FIRST TIME HEARING The Beatles - Twist & Shout - Performed Live On The Ed Sullivan Show REACTION

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  • čas přidán 8. 02. 2022
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Komentáře • 399

  • @DJ-bj8ku
    @DJ-bj8ku Před 2 lety +96

    John the singer was in his early 20s too. Now play Don’t Let Me Down from the 1969 rooftop concert and see their transformation from teen idols to cultural icons.

  • @reinacarbetta388
    @reinacarbetta388 Před 2 lety +94

    This was 58 years ago TODAY! Their first performance on American television (they did several songs.) 73.7 MILLION viewers (almost 65% of the population then) and is still the 2nd most-watched program of all time. I wish I was alive to see it!

    • @Xcris_crosX
      @Xcris_crosX Před 2 lety +12

      I loved every minute of it. I knew they were going to be on the Ed Sullivan show. My sister and I tried to play it cool that we're not like those crazy🤪 fans. We sat in front of the TV ho-hum about the whole thing. But immediately from Paul's count of one, Two, THREE, FOUR we went total Beatlemania🤪!!! Our grumpy, strict old Dad came into the room to see what the hoopla was about. Uh-oh, we thought he was going to turn it off and we were gonna have to tackle him because this was serious. But surprisingly he sat down without a word and watched with us. My sister and I looked at each other like👀 Sometime later he admitted he liked them. My Dad was a classical violinist and grumbled that everything else was just noise. So it was total and complete confirmation that if our Dad liked the Beatles they had to be the greatest band ever

    • @reinacarbetta388
      @reinacarbetta388 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Xcris_crosX Awe, I love that! Great story! I had Beatle-loving parents, so I grew up listening to them and hearing the stories about my family watching them on Ed Sullivan. I love and study The Beatles but I am definitely jealous of everyone who was alive when they were together.

    • @Xcris_crosX
      @Xcris_crosX Před 2 lety +6

      ​@@reinacarbetta388 You study The Beatles? They changed the world. The international Youth Movement didn't have social media to unite us, we had the Beatles. They, especially Lennon, empowered the American Youth Movement to help stop the Vietnam war that was killing thousands. Turn on Captions for *"GIVE PEACE A CHANCE. (Ultimate Mix, 2020) - Plastic Ono Band (official music video HD)"* and *"POWER TO THE PEOPLE. (Ultimate Mix, 2020) - John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band (official music video HD)".*
      They emboldened youth to destroy the Berlin Wall and the Soviet youth to retaliate against the USSR. It's been said the Beatles were the first rip in tearing down the Iron Curtain. They did what the threat of U.S. missiles could not. There was a time when Soviet youth claimed nobody loved the Beatles more than they did. Because they had to buy Beatles records through the Black Market and try to avoid getting caught by the KGB. Check out YT video all in part called: *"How The Beatles Rocked The Kremlin Part 1/4"*

    • @wendyhodges7172
      @wendyhodges7172 Před 2 lety +4

      My mom always talked about The Beatles and Elvis and seeing them on TV for the first time. She was such a huge fan of both. We grew up listening to all of that good music.

    • @markamos1911
      @markamos1911 Před 2 lety +2

      Not actually from their first performance on American television, the 9 February 1964 Ed Sullivan appearance, it's from their third appearance, broadcast on 23 February (which was filmed on the 9 February before they appeared live on the show that evening).

  • @chickmcgee1000
    @chickmcgee1000 Před 2 lety +63

    Cool observation about these old videos. My sister was six and I was five years old when Mom was yelling at us for sitting too close to the TV watching the Beatles for the first time. You can’t imagine how it felt watching them play. Geez, it makes me realize how old I am. The more you listen to how their music progressed through the next years, the more you’ll see that they were something special. They were more to music than just a rock band.

    • @russelbarnes7235
      @russelbarnes7235 Před 2 lety +5

      I too was five years old when I first saw the Beatles. I was the son of a career soldier, and we were living in Japan back then. We were lucky enough to get American tv limited of course, but we got the Ed Sullivan show, anyway, The Beatles were super popular in Japan, and Russia and the world basically. Pick a song, you'll love it. Deepest rabbit hole out there. Imo. Peace

    • @lilmissness
      @lilmissness Před 2 lety +1

      I’m 71 now and I can’t believe how many years have passed and they still sound great!

  • @Tijuanabill
    @Tijuanabill Před 2 lety +34

    Our man is correct. Despite this being super early, and having a very traditional early Rock and Roll vibe to it, the TONE of those guitars is really something. That Beatles sound that you hear later in their careers, was already present in this.

    • @arconeagain
      @arconeagain Před 2 lety

      There's fashion, style and technology that played a roll too. Sustain, distortion, new guitars and pick ups, new guitar effects changed rock n roll. This open, natural twangy sound became somewhat a thing of the past. Not to say it doesn't sound great, I wish more would go back to the roots.

