The Guardian (USA)

One Two Three Four: The Beatles in Time by Craig Brown – review

- Anthony Quinn

Fifty years since their dissolutio­n in April 1970 the Beatles live on. The band’s music, their significan­ce and their individual personalit­ies exert a hold on the cultural consciousn­ess that seems to tighten as their heyday recedes. But is there anything new to say? Craig Brown’sOne Two Three Four, the latest to enter the crowded library of Beatles books, is not a biography so much as a group portrait in vignettes, a rearrangem­ent of stories and legends whose trick is to make them gleam anew.

The subtitle, The Beatles in Time, marks out the book’s difference from the rest. Brown goes on Beatles jaunts around Liverpool and Hamburg, visits fan festivals, tests the strength of the industry that has agglomerat­ed around them. So many of the clubs where they played are now lost or changed beyond recognitio­n – “a memory of a memory” – and the fans who do the pilgrimage­s are simply chasing shadows.

Brown, the arch-satirist, is wry about the 1,000-plus Beatles tribute acts worldwide. At times, the slightly desperate nostalgia of Internatio­nal Beatle Week in Liverpool reminds him of his parents watching The Good Old Days in the 1970s, a collective delusion that the dead can be revived. But then he watches tribute band the Fab Four play She Loves You and he’s transporte­d. A double fantasy is at work – “for as long as they play, we are all 50 years younger, gazing in wonder at the

Beatles in their prime.”

The book is a social history as well as a musical one. Success came slowly at first, and then quickly, “as a landslide, flattening those ahead”. Cliff Richard, once the golden boy of British pop, sounds (even decades later) mightily miffed about the way the Beatles displaced him. Prime ministers were as susceptibl­e as teenagers: Harold Wilson sought an audience with them and later arranged their MBEs.

In the US, their appearance­s on TheEd Sullivan Show had a seismic effect: it seemed nobody could talk about anything else. Some responded in bemusement. Cassius Clay, after a jokey photo session with “the boys”, asked a reporter: “Who were those little sissies?” The actor Eleanor Bron recalls girls screaming “like starlings” as the Beatles landed at Heathrow – “a high sighing hopeless poignant sound, unrequitab­le”. You can almost feel the 1960s bloom from monochrome into colour as the band plays irresistib­ly on.

Brown is an able memoirist, with an instinct for selection that quite eludes the Beatles’ most exhaustive chronicler, Mark Lewisohn, whose basic principle is to include everything he knows. One Two Three Four hasn’t the authority or the insight of Ian MacDonald’s sacred Revolution in the Head, and lacking an index it isn’t as useful as Philip Norman’s 1981 biography Shout! But it does an intriguing sideline in characters who were tangential to the Beatles’ story – such as Richard and Margaret Asher, who welcomed Paul as one of the family into their Wimpole Street home when he was going out with their daughter, Jane. Or the drummer Jimmie Nicol, a Beatle-surrogate for 10 days when Ringo had tonsilitis and whose life thereafter fell through the cracks. Or the sad figure of Eric Clague, former police constable, who discovered by chance that the woman he had accidental­ly run down and killed years before was Julia Lennon, John’s mum.

This is the strange paradox of the Beatles. Listening to the sound that John, Paul, George and Ringo created still plugs us right into the “happiness and exhilarati­on” that their producer, the gentlemanl­y George Martin, talked of. Reading about them, conversely, is quite a melancholy experience, because the end seems always in sight.

It’s noticeable in this book how, once they are famous, they become prey to the most outrageous hangerson. This vulnerabil­ity is most evident in John, the prickliest of the four, and also the neediest. He was first seduced by Magic Alex, a Greek conman whom he appointed his guru and electronic­s expert. Then he and George fell under the spell of the Maharishi.

Finally, and fatefully, came Yoko Ono, who John initially assured his wife Cynthia was “crackers, just a weirdo artist who wants me to sponsor her”. Brown reserves a particular scorn for Yoko, not because she “broke up the Beatles” – that was inevitable – but because her narcissism egged Lennon on to painful extremes of silliness and selfimport­ance.

The saddest irony was that the Beatles once did have someone to take care of them. The Hamlet’s Ghost of this book is Brian Epstein, whose story Brown plots in reverse – from the eclipse of his lonely suicide to the brighteyed overtures as manager and impresario. It makes a poignant epilogue. Of course that story is nothing without the

Beatles’ talent, but here is the reminder of how Epstein discovered it, packaged it, and sold it. Had he not taken himself down the steps of the Cavern Club one lunchtime in November 1961, the world might never have heard of the Beatles. As Lennon once admitted: “Brian … made it all seem real. We were in a daydream ’til he came along … We stopped chomping at cheese rolls and jam butties onstage.”

•One Two Three Four: The Beatles in Timeby Craig Brownis published by Fourth Estate (£20). To order a copy go to guardianbo­okshop.com. Free UK p&p over £15

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 ??  ?? The Beatles at manager Brian Epstein’s home, 1967. Photograph: Apple Corps Ltd
The Beatles at manager Brian Epstein’s home, 1967. Photograph: Apple Corps Ltd
 ??  ?? The Beatles in Washington DC, 1964. Photograph: Copyright Apple Corps
The Beatles in Washington DC, 1964. Photograph: Copyright Apple Corps

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