New light on the Sheridan recordings

8 Responses

  1. James Percival says:

    Well, no one has commented yet, but for me this is exactly the kind of story that interests me the most. Documentation, especially when the key actors are dead or can't remember, is the key to building an increasingly accurate account of history. It's also a good example of how Lewishon's work will never be finished because he has already said in an interview that he will have to revise some aspects of volume 1 of Tune In.
    OK, it may not be the most important set of questions about the Beatles early history, but I for one was frustrated that the Polydor recordings could not be definitely identified, nor a complete account provided forwhen they were recorded. This moves the debate on for sure.

  2. Unknown says:

    Is Nobody's Child the same song, later recorded by the Wilburys.

  3. Foxx says:

    youtube.com/watch?v=AzkpPnPWRL4
    youtube.com/watch?v=6SqF56nj2LU

    They are the same, but quite different arrangements.

  4. wogew says:

    Ringo's mother Elsie always requested "Nobody's Child" at the family parties, and he would sing it to her. 😉

  5. Unknown says:

    So The Wilburys covered a song from the Beatles Hamburg repetoire

  6. Popper says:

    Interesting that "Cry for a Shadow" is listed as "Cry for a Shadow" on the receipt, and not as "Beatle Bop". I believed that Polydor re-named it without the Beatles' knowledge, shortly before it was released, but on this evidence, it was going by that name already and the group would have known.

  7. N. N. says:

    About the theory that “those two missing songs were only given to Polydor after the success of the Beatles from the archive of Bert Kaempfert”. It has apparently not been noticed by anyone that Bill Harry wrote in his book “The Beatles Who’s Who” already in 1982: “Once The Beatles began to achieve their success, Polydor were anxious to track down any further material that Bert had and he found a number of tapes which he had stored away.” This can hardly refer to anything other than these songs.

    In the book, Bill Harry mentions interviewing Kaempfert when he appeared live in London as a performer only a few days before his death in June 1980. This information was apparently given directly by him to Harry at that time.

    • Thorsten says:

      Thanks – I think I read it at the time but never put it out again. Yes he will refer to those 2 tracks. I always remembered that in a house fire his archive was destroyed and therefor nothing else was left. I can imagine that on his tapes some outtakes could have been there but he only sent out unused songs in 1964. I think Kaempfert could have been interviewed much deeper – but no one cared at the time – nor he did.

Leave a Reply to PopperCancel reply