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Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park

Тема: Битлз - концерты

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Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:19:32
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65 Aug 20 3:00 pm & 8:00 pm (Chicago, White Sox Park)65 Aug 20 3:00 pm & 8:00 pm (Chicago, White Sox Park)

Список песен предыдущего концерта в Хьюстоне:

Twist And Shout (1:21) /2x:TEX,LIV:SA,8pm:SAM,LIV:AD/
She's A Woman (2:49) /2x:TEX,LIV:SA,8pm:SAM,LIV:AD/
I Feel Fine (2:10) /2x:TEX,LIV:SA,8pm:SAM,LIV:AD/
Dizzy Miss Lizzy (3:02) /2x:TEX,LIV:SA,8pm:SAM,LIV:AD/
Ticket To Ride (2:18) /2x:TEX,LIV:SA,8pm:SAM,LIV:AD/
Everybody's Trying To Be My Baby (2:22) /2x:TEX,LIV:SA,8pm:SAM,LIV:AD/
Can't Buy Me Love (2:08) /2x:TEX,LIV:SA,8pm:SAM,LIV:AD/
Baby's In Black (2:21) /2x:TEX,LIV:SA,8pm:SAM,LIV:AD/
I Wanna Be Your Man (2:10) /2x:TEX,LIV:SA,8pm:SAM,LIV:AD/
A Hard Day's Night (2:31) /2x:TEX,LIV:SA,8pm:SAM,LIV:AD/
Help! (2:20) /2x:TEX,LIV:SA,8pm:SAM,LIV:AD/
I'm Down (2:14) /2x:TEX,LIV:SA,8pm:SAM,LIV:AD/


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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:23:33   
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Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park1.
Отстой!  
Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:24:28   
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Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park2.
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:25:02   
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значок не тот
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:26:48   
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Интервью Джорджа Харрисона:


George Harrison Interview
Chicago, Illinois
August 20, 1965

ABOUT THIS INTERVIEW:

This brief but intriguing chat with George Harrison was conducted immediately following the Beatles performance at Chicago's White Sox Park during their 1965 American tour.



Q: "We have with us George Harrison in the basement of Comiskey Park in Chicago. George, at the taping last week of your show, I was concerned about whether you would do one song-- 'Help!' and you did it. And the quality of the song in-person, in contrast to the recording, was just so fantastic. I just couldn't believe it. Did the Beatles have problems perfecting a stage sound?"

GEORGE: "No. We've never had much trouble, because right from the beginning when we started recording we used to just record in one take, you know. Things like 'Twist And Shout,' and 'I Saw Her Standing There,' which are all on our first album in England-- we just turned the recorder on, we got a sound balance in the studio, just put the tape on, and did it like that. So we never did any of this overdubbing or adding orchestras or anything like that. And only recently where we've been using a bit of overdub stuff, we've added things like tambourine which you don't notice. You know, because we still like to think we can get basically the same sound on stage."

Q: "You have, in actuality, two personalities-- You're a Beatle, this is your job, your profession. You're also George Harrison, the guy who at first was not a Beatle, and has a family and everything else. Which life do you prefer best?"

GEORGE: "Well, now the two personalties have sort of merged into one. I definitely couldn't go back to, you know, the thing that was going before Beatles. You know, it's just become me. This is my life. If I was taken away from records and guitars and crowds and everything... But my personality, I think, has broadened since we became famous because you can't be inferior in our position. You know, you've got to meet people, you've got to talk, and you've got to be what they expect you to be. So naturally you come out of a shell. That's one thing I think-- Ringo-- it's more obvious with him than with me, say. Because he was very introvert when he joined us, but now he's as extrovert as all of us."

Q: "This is the last question, because this is right after the show and I don't want to keep you long."

GEORGE: "Actually, I don't mind all you fellas because you get... with being on the plane and seeing you every day, it feels as though you're sort of part of the group, rather than on the other side, you know."

Q: "Do you have any individual plans for further songwriting in the future?"

GEORGE: "Umm... Well, I'm still trying to churn out a couple. You know, my main problem is trying to write lyrics. And I don't think it's worth writing songs and getting somebody else to do the lyrics, you know, because there's no point-- You don't feel as though you've done it, really. So I've written a few more songs I've got taped at home, but I don't... If I get something going then I'll tape it, and I'll leave it for about five weeks and I'll suddenly remember. And then I'll add a bit more to it. And so probably it will take me about three months before I've really finished one song. I'm so lazy, you know, it's ridiculous. But I'd like to write more."

Q: "George, thanks alot for talking with us, and I hope you have a great vacation out in Hollywood."

