Possibly Jimmy Nicol who substituted for Ringo during part of the 1964 world tour.
He wrote it during filming for the 1966-1967 film, How I Won The War. The inspiration was on old orphanage near where John lived, called Strawberry Fields. Strawberry Fields is no longer there, but, it was ironically located on Penny Lane in Liverpool.
Lennon lived in Woolton on Menlove Avenue, McCartney in Allerton on Forthlin Road, Harrison in Wavertree on Arnold Grove and later Speke, and Starr in Dingle on Madryn Street.
No, they are different people. Both have played and lived hard. It shows in their faces.
No. Harrison and Starr shared an apartment for awhile, and Lennon (with Yoko Ono) stayed with McCartney when he and Cynthia first split, but they never all lived under the same roof, unless it was the floor of a hotel while they were on tour. (The common-house theme in Help! was a fantasy.)
The studios on Abbey Road in London were originally known as the EMI Studios. Following the success of the Beatles album Abbey Road which was recorded at the EMI studios, the studios were renamed after the road and album.
Dennis chambers
They lived in Liverpool England.
Elvin Jones or Roy Haynes. The former was, indeed, one of the best drummers who ever lived.
he lived in Salem, Oregon
Soho i believe His hometown is Barnes so...
Barnes, England and other places in California
The members of the English rock band named," The Beatles," lived in Liverpool. They built their reputation throughout the 1960s in clubs in Liverpool and Hamburg.
Karen Anne Carpenter was first a drummer, then she became a singer. She could play the drums and sing at the same time. Karen was an excellent drummer and she was an outstanding singer. Karen Carpenter was probably the best woman drummer/singer who ever lived! Karen could also play the bass guitar. She was not a composer. She did not write any songs. All of the songs Karen sang (and/or played the drums for) were written by someone else.
No. Don't think he graduated high school. As a young band the Beatles lived a pretty rough life. They played in bars in the red light districts in Germany and were heavy into drugs.
AnswerHe is the drummer for Deep Purple and probably (certainly?) the greatest rock drummer that has ever lived, his full name is Ian Anderson Paice (born June 29 , 1948 ; Nottingham , England )He also played for Whitesnake for a period between Purple's breakup in 1976 and reformation in 1984.
Yes. I am George Barnes' daughter Alexandra Barnes Leh, and my parents and I lived at Les' house in the Deerhaven neighborhood of Mahwah, New Jersey while Les and my father worked on the album. They began recording in the fall of 1967 and completed the album in the early spring of 1968. It was recorded in Les' home studio. Les laid down a work track for each of the cuts, and my father played every part -- which is why, to quote my mother Evelyn, it sounds like "George Barnes Now."
Originally, when the group first came together in 1957, they were a skiffle group called "the quarrymen" This was before however ringo start was there drummer. After that they changed there name again to the "silver beetles". This name was short lived and the word "silver was dropped to leave the spelling "beetles". When the group was offered a spot to play in the star club in Hamburg Germany, John Lennon decided to change the name to "the bEAtles" dropping the double "e" and adding a "ea" to make a musical joke about the beat. And the rest is history