Dick Clark Interviews The Beatles - American Bandstand 1967
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- čas přidán 11. 01. 2011
- Dick Clark does Hollywood Hotline on American Bandstand 1967 where he revisits a phone interview he did with The Beatles four years earlier, in honor of there appearance in the week to comes (Dick wants to do an comparison between how they answer then and how they would answer now).
Some of the questions that was 'how did The Beatles get their name', "when did you make your first record', 'how many records did you sell so far', 'we understand your records are being to sell all over the world', ' tell me is it truth that you have your own personal hair dresser', 'how did you the idea of the hair style', and 'do you ever worry about the audience getting out of control at one of your appearances'.
License American Bandstand Clips Here:
dickclarklicensing.com/Default... - Zábava
Dick was plugging next weeks show as an appearance by the Beatles. It was actually just showing 2 promo videos. The Beatles never appeared in person on Bandstand.
Right? I almost did a CZcams search, thinking “how did I miss that?”
Dick Clark said that after hearing their first records he didn’t think there was anything special about them even after being offered a tv performance from them. It was after seeing them on Ed Sullivan he realized that passing on the Beatles was one of his biggest blunders.
Clark made up for it by cutting a deal with Brian Epstein where he’d get a weekly segment promoting new bands he was managing so a lot of British Invasion bands got exposure on Bandstand
@@jennifersman7990 It's interesting how the Beatles were perceived in America, prior to 1964. I remember reading that when 'She Loves You' was released in America, in September of 1963, a DJ here played the song five nights in a row, trying to get a reaction from his audience (I assume that audience was made predominatly of teenagers and people in their early 20s). But his audience didn't think much of the song at all. And, in late 1963, when Jack Paar played a clip of the Beatles playing 'She Loves You, Paar's audience found it amusing (but certainly wasn't blown away or impressed).
@@thehighllama8101
And the rest they say.......is history. 😊
Still a fan 55 years later
It sounds like they took a Beatles press conference and claimed that it was Dick interviewing them. He has Ringo and George mixed up!
Ringo has a deeper voice than the other three.
I noticed that right away. Go figure huh
You got George and Ringo wrong Dick. yap yap.
Yeah this is completely fake. If it were real they wouldn't do all those cuts since they wouldn't need to.
It used to be common for promoters to send out records of some artist answering specific questions, just the answers, and then the radio station would get a script saying what to read for the question, then have the record cued up and just fire it. That's what Clark's doing here. Fake interview.
I noticed that they had George and Ringo mixed up right away!
Had AB only had “live” performances
Imagine the historical significance
Dick Clark's fault he insisted on lip syncing thought the kids didn't like music liked the records exactly as they had heard them - tons of live performances lost forever
By the way, Dick, that's George,not Ringo.
Not George, Ringo... not Ringo, George...
he may rest in heaven, he performed 10.000 shows of american bandstand, he was brilliant artist
HE WAS A VRRY EGOTISTICAL MAN AND PENNY PINCHER AS WELL I WORKED AT DICK CLARK PRODUCTIONS IN BURBANK. NOT MUCH FUN
@@marksandford1566 Wow!!! Thanks for the insight!! Now we know!!
My Ex Boss ,I loved him he had his own funny ways but then it's his right love you ❤️ Boy miss you
He never interviewed them, that was a stock open end interview sent out by Capitol records to radio stations.
He never had them on the show either. He showed videos.
Yes, I use to own one of these records. You asked the pre-printed question that came with the record, & Paul would answer it. I believe it was on Capitol Records.
@@kitcat4650 What is interesting is that he thought he could get away with using what hundreds of local djs had already used.
But it was easier to fool people back then.
@@MrJoeybabe25
Easier
@@navysealsliedtheyneverburi430 Fuck off!
everyone's got this wrong. Dick Clark isn't interviewing them live, he clearly talks about how the beatles used to answer questions, and then proceeds to play sound clips from early beatle interviews. This isn't 'live' or in 1967
Well, the interview clippings aren't from 1967
@@JoeGibsonLP yes he says that in the clip. He says a few times that the interview is from a few years back.