  • @andy.8455
    @andy.8455 Před 2 lety +81

    They get better and better as ya go through the album's their success will never be repeated again. A day in the life, Norwegian wood strawberry Fields, there's tons....

    • @atheist101
      @atheist101 Před 2 lety +1

      It's wild they started as really good typical music at the time and went in a wild direction. I feel like out of all the legends they changed the most through their career, but in a good way. Listening to their older material and then their later material sounds like another band.

    • @patdonnelly9392
      @patdonnelly9392 Před rokem

      True that! They were always the best band out there (loved all their early stuff as well) but they Never stopped evolving. To think they created all that great music from '62 to '70 boggles my mind!

  • @terrylynnheinrich8777
    @terrylynnheinrich8777 Před 2 lety +15

    Help..If I fell in love with you..Yesterday..Revolution..Strawberry Fields Forever..all great songs! Come together was awesome too..Love your reactions!

  • @cheripetty1805
    @cheripetty1805 Před 2 lety +12

    After this legendary performance on the Ed Sullivan Show, there wasn't a dry seat left in the House!😀

  • @MaRoach7
    @MaRoach7 Před 2 lety +5

    My Mama said I watched this when I was a year old. She said I stood an inch from the TV completely hypnotized. I got my first Beatles album when I was 3 from my beloved Grandma. I just know I've always loved them

  • @carolynnewcomb2153
    @carolynnewcomb2153 Před 2 lety +13

    You’re learning history through music so that’s great! Girls used to pass out getting all worked up over watching the Beatles! Those fans were seriously invested, ha!

  • @ziggymarlowe5654
    @ziggymarlowe5654 Před 2 lety +17

    The Beatles video of "Come Together" is a must see, it's so trippy.

    • @kriegmeister6843
      @kriegmeister6843 Před 2 lety +1

      And The Beatles' "Daytripper" Live, is another one of my favorites. Check that one out too, you two. 😁😁👍👍

  • @fothebo1
    @fothebo1 Před 2 lety +7

    Today February 9th is the 58th anniversary of them playing on the Ed Show. It was the 1st time America got to see the Beatles. I remember this night. Me and my brother watched it and were amazed. We grab old badminton rackets and imitated them. Please react to The Beatles Live on the rooftop playing Dont Let me down.

  • @kevincarson7524
    @kevincarson7524 Před 2 lety +35

    The crazy thing here is that when the Beatles played live they couldn’t even hear their own instruments because of all the screaming girls. So to perform live they had to completely rely on timing.

  • @joanneharper9090
    @joanneharper9090 Před 2 lety +6

    You know, this was just a few months after Kennedy was assassinated. The Beatles did a lot to bring some happiness to America.

  • @esmaelgonzales6250
    @esmaelgonzales6250 Před 2 lety +3

    I had just turned 14 when the Beatles hit our shore! From that moment when they appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show, we never relaxed...until they broke up & broke our hearts in 1970! They brought us thru our youth & into our adolescence & beyond. I was 20 when the breakup happened & it hit me hard. But, I was thankful bc they brought along so many other artists from England and it was astounding how our own musicians responded, including the veteran Beach Boys! It was an amazing time! I still remember how we'd wait for the next release of a single or an album! Their singles were never on an album! Every single seemed to have two "A" sides, every album not a bad song on them! It was strangely weird! That's why the Beatles will live on FOREVER!

  • @debramoore7513
    @debramoore7513 Před 2 lety +2

    My mom was a huge Paul McCartney fan and when The Ed Sullivan Show did two nights of the Beatles “welcome to America” my mom made sure we had our TV dinners and got to eat in the living room. 📺 I was 6 yrs old and never forgot that great memory. I lost my mom in 2018 to Alzheimer’s 🥺 💟

  • @arjaylee
    @arjaylee Před 2 lety +1

    This changed the world of popular music. Follow them through the years These initial performances on the Sullivan Show is the marker on the Timeline: Pre Beatles | After Beatles

  • @denisediamond293
    @denisediamond293 Před 8 měsíci +1

    TY so much for playing 'Twist & Shout.' I watched this Live on our b & w TV in our living room @ home on a Sunday night. My memories flooded back with tears in my eyes. Beatles Best Band ever 🫶

  • @pollynicklas5220
    @pollynicklas5220 Před 2 lety +4

    The Beatles have a very large playlist! Just pick most any song!

    • @yes2day100
      @yes2day100 Před rokem

      That's the thing. You can hardly go wrong. Even their quirky songs are interesting and fun to listen to. And the ones they thought of 'throwaways' are full of pop magic.

  • @MuzacMark1960
    @MuzacMark1960 Před 2 lety +1

    There was 73,000,000 viewers this night it changed the music landscape this was Feb and in April the Beatles had the top 5 hits on the charts at the same time and had 24 charted hits that year as well

  • @Sixwheelin
    @Sixwheelin Před 2 lety +1

    I remember the night we gathered around our set to see this episode of The Ed Sullivan Show - It was awesome!