GEORGE: "Oh, thank you."
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:27:39   
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George, Paul, John, & Ringo with entourage between shows in the locker room at Chicago’s Comiskey Park during 1965 tour. (Larry is second from right, back row.)George, Paul, John, & Ringo with entourage between shows in the locker room at Chicago’s Comiskey Park during 1965 tour. (Larry is second from right, back row.)
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:30:16   
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Fri. 8/20/65 INTERVIEW RECORDING: Interview taping and filming upon arrival in Chicago. UNK location Aired UNK Unreleased
UNRECORDED: The Beatles perform an afternoon and evening performance at the Comisky Park or White Sox Coliseum in Chicago, Illinois.
FILMING: Silent color "home movies" filmed of the Chicago concert at Comisky Park by Minnesota's WDGY radio DJ, Bill Diehl. Aired 11/21/95 Released 1995
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:32:15   
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Beatles at Comiskey Park, first show, August, 1965Beatles at Comiskey Park, first show, August, 1965
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:36:43   
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The Beatles at Comiskey Park, Chicago, August 20, 1965The Beatles at Comiskey Park, Chicago, August 20, 1965

Фото: Robert Whitaker
Hulton Archive

http://www.getback.com/gallery/the-beatles-live-/2982141/11
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:38:27   
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John Lennon of the Beatles during a concert at Comiskey Park, Chicago, during the group's second U.S. tour, August 20, 1965John Lennon of the Beatles during a concert at Comiskey Park, Chicago, during the group's second U.S. tour, August 20, 1965
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:39:50   
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Paul McCartney on stage during a Beatles concert at Comiskey Park, Chicago, August 20, 1965Paul McCartney on stage during a Beatles concert at Comiskey Park, Chicago, August 20, 1965
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:40:47   
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Paul McCartney and George Harrison on stage during a Beatles concert at Comiskey Park, Chicago, August 20, 1965Paul McCartney and George Harrison on stage during a Beatles concert at Comiskey Park, Chicago, August 20, 1965
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:42:46   
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The Beatles rehearsing for a performance at Comiskey Park, Chicago, August 20, 1965The Beatles rehearsing for a performance at Comiskey Park, Chicago, August 20, 1965
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:43:29   
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John Lennon on stage during a Beatles concert at Comiskey Park, Chicago, August 20, 1965John Lennon on stage during a Beatles concert at Comiskey Park, Chicago, August 20, 1965
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:46:31   
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ABOUT THIS INTERVIEW:
This intriguing chat between Larry Kane and each of the Beatles was conducted immediately following the Beatles performance at Chicago's Comisky Park, also known as White Sox Park, during their 1965 American tour. Kane was the only American reporter allowed to travel with the Beatles during their 1964 North American tour, and also accompanied them on their 1965 tour.

Larry Kane has authored the insightful books, 'Lennon Revealed' (2005) and 'Ticket To Ride' (2003) documenting his conversations with the group and also his first-hand accounts of behind-the-scenes events as they happened.

- Jay Spangler, Beatles Ultimate Experience

Q: "With me I have John Lennon in the basement of Comiskey Park in Chicago."

JOHN: "That's right, baby."

Q: "What'd you say?"

JOHN: "I said 'Dat's right, baby.'"

Q: "John, last year, most of the concerts were indoors, and this year a majority of them have been outdoors. Which do you like better?"

JOHN: "I don't care, you know. As long as it's not raining, I don't mind where it is."

Q: "You guys today were as loose as I've ever seen you. I mean, just as relaxed. Is there any particular reason for this, or did it just come naturally?"

JOHN: "When you're playing just after you've got up in the morning, we tend to be hysterical in the morning. Either very grumpy or hysterical, you know. So we were just sort of - still really half asleep, you know."

Q: "I also noticed that you were looking around at the stands behind you. Do you think this is a bad psychological factor, the empty stands... even though they didn't sell that portion."

JOHN: "Yeah, it does put you off a bit, you know. Even though they keep saying, we don't allow them to sit there. I dunno, I wish they'd hide it. Whereas there's also kids always half behind, you know. And I'm really looking 'round so they get to see something, anyway."

Q: "If you had the chance, which role do you like better... and there are basically two roles in your life - Your job as a Beatle, and your role at home, as John Lennon the guy from Liverpool. Now which do you like better?"

JOHN: "Uhh..."

Q: "It's a tough question to ask, I know."

JOHN: "They're so intermingled, you know. I'm no different, you see. I don't look upon it as two different jobs. I change a bit when I leave home 'cuz I've got to smile more, or something. I dunno."

