Meet the Beatles
A Cultural History of the Band That Shook Youth, Gender, and the World
Chapter OneThe British Are Coming!
In the beginning there was the scream.
It was high-pitched, wailing, the sound of pigs being slaughtered, only louder. So me in England compared it to the air raid sirens that had been so prevalent during the war only two decades before. Oddly, it was both joyous and hysterical; it could be heard sometimes over a mile away. It was continuous, yet punctuated by crescendos. Its decibel level was so high that it broke the equipment measuring it, and the next day, some found their ears still continued to ring.
"I've never heard a sound so painful to the ear," one observer at the
time said. "Loud and shrill. It was like standing next to a jet engine. It physically hurt."
Of course, years earlier there had been stories about the girls who shouted for Sinatra and then for Elvis. But this screaming was different -- the beginning of a new era, an expression of cultural change.
"We screamed because it was a kick against anything old-fashioned," remembered Lynne Harris, a fan of the Beatles at the Cavern Club in Liverpool, where they were essentially the house band ... read full excerpt from Meet the Beatles ebook