I tried to watch american bandstand every week. Dick Clark was the best. He is missed very much. There will never be another like him.
You are right. I think that Dick asked the best intelligent questions to really learn about the guest artists and I think he was really concerned about them and the current music trends. I don't think anyone has matched him since.
This was a common thing many TV people did then, take a recorded interview and sub in their own voice as if they were there. Obviously an attempt to raise they’re appearance of importance.
He is talking with a recording Beatles interview made years ago,the voice of John,Paul,George and Ringo has a sound of young voices.
Yes, in the first minute, he says the interview is four years old. Did you actually watch the video?
This (famous folk recording answers to questions and presenters pretending to interview them whilst the recording is played back) was very common back then. It was win-win in that the performer got publicity and the interviewer got to seem important because they were associated with stars.
Dick Clark. A national treasure and one of the all time television legends.
1957-1987 American Bandstand
1971-79, 1982-88 Pyramid
1978-2003 Dick Clark’s Weekly Top 40
A "canned" interview that ANY obscure music person, like Clark, could have used.
man we lost a hollywood legend R.I.P. Dick Clark
amyhooda11 Never trusted him but he was a very shrewd businessman cashing in on Rock & Roll knowing that’s where the money is. Highly doubt he actually liked Rock & Roll as he wasn’t from that generation although there were people his age that did like it but were far & few in between. But what is ironic as our Parents were Clark’s age & didn’t like Rock & Roll was that Chuck Berry & Little Richard were also from the Big Band Era but were Rock & Rollers.
@@revrotunda3206 He was accused of accepting payola. He denied it, unlike Alan Freed.
Who knew, on top of everything else the Beatles invented sarcasm?
Sarcasm was already a well honed British skill.
They didn’t invent it but they were and are still famous for it
At that time, the Beatles were no longer doing live tv performances....they would record their appearances in advance from their Apple studios then forward copies to certain tv shows (i.e.; The Ed Sullivan Show, The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour)
Dick says "Ringo got on the phone" then it's actually George speaking.
America's oldest teenager.
Bandstand kids say he was a racist
@@chucknchar .. Your kids say you touched them
@@chucknchar Your Momma is a racist.
@@rmartin7558 overused your mom joke detected
@@chucknchar He was actually the least racist. He was one of the first to integrate African Americans successfully on TV.
Transcript from 02.03:
Ringo: "Er, well, the last count was um, six million I think..."
John: "That's just Ringo's record - the others don't sell..."
Clarke talks.
George: "Yes, well we've heard that our latest record, 'I wanna hold your hand', came into the Australian top twenty..." etc. etc.
Actually, John was VERY worried about personal appearances. I believe an incident at the last live concert where lit firecrackers were thrown at them (San Francisco, I think) was enough for them to go 'Fuck this shit" and they stopped doing live shows.
Actually, the firecracker event happened in Memphis
@@knkjchannel55 Well, I'm old and my brain misfires on a regular basis now, so....You could be right, I might be lazy.
@@byronp2311 ok
@@knkjchannel55 We try.
And don't forgot their disaster of a tour in phillipines
Hafta say: Dick Clark was pretty sharp. He rode the major changes in music with good perception and insight.
Bullshit.
Clark's shortsighted snubbing of the Beatles was an enormous misstep that almost cost him everything he had ever worked for.
@@williardbillmore5713 O...kay... Well I did not know this. It isn't observable in this video...
Proves my theory that time has indeed become distorted. Here, Dick Clark is talking about 3YEARS earlier as "the early days"
The Space/Time continuum has been altered by Marty McFly!
There's an interview the Beatles did in 67 or 68 where they called their fans of 4 years prior "the old generation" (mainly because their music by 67 did not sound anything at all like it did back in 63-64.
As to their hair, at least 5-10 versions of how it came about have appeared in print and audio. I don't think we'll ever know unless Paul and Ringo, still with us as of 2018, sit down and address this issue. The truly biggest worldwide phenomenon of the arts and entertainment of the 20th century, still reverberating strongly today.
Before hearing Paul answer the question, I thought it was Stu Sutcluffe's girlfriend that came up with the idea for their hairstyle.
