South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

For casual Beatles fans, tidbits are fab

Hardcore followers will learn little

- By Sibbie O’Sullivan

Peter Asher is more than qualified to take us on a journey through the Beatles’ many songs and adventures. He’s a longtime friend of the band and in the late ’60s was a producer for the Beatles’ Apple label, signing such talents as James Taylor. He’s been producing stars ever since and recently hosted SiriusXM’s radio show about the Fab Four, “From Me to You.” Though hardcore Beatles fans won’t find much that’s terribly surprising about the band in Asher’s new book, “The Beatles from A to Zed,” the writer and producer excels at excavating details and connection­s that sparkle and entertain.

Adopting Asher’s alphabetic­al format, here are some delightful — and less-than-delightful — takeaways from Asher’s book. (Space limitation­s kept me from including the full alphabet.)

A: A is for Abbey Road Studios. It was originally known as EMI Recording Studios and was inaugurate­d by Sir Edward Elgar, England’s famous classical composer who wrote that school graduation grind, “Pomp and Circumstan­ce.” A is also for allusions. In James Taylor’s song “Carolina in My Mind, he mentions “the holy host of others standing around me.” That “holy host,” Asher reveals, is the Beatles. The title of Paul McCartney’s song “Queenie Eye” alludes to a Liverpool street game, but Asher, a well-off Londoner, has never heard of it.

Asher mentions the Beatles as a group and as solo artists, though by my

‘The Beatles from A to Zed’

By Peter Asher, Holt, 272 pages, $27 count he seems to favor Paul. Perhaps this is because Paul dated Asher’s sister Jane and for a time lived in the Asher home. There, Paul often regaled the family with one of the many Beatles songs that begins with A, “And I Love Her.”

C: C is for covers. There are numerous covers of Beatles songs, well-known ones like Stevie Wonder’s “We Can Work It Out.” But did you know that Rufus Wainwright and Eddie Izzard covered John’s “Across the Universe,” or that the Count Basie Orchestra covered “All My Loving” and Shirley Horn sang a version of “Yesterday”? That’s versatilit­y for you. Asher alerts us that Bobby Rydell, a pompadoure­d teen idol known for such hits as “Wild One,” covered Asher’s own hit, “A World Without Love.” I don’t need to tell you which version is better, do I?

G: G is for guitars. Asher

Producer and longtime Beatles pal Peter Asher has written “The Beatles From A to Zed.”

loves the instrument, especially the 12-string. Guitars, of course, are made of wood, but different wood creates different sounds. To demonstrat­e, Asher suggests listening to Paul’s “Blackbird,” played on a Martin D-28, and then “Yesterday,” played on an Epiphone Texan.

H: H is for Hobbits, something the Beatles considered playing in a film that was, thankfully, never

made, and also for harpsichor­d (which George Martin played in “Fixing a Hole”), an instrument that has only one volume level no matter how hard or soft its keys are pressed. But H is also for “huh?” — as when Asher asserts that John “really makes ( ‘Baby’s in Black’) rock.” The song is in waltz time. Could Asher have meant “sway”?

R: R is for redundancy. Evidently, both John and

George Harrison wrote songs with nearly the same title: “Out the Blue” (John’s ballad about Yoko) and “Out of the Blue” (George’s long instrument­al jam that lasts “the right amount of time to make a martini or whatever you fancy as you listen to it”).

S: S is for style, which is important in any book. Sometimes, Asher’s is offputting. Too many of his statements begin with

“maybe” or caveats that he is just “guessing” about something. Sure, Asher is not a Beatles scholar and his book is a casual recollecti­on of his time with the band, but why must he use this twee self-deprecatin­g tone when we know he knows what he’s talking about?

T: T is for titles. Asher delights in sourcing numerous titles of Beatles songs and albums, both group and solo efforts. The title “Eight Days a Week,” for example (a song John never liked much, Asher confirms), has long been linked to Ringo Starr, but Asher says it may “have come through an overworked chauffeur to whom John was talking to who said that he had been working too hard.” Ideally, Asher could verify this tale. Instead, he frustratin­gly shrugs his shoulders: “Who knows?”

W: W is for who cares, which is quite different from who knows. Each reader will decide which of Asher’s revelation­s belongs in which category. In the meantime, I’m still ruminating over Asher’s comment about the mysterious fire in “Norwegian Wood.” Everyone seems to insert themselves into that song’s provenance. Paul remembers that Asher’s room was “done out in wood,” but Asher writes, “I am certainly very proud if I or my room even made a contributi­on (to the song), but I cannot honestly remember ever doing out my room in wood.” To suggest that Asher try to dishonestl­y remember would be unladylike, so I’ll let the letter “x,” as in be the last word.

exit, Sibbie O’Sullivan’s book of essays about John Lennon is forthcomin­g.

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PETER ASHER
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