Regina Leader-Post

Session drummer played drums on Beatles’ first hit Love Me Do

- HILLEL ITALIE

Andy White, a top session drummer in England during the 1960s who played on songs by Tom Jones and Herman’s Hermits among others and stepped in for newcomer Ringo Starr as the Beatles recorded their debut single Love Me Do, has died. He was 85.

White died Monday, Nov. 9, at his home in Caldwell, N.J. He had suffered a stroke several day earlier, his wife, Thea, said.

The Scottish-born White was already an experience­d musician when EMI official Ron Richards called in September 1962 and asked him to come to the Abbey Road studio in London and help with a session by a new band from Liverpool. That band — the Beatles —was working on the John Lennon-PaulMcCart­ney song Love Me Do and producer George Martin was unsatisfie­d with the work by Starr, who had recently replaced Pete Best.

Two versions of the song were released — one with White on drums and Starr on tambourine, and one with Starr on drums — and each have appeared numerous times over the decades. A simple, punchy ballad, Love Me Do was a top 20 hit in England in the fall of 1962 and made it to No. 1 in the U.S. two years later, at the height of Beatlemani­a. White also played drums on the song’s original B-side, P.S. I Love You, which featured Starr on maracas.

The session lasted just a few hours. White received a small fee and never played with the Beatles again. “He didn’t talk about it very much, except to joke about it,” Thea White said. “He liked to say: ‘It could have been anybody. It just happened to be me.’”

Born in Stranraer, Scotland, and raised in Glasgow, he was playing drums in a bagpipe band by age 12, an affinity he would retain to the end of his life. He moved to London in his early 20s and found work with the Vic Lewis Orchestra, touring in the U.S. with Bill Haley and the Comets and mastering the rock ’n’ roll style.

After his day with the Beatles, White continued to have a diverse and productive career, whether backing Jones on his hit It’s Not Unusual or touring with Marlene Dietrich and her musical director, Burt Bacharach. Steve Van Zandt of the E Street Band and The Sopranos fame recruited him as a consultant for the film Not Fade Away, a 2012 release about a ‘60s rock band in New Jersey.

White emigrated to the U.S. in the 1980s after marrying Thea Ruth, a voice-over artist. His survivors include four nieces and six nephews.

 ?? COURTESY WHITE FAMILY ?? Andy White, a top session drummer, stepped in for newcomer Ringo Starr as the Beatles recorded P.S. I Love You.
COURTESY WHITE FAMILY Andy White, a top session drummer, stepped in for newcomer Ringo Starr as the Beatles recorded P.S. I Love You.

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