  • @buppie2000
    @buppie2000 Před 2 lety +1

    Nah.... THIS is what's crazy... That Ed Sullivan show you are watching is one of my earliest memories. I remember watching it live with my brothers and sisters in the family room. In Feb 1964 I was 5.
    What's crazy is me sharing that moment with you kids in 2022. That little girl with braces and glasses is someone's grandma.
    Cheers!

  • @robertmartin1807
    @robertmartin1807 Před 2 lety +2

    They were a Phenomenon! No one comes even close to what they did. It’s almost unreal to be honest. Their legacy! They changed the World!

  • @mikenaykki2173
    @mikenaykki2173 Před rokem +1

    They help create the early stages of Rock Music! They turn the pop and rocking roll scene up side down and nobody like them and never will be!! There the greatest of all time!!

  • @nationaltrails9585
    @nationaltrails9585 Před 2 lety +1

    My older 14 year old sister was The Beatles fan, our family, the whole country saw them on The Ed Sullivan Show on Sunday, February 9, 1964. Playing in various configurations since 1958 in England and Germany, they were an experienced band when they appeared on the show. After that show, a lot of kids wanted to sing, play guitar or drums. Sidenote, commercial TV networks began primetime color broadcasts in 1965 (that why NBC uses the Peacock).

    • @nationaltrails9585
      @nationaltrails9585 Před 2 lety

      Checkout the film clip from Ferris Bueller's Day Off or some Beatles tribute bands.

  • @frankphillips5660
    @frankphillips5660 Před 2 lety +6

    I was 9 when I saw this on TV. There was color TV but hardly anyone had one. Even if they did most recordings and TV shows were filmed in black and white. There was only 3 major stations, ABC,CBS and NBC. You might be able to get PBS on UHF and I don't believe remote control had been invented yet. If do, no one I knew had it. You had to get up and change the channel knob on the TV. I was elated when we got an RCA big picture (19inch) color console TV in 1967 that my dad paid $600.00 for which was a lot of money! This was the early Beatles and this song was a cover which the early Beatles did several of. Up until the Beatles, most bands were reserved and fans that saw their shows were very reserved as well. When they appeared with their long hair, the boys insisted on letting their hair grow long and would get Beatles haircuts because that's what girls liked. Their sound was explosive for the times and the fans became less reserved. The Beatles completely changed music and culture worldwide. Check out their Shea Stadium concert from 1965. Over 50,000 fans, the most ever for a concert, and the music was piped in over the stadium speakers and yet the band couldn't even hear themselves over the screaming in the stands. From 1964 to 1970 The Beatles recorded over 230 songs 20 #1 hits, 35 top ten hits and consistently had songs in the top 100. They are the GOATS bar none. They have consistently been one of the best sellers every single year since their break up in 1970 including last year. Each member has also had many solo hit songs after the break up. "A Day In The Life" was a breakthrough song for the music industry with all of it's innovations. The Beatles also made movies like HELP, A HARD DAY'S NIGHT and MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR all named after their albums titles. They also may have made the first music videos and even had their own cartoon TV show. You might need to just play the studio audio only versions of their music to avoid copyright issues.

    • @somethingyousaid5059
      @somethingyousaid5059 Před 2 lety

      Is your name really Frank Phillips? The only reason I ask is because that's my name! What are the odds of that.

    • @frankphillips5660
      @frankphillips5660 Před 2 lety

      @@somethingyousaid5059 yep. I'm in Florida. Nice to meetcha

    • @somethingyousaid5059
      @somethingyousaid5059 Před 2 lety

      @@frankphillips5660
      How about if I trade you my cold West Virginia for your warmer Florida, eh? Yeah, nice to meet you too. I wonder exactly how many other Frank Phillipsus (spelling?) there are in the world. Too many to suit either of us no doubt. The only other Frank Phillips I ever heard of worked as a director of photography or something like that in some movies. I remember seeing the name appear in the opening credits for a couple of Walt Disney movies that were made back in the 1970s.
      Anyway, thanks for confirming for me that that's your real name.

    • @frankphillips5660
      @frankphillips5660 Před 2 lety

      @@somethingyousaid5059 I was born in West Virginia. Bluefield. Most of my relatives live in Southwestern VA, near Bluefield. Small world. I had another commenter tell me that he lives in Texas and there is a Frank Phillips University there.

    • @somethingyousaid5059
      @somethingyousaid5059 Před 2 lety

      @@frankphillips5660
      A small world indeed! As for me, I was born (and raised) in Williamson (which probably isn't really that far from Bluefield I'm guessing). Ought to start a club of Frank Phillipses. Lol!

  • @michellejones6630
    @michellejones6630 Před 2 lety +2

    Definitely, back in those days bands sounded like their records..... amazing!!!😍😍

  • @lomoholga
    @lomoholga Před 2 lety +1

    Watching the progression of this channel is hilarious- the first several videos the lady is totally into it, then at some point you get the impression she’s thinking “what? You want to pump out one of these damn videos a few times a week!! Oh man…c’mon!”

