The Chronicle

Book solves Beatles song riddle

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FOR The Beatles, 1963 was the breakthrou­gh year. Four quickfire UK hits in 12 months – the first peaking at number two, the other three hitting the top spot – kicked off their unstoppabl­e ascent to worldwide musical domination.

In a year of incessant touring around the provinces of the UK as the band built its reputation to increasing­ly hysterical audience reactions, some songs were written on the road. For years, it has been known that the early lightning rod of Beatlemani­a, She Loves You, was written in Newcastle.

The Fab Four performed four times in the city during 1963, twice at the City Hall, and twice at the smaller Majestic Ballroom (today it’s 02 Academy) on Westgate Road. It was after the June 26 show at the Majestic that The Beatles wrote She Loves You – a fact confirmed by Paul McCartney.

“We were in a van up in Newcastle. I’d planned an ‘answering song’ where a couple of us would sing ‘she loves you’ and the other ones would answer ‘yeah yeah’,” he recalled years later. “We decided that was a crummy idea, but at least we then had the idea of a song called She Loves You. So we sat in the hotel bedroom for a few hours and wrote it, John and I.”

But exactly which hotel the song was written in has been much-debated. Many claim it was the former Royal Turks Head Hotel on Grey Street; but others say it was at the Imperial Hotel (today it’s a Holiday Inn) in Jesmond.

The subject has finally been laid to rest in a newly-published book, The Beatles 1963: A Year In The Life, by Dafydd Rees. It’s the product of many year’s of work and research, including delving through archives of the Evening Chronicle, by the author. In his entry for Wednesday, June 26, he describes the band’s appearance at the Majestic.

There were two 20-minute sets and a frenzied crowd reaction which forced the musicians to take refuge inside the city’s former police station on Pilgrim Street. Rees also writes: “After checking into the Royal Turks Head Hotel ... John and Paul settled down in one of the rooms, sitting facing each other on twin beds and began to write She Loves You.” So there it is.

All of which has come as a bit of a disappoint­ment to Madeleine Warren, director of sales at the Holiday Inn, Jesmond. “I’ve been looking into this for six years since I started working here,” she says. “I reignited my search this year because next year will be the song’s 60th anniversar­y. We had plans for the anniversar­y – a tribute band, an Abbey Road set up outside the hotel, and renaming the bar with a Beatles theme. Then I got in touch with Daffyd Rees via his publishers and he graciously responded and very gently dampened my hopes.”

■The Beatles 1963: A Year In The Life, by Dafydd Rees, is published by Omnibus Press.

 ?? ?? The Royal Turks Head, Newcastle has a confirmed claim to fame
The Royal Turks Head, Newcastle has a confirmed claim to fame
 ?? ?? The Beatles hit big time back in 1963
The Beatles hit big time back in 1963

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