Q: "We all do."

JOHN: "But I could only stand being 'John Lennon at home' for so long. And I can only stand being 'John Lennon - Beatle out on tour' for so long. So either one... there's no preference. I couldn't stand living without one or the other."

Q: "Has your wife ever seen one of your concerts?"

JOHN: "Yeah, she used to see a lot of them. She hasn't seen us for quite a bit, though. She enjoys 'em, but it's so... She gets to see us when we stay somewhere in England and do a show."

Q: "Do you ever get any critiques from her on them?"

JOHN: "Oh yeah. Well, she used to come 'round with us a lot and say, 'You were lousy tonight,' you know. 'You're pulling those faces' ...she doesn't like me fooling around. Clowning, you know. She says 'Why are you always pulling them stupid faces?' On TV, you know, I usually pull some kind of face. She doesn't like that. She wants me to be straight, you know."

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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:48:14   
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Q: "Paul McCartney. How are you, Paul?"

PAUL: "Fine."

Q: "I noticed a question before about your relationship with your family. When you first started with The Beatles, and you first started in this type of entertainment, was there any opposition from your family?"

PAUL: "Yes, because my dad originally thought, naturally you know, it was the obvious thing to think... He just said 'Well, you're never gonna make any money being in a group. And you may be enjoying yourself, but you've still got to have some money to help you live,' you know. So he said, 'Get a job and do it in your spare time.' But because we were playing lunchtime sessions and things, I did get a job. But because we were playing lunchtime sessions, I couldn't stick to it. I had to keep running away every afternoon to play a lunchtime session. So I gave it up. And luckily we made it, you know. And so now he's very thankful I didn't take his advice."

Q: As an Englishman and as a Briton... Before you came over to this country, did you have any things in your mind about this country that were proved false later?"

PAUL: "Yeah. I had lots of things in my mind. My main thing was - I thought all Americans were like American tourists. And I'm sure, say, people in France must think that of... or Spain must think that of Britons too. Something happens to a person when they go on tour - when they become a tourist. And those are the only Americans I'd ever seen. You know, if you sort of go to a place, you see lots of tourists and it doesn't matter what nationality they are, they're all a bit crummy... going 'round flashing everywhere. The typical tourist kind of thing."

Q: "I hope you won't take this wrong. Before I went on the tour last year with you guys, I had the 'impression' of a British person as a rather sticky person."

PAUL: "Well this is the whole thing. Our impression over in England generally about Americans, before we came here, was of the big sort of Stetson hat... They're a Texan, really. That was the whole image. Texan, and big colored tie and oil wells everywhere. And cameras and clicking, and you know... Trying to talk French with an American accent. But coming over here, I think that's been proved untrue 'cuz there are so many Americans who are great."

Q: "One last question. When President Kennedy was assassinated, what were your first thoughts concerning this country, the assassination, and the fact that it happened at that hour in 1963?"

PAUL: "My first thought was, 'Idiots!' The idiots - everyone who bungled the whole thing. The fella who killed him, I don't know whether it was Oswald or not. The official thing's gone out to say it was Oswald. Umm, he was an idiot."

FEMALE: (to John, away from the microhpone) "You're a tool."

JOHN: "Does that mean the same thing over here?"

PAUL: "I think so."

JOHN: (jokingly) "I'm a tool, man. This girl just called me a tool."

PAUL: "From my point of view, and from a lot of people in England's point of view, he was the best president that America had had for an awful long time. And he was creating a great image for America, and he seemed to be doing great things, you know. He seemed to have a good head on his shoulders, and it was good for everyone, I thought. And Russia was getting on quite well it seemed too. I don't know whether this was true. This may have been all newspaper talk. But you get someone like Khruschev who was knocked out with Kennedy, and it seemed fine. And just the fact that someone bumped him off was a terrible, big drag, you know. 'Idiots,' I thought."


Q: "Hi Ringo, how are you?"

RINGO: "Alright, Larry. How are you?"

Q: "Pretty good. A lot of these fan magazines, and legitimate articles about you, describe you as being very sad all the time. You're not a sad person are you, really?"

RINGO: "No. It's just the face, you know, as I keep telling people at all these conferences. Someone jumps up every time saying, 'Why are you so sad?' I'm quite happy inside. Just the face won't smile."
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:52:49   
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Q: "Do you like these outdoor concerts, like at Shea Stadium and here in Comiskey Park?"

RINGO: "Not as much as indoor with the people a bit closer, you know. 'Cuz they're too far away, really."

