I Met the Walrus
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About this ebook
Imagine you're the world's biggest Beatles fan and you've just snuck into John Lennon's hotel room. But instead of being thrown out, inexplicably you're invited to spend the day with your idol. That's exactly what happened to fourteen-year-old Jerry Levitan in 1969. After hearing John was in Toronto for a "bed in," Jerry tracked him down at the King Edward Hotel and convinced the world's biggest rock star to sit down for an exclusive forty-minute interview. John talked candidly about war, politics, the scandalous Two Virgins album, and the supposed subliminal messages in his music.
Now, forty years later, it's all here: Jerry's once-in-a-lifetime adventure, illustrated by acclaimed artist James Braithwaite and featuring never before seen photographs of John and Yoko. Also included in the book is Jerry's memorabilia from that day—notes from John and Yoko, the secret code to contact him, drawings, John's doodles, and much more. Complete with an audio and video DVD of the interview that inspired the Academy Award-nominated film of the same name, I Met the Walrus is an immortalized one-on-one moment with John—a must-have for Lennon fans around the world, as well as anyone who has ever dreamed of meeting a hero.
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Book preview
I Met the Walrus - Jerry Levitan
1
MEET THE BEATLES
I was nine years old when the Beatles first performed on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1964. It was February 9, and like millions of other families in those days, we sat around the TV each Sunday night at 8:00 P.M. to be entertained by that awkward yet strangely captivating impresario. That night there was a special buzz to his show. He was to showcase his latest find, four lads from Liverpool, England, who were taking their country and the music world by storm. The Beatles were something special. Girls screamed and fainted at the sight of them. Their mop-top haircuts made them controversial and gave them a slight edge of mystery and danger. Everyone anticipated their appearance for different reasons. I was practically vibrating from all the excitement.
Sullivan came on the black-and-white TV and in his distinct speaking manner said, This city never has witnessed the excitement stirred by these youngsters from Liverpool who call themselves the Beatles. Ladies and Gentlemen…the Beatles!
With that announcement, my family and a nation were mesmerized as they opened the show with All My Loving,
accompanied by high-pitched, never-ending screams from teenage girls. John, Paul, George, and Ringo were confident and cute as they performed four other songs (Till There Was You,
She Loves You,
I Saw Her Standing There,
and I Want to Hold Your Hand
) between the other acts, including a magician performing a card and saltshaker trick, an impressionist, and a comedy acrobatic troupe. The Beatles took my breath away. I had officially witnessed my first great spectacle.
Ringo kept the happy beat on an elevated stage looking down on his mates on a set that had huge arrows pointing at them. Paul played his distinctive, violin-shaped left-handed bass; George was on lead guitar. But John—standing in that quintessential Lennon style, defiant, guitar high up against his chest, legs apart—was clearly the band’s leader. They bounced to the beat, well dressed in black suits, thin black ties, and pointed Beatle boots. And, relative to most other people at the time, longish wavy hair. This was a new kind of rock and roll star. The camera would cut away to shots of young girls in various fits of ecstasy and insanity, and a smattering of boys, who were in rapt, yet reserved attention. At one point their first names were flashed on the screen under their faces: Paul,
George,
Ringo,
John: Sorry girls, he’s married.
The cultural phenomenon that was the Beatles was well underway that night as a history-making seventy-three million North Americans tuned in to see what the fuss was all about.
Something happened to me when I saw the Beatles for the first time. Before then my heroes had been comic book characters like Superman and Batman. But the Beatles were something better. They were superheroes with instruments and great musical powers. They were instantly familiar to me and I trusted them immediately. I had found new heroes to worship.
It couldn’t have been a better time for the country to meet the Beatles. Just three months before their introduction to North America, the world was jolted by the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Kennedy represented hope and a new beginning for the baby boom generation.
When JFK died so violently it shocked the world. Canada was no exception. I remember sitting in my classroom in school when an emergency announcement came on from the principal that President Kennedy had been shot and school was cancelled. I left class that day and watched teachers and random people on the street weeping for themselves and the fate of the world. I came home to my devastated mother and aunt. It was as though the world had come to an end. For the burgeoning television generation that I was part of, the coverage of Kennedy’s assassination and its aftermath was overwhelming. That heavy cloud was the backdrop to Ed Sullivan’s gift to North America that February night. It has been said so many times before, but the Beatles really were what the Western world was waiting for. Everyone, particularly my generation, needed a reason to believe that the world was a good place, that our lives had meaning, and that our future held promise.
Exposure to pop culture was limited in the early ’60s. There was no MTV or VH1—only television variety shows, movies, radio, and print. That meant that if you wanted to know what was happening in the music scene you had to listen to your favorite pop radio station, catch the hottest TV show, and speak to your friends to keep up. My brother, Steve, and sister, Myrna, were older and more in tune with what was happening and I went along for the ride. They had the turntable and the records. I had the comics.
