first started were their best years. They were just four guys in a band playing the music the loved. John's songs being more about him and more personal while people person Paul wrote about the people around him.When the Beatles started to do more 'buisnessy' things, and especailly when Brian Epstien died, a lot changed for the Beatles. To me it seemed like they started trying to do too much at one time.

The Magical Mystery bus tour was a lot of fun. It was sort of surreal to drive around and see the places that the Beatles saw every day growing up. I thought it was a lot of fun driving down Penny Lane, while listening to Penny Lane, and seeing the inspiration for the song and what the song was about. I also liked that we got to see the gate to Strawberry Fields. I wish we could have actually gone into Strawberry Fields to see the place that John wrote about and seen the place that inspired the song. Being by the gate was powerful in itself but to have actually been in the fields would have made for another surreal moment.

The Cavern Club was tons of fun! I actually thought that The Beatles Story Museum did a very good job when they replicated it. Being at the Cavern was another one of those surreal moments. For me it's amazing to think that I was in the same place as the Beatles when they first got their start. When I was there there was a guy, Tim Shaw, playing all Beatles songs and playing them very well. There was actually a very good crowd there that night listening to him play; I can't even imagine what it was like when the Beatles were there. There were pictures there of the Beatles when they played there and I thought that was really cool to see it was sort of like proof that, yeah, this really is where they got their start. It's interesting to think how the Beatles started playing in the small, little Cavern Club (most likely packed wall to wall with people) and moved up to playing in big time, sold out arenas. I think the Cavern was very much a part of who they were as a band and I think they kept that with them even when they got big.

Probably my favorite part of the trip was being one of the lucky few who got the chance to go inside the childhood homes of John and Paul. It was the most surreal moment of the trip. I was speachless walking through their homes. Neither home was what I was expected it would be they were better. Hearing the stroy about how Aunt Mimi would have college studets stay in and pay rent to make ends meet made it seem so real. When we think about the Beatles, or any famous person for that matter, we don't really think about them dealing with issues, like money, that the rest of us do. It's like we forget that they had a life like ours before they got big, we just don't think about it. Being in John's home and hearing Aunt Mimi's story brings a whole new perspective on things for me. Back to John's house... I have to say if i lived in John's house I would have John's room. It was small but cozy at the same time and easy to see how creativity would flow looking through the window to the street. There were a few sketches and drawings that John did when he was little that I thought were hilarious. I think seeing these sort of showed the real John and who he was. As a Beatle I think his writing was sort of the same as when he was a child but it was more advanced writing.
Next was Paul's house. I loved being at Paul's house. I loved all the pictures hanging on the wall that his brother took of Paul and John playing and practicing their songs in the living room. I'm still in awe that I was in the places where a lot of the Beatles songs were born and where the two grew up. My favorite story from Paul's house was the story that he and his brother would have to go to the back and climb the drain pipe to climb through the window when their dad would lock them out because they were late for dinner. My favorite picture was of Paul climbing up the drain pipe. For me this made Paul seem more real and in a noncreepy way made me feel more connected to Paul because I have had to crawl through my window I don't know how many times. It's the little stories and things like that that remind me that they were like me before they got big. I loved hearing the little stories like that and getting the chance to see their homes. It was an amazing experience and feeling I will always remember.

All in all I would say Liverpool was an eye opening, learning experience that gave me a whole new perspective on life, the Beatles and their lives.  

3 comments:

  1. I enjoyed reading your thoughts on Liverpool, Karly! I truly believe that going to Liverpool made the whole group appreciate the Beatles even more than before. We had the opportunity to see what the Beatles were inspired by and how they grew up on the Merseyside. I am so grateful that we were a part of the group that was allowed to see inside John and Paul’s childhood homes. Seeing and physically being on Penny Lane, standing next to the Strawberry Field gate, and listening to live music in the Cavern Club was so surreal. It’s still hard for me to believe that I was actually there! If I would change anything about your blog it would be to add a little more detail on what you saw throughout The Beatles museum. Maybe give some specifics on what you saw and/or liked the most about the exhibit. :)

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  2. I too, loved that Penny Lane was playing as we drove down the street. I remember the video I took as the song was playing, we were singing along, sitting in the back of the bus. You said after Brian Epstein died, the Beatles were trying to do too much. What exactly do you mean? Do you think they were unable to properly conduct business? In this case, would it have been mostly due their emotional state of mind, or were drugs a factor?

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  3. I would have to agree with Karly on the fact that being in Liverpool was a surreal experience. It was amazing to travel to all of the different famous Beatles land marks and to see where each member of the band grew up. It definitely brought the reality back to me that these four men did have lives outside of the band.

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