  • @shanenolan8252
    @shanenolan8252 Před 2 lety +1

    I believe at one point during their us tour they had the top 5 somgs in the chart ( at the same time) 40 million people watched them on one tv show ( ed Sullivan)

  • @pbasswil
    @pbasswil Před 2 lety +1

    What's amazing is how _in tune_ they sang, and how their harmonies _blended._ Understand: Since around 5 years after this (say, Woodstock in 1969), live bands have had monitor speakers pointed at them, so they can hear themselves, and tune their vocals. (More recently that's changed to in-ear monitor headphones.) In '64, The Beatles were already an experienced road act; and knew how to sing in tune without _any_ monitoring aids. It helps that the volumes they played at were much lower in those days; but still, their performance abilities were off the hook.

  • @kkrslim6651
    @kkrslim6651 Před 2 lety +10

    You should really listen to 'A Day In The Life' by the Beatles

  • @mikemiller3069
    @mikemiller3069 Před 2 lety +3

    I was only 4 when this was recorded but I was the youngest of my family and some of my siblings were teenagers so I was raised on this stuff. At that time, families only had one TV in the living room, and, yes, it was black and white. My family didn't get a color TV until 1976 when my Dad won a color set in a raffle. We still only had one set in the house though so age outranked youth so I only got to watch what I wanted when nobody else was watching TV. But we only had like 5 channels to watch anyway which is why us "boomers" have so much common history and know the same shows and the same music. It still binds us together to a certain extent. You can mention a certain episode of "Gilligan's Island" for example and we are all familiar with it.

  • @picolo4102
    @picolo4102 Před 2 lety +2

    It was on this date that they 1st appeared on ed sullivan. Ed sullivan show was big back then. You got to see groups live new comedians entertainers

  • @joankisloski6972
    @joankisloski6972 Před 2 lety +1

    I got to see the Beatle in 1965 ... My 1st concert. It was a crazy time.

  • @Tijuanabill
    @Tijuanabill Před 2 lety +1

    Fun fact, contrary to what people think, those girls screaming, is what lead to loud amplifiers. The original push for volume was due to crowd noise. But then of course, it lead to discovering all the magical things that happen when you turn the right amp up full blast, which lead to everything great in the 60s and 70s music scenes.

  • @mikeguerrero72
    @mikeguerrero72 Před rokem

    I was 1 of millions that saw this live on The Ed Sullivan Show. These guys took the U.S. without even trying. They were ready to make history.

  • @jameshealy8402
    @jameshealy8402 Před 2 lety +7

    Mr Postman is a must by them it's a cover of The Marvelettes from Motown , and what a cover . They wrote 200 songs in 7 yrs plus what they wrote after split . Also do a reaction to A Brief History Of The Beatles , you'll love it

    • @1funkyflyguy
      @1funkyflyguy Před 2 lety

      That is a definite watch, if you want to know why the Beatles are considered universally by everyone both young and old even up to today, the greatest music group to ever exist. In effect they are the band responsible for influencing the creation of the modern global popular ("pop") music industry that we have today. Facts don't lie, watch it and it will all become clear.

  • @thondomain
    @thondomain Před 2 lety

    We had been hearing them on the radio for a couple weeks and couldn't wait to see them. My grandmother lived with us then and I recall I was outside when Ed Sullivan came on and she came to the door and shouted, "Them Beagles are coming on!"
    I didn't know anyone with a color TV until a few years later. One friend who was upper middle class had a color set and some of us would go to his house to watch Star Trek in color. Of course they'd had color movies since the 1930s but to see color on TV was amazing. They even sold colored screens you could put on the TV that were green at the bottom and shifted to blue at the top to give the illusion of color TV.
    But the Beatles were everywhere in 1964. Seems every other song on the radio was The Beatles. I've never experienced anything like it since.
    Their first film, A Hard Days Night, was in black and white but the second movie, Help, was in color. And then they came out with Sgt. Peppers Lonely Heart Club Band in their colorful band uniforms. It was like they turned the world from black and white to color. Even the music seemed to change from black and white to color in the 1960s.

  • @waynec3563
    @waynec3563 Před 2 lety +1

    You should check out when Ed Sullivan introduced The Beatles at Shea Stadium in 1965. Instead of a seven hundred screaming fans there was around 55,000.

  • @lilmissness
    @lilmissness Před 2 lety

    In 1964, I was 13, not to many people had color TV and not all programs were shown in color. I remember so well when the Beatles came to the US their music was totally different than what we had been listening to. We went from Beach Music to the Beatles, then Rolling Stones and we were off and running with the British Invasion. Best time of my life!!!

  • @ericpetty4503
    @ericpetty4503 Před 2 lety +2

    Although invented in the early 50s, color TVs did not become affordable to the general public until the mid 60s. I remember watching Bonanza as the first program in color for me.