Before the Beatles, the pop charts were filled with bouncy pop tunes like crooner Steve Lawrence’s Go Away Little Girl,
the Four Seasons’ Walk Like a Man,
He’s So Fine
by the Chiffons, and Blue Velvet
by Bobby Vinton. These were sweet, nonthreatening songs that the whole family could love. One-hit wonders sung by finely groomed white teenagers filled the airwaves. It was a far cry from the hip-shaking, lip-snarling Jailhouse Rock
of Elvis Presley just a few years before.
Elvis had been drafted into the army in 1958, sent to Germany, and rock and roll had taken a turn for the worse. During his absence the charts were littered with fluff like Venus,
Alley-Oop,
The Chipmunk Song,
and Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polkadot Bikini.
When Elvis and his particularly deviant
music left the scene, the moguls of the recording industry—with some prodding from parent groups and congressmen—encouraged a cleaner, whiter diet of all-American pop.
Some musical gems managed to sneak through, however, and many of these reached the Beatles when the Atlantic ships docked in the port of Liverpool bringing goods from America, including records like Kansas City,
Will You Love Me Tomorrow,
Mack the Knife,
Hit the Road Jack,
and Please Mr. Postman.
It was these songs plus those by Buddy Holly, Chuck Berry, Little Richard, and of course, pre-Army Elvis that had the greatest influence on the Beatles.
The day Elvis was inducted into the Army, March 24, 1958, John Lennon was seventeen years old and Paul McCartney just fifteen. The world’s greatest songwriting team had met less than a year earlier, on July 6, 1957. That day, Paul McCartney impressed John with his ability to sing all the lyrics to Eddie Cochrane’s Twenty Flight Rock.
Within a day, he was invited to join Lennon’s group, then called the Quarrymen after John’s high school, Quarry Bank. Within weeks, Paul’s younger mate George Harrison came on board. A few years later, the ill-fated Pete Best was dumped to make room for Ringo Starr, and the Fab Four as we know it was created. Within five years they would be on the cusp of history-making stardom with the release of Love Me Do
in the UK on October 5, 1962.
Right around the Sullivan broadcast I remember working on a school project on the Guttenberg Bible one Sunday with a classmate at his place. We were teamed up and I was fixated on cutting and pasting text and photos onto the bristle board. He was busy spinning records, one in particular, Meet the Beatles. He played it over and over again. At first he was annoying me because I was doing all the work. But the distraction slowly became fascinating. Listen to this one,
he would say. Paul sings lead.
That’s John on the harmonica.
Increasingly my attention was drawn away from what I was doing and I was standing side by side with him at the hi-fi in his parents’ recreation room watching the record spin and examining the album.
Most of the songs were familiar to me. You had to have been on the moon not to have heard I Want to Hold Your Hand,
I Saw Her Standing There,
or All My Loving.
The less-played songs were visions into the group’s future. George’s Don’t Bother Me
with the bongo beat. The minor chord in Not a Second Time.
The affectations had already become pop legend: Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The harmonica. Inventive harmonies. Ringo shaking his head and all those crazy rings. Examining that album and listening to the songs over and over while we neglected our project was like going through a portal to a new dimension.
Meet the Beatles was released on January 20, 1964. The release of the singles Please Please Me,
From Me to You,
She Loves You,
and I Want to Hold Your Hand
was already causing sensations everywhere with their distinctive, joyous sound. The harmonies and hooks were different and enticing. The Dave Clark Five, Freddie and the Dreamers, Gerry and the Pacemakers, Herman’s Hermits, the Animals, and the Rolling Stones would all travel the intercontinental road to America paved by the Beatles. North America’s appetite for a new style of pop and rock had become insatiable.
By 1964 the charts were being filled with a different range of music than the safe and clean tunes of just a year before. I Get Around
by the Beach Boys, Pretty Woman
by Roy Orbison, and albums by Bob Dylan, Dusty Springfield, the Yardbirds, and the Rolling Stones broadened the range of music for young people and the possibilities for change. These songs left the increasingly banal and novel songs of the early ’60s in the dust and the Beatles were leading the way, even writing chart toppers for other bands (the Stones’ first big hit, I Wanna Be Your Man,
was a Lennon/McCartney original).
It didn’t take long for the Beatles to infiltrate the pop lexicon. There were numerous references to them in situation comedies and films and parodies on variety shows. Comics would wear wigs and mimic the Liverpudlian accent. They would sing badly and goof around. Peter Sellers recorded She Loves You
(inspired by Dr. Strangelove) reciting the lyrics in a German accent. That is how the establishment saw them—fun loving, harmless, and cute. But kids at the time knew differently. They understood that the Beatles were leading the vanguard of a new era of music and pop