Extensive Definition
The Quarrymen (sometimes written as The Quarry
Men) (circa late 1956 - Oct 1959) are an English skiffle group formed in Liverpool in the
latter part of 1956 by
John
Lennon with several school friends. The group's name was
inspired by the name of the Quarry
Bank grammar school, which Lennon and most of his band-mates
attended.
Early years
John Lennon had become enthused with rock 'n' roll music firstly through Bill Haley & His Comets Rock Around the Clock in January 1955 and then Elvis Presley's hit Heartbreak Hotel in April 1956. British teenagers in the mid-1950s who wished to try creating such music—but who had no experience or training—became attracted to a musical form peculiar to Britain known as skiffle music. It was a hybrid of American folk, blues and hillbilly with strains of primitive rock 'n' roll. Its primary attraction was that it did not require great musical skills or expensive instruments. It was home-made music that could be created by enthusiastic amateurs with very limited skills. The most successful proponent of skiffle in 1955-1957 was a Scottish-born musician called Lonnie Donegan.When Lennon decided that he wanted to try making
music himself, he decided to start a skiffle group in late 1956. He
started by recruiting his best friend, Pete
Shotton. Lennon was to be the singer and guitarist. Shotton elected to
play washboard, a
common skiffle instrument used to provide a rhythmic sound. After
just one week as "The Black Jacks", they renamed themselves "The
Quarrymen," (due to the fact that a more respectable Skiffle Group
was already known as "The Black Jacks") after a line in their
school song at
Quarry Bank Grammar School and a week later they recruited
another friend from their school, Bill Smith, to play tea chest
bass, despite the fact that Shotton had recently been involved
in a fight with Smith.
Smith's musical ability was as limited as
Shotton's, and he soon began to be sidelined when two other school
friends Rod Davis (banjo—born Rodney Verso Davis,
7
November 1941, Smithdown
Hospital, Smithdown Road, Sefton, Liverpool) and
Eric
Griffiths (guitar)
joined the band, as these two could play their instruments
comparatively well. Smith was eventually replaced by Len Garry.
After recruiting Colin Hanton
to play drums, the
Quarrymen performed at parties and skiffle contests in the
Liverpool area. It was unusual for skiffle groups to have a
drummer. Hanton had purchased his drum set with his earnings as an
apprentice upholsterer. He had his name and the band's name put on
the skin of the bass drum in letters cut out from black
paper.
On 22 June 1957 the Quarrymen
played twice at an outdoor party in Rosebery
Street to celebrate the 750th anniversary of the granting of
Liverpool’s charter by King
John. On Saturday 6 July 1957, the band played
at
St. Peter's Church garden fête. In the afternoon they played on
a stage in a field behind the church. After the set, Ivan Vaughan
- a pal of Lennon who was attending the event with another of his
friends, Paul
McCartney - introduced his two friends to each other. Lennon
and McCartney chatted for a few minutes while the band was setting
up in the church hall for the second set. McCartney demonstrated
how he tuned his guitar and sang Eddie
Cochran's "Twenty
Flight Rock" and Gene
Vincent's "Be-Bop-A-Lula",
and a medley of Little
Richard hits to his own guitar accompaniment. The evening show
started at 8 p.m. and admission cost two shillings. A young
audience member, Bob Molyneux, recorded part of the evening
performance on his Grundig portable
reel-to-reel
tape
recorder. After the show, Lennon and Shotton discussed the
afternoon encounter they had had with Ivan Vaughan's young friend
and Lennon indicated that he thought they should invite McCartney
to join their fledgling group. Two weeks later, Pete Shotton
encountered McCartney, who was cycling through Woolton. Shotton
conveyed Lennon's casual invitation to McCartney to join the
group.
Nigel
Whalley, a friend who had briefly played tea-chest bass in the
group, was acting informally as a manager for the group. He secured
the Quarrymen a booking at Lee
Park Golf Club in Liverpool. Alan Sytner,
owner of the Cavern
club, was a member of the golf club. The band subsequently appeared
several times in what were billed as “Skiffle Sessions”, and in
August 1957, their name was first mentioned in the Cavern's
advertisement in the Liverpool
Echo.
McCartney
McCartney made his debut with the band for a Conservative Club social, at The New Clubmoor Hall on Back Broadway in Norris Green, Liverpool, on Friday, 18 October 1957, a while after returning from his summer holidays. The band had been booked by local promoter Charlie McBain and they wore matching outfits with long-sleeved, white cowboy shirts, black string ties and black trousers. Lennon and McCartney stood front and center onstage and wore white sports jackets. McCartney played lead guitar. During the show he botched a solo, embarrassing himself and the group. To save face with Lennon, during a break McCartney played him "I've Lost My Little Girl"—his recently completed first song. (Hearing this song reportedly inspired Lennon to also start writing.) The other members of the band that night were Hanton on drums, Garry on tea-chest bass and Griffiths on guitar.On Thursday, 7 November, McBain booked The
Quarrymen to appear at Wilson
Hall, Garston. They also played Stanley Abattoir Social Club on
16 November, New Clubmoor Hall on 23 November and Wilson Hall on 7
December.