    • @coleparker
      @coleparker Před 2 lety

      Me too. Also one thing about those early sets, you could not move them around, run or turn off and on a vacuum cleaner close them as you would knock off the color scheme and you would get a rainbow affect.

  • @rebeccazwillenberg3957

    They had color tv's in '64 but there were very limited programs that were broadcasted in color. Ed Sullivan show was something that you looked forward to every week!

  • @roadkill7314
    @roadkill7314 Před 2 lety

    I'm glad that you appreciate what great access you have to classic music! When I started driving literally the only access we had to music in the car was the radio. We were so excited when 8 track and then cassette tape came out! You guys are so lucky to have CZcams!

  • @danilleblanc7487
    @danilleblanc7487 Před 2 lety

    That was the very first time that people in North America had seen The Beatles live! There was nobody else like them! They changed the world and rock music would never be the same! They progressed so quickly and every other band just followed along. When you think of The Beatles and their place in creating what you know as rock music today you must realize that it was The Beatles way up on top and everyone else playing catch up. They led the way for all of the bands you listen to today. All the other bands waited for the next Beatles album so that they could follow along in that direction! Try In My Life by them written just a year after this appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show to see the how they were leaps and bounds ahead of everybody else in their progression in song writing, lyrics, musicality and talent that just kept on growing and growing. They were and still are to this day the gold standard in the creation of this powerful music!

  • @gabrielfuentes1054
    @gabrielfuentes1054 Před 2 lety +4

    After the long and glorious history of the Beatles you may also want to see what they did after the band broke up.. John Lennon -Imagine, George Harrison- My Sweet Lord, or Paul McCartney- Maybe I Amazed.. you will have tons of material to look at

  • @jasongilbert2379
    @jasongilbert2379 Před 2 lety +2

    Still sounds Great after all these years!!!

  • @jdw9397
    @jdw9397 Před 2 lety

    I think every teenage girl in America who had a tv was watching this!
    Color tvs came out in the 50’s but it wasn’t until the mid to late 60’s that most people could afford them. My father worked as a television repairman and was able to get a used one. Every year all of the neighborhood children would come to our house to watch the Wizard of Oz.

  • @jamesjayegan2748
    @jamesjayegan2748 Před rokem

    The way the smile slowly grows on her face...

  • @p.millard557
    @p.millard557 Před 2 lety +4

    I would recommend you these songs from these Beatles albums:
    1963 Please Please me - Please, please me; Love me do; A taste of honey.
    1963 With the Beatles - Roll over Beethoven; Money (That's what I want).
    1964 A hard day's night - I should have known better; Things we said today.
    1964 Beatles for sale - Baby's in black; Rock and Roll music; Eight days a week.
    1965 Help! - You've got to hide your love away.
    1965 Rubber Soul - Norwegian Wood; Nowhere man; Run for your life.
    1966 Revolver - Eleanor Rigby; I'm only sleeping.
    1967 Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - With a little help from my friends; Lucy in the sky with diamonds; Fixing a hole; she's leaving home; Being for the benefit of Mr Kite; Lovely Rita; A day in the life.
    1968 The Beatles White Album - Back in the USSR; Dear Prudence; Glass Onion; The continuing story of Bungalow Bill; Piggies; Rocky Raccoon; Julia; Mother nature's son; Sexy Sadie; Helter Skelter; Savoy Truffle.
    1969 Yellow Submarine - All you need is love.
    1969 Abbey Road - I want you (She's so heavy); You never give me your money; She came in through the bathroom window; Golden slumbers; carry that weight; The end (these last three songs have to be played together)
    1970 Let it be - Two of us; Across the universe; I've got a feeling.
    Also:
    I am the walrus; Strawberry fields forever, which are in an album sold in the US under the name of Magical Mystery Tour.

    • @sda6691
      @sda6691 Před 2 lety

      Also...I want to hold your hand...1964

    • @XxThePhantomFreezexX
      @XxThePhantomFreezexX Před 2 lety

      hes a real no where man sitting in his no where land

  • @jeffreyjenkins1242
    @jeffreyjenkins1242 Před 2 lety

    Hey guys! Great reaction. I check ya out most days. Funny how you were talking about getting to watch something like this from so long ago. Sunday night Feb. 9, 1964 I was 9. Sis was 7 and little bro was 4. Sis and I remember vividly watching The Ed Sullivan Show with mom and dad when The Beatles performed. It is impossible to fully comprehend the effect on American youth that night. Even having grown up in the '60s and '70s listening to every genre of music I could find, I still find it staggering the cultural wave they brought with them. Anyway, Thanks.

  • @walterhambrick8705
    @walterhambrick8705 Před rokem

    To answer your question there were color TVs available but they were expensive. The last 4 seasons of "The Adventures of Superman" (1953 - 1957) were filmed in color but only broadcast in B&W. Then in 1965 they were first broadcast in color. FYI: All of the Beatle appearances on the Ed Sullivan Show were in B&W.