Q: "You lose some connection with the audience."

RINGO: "Yeah."

Q: "When you're playing the drums and singing at the same time... Did it come naturally to do a song, and play the drums with your hands and feet at first?"

RINGO: "Yeah, it just happened. I was in another group, and we used to play such long hours. It was in Germany so everyone had a sing, you know. Everyone sang a couple of songs to give 'em a break, 'cuz we used to play for about seven hours."

Q: "Now seeing you guys every night, and you look tired at times..."

RINGO: "Yeah."

Q: "Do you ever get tired of the traveling bit?"

RINGO: "Well, the traveling knocks you out in the end. You sort of get fed up with sitting on planes and in cars, and you wanna just sit down for a year."

Q: "Last year after the tour, I found it hard for myself to get back to normal."

RINGO: "Yeah. It took me about three months to get back to normal in Britain, 'cuz I was sleeping and waking up all at the wrong times, you know. Because it was so long and all the interstate changes with times, and then the flight back to England, and that. I just didn't know what was happening when I got back."

Q: "I'll repeat a question that's been asked about ten times in a different vein. Everybody asks whether you'll be back for another tour, and you say 'It's not up to us right now.'"

RINGO: "Yeah."

Q: "Do you want to come back for another tour?"

RINGO: "Yeah, yeah! That's the truth, we want to come. You know us, we like the States."

Q: "One last question. Do you plan any songwriting?"

RINGO: "I've sort of been writing one song for the last four years and still haven't finished it, so not really. No, I'm happy just doing' what I'm doing. Playin'."

Q: "The song you have, 'Act Naturally,' is going over pretty well..."

RINGO: "How can it go over? It's not..."
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:54:24   
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Q: "Well there's some radio stations that have played it, you know."

RINGO: "Oh I'm glad, you know."

Q: "Well, in fact, I think in some cities it's one of the top five most requested songs. I know it is in Miami."

RINGO: "Oh great, great."

Q: "Did you feel pretty comfortable doing a country and western song? Is this your line of trade?"

RINGO: "I like country and western, you know, as much as rock and roll. And they wanted me to do a number on the album - our recording manager. So I sorta played a couple of albums one night at home and picked three songs out. And then we went up to John's and we picked one out of the three that I could sing okay in key."


Q: "We have with us George Harrison in the basement of Comiskey Park in Chicago. George, at the taping last week of your show, I was concerned about whether you would do one song-- 'Help!' and you did it. And the quality of the song in-person, in contrast to the recording, was just so fantastic. I just couldn't believe it. Did the Beatles have problems perfecting a stage sound?"

GEORGE: "No. We've never had much trouble, because right from the beginning when we started recording, we'd just record in one take. You know, things like 'Twist And Shout' and 'Saw Her Standing There,' which were all on our first album in England - we just turned the recorder on. We got a sound balance in the studio - just put the tape on and did it like that. So we never did any of this overdubbing or adding orchestras or anything like that. It's only recently where we've been using a bit of overdub stuff. We've added things like tambourine, which you don't notice, you know. Because we still like to think we can get basically the same sound on stage."

Q: You always see these groups who appear on television, and the sound is so different from the sound you hear on a recording."

GEORGE: "Yeah."

Q: "There's another question I'd like to ask that I covered with Ringo and John. You have in actuality two personalities - You're a Beatle, this is your job, your profession... and you're also George Harrison, the guy who at first was not a Beatle."

GEORGE: "Yeah."

Q: "...and has a family and everything else. Which life do you prefer best?"

GEORGE: "Well, now the two personalities have sort of merged into one. And I definitely couldn't go back to the thing that was going before Beatles, you know. It's just become ME. This is my life, you know. If I was taken away from records and guitars and crowds and everything... But me personality... I think it's broadened since we became famous, because you can't be inferior in our position. You've got to meet people. You've got to talk, and you've got to be what they expect you to be. So naturally, you come out of a shell. That's one thing. I think Ringo - it's more obvious with him than with me. Because he was very introvert when he joined us, but now he's as extrovert as all of us."

Q: "Do you think you were a little introvert at first, too?"

GEORGE: "Not really. I probably am more introvert than the others, because I would prefer to come along and do a show... I don't mind how noisy everybody is while we're doing a show - but when we come off, I would like just to be able to sit 'round and you know, have a bit more peace than we do get."

Q: "Because this is right after the show, and I don't want to keep you long..."

GEORGE: "No, actually, I don't mind all you fellas, because with being on the plane and seeing you every day, it feels as though you're sort of part of the group."

Q: "Well, that's nice."

