Site hosted by Angelfire.com: Build your free website today!

WISEGUIDES : BEATLES TOURS OF LIVERPOOL with live Wiseguides!

WISEGUIDES : FAB BEATLES TOURS OF LIVERPOOL


JOHN LENNON


PAUL IS DEAD

"Lately on campus there has been much conjecturing on the present state of Beatle Paul McCartney. An amazing series of photos and lyrics on the group's albums point[s] to a distinct possibility that McCartney may indeed be insane, freaked out, even dead."
These words, which initiated the "Paul is dead" hoax of 1969, sound like the type of speculation that typically appears in the National Enquirer, Weekly World News or the Drudge Report. But they actually make up the first paragraph of an article that covered the top half of the front page of The Times-Delphic on Sept. 17, 1969.
Tim Harper's Times-Delphic article -- "Is Beatle Paul McCartney Dead?" -- was the first documented source of the hoax, according to a document on the Rec.Music.Beatles Web site (http://rmb.simplenet.com/public/rmb.html). Harper's article and a Sept. 23, 1969, article in Northern Illinois University's Northern Star inspired other journalists to pursue the story, the document said.
Who was the source of this speculation? Harper does not disclose his source in the article, but he told an interviewer from the RMB Web site that he learned of the rumor from Dartanyan Brown, a fellow T-D staff member. Brown heard about the rumor from an unknown musician, who recalled hearing about it in California, the document added.
But the exact origin of the hoax was unknown, Harper's article said.
"We probably will not know the truth around this entire intrigue for some time," the article said. "We may never know. Nevertheless, it is something to think about. It's still unclear just how the whole deal was originated, or who discovered it, but if it did originate recently or locally, we may find out soon."
The only "sources" Harper identifies in his article are Beatles albums that seemed to hint at McCartney's so-called death.
"The Sergeant Pepper Album, obviously, signified the 'death' of the old Beatles who made girls scream when they sang 'yeah yeah yeah!'" the article said. "The new Beatles blew grass and dropped acid, criticized religion, studied under Maharishi in India, and had a new sound.
"This album also started the hints that all was not right with the Beatles, especially Paul. On the front cover a mysterious hand is raised over his head, a sign many believe is an ancient death symbol of either the Greeks or the American Indians. Also, a left-handed guitar (Paul was the only lefty of the four) lies on the grave at the group's feet. ...
"Then came the group's latest album: 'The Beatles,' with an all-white cover. With this record the whole mystery became even more spooky. On the tune 'Revolution No. 9' there is a part where a lone deep voice repeats 'No. 9.' When this is played backwards a voice quotes 'Turn me on, dead man,' and 'Cherish the dead.'..."
When looking back at this article, it's easy to dismiss it as a harmless report that misinformed a few people on a small university campus. But all media organizations -- including those on college campuses --have a lot more power than people like to think. Harper's article, which was based on pure speculation, inspired other journalists to pursue this article, and it wasn't long before word of McCartney's possible death spread to different areas of the country.
John Winston Lennon was born in Liverpool on October 9, 1940, during the height of WWII, his father, Fred Lennon, off at sea. His father didn't turn up again until five years later, and when he did he tried to take john away from his mother, Julia, when she refused to restart her life with him. Instead, he grew up in the Liverpool suburb of Woolton, with his Aunt Mimi and Uncle George Smith, at 251 Menlove Ave, which became nicknamed Mendips. Julia died in 1958, in an automobile accident practically in front of Mendips, when John was just seventeen. Aunt Mimi ran a very strict household. John very quickly became bored at school, preferring drawing and writing about his classmates and teachers rather than his studies. Rebellious at an early age, he had a very rough school history, truanting from school and petty stealing. His future looked bleak until Mimi got the headmaster of the Quarrybank school to write a letter of recommendation for John to the Liverpool Art College, because of his drawings. It was at Liverpool Art College, in 1956, a friend played him Elvis' Heartbreak Hotel, and John's musical interest was piqued. Then he heard Lonnie Donegan's Rock Island Line on Radio Luxembourg, and became part of the new Skiffle craze by begging his Aunt Mimi until she broke down and bought him a guitar, although she forever told him he would never get anywhere with it. He had already learned to play the harmonica during his childhood, and he taught himself the guitar by applying banjo chords that his mother had taught him. In 1955 he started his own band, the Quarrymen, with his long time pal and fellow troublemaker Pete Shotton, singing all the popular songs, sometimes making up the words when he couldn't get them all off the radio. Also in the Quarrymen were Nigel Walley and Ivan Vaughan, the rest of John's gang. It was Ivan Vaughan who introduced John to his friend, Paul McCartney, in 1957. John married his girlfriend of four years, Cynthia Powell, in 1962. She was pregnant with their son Julian at the time, who was born in April, 1963.



We offer Liverpool Day Trippers the finest, most detailed
Beatles Tours of Liverpool.


You can join our expert driver guides for private tours (up to 4 persons)
group coach tours for up to 45 persons, or our luxury 8-seat vehicle for an in-depth
tour of Liverpool. Duration from 2-hours to all day. Our tours can include all the
following elements : Beatles birthplaces, The Beatles' school years, the teenage years,
Strawberry Field, The Hamburg Break, Penny Lane and Liverpool's famous streets,
Mendips, The Cavern Club, Discounted admisson to The Beatles Story - Liverpool's
foremost Beatles attraction at Albert Dock, McCartney House visit, time to shop at the
official Beatles Shop. All accompanied by our expert Liverpool guides and
their fast and informative anecdotal guiding.



Our walking tours are available in English, French, Spanish, Japanese, German and
Danish on board our 8-seater vehicle, or in any of : English, French, German, Spanish,
Japanese or Italian on a full-size tour coach for groups of 20 or more.



    

Click here to listen to Beatles Midi songs

Want to book a Beatles Tribute Band for your event? We have the fabbest foursomes!








WHY NOT USE THE ONLINE BOOKING FORM ON OUR ENQUIRY PAGE?

Wiseguides Beatles Booking Form

Our Full Liverpool Restaurant & Banqueting service is now available.

E-mail your request to : wiseguides@merseymail.com

Click here for Liverpool Pub Crawl



wiseguides@merseymail.com



JAILBREAK! - A Wiseguides Team Building Exercise.



Click here to GET BACK to our main Beatles page