  • @revaflowers3115
    @revaflowers3115 Před 2 lety

    I was 11 years old when this was aired on the Ed Sullivan Show.I was so excited to get to see the Beatles in a live performance.Prior to this,the only images we had of the group were stills in magazines or a quick glimpse in some news reel.All the girls were crazy for them and there was so much screaming during their performances I was surprised we could even here them.As you can tell John was almost yelling out the lyrics to be heard over the screaming.It was the beginning of a new era in Rock & Roll music for America."The British Invasion" as it was coined,was moving us away from Do Wop music and into more complicated rhythms and lyrics.The Beatles only toured for a few years and then started releasing studio album and movies.I think they may have only toured in the USA two times,but I might be wrong there.Though there was some color tv shows in the early 60s ,there were still a lot of black and white programs.My family didn't have a color tv until 1966.Those tvs had large tubes in them (like little like bulds)and you removed a burnt out tube yourself and took it to the store and bought replacements for them..even the big picture tube ,which also was the veiwing screen ,you could have changed out.

  • @lorikisiel9367
    @lorikisiel9367 Před 2 lety +8

    This appearance on Ed Sullivan was during the Beatles' first visit to the US from England. The only other performers that I know of that had girls in the audience screaming and going crazy to this degree were Elvis and Michael Jackson, although Frank Sinatra had some, too

    • @poppad331
      @poppad331 Před 2 lety +1

      @@deependz3231 that's happened at many concerts sadly, Lori Kisiel was referring to The Ed Sullivan Show and she is correct what she said

  • @greenwoodtea
    @greenwoodtea Před 2 lety

    We had color TVs in 64....but most TV was Black and white until 66 or 67. I remember watching all the Beatles appearances on Ed Sullivan......it was a revolution'!!!!!

  • @audreyhumphries5867
    @audreyhumphries5867 Před rokem

    I have been a Beatles fan all my life, I do know in concert this the last song, because it took so much effort on his voice

  • @susanelkins3068
    @susanelkins3068 Před 2 lety

    The smile on your face is heartwarming!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @stedevo3812
    @stedevo3812 Před 2 lety +1

    There was Probably things in colour back in 64 but it was expensive to use back then. The Beatles... from my home town, the drummer Ringo Starr is old house is 600 meters from my house now.

  • @kengause9259
    @kengause9259 Před 2 lety

    Great memory. I remember sitting cross legged in front of the black and white television in 1964 watching it. They did the studio record in one take because of the stress on John's voice.

  • @fn8566
    @fn8566 Před rokem

    I watched live. I was 10 years old. It was on a Sunday night. The next day at school every guy had their hair like the Beatles. You cannot imagine the cultural impact they had. Nothing since has come close!

  • @stevengulley8950
    @stevengulley8950 Před 2 lety

    Color TV was around in '64, but it cost over $400, which was a LOT of money in those days. Everywhere that The Beatles performed live was a madhouse of screaming teenage girls, sometimes they couldn't even hear their own music. But there was one song, that Paul McCartney sang solo on The Ed Sullivan Show which silenced the entire crow. That song was "Yesterday" give it a look and a listen.

  • @annmariecarey9799
    @annmariecarey9799 Před 2 lety +1

    They are the best R&R group of all time. Breaking musical rules, exploding barriers wide open, check out the First Heavy Metal song.... Ever! Shelter Skelter

    • @AlBarzUK
      @AlBarzUK Před 2 lety

      That’s “Helter Skelter”. 🤗

  • @memorast
    @memorast Před rokem

    You did great on this reaction. And you’re right it was black and white except for the people that have color TV in color TV was just coming out! Amazing experience I was there when was the kid. My mom was going nuts over this thing! She saw the bill noodles the Beatles! And fell in love with them. Same thing happened before with Elvis!

  • @mikeguerrero72
    @mikeguerrero72 Před rokem

    I saw the show where they did this song. This song is one of the best sounding tunes played live. I watched this performance live on TV.

  • @deborahkilmer9271
    @deborahkilmer9271 Před 11 měsíci

    This was the very moment I fell in love with Beatles. I sat in the living room with my parents and that love affair has lasted till this day.

  • @geraldclough1099
    @geraldclough1099 Před 2 lety

    The thing to be aware of is that when the Beatles came to prominence, they were moving in and out of a genre that far more than rock and roll as it was developing. They took it so far beyond those limits that it was a genre of its own. And because it was undefined, they were able to do such stunningly different styles and were accepted, because it was all theirs. And that let them lay down the foundations of multiple subgenres that inspired others who saw niches for themselves. A true phenomenon. The remarkable thing is that they continues to extend the limits to the end and in some cases individually far further.