GEORGE: "Rather than on the other side, you know."

Q: "Do you have any individual plans for further songwriting in the future?"

GEORGE: "I'm still trying to churn out a couple. My main problem is trying to write lyrics. And I don't think it's worth writing songs and getting somebody else to do the lyrics, you know. Because it's no point. You don't feel as though you've done it, really. So I've written a few more songs I've got taped at home. If I get something going, then I'll tape it and I'll leave it for about five weeks. And I'll suddenly remember, and then I'll add a bit more to it. So probably it'll take me about three months before I've really finished one song. I'm so lazy, you know. It's ridiculous. But I'd like to write more."

Q: "I'm sure as you get doing more, you become more experienced and it becomes smoother."

GEORGE: "Yeah."

Q: "George, thanks a lot for talking to us, and I hope you have a great vacation out in Hollywood."

GEORGE: "Oh. Thank you."


Source: Transcribed by the Beatles Ultimate Experience website from audio copies of the inerviews
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 14:57:24   
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Воспоминания очевидцев:

http://www.musicouch.com/Live-Music/Beatles-65.274863

The time had come. The MC went up to the stage and you couldn't hear one thing he said. He was rattling on I'm sure about all the hits they'd made, the movies they'd done, how they made there first hit LOVE ME DO back in 1962 and just finished a successful concert at Shea Stadium five days before, and all the stuff we already knew. Just shut up now! Everyone's eyes were on the 3rd base dugout. All we heard was “THE BEATLES”! There they were, all four with their brown suits acting it up from the dugout toward the stage in the bright August sunshine. They seem to be doing parodies of A Hard Day's Night acting crazy and generally having fun. The screams were just deafening, girls started breaking through the security guards, running in the outfield, other young girls were passing out or just plain in tears, some had to be handed over the dugout to be taken to the medic's room to be revived. Heck, they were going to miss the show! It didn't matter. It was all part of a wild, surreal scene of 1965. A scene that would be created throughout the U.S. and one that touched me deeply. But at that moment, it was just plain FUN, the Beatles finally made their way to the stage that was set for them, they were gods, and every move John, Paul, George or Ringo made sent riveting waves of screams throughout the crowd, showering adoration from their adoring fans. They were master showmen and loved the crowds.

They started, of course with “Twist and Shout”, then into “She's a Woman”, rolled through several songs, I especially remembered “Ticket to Ride” and “A Hard Day's Night” and “I'm Down.” Each song lasted all about 2 ½ minutes or less making the whole show maybe 25 minutes or so. No matter, it was pure pandemonium, insanity, craziness something the likes of which had never been seen before. I didn't want it to end. It was a high point in my life and I knew I was changed forever. Before I knew it, the fab four were taking their final bows as was customary for them and the crowd was left alone without them to hold, to see, to sense, to have for their own for just a short while. But the senses were filled, the soul was refreshed and life seemed all good for awhile as we filed out of the stadium. I think most of us 40,000 screaming fans wanted to be a star like them that day. As for me, I right then and there realized my calling in life, it was to be a drummer. I saw Ringo back there pounding out the skins, keeping the band in order, generally enjoying himself without having to carry the show or really put on a show as the guys in front did. It sort of suited my personality, somewhat shy and introverted but nonetheless aggressive and forceful in my own way trying to be in control in a more subtle fashion. I was going to be a drummer and further-more, a star, no matter what it took. I was hooked in a big way. Dad, Steve, Teresa and me climbed in dad's black four door sedan and went back to Elmwood.
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 10.04.09 15:01:59   
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Стадион сегодняСтадион сегодня
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: игорь комсомоленко   Дата: 10.04.09 23:50:46   
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На фото,где поёт Джон,обратил внимание,что очень много свободных мест!Что-то странно это-билеты на концертах в Штатах разметались в момент!Откуда же пустые места?Может это саунд-чек?
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 11.04.09 00:03:07   
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2игорь комсомоленко:

>Может это саунд-чек?

Может. Потому что первая, фронтальная фотография так и подписана. К тому же фото сделаны очень близко и сбоку (Пол, Джордж), это значит что фотограф находился прямо на сцене. Чего не концерте быть не может.

Но даже если это и концерт, то мечтать как на Shea иметь забитый до отказа стадион, наверное и сами Битлз не могли себе позволить. Обычная посещаемость концертов Битлз на стадионах насколько помню - 15-20 тыс. Этот вмещал в те времена 29.

Comiskey Park was very modern for its time. It was the fourth concrete-and-steel stadium in the major leagues, and the third in the American League. As originally built, it sat almost 29,000, a record at the time. Briefly, it retained the nickname "The Baseball Palace of the World."

