#TheBeatles #BobDylan #BobDylanJohnLennon
Derek Taylor, journalist and famed publicist for The Beatles, tells the story of the first time Bob Dylan met The Beatles, as well as how Dylan influenced the boys from Liverpool. This video is a clip from a full-length interview with Taylor on the Citizen Abels show - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C-smhnQrOsc/.
Taylor speaks candidly in the interview about drugs and fame and the pressure these artists felt under pressure from the press and society, as well as what the music and songs they created influenced a generation and earned the name, “classic” rock. It’s a fantastic interview from beginning to end.
ThisDayInMusic.com describes the meeting between Dylan and The Beatles (https://www.thisdayinmusic.com/liner-notes/help/) as follows:
On 28th Aug 1964, after playing a show at Forest Hills Tennis Stadium, New York, The Beatles met Bob Dylan for the first time at The Delmonico Hotel. Dylan and mutual journalist friend Al Aronowitz introduce the Fab Four to marijuana.
I need to be careful what I say here, but as we all know, some people with artistic tendencies like the odd puff on an herbal.
According to cannabis historian Ernest Abel, the connection between music and marijuana began with jazz musicians in New Orleans around 1910. It was with these musicians that marijuana became an integral part of the jazz era. Unlike alcohol, which dulled and incapacitated the senses, marijuana enabled musicians whose job required them to play long and exhausting sets. Taking the drug also seemed to make their music sound more imaginative and unique, at least to those who played and listened while under its influence.
Dylan had wrongly assumed that the Fab Four were already pot heads, after mishearing the lyrics to “I Want To Hold Your hand” which he thought were “and when I touch you I get high, I get high…” The actual words are ‘I can’t hide, I can’t hide, I can’t hide…'”
So, Bob and mutual journalist friend Al Aronowitz introduced the Fab Four to marijuana. “Till then we’d been hard scotch and Coke men,” admitted Paul McCartney. Dylan rolled the first joint and passed it to John Lennon who immediately passed it to Ringo Starr, whom he called his “Royal Taster.” Because the drummer didn’t know the etiquette of sharing a joint, he finished the whole thing himself. More joints were rolled and the Beatles spent the next few hours in hilarity, with Dylan watching in amusement.
The Beatles were hooked. John Lennon later stated, “The Beatles had gone beyond comprehension. We were smoking marijuana for breakfast. We were well into marijuana and nobody could communicate with us, we were just glazed eyes, giggling all the time.”
This was the swinging ’60s, and everyone was at it, but the trick was not to get on the wrong side of the law. In 1967 Rolling Stone Keith Richard was found guilty of allowing his house to be used for the illegal smoking of cannabis. He was sentenced to one year in jail but his conviction was quashed by appeal court. Both Mick Jagger and Brian Jones were also arrested for possession. (I’m told you can see Jagger smoking a rather large cigarette in the Beatles “All You Need Is Love” promo film.)
In 1973 Paul McCartney was fined £100 ($170) for growing cannabis at his farm in Campbeltown, Scotland. McCartney hilariously claimed some fans gave the seeds to him and that he didn’t know what they would grow.
Well, would you believe it?
“Citizen Abels” – a production of Four Strong Media LLC and The Citizen™ Media Group – is a YouTube show and channel produced, directed, and starring David Abels. You can follow Citizen Abels on Facebook and Twitter or visit The Citizen on his website. He’s a got a million stories to tell. And they’re all true.™ Four Strong Media. High art of the lowest order.™ All original material is the respective property of its copyright holder.
https://www.facebook.com/citizenabels/
https://www.twitter.com/citizenabels/
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https://www.citizenabels.com/
Derek Taylor, journalist and famed publicist for The Beatles, tells the story of the first time Bob Dylan met The Beatles, as well as how Dylan influenced the boys from Liverpool. This video is a clip from a full-length interview with Taylor on the Citizen Abels show - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C-smhnQrOsc/.
Taylor speaks candidly in the interview about drugs and fame and the pressure these artists felt under pressure from the press and society, as well as what the music and songs they created influenced a generation and earned the name, “classic” rock. It’s a fantastic interview from beginning to end.
ThisDayInMusic.com describes the meeting between Dylan and The Beatles (https://www.thisdayinmusic.com/liner-notes/help/) as follows:
On 28th Aug 1964, after playing a show at Forest Hills Tennis Stadium, New York, The Beatles met Bob Dylan for the first time at The Delmonico Hotel. Dylan and mutual journalist friend Al Aronowitz introduce the Fab Four to marijuana.
I need to be careful what I say here, but as we all know, some people with artistic tendencies like the odd puff on an herbal.
According to cannabis historian Ernest Abel, the connection between music and marijuana began with jazz musicians in New Orleans around 1910. It was with these musicians that marijuana became an integral part of the jazz era. Unlike alcohol, which dulled and incapacitated the senses, marijuana enabled musicians whose job required them to play long and exhausting sets. Taking the drug also seemed to make their music sound more imaginative and unique, at least to those who played and listened while under its influence.
Dylan had wrongly assumed that the Fab Four were already pot heads, after mishearing the lyrics to “I Want To Hold Your hand” which he thought were “and when I touch you I get high, I get high…” The actual words are ‘I can’t hide, I can’t hide, I can’t hide…'”
So, Bob and mutual journalist friend Al Aronowitz introduced the Fab Four to marijuana. “Till then we’d been hard scotch and Coke men,” admitted Paul McCartney. Dylan rolled the first joint and passed it to John Lennon who immediately passed it to Ringo Starr, whom he called his “Royal Taster.” Because the drummer didn’t know the etiquette of sharing a joint, he finished the whole thing himself. More joints were rolled and the Beatles spent the next few hours in hilarity, with Dylan watching in amusement.
The Beatles were hooked. John Lennon later stated, “The Beatles had gone beyond comprehension. We were smoking marijuana for breakfast. We were well into marijuana and nobody could communicate with us, we were just glazed eyes, giggling all the time.”
This was the swinging ’60s, and everyone was at it, but the trick was not to get on the wrong side of the law. In 1967 Rolling Stone Keith Richard was found guilty of allowing his house to be used for the illegal smoking of cannabis. He was sentenced to one year in jail but his conviction was quashed by appeal court. Both Mick Jagger and Brian Jones were also arrested for possession. (I’m told you can see Jagger smoking a rather large cigarette in the Beatles “All You Need Is Love” promo film.)
In 1973 Paul McCartney was fined £100 ($170) for growing cannabis at his farm in Campbeltown, Scotland. McCartney hilariously claimed some fans gave the seeds to him and that he didn’t know what they would grow.
Well, would you believe it?
“Citizen Abels” – a production of Four Strong Media LLC and The Citizen™ Media Group – is a YouTube show and channel produced, directed, and starring David Abels. You can follow Citizen Abels on Facebook and Twitter or visit The Citizen on his website. He’s a got a million stories to tell. And they’re all true.™ Four Strong Media. High art of the lowest order.™ All original material is the respective property of its copyright holder.
https://www.facebook.com/citizenabels/
https://www.twitter.com/citizenabels/
https://www.youtube.com/c/citizenabels/
https://www.citizenabels.com/
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