  • @Guy-lo3ld
    @Guy-lo3ld Před 2 lety

    The Beatles are always great to react to since they're so influential and had a tremendous impact on culture

  • @bryandouple5595
    @bryandouple5595 Před 2 lety +1

    The Beatles were the first band to ever play for this many people and sound systems and amplifiers didn't exist to handle this large of a crowd. They had special equipment custom made for these shows and they were still way underpowered. The band could barely hear what they were playing and the crowds were so loud they probably didn't hear much music. Still, it's great!

  • @brunopadovani7347
    @brunopadovani7347 Před 2 lety

    There were color TVs in 1964, but they were quite rare. On our street, the first color TV was bought around 1966. I remember going to see it. My parents bought our first color TV in 1969.

  • @debbiechang5781
    @debbiechang5781 Před 2 lety +2

    The screaming girls were a major feature of every live Beatles performance (unfortunately). It came with the territory but it was a very exciting time. I was 9 the first time they toured the US. I’ve been a dedicated fan ever since. That’s John Lennon singing lead. He was murdered in 1980. I can’t believe he’s been gone for 42 years. Worst day of my life. Best band on the planet. Hands down. 🌺✌️

  • @LarryNeie-lj7zc
    @LarryNeie-lj7zc Před 10 měsíci

    I was 13 in 1964 and so excited to see The Beatles on Ed Sullivan. My mom was ok with their songs and my dad not ok. But, he ended up liking them later with songs like In My Life and Elinor Rigby. Thanks dad for listening to the music.

  • @susanelkins3068
    @susanelkins3068 Před 2 lety

    The best group ever- thank you--MORE

  • @lorettascurato2692
    @lorettascurato2692 Před 2 lety

    I was six years old and it’s like yesterday. I’m smiling with you!

  • @gillcawthorn7572
    @gillcawthorn7572 Před 2 lety +1

    In 1962 I heard a relation of my brother-in-law talk about this group that he had just seen in Hamburg ,Germany called `the Silver Beatles` ( he had been stationed there whilst in the RAF). " Watch out for them, they re going to be really big" . I`m ashamed to say that I scoffed ,saying whoever heard of a group with such a stupid name .He was right and I was totally wrong and admitted it when in1963 they started releasing their music and I was hooked !

  • @josefschiltz2192
    @josefschiltz2192 Před 2 lety

    This from the Brittanica Online: Although colour TV was introduced to consumers in 1954, less than 1 percent of homes had a colour set by the end of that year. Ten years later, in fact, nearly 98 percent of American homes still did not have one. It was not until 1964 that NBC was finally broadcasting over half its programs in colour; CBS reached that threshold the following year.

  • @mikefetterman6782
    @mikefetterman6782 Před 2 lety

    Color TV started to become commonplace a couple years later around 1966-1970. Most people were still new to having a television for more than a couple years in 1964.

  • @xiurong888
    @xiurong888 Před 2 lety

    We always watched the Ed Sullivan show in my parents' house. I got to see all of the Beatles' appearances live as a 10-year old.

  • @mgonzales56
    @mgonzales56 Před 2 lety +1

    Great observation as far as how long ago this was, and to be able to watch it on video is simply amazing. I guess you all feel the same as I do when I watch videos on CZcams from the 1900's. It blows my mind when I watch them, and to think all the people in those 1900 video are dead...even the kids. Check them out and it is very interesting. But thanks for watching The Beatles. I could tell you were both enjoying the performance.

  • @zylem13
    @zylem13 Před rokem

    I was 8 when I watched that show. There were a few color TVs then, but most shows were still shot in black and white. Things started getting more colorized during the late '60s.

  • @garryhall9519
    @garryhall9519 Před 2 lety

    There were colour tv's in 1964, but they were incredibly expensive. I believe the Ed Sullivan Show went to colour broadcast the following season .

  • @arjaylee
    @arjaylee Před 2 lety +1

    I was in the 4th grade when this happened. The reverberation at school the next day was palpable. It's all we could talk about...We drove the Nuns crazy...

  • @stineybeanie79
    @stineybeanie79 Před 2 lety

    A day in the Life!
    Also, remember that most Beatles tracks were recorded on only 4 tracks in the beginning of their careers, later on 8 tracks.

  • @joelanderos23
    @joelanderos23 Před 2 lety

    i was seated 3 feet from the tv screen on feb 9, 1964 to watch america's introduction to the beatles. a REAL boy band that played their own instruments.

  • @jennellew.6036
    @jennellew.6036 Před 8 měsíci

    Check out their two beautiful love songs. Great chorus to these two songs called "If I Fell( in love with you) and "Here, There." The Beatles were always great with singing different types of songs.

  • @laurab68707
    @laurab68707 Před 2 lety

    This was there first appearance on American TV. They were huge. The screaming girls were always there. I was only 9 years old and was crazy about The Beatles.

  • @just-so-were-crystal-clear5245

    "I saw her standing there" " long tall sally" " hard days night" from the film " tomoorow never knows" " Helter Skelter" " Strawberry fields forever" " Because" and so much more

  • @bobbyboko6317
    @bobbyboko6317 Před 2 lety +1

    Beatlemania , they took the world by storm

  • @jeanettesmith765
    @jeanettesmith765 Před 2 lety

    I'm 68, so you're talking my music now! I saw this live when I was 10!