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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 11.04.09 00:15:00   
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О, сорри, это данные на момент открытия в 1910 году.
В 60-ые количество зрителей было побольше.
Хотя сложно понять, почему вместимость скачет таким образом:


Capacity
28,800 (1910) 52,000 (1927) 50,000 (1938) 51,000 (1939) 50,000 (1940) 46,550 (1942) 50,934 (1953) 44,492 (1969) 43,951 (1990)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comiskey_Park
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 11.04.09 00:21:38   
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Beatles Fans Sobbing at Concert Beatles Fans Sobbing at Concert

Original caption: 8/20/1965-Chicago, IL- While thousands screamed, these two Beatles fans sobbed their hearts out during an afternoon appearance of the British rock and roll performers at Comiskey Park here 8/20. About 20,000 fans were on hand for the early performance
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 11.04.09 00:53:03   
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Конферанс радиоведущего Кларка УэбераКонферанс радиоведущего Кларка Уэбера



Clark Weber is one of the legendary radio voices in Chicago over the past five decades. He still lives in the area, running an advertising agency Clark Weber & Associates specializing in radio advertising for the 50+ market.





Rick: I have to ask you this right out of the box because I love this story so much. Could you tell the story about the day you introduced the Beatles on stage at Comiskey Park?

Clark: Capitol Records threw a luncheon that afternoon for WLS and the Beatles at the Saddle & Cycle Club on Lake Shore Drive. A good friend of mine, Jim Feeley, was dating a model named Winkie, and I invited them to come along. Well, Winkie showed up in a two-piece tennis outfit, and she looked incredible. I sat her next to George Harrison and his eyes almost popped out of his head. She made nice with him for a little while and George really thought she was going to be staying with him all day. When Winkie got up to leave a few minutes later to go to a modeling audition, George was wounded. “You’re not going anywhere,” he said. Winkie replied: “Oh yeah? Well watch me.” Later that night Feeley called me and asked if she could come to the concert, and I said—‘You’re really pushing it’, but I did get her in. So, flash forward twenty years later. A photographer from the Sun-Times called me up to say he had a photograph he wanted me to see. It was the Beatles on stage at Comiskey Park. I’m standing to the side of the stage and so is Winkie, and George Harrison is on stage looking right at Winkie, giving her the dirtiest look imaginable. Winkie later married a pro football player, moved down to Texas and had five kids, but George never got near her.

Rick: What was it like on stage that night?

Clark: As soon as Bernie Allen and I walked onto the stage, the crowd went crazy because they knew what was coming. There were 38,000 screaming teenage girls and the sound was indescribable. I told Bernie to hold his hand out with his fingers spread. We could feel the vibrations in our fingers. I don’t think anyone in that ballpark heard a single second of the show. I was standing right next to the stage and I didn’t hear it.

http://chicagoradiospotlight.blogspot.com/2007/05/clark-weber.html
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 11.04.09 01:09:04   
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Похоже на фанфик, но говорят что было реально и в журнале печатались чудесные воспоминания юной фанатки Пола:



MEETING THE BEATLES
A 1965 Encounter With Paul McCartney

Most female Beatles fans who screamed and waved at the Fab Four during their touring days were completely lost in a chorus of similar screams and waves. Jorie Gracen was a happy exception. She writes of her 1965 encounter with Paul McCartney after a Beatles concert in this article originally published in Beatlefan #11, August 1980.)

It was the summer of 1965, and I had luckily obtained a pair of front-row tickets for The Beatles' 8 p.m. Aug. 20 concert at Chicago's Comiskey Park. The second ticket I had was for my mother, who planned to join me (not as a Beatles fan, but as my bodyguard, since I was only 13 years old at the time).

I was quite excited at the thought of seeing The Beatles in the flesh! I wondered what Paul looked like close up. As the time drew near, I fantasized about how I would act if I met Paul face to face. I told myself I would not scream or faint. (Ho! Ho!) But at that moment, amidst hystrical shrieking, the concert began. The Beatles, of course, were the last group to perform, and I waited impatiently, hoping the supporting acts would finish soon.

At last, the time had come. All 60,000 fans inside Chicago's most famous ballpark let out the most deafening squeals of delight as their heroes bounced onstage. Paul was all smiles and waves. I thought he was more handsome in person than in his pictures. John warmly welcomed the audience, looking very macho. Ringo and George stared in amazement as they were quite taken by the thunderous ovations. George looked much thinner and shorter than I imagined. Ringo had the bluest eyes I had ever seen.