Harrison
The Quarrymen played The New Clubmoor Hall on 10 January 1958 and at The Cavern on 24 January. With Lennon losing interest in skiffle and playing more rock ‘n’ roll, banjo-player Rod Davis left the band in February 1958. McCartney's schoolfriend, George Harrison, first saw the group perform on 6 February playing at Wilson Hall. Harrison auditioned for The Quarry Men in Rory Storm's Morgue Skiffle Club, playing "Guitar Boogie Shuffle" (by Bert Weedon) in March 1958. Despite Lennon's initial reluctance due to Harrison's young age, Harrison joined the Quarrymen as lead guitarist at McCartney's insistence.In March, Garry contracted meningitis (from which he
later recovered) and was thus sidelined from the band. Griffiths
was asked to take over playing tea-chest bass but he declined and
left the band. Shortly after this lineup change, John Charles
Lowe, another schoolmate of Paul's, joined the band, playing
piano with them through the summer of 1958 whenever a piano was
available at the venue. On 23 March the band performed at the
opening night of The Morgue Skiffle Club.
In the summer of 1958 the band (consisting of
Lennon, McCartney, Harrison, Hanton and Lowe) recorded two songs
onto a 78-rpm acetate disc in Percy Philips' small demo studio in
Kensington Road, Liverpool. The first recording was a cover of
Buddy
Holly's "That'll
Be the Day". The second song was an original composition
written by McCartney and Harrison, inspired by Elvis's song "Tryin'
To Get To You," titled "In
Spite of All the Danger". Brown and Harrison recruited Lennon
and McCartney on short notice to help them fill the residency, and
the new band used the old name ‘The Quarrymen’. but on 10 October
there was an argument between the band and Mona Best over the
band's fee for performing in The Casbah that night. Ken Brown had
showed up at the gig, but was too ill to perform. Mrs Best insisted
Ken deserved to be paid for showing up, but the rest of the band
insisted on being paid his share of the band's fee. In the end The
Quarrymen walked out of The Casbah, ending their residency.
The band next appeared as Johnny and The Moondogs
at The Carroll Levis Auditions at The Empire
Theatre, in Liverpool. By May 1960, Lennon, McCartney and
Harrison (then known as The Silver Beetles) were joined by Stuart
Sutcliffe, and three months later they invited Mona Best's son,
drummer Pete Best, to
join the band. They tried several other names before settling on
The Beatles for their performances in Hamburg in August
1960. When the group returned to Liverpool, Sutcliffe left the
group, choosing to remain in Hamburg. On 13 April
1962,
Sutcliffe's girlfriend, Astrid
Kirchherr, met The Beatles at Hamburg airport and told them
that Sutcliffe had died from a brain
hemorrhage a few days before. In August 1962, Lennon, McCartney
and Harrison dismissed Pete Best and replaced him with Ringo Starr.
The final lineup of the Beatles was now in place and remained
intact until the group disbanded in 1970.
Reunion in 1990s
John Duff Lowe and Rod Davis reformed as a band for a short time in the 1990s – and it remains in the EMI archives.During 1995 and 1996 Len Garry continued to
appear as guest vocalist with The Scott Wheeler Band during the
band's twice-yearly tours of Merseyside, specialising in singing
his beloved Elvis tunes.
In January 1997 the Cavern Mecca
invited all the bands who had played at the Cavern in the 1950s to
the unveiling of the “Cavern Wall of Fame” in Mathew
Street to celebrate the club's 40th anniversary. All five of
the surviving original Quarrymen and Duff Lowe attended, and that
evening they gave an impromptu performance onstage at the
Cavern.
That evening they were asked to help salute the
upcoming 40th anniversary of the now legendary Lennon-McCartney
meeting at Woolton fête.
40th anniversary of the first meeting of Lennon & McCartney
The 40th anniversary event was initiated and primarily organized by Jean Catharell, the head of Liverpool Beatlescene fan club. She determined that the cultural significance of the historic meeting should be marked by a series of events around the 40th anniversary. She helped organize a faithful re-creation of the original garden fete and evening concert - both headlined by the Quarrymen. The events were held to raise funds for the St. Peter's Church Hall Restoration Fund.In 1957 - the original garden fête and evening
concert had taken place on 6 July - a
Saturday. For the 40th anniversary celebrations it was decided to
hold events over the weekend closest to the original date - the
weekend of Saturday 5th July and Sunday 6th July. The Saturday
garden fête and evening concert were re-created on the Saturday
(5 July
1997). A
church service and plaque unveiling taking place on Sunday (6
July).