  • @kevinmarsh8922
    @kevinmarsh8922 Před 2 lety

    My brother, sister and I watched this on the tv. It was a big deal back then, and was one of the most watched shows of the time.

  • @Bluewizard7131
    @Bluewizard7131 Před 2 lety +1

    Check out "I Want You, (She's So Heavy)" by the Beatles.

  • @winstonsmith8441
    @winstonsmith8441 Před 2 lety

    My parents let me and my brothers stay up to watch the show. It was all anyone was talking about. They were great.

  • @stormhawk3319
    @stormhawk3319 Před 2 lety

    Ironically their signature song playing live in their early recording days was this, a cover.

  • @j.whisper2379
    @j.whisper2379 Před 2 lety

    We had color TV's in 1964! My parents had a Curtis Mathes oval screen console! Watched the NBC Peacock on that screen on many occasions. I was 16 at the time! Then I listened to I am The Walrus in Nam, during th e Summer of Love, 67

  • @unclebobunclebob
    @unclebobunclebob Před 2 lety

    Glad you appreciate the time machine nature of being able to watch the past.

  • @mrod7692
    @mrod7692 Před 2 lety

    A lot of your subscribers actually remember watching this performance on TV.

  • @inwoodliver
    @inwoodliver Před 2 lety

    Love that you both smiled at the aaahs

  • @lathedauphinot6820
    @lathedauphinot6820 Před 2 lety

    This is from the very end of the black and white TV era. First color movie was “Gone With The Wind” in 1939, I think, but TV was black and white until about 1965, then color came in one show at a time. By 1968 or so all new shows and most shows on TV were color except for re-runs. I was born in 1965 so we wanted to watch color, and our parents’ wanted to watch black & white.

  • @themajicman745
    @themajicman745 Před 2 lety +1

    This song was a big-time classic for the Isley Brothers.

  • @coleparker
    @coleparker Před 2 lety

    I was 11 at the time. Yes color TV was around, but there were not too many sets at the time and most of us still had black and white sets.

  • @christinerobinson3819
    @christinerobinson3819 Před 2 lety

    I was 12 when this came out. It was just so different from what we had in the 50's. It was amazing

  • @dougsusie2319
    @dougsusie2319 Před 2 lety

    Thanks guy's, I kinda forgot that today February 9th is the 58th anniversary of their introduction to America on The Ed Sullivan show (damn I'm getting old). I was 5 1/2 years old almost to the day, I was born on August 9th, 1958. What stands out for me about this evening is that I clearly remember my mother telling me "Douglas, if you don't get in the tub and get your bath you're not watching The Beatles tonight" That was probably the first bath I willingly took up to that point. Funny how little moments like those can stick with you for your entire life. Over 73 million people watched The Beatles that night with nearly half of the television sets in America at the time tuned into to watch them perform twice that evening and is still the largest tv audience in American history to watch a tv show. Check out the studio version of this song from their debut album Please Please Me released in the UK in March, 1963.The band recorded 10 of the 14 tracks on the album in one 12 hour marathon session with this song being the last recorded at around midnight. Lennon had a bad cold and had no more than one take in him for this recording. He sipped a hot cup of tea, sucked on a cough drop and then shouted it out. One take and probably the most legendary recording if a song in history. Check it out, it's amazing ! A few for you here are the video clip of "Help" Live from Blackpool Night Out 1965. Great color and sound for 65 and check out how in just a year the growth in lyrics and the way they looked, the hair was a lot longer. Lennon kills the vocals with great backing vocals by Paul and George. Kinda of a must watch video. George's "Here Comes The Sun" from their last Lp recorded together "Abbey Road" released in September, 1969. Make sure it's the 2019 50th anniversary remix with video, sounds incredible. Even with all of the incredible Lennon/McCartney songs this one by George is the most streamed Beatles song on Spotify with around 370 million streams at this time, great song. Also from "Abbey Road" Paul's "Oh Darling" you two have no idea with this one, trust me. Also John's "Come Together" and "I Want You (She's So Heavy)" Oh yeah young ones. Also 2019 50th anniversary remixes on these 3 also. Video for John's "Revolution" 1968 which was the B-side on the "Hey Jude" single watch as they show you how to rock out on this video. Last one, Paul's "Let It Be" a classic 2021 50th anniversary remix (released a year late due to covid) Although the album "Let It Be " was the last Beatles Lp released in 1970 "Abbey Road" is the last official Beatles Lp. "Let It Be" was recorded in January/February 1969 and then sat on the shelf for over a year before it's release. Do what you may with these, they're all great ! Peace, kiddos ☮️✌️💕

  • @willfromyadkinville
    @willfromyadkinville Před 2 lety

    the year i was born! April 17th the number one hit was by the Beatles " can't buy me love"