They ran through their numbers sounding so much better live than on their albums. Though the Chicago fans kept up their screaming throughout the concert, The Beatles, remarkably, could be heard above it all. (At least on the front row.)

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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 11.04.09 01:09:15   
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I remember George bouncing a ball onstage that someone had thrown. John was doing little dances and at one point started talking jibberish over Paul's introduction. Paul, a bit perturbed, hit John lightly in the shoulder. John, of course, hit him back a little harder. Then they both started a hand clapping game between themselves. When that was through, they started "Baby's in Black" and did their familiar waltzing (with their guitars) routine.

All the time, I kept yelling to Paul, hoping he'd acknowledge my existence. He ignored me completely and just kept on with the show. John heard my screams for Paul and a few times came over to the side of the stage. (I was on John's side.) He waved to me a few times, but I had eyes only for Paul. Towards the middle of the show, John took off his jacket. He looked straight at me all the while, trying to see if he could get my undivided attention, but I kept yelling "Paul!" (sorry, John). Then John made a motion to (unzip?) his pants. (Now, I was watching!) The crowd, of course, went wild. At the crucial moment, John gave a tug at his waist, smiling very innocently at the crowd, which by now had lost control. There came shouts for "MORE!" John wasn't going to give it to them.

Not to be outdone by John, Paul got down on one knee and asked the hysterical audience, "Which side loves ME better?" Guess whose side won.

Both George and Paul took great pleasure in doing anything that would excite the audience. (It didn't take much.) In a spur of the moment move, they decided to walk offstage. People started running out after them while the police did the best they could to stop them. After it was all under control, the police went over to the two naughty Beatles who had started the whole thing and proceeded to chase them back onto the stage. Paul did not take kindly to it but decided that it was safer to be onstage.

It was getting toward the end of the concert and I decided to wait for the first lull in the crowd to try and get Paul's attention. I got on top of my chair, wearing a shocking pink and white polka-dot outfit that I had bought especially for this occasion (the things we have to do in these heathen countries) and figured it was now or never! The stadium became quiet as John announced the next song. I leaped out of my chair, higher than I could imagine (they caught the bottom of my feet on the midnight news!). As I hit the peak of my jump, I screamed "PAUL!" as loud as I could and did a spread-eagle (split) in mid-air (my cheerleading days finally paid off). As his name echoed around the stadium, he turned to see me in mid-air and did a double take. (So did my mom.) Then he leaped up in the air, did a spread-eagle also (he almost didn't make it) and waved back to me. Of course, I was overwhelmed.

The concert ended with a fantastic version of "I'm Down". By then, my mother and I were fighting over the binoculars. (And she said she didn't like The Beatles!) When the concert ended, I was sad indeed but right up on Cloud Nine. I watched The Beatles drive off in what looked like a golf cart. They were taken to the empty bleacher section, where they quickly ran up some stairs and disappeared into another section of the ballpark.

We waited around for the crowd to clear out after the show. I ran down one of the stairways alone, looking for an exit, and got myself lost in one of the empty tunnels. It was then that I noticed a barricaded tunnel.

As I stood there staring at it, wondering where it went, someone came up from behind me and grabbed me! As the person grabbed me, a girl who came out of nowhere started screaming "PAUL! PAUL!" She ran excitedly towards us. I turned around to see who was holding me, as whoever it was kept sneaking behind my line of vision. All of a sudden, it seemed like thousands of screaming girls were running towards us. Then I turned and saw Paul! He let go of me (unfortunately) and quickly took off. (Boy, can he run!) Without effort, he leaped over the barrier and ran for his life. He disappeared down the tunnel with the crowd in hot pursuit.

I stood there stunned, not believing what had just happened to me. The police rushed in to control the crowd and I, of course, was the first one they headed for. One cop grabbed me (I guess it was my day for being grabbed) and pulled me away from the charging crowd. He pinned me up against the wall, mainly for my own safety. (Thank goodness!) Everyone was trying to get past the barrier but the police already had formed a solid wall of officers to hold off the crowd. I must say, it got a little out of hand.