All five of the surviving Quarrymen reunited for
the occasion and undertook rehearsals in Liverpool in early June.
The re-creation of the events from 1957 included a midday
procession through the village with the band playing on the back of
a flatbed lorry (driven by the driver who had performed this task
in 1957). A faithful re-creation of the afternoon concert in the
garden featured The Quarrymen performing many of the same songs
they had performed in 1957. At the re-creation of the evening
concert in the Church Hall the band's set included "Puttin' on the
Style" which Bob Molyneux had recorded 40 years earlier. They also
played Twenty
Flight Rock - the Eddie
Cochran song that McCartney had performed to impress Lennon at
their brief first encounter. The concert ended with a performance
of John Lennon's Imagine
sung by Pete Shotton - his closest pal in the band who had stayed
friends with Lennon till the latter's death in 1980.
The anniversary was saluted with a series of
personal messages and congratulatory messages from Paul
McCartney, Yoko Ono, US
President Bill
Clinton, British Prime Minister Tony Blair and
Her Majesty The Queen that had been solicited by event
co-producer, Martin
Lewis.
Subsequent career
Following the success of this event, all five original surviving Quarrymen (Shotton, Griffiths, Davis, Garry and Hanton) recorded an album Get Back - Together, which was released in September 1997. It had an official launch at the Beatlefans Convention at the Playhouse, Derby on Sunday, 9 November 1997.Between 1998 and 2003 - the five members of the
Quarrymen toured together performing concerts at festivals and
Beatles fan conventions. Their stage show included spoken-word
recollections of their brief but eventful history. The band
performed throughout Europe, USA, Canada, Japan and Cuba.
In Cuba they performed at a festival where they
were seen by Hunter
Davies the author who had written the only official biography
of the Beatles (published in 1968). Davies was intrigued to see the
performance and decided to write a book (The Quarrymen - Omnibus
Press, 2001) detailing the history of the band that had been the
start of the Beatles.
During those years Len Garry continued to guest
with The Scott Wheeler Band on its Merseyside tours, and in 2002
and 2005 Duff Lowe sang and played portable keyboard at two of the
band's Mathew Street Festival shows. Coverage of those events,
including photos and additional historical information on the
Quarrymen, was included in Scott's book Charlie Lennon: Uncle To A
Beatle (Boulder, Colorado: Outskirts Press, 2005).
In 2003 the band recorded another album Songs We
Remember - released initially in Japan (2003) - and subsequently in
the UK (2005). The lineup was depleted in 2005 by the death of Eric
Griffiths and the retirement of Pete Shotton from performing. The
three active surviving members recruited John "Duff" Lowe (from the
1958 lineup) and the band continues to tour internationally as a
four-piece group with occasional guest performers.
The Quarrymen Discography
- Open for Engagements (1995)
- Get Back - Together (1997)
- Songs We Remember (2004)
Band line-ups from The Quarrymen to The Beatles
Notes
References
- Ed Chen and Saki, The Beatles Anthology (1995). Retrieved August 31 2005.
- Clarke, Donald The Penguin Encyclopedia Of Popular Music, (London: Penguin, 1989)
- Lennon: the definitive biography
- Davies, Hunter The Quarrymen, (London: Omnibus Press, 2001)
- Davis, Andy 'Inside The Beatles Anthology', Record Collector, November 1995
- Doggett, Peter 'The Bits I Left Uptown,"', Record Collector, December 1995
- Harry, Bill The Ultimate Beatles Encyclopedia, (London: Virgin Publications, 1992)
- Lennon, John In His Own Write, (London: Jonathan Cape, 1964)
- Lewisohn, Mark The Beatles Live!, (London: Pavilion Books, 1986)
- Many Years From Now
- Shotton, Pete and Shaffner, Nicholas John Lennon—In My Life, (New York: Stein and Day, 1983)
- The Beatles: The Biography
- Wheeler, Scott(2005), Charlie Lennon: Uncle To A Beatle, (Boulder, Colorado: Outskirts Press, 2005)
External links
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quarrymen in Danish: The Quarry Men
quarrymen in German: The Quarry Men
quarrymen in Spanish: The Quarry Men
quarrymen in French: The Quarrymen
quarrymen in Galician: The Quarrymen
quarrymen in Italian: The Quarrymen
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