Regina Leader-Post

WHEN BEST ISN’T ENOUGH

Sacked Beatle says he’s glad he never became a ‘show-business commodity’

- JAMES HALL

Pete Best leads me through a doorway under the stairs of his family ’s former home in the West Derby suburb of Liverpool, England. We descend a narrow staircase and arrive at a series of dark vaults. Beatles posters cover the walls. In one corner, the word “John” is crudely carved into the wooden panelling. A stretch of ceiling is painted in multicolou­red strips, the handiwork of a teenage Paul McCartney.

This is the Casbah Coffee Club, a club opened by Best’s mother, Mona, in 1959. And before the Cavern, the Casbah was The Beatles’ home. “We ran riot here,” says Best of that period, when lineups would form down the road. “The foresight my mum had for the Liverpool music scene was incredible.”

As the one-time Beatles drummer, Best performed with the band 76 times at the Casbah. However, in August 1962 — just weeks before Love Me Do kick-started the band’s journey to megastardo­m — McCartney, John Lennon and George Harrison sent manager Brian Epstein to tell Best they wanted to replace him with Ringo Starr. Not for nothing is the 76-year-old grandfathe­r dubbed the unluckiest man in music.

Best joined another group, but events obviously affected him. He attempted suicide in the mid-’60s and gave up show business in 1968, going on to work in a bakery and then at an employment exchange as a civil servant. He married, had children and in the late ’80s, started playing again — Merseybeat songs, original material and even the occasional Beatles number — as the leader of The Pete Best Band.

But it’s clear some rawness from that fateful day in 1962 still lingers. He doesn’t know who made the decision, and it still rankles Best that the band members didn’t sack him themselves, face to face.

“I’m not saying I’d change the outcome, but at least give me the decency of being there and (letting me) confront them,” he says. After the firing, Lennon admitted they ’d been cowards. Does Best think McCartney owes him an apology? “Ask him.”

He hasn’t spoken to McCartney (or Starr) since his sacking.

“Paul has always hinted that he’d like to meet up. The door’s always been wide open. I’m not the guilty person, you know? Whether he wants to do it on a public basis or a private one, it’s his call. We’re senior statesmen now. How many years we’ve got left on the planet is really predictabl­e. Let’s talk about things in general. Stick a bottle of Scotch on the table and let’s have a good old bash.”

Best was born in Chennai, India, in 1941, returning to England with his family in 1945. Back in Liverpool, his father, Johnny, ran the family boxing promotion business while Mona, the free-spirited daughter of an Irish major in the Bengal Lancers, launched her club. The Quarrymen, an early incarnatio­n of The Beatles, played the opening night. But after a fallout over money, the band disappeare­d to Scotland. Meanwhile, Best’s own band, The Blackjacks, took off. When The Silver Beatles, as they ’d become, returned and were offered a residency in Hamburg (with additional member Stuart Sutcliffe), they needed a drummer. Best was recruited. In August 1960 they went to Germany.

Everything about Hamburg was “a culture shock” Best says, from the journey over — 10 people were crammed into an Austin J2 van — to playing for seven hours a night, to the red-light district where they were based. They were giddy teens surrounded by neon lights, clubs and a 24-hour city. “We’d never seen anything like it,” Best says.

They improved hugely as a band, stretching out R&B standards for 30 minutes. Other band members took slimming pills called Preludin to stay awake during their mammoth sets, but not Best.

Life was one long teenage escapade. Best recalls how he, Lennon and McCartney were in the same bedroom as Harrison the night he lost his virginity. “At the end, we all stood up and applauded.”

Back in England in 1962, record labels circled. Decca famously turned down The Beatles. It was when the band recorded for EMI that Best was sacked. “Unbeknowns­t to me, they ’d approached Ringo,” he says. After a gig one night in August, Epstein asked to see Best the following morning. Best expected a normal business meeting, but Epstein was jittery. “He said, ‘Pete, I don’t know how to tell you this. The boys want you out’ — those were the words — ‘and it’s already been arranged.’ That was another key word: arranged. Ringo joined the band on Saturday.

“It was a closed shop. I asked why and he said, ‘Because they think he’s a better drummer.’ The bomb was dropped.”

Conspiracy theories abound about why he was sacked: Paul was jealous of his looks (Best kept his Tony Curtis quiff while the others got “Beatles haircuts”); he was aloof in Hamburg; they did drugs and he didn’t.

Although he thinks about what could have been, Best says he wouldn’t change his life for “all the tea in China.”

He’s glad he’s not a “show-business commodity.” Besides, as an original Beatle, he’ll always have his place in rock history. “Yes, they are the most famous musicians in the world. And regardless of what happened, I played a key part in that.”

 ?? CRIS BOURONCLE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Pete Best’s mom, Mona, owned the Casbah Coffee Club in Liverpool, England, where The Beatles got their start. Best, seen in 2013, was dumped as the group’s drummer in 1962.
CRIS BOURONCLE/GETTY IMAGES Pete Best’s mom, Mona, owned the Casbah Coffee Club in Liverpool, England, where The Beatles got their start. Best, seen in 2013, was dumped as the group’s drummer in 1962.
 ??  ?? Drummer Pete Best was with The Beatles pre-fame and pre-Ringo. Best was unceremoni­ously dumped from the band mere weeks before its members skyrockete­d to fame and fortune.
Drummer Pete Best was with The Beatles pre-fame and pre-Ringo. Best was unceremoni­ously dumped from the band mere weeks before its members skyrockete­d to fame and fortune.

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