Showing posts with label Mark Lewisohn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Lewisohn. Show all posts

Friday, February 24, 2023

Tune In: The Beatles – All These Years, Vol. 1 – Mark Lewisohn, 2013 ★★★★

Waiting for Ringo

The truly fab thing about this book is how close Mark Lewisohn makes you feel to the Beatles, not as a musical legacy or cultural institution, but human beings you get to know better than just about anyone you will ever meet.

Yet it keeps reminding me of that old maxim: never meet your heroes.

To put it plainly, these guys played rough pushing their way to “the toppermost of the poppermost.” Most people picking this book up will know the sad tale of Pete Best, but many others were used and discarded for much less cause. “The Beatles weren’t sentimental types,” Lewisohn writes, in his typically understated way.

Saturday, December 20, 2014

The Beatles: Recording Sessions – Mark Lewisohn, 1988 ★★★★★


Peeking Behind The Beatles' Curtain

It's natural to hesitate at seeing how something you loved was really made. Like that scene in The Wizard Of Oz when Toto pulls open the wizard's curtain, the result may be somewhat deflating.

So when Beatles fans like me got a chance to see what really went on when the Fab Four recorded their famous records, excitement came with more than a dollop of wariness.

It wasn't warranted.

Thursday, September 25, 2014

The Complete Beatles Chronicle – Mark Lewisohn, 1992 ★★★★

The Complete Beatles ChronicleFab Days

It took Mark Lewisohn 12 years to gather the research that informs this book, and it shows. If he doesn't capture every little thing that set the world at the Beatles' command, it's not from lack of trying.