When I finally got out of there, my mother wondered what had happened to me since I was quite dazed and shook up, not to mention hard of hearing. I told her she'd never understand, and left it at that. It was one night I'd never forget.

http://www.beatlefan.com/Archiveencounter.htm
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 11.04.09 01:14:20   
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They toured several times, though the tours were not particularly musical. At Shea stadium and Comiskey Park they played into the PA system so the sound quality wasn't good. The boys have said they couldn't hear what they were playing for all the screaming. They biggest amp up to the time was 100 watts, and it was made specially for them. Needless to say, there were people in the cheap seats who heard almost no music.

http://ca.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080327193200AAZeHuQ
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 11.04.09 01:31:22   
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Еще одна версия количества посетителей:

August 20: Comiskey Park Chicago, Illinois: Another baseball venue, Comiskey Park was the home of baseball's White Sox. The Beatles performed two shows (one at 3:00 p.m. and one at 8:00 p.m.) to a total crowd of 52,000 for both shows.

http://applescruffs.www1.50megs.com/beatlesontour2.html
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 11.04.09 01:45:53   
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все тикеты на дневной концерт:  http://www.rarebeatles.com/photopg7/chica65.htmвсе тикеты на дневной концерт:

http://www.rarebeatles.com/photopg7/chica65.htm
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 13.04.09 20:17:51   
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Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park/
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Воробьёв Александр   Дата: 13.04.09 23:55:22   
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2Expert: на последней фоте гитара у Джорджа другая что ли, не такая как на Shea? А если фото с саундчека, то интересно, что в Штатах у них они вообще имели место быть ввиду трудностей с безопасностью. Но они были?
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 14.04.09 00:10:31   
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2Воробьёв Александр:2Воробьёв Александр:

>2Expert: на последней фоте гитара у Джорджа другая
>что ли, не такая как на Shea?

И он, и Джон по ходу выступления меняли гитары. Возможно, что на этом концерте меняли. Только нет фот.


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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 14.04.09 00:14:26   
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2Воробьёв Александр:

>Но они были?

Конечно. Про трудности с безопасностью слышал только в отношени 66 года. Тот же стадион Shea показывает, что полиция была на уровне и никого к сцене не подпускала.
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 14.04.09 00:21:13   
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Ну а японцы - те вообще все забронировали и вроде даже самих битлов не хотели в какой-то момент на концерт пускать. Но потом одумались...  Ну а японцы - те вообще все забронировали и вроде даже самих битлов не хотели в какой-то момент на концерт пускать. Но потом одумались...
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Воробьёв Александр   Дата: 14.04.09 09:25:24   
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2Expert: на вашем фото, которое в оригинале из Нью-Йорка 1965 - исполнение песни A Hard Day's Night. Джордж играл на 12-струнке, как на альбоме. Кое-какие гитары были на подмене у них, в т.ч. полуакустики Gibson. На случай, например, если какая-либо из гитар выйдет из строя на концерте. Тур примечателен наличие клавишных (I'm Down). И исполнением сравнительно длинного кавера Dizzy Miss Lizzy Ларри Уильмса на этих концертах (песня из альбома Help).
Насчет безопасности - Битлз вспоминали, что крайне нечасто выходили из отеля во время турне, особенно в Штатах. Я и спросил про саундчек. Должно быть, они имели место. В Англии были точно перед концертами в театрах.
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 14.04.09 14:09:29   
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2Воробьёв Александр:

>На случай, например, если какая-либо из гитар
>выйдет из строя на концерте.

Гитары меняли в номерах скорее по причине свойств их акустических.
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 14.04.09 14:10:13   
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Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park.
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Expert   Дата: 15.04.09 00:59:52   
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Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park.
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Воробьёв Александр   Дата: 15.04.09 09:55:51   
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2Expert: с новыми полуакустиками их можно лицезреть на концерте победитель опроса журнала NME в 1965 году (в Анталогии есть фрагменты шоу). Там они на нескольких песнях их использовали.
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: Drevesina   Дата: 27.07.14 21:29:22   
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Я думаю, что бы было, если бы The Beatles попробовали утихомирить взбесившуюся толпу подобно Джиму Моррисону (что-то вроде "Вы же не хотите, чтобы мы исполняли музыку... А идите вы ...! Мы пришли, чтобы исполнять музыку!" Фанаты бы их смели с лица земли от гнева, от того, что их некогда кумиры поняли, что публике, в общем, наплевать на музыку в рок-н-ролле, что публика вознесла оный до небес почти исключительно как средство выпускания пара? Были ли у Ливерпульской Чётверки силы противостоять публике? Извините, накипело. :(
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Re: Концерт 20 августа 1965 года, Чикаго, Comiskey Park
Автор: adh   Дата: 25.08.19 15:54:04   
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August 20.August 20.
The Beatles performed two shows at Comiskey Park, Chicago, on this day in 1965, at 3pm and 8pm.

Tickets were priced at $2.50, $4.50 and $5.50. The Beatles earned $155,000 for the two performances.
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