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Beatles E-Mail this report to a friend

Lindsay Pereira

4 am. Sunday morning.

Britney Spears on MTV sings passionately about how all she wants to do is make you happy. I cringe, shut my eyes, switch off the TV, and slip The Beatles' 1963 debut 'Please Please Me' into my player.

Everything stands still, and I smile almost at once.


Why did The Beatles rule the world when they did, I ask myself, still smiling while 'I saw her standing there' happens once more.


Beatles
Beatles? Huh?

As the MP3 Generation speaks, an epitaph is being written.

An informal survey by Rediff returns horror responses from: "They make me fall off to sleep" to "New band?"

Could they, today, have given the Backstreet Boys a run for their money? If I fell asleep now and woke up one morning in the year 2040, would 'Love me do' still play somewhere? The answers refuse to come.

Cut to the sixties, when Elvis would simply move his knee to make my mother's go weak.

After John Lennon's aunt Mimi once told him, "The guitar's all very well, but you'll never make a living out of it," I really hope she lived to eat all her hats. Beatles

Because, hey, little John Winston Lennon and his three clean-cut buddies Paul, George and Ringo managed pretty well, thank you.

My player interrupts. Why wasn't I born when this sound first hit the airways? A queer kind of pacification to the latter query comes from The Beatles themselves. Tomorrow, I'm told, that's November 13, The Beatles hit cyberspace with all they've got, via their official Web site. (http://www.thebeatles.com/) Prompting me to ask almost at once: If the web does what radio did all those decades ago, could Beatlemania be unleashed all over again?

Beatles The result of over a year's hard work -- with inputs from band members, friends, tech wizards, and a sum reported to be around $7.5 million - the site coincides with the release of a new Beatles album titled, simply, '1'.

I pause for a while, trying to dissect this piece of information. It marks a huge move, from playing to generations fed on a steady diet of radio, to audiences comprising largely those who were probably foetuses the last time the band played to screaming masses.

73 million Americans stayed up late to watch TV when the four teenagers performed for the Ed Sullivan Show. It was a night where, even in New York, no major crimes were committed. Sullivan faced the cameras, and asked all of America to "Judge for yourself." Who could blame their verdict?

Beatles Tomorrow, history repeats itself, re-introducing that old magic to a whole new set of people groomed in front of computer screens.

Keeping aside more questions, I slide in 'Rubber Soul.' An album that could claim marijuana as its muse. No more rhyming couplets, this was a taste of what The Beatles could accomplish, with or without the LSD.

They had little or no formal knowledge of music, I realise, glancing through a biography. Which is why I remember shaking my head in awe the first time someone told me they drew comparisons in complexity to composers like Gustav Mahler.

In a country where bands tried their best to imitate American musicians, with the rare burst of something exceptional like home-grown skiffle music, The Beatles rewrote what avant garde was all about. And what they used was just high octane energy, feel good tunes, and the good ol' BBC ('The Beeb'), to get their message out. Radio worked then, but will modems do what telecom did in '63? Will The Beatles' foray online survive the rigours of our hype driven markets?

Beatles The cynic in me surfaces again, confronted with the little detail of today's teenagers being largely ignorant about the Beatles phenomenon. News reports from around the world, however, beg to differ. Barely five months ago, presses around the world turned day and night to meet the demand of over a million and a half volumes of The Beatles Anthology, written by the band members themselves. Costing $60, it was the last element of the Beatles Anthology trilogy launched in 1995 with a TV documentary and 3-CD set that sold 45 million copies worldwide.

There's more. In a recent poll conducted by Rolling Stone for the Ten Most Influential Artists, Top Ten Rock Bands of the Century, and Best Rock Band Ever, guess who came out on top? Also, guess who walked away with three out of the top four albums?

Beatles Okay, granted. But what about the overdose of Beatles information already online? From links at the Beatles Fans Home Page (http://www.beatles.about.com/musicperform/beatles/mbody.htm) to a tour of Beatles sites in Liverpool and London (http://www.music.indiana.edu/som/courses/rock/england.html); books about them (http://showcase.netins.net/web/reading/beatles.html) to all their lyrics (http://www.stevesbeatles.com/), to Beatles Desktop Themes (http://www.upv.es/~ecabrera/theme.html) -- everything's covered, and how.

Fans can even log on at the John Lennon Artificial Intelligence Project (http://www.triumphpc.com/john-lennon) that recreates Lennon's personality by programming an advanced bot with artificial intelligence using his own words. Letting you have, in simpler terms, a virtual chat with the man! Given this kind of competition, how will the official site stand its ground?

Beatles Rumours abound. While '1' offers 27 songs encompassing all the group's British and American number one singles, the site will apparently create a unique Beatle experience for each track. A section called Get Back, for example, supposedly gives viewers an audio-visual recreation of The Beatles last performance in Savile Row. There's a virtual walk round Studio 2 at Abbey Road, an interactive section enabling participants to 'become' John, Paul, George and Ringo, and visuals that can be viewed with different effect glasses for the tongue-in-cheek track, Day Tripper.

Time will tell, is all I can say to myself, turning to my player yet again. I listen to Abbey Road, the last Beatles album with its passionate 'Come Together.' Three minutes into the track, realisation dawns, and John Lennon stands vindicated. Maybe they really were more popular than Jesus. 6 am. No more questions. No answers. Only the music. Which is probably just the way the Fab Four would have wanted it anyway.



The Internet Beatles Album
Want to know what happened today in Beatles history? Find out here.
Beatles Fans Home Page
Lots of links, and then, some more.
Pepperland: Where Nothing Is Real
Simulates what it must have been like to grow up with The Beatles. Then again, you could also ask your mother.
BeatlesWeb
Nothing official about it, but still informative.
Beatle Girl's Ultimate Page
Need some really good reasons to get hooked on to The Beatles? Get your answers here.
Ultimate Beatles Page
For the musicians, this one has guitar tabs, and lots of MIDI files.