@@oldiesgeek454 that's pretty much the accepted version of the story, her name is Astrid Kirchherr.
I think Lennon said it best when he said the hair came from the scalp!
@@oldiesgeek454 That’s what I’ve always heard!!
@@oldiesgeek454 Something about when they were in Paris? Think some of the boy models in France were wearing the "pudding basin" hairstyle...then again when you look at pics of President John F. Kennedy circa 1962/3 he allow his hair to flop on his forehead, which was really unheard of until then..at least here in the USA
How cool was Dick Clark..So glad he was doing great stuff in my lifetime,
Beatles. Pink Floyd...yes Pink Floyd's 1st tv appearance!
RIP Dick. Always remember how important you will always be to music.
He never played Beatles records on band stand, he hated them cause they declined to appear on Band stand.
Groovy!
At 2:30.... that is certainly George.
Not Ringo.
not only that, but the question supposedly posed to george at around 2:00 was answered by john...
+TacomaPaul Yep -- he got George and Ringo mixed up -- he still hadn't figured out which one was which in 1967!!
I know. What a dumbass!
I auditioned in the 80s for a show Dick Clark was producing and was going to sing What a Feeling and my black velour jump suit tore in the back and could not complete the dancing or I would become FLASH DANCE in a whole new LIGHT!!! lol
A DC rehearsal was the live presentation. He was the most well-oiled machine on TV at the time.
PAUL. YOUR MEMORY IS FADING. THE FIRST RECORDING WAS SEP.4 1962..VERSION 1 OF " LOVE ME DO" WITH ANDY WHITE ON DRUMS AND RINGO ON TAMBOURINE. ONE WEEK.LATER SEP 11 1962 VERSION 2 WITH RINGO.ON DRUMS AND B SIDE
" PS I LOVE YOU. BY EARLY 63.THEY HAD DONE ANOTHER 2 SIDES AND WERE GETTING READY TO CUT THEIR DEBUT ALBUM..
Today Commemorates Dick Clark's 90th Birthday
I hope this new list created is not already taken... Who else loves this as much as I do?
2:50, he says it's Ringo, but it's actually George.
That's George @ around the 2:51 mark, not Ringo.
Poor Dick.... he never really did get The Beatles did he? He admitted years later that he figured they'd never go anywhere when he first saw them on the Sullivan show. They weren't the clean-cut Bobby Vee/Johnny Tillotson types of performers he and his bunch preferred. In this interview, which he admits is already four years old, he still doesn't know which one is which. He mixes up George and Ringo. And his little teenybopper audience didn't appreciate "Penny Lane" and (especially) "Strawberry Fields Forever" at all.
I feel like he would be confused about music after 1964. Heavy Metal, Funk, New Wave, (Hip Hop if he went further) was too strange for his 50s ears.
Bobby Dylan65 Yes, your right.
Dickie was somewhat of a business prodigy.
He had discovered a great formula.
Teenagers, ( the word created in the 50's) music and dance= Television = $$$$
A millionaire by 21.
The teenagers that took the " journey" with The Beatles picked up the Stones, Blues and all else including war and protest.
A tough one for Mr. Clarke to fig$ure out.
And yet he managed to do several radio countdowns from 1981 to the 2000s.
**The 'real story?' Clark seemed to have no respect at all for Brian Epstein regarding 'fees/promotional material/choice of venue/no other artists to appear on any episode or 'interview'/in other words, anything to do with the'Fabs' went thru Brian personally and he expected Clark to 'talk business' with him personally...and Brian was livid when he went to see Dick Clark at his offices and was told he was 'busy' and Brian being 'Brian' he stormed-out and told the people there "I WON'T BE DIS-RESPECTED LIKE THIS...HE'LL SEE THE 'BEATLES' LIKE ANYOTHER FAN...PAY FOR A TICKET!"** (my older sister dated a guy who worked for 'DCP'...that's where the story comes from)
+Gerry Knightongale Pay for a ticket? Sounds like Epstein forgot momentarily that the Beatles were no longer performing at the time... Lol
The Beatles never came on the American bandstand they was on the 📞 phone talking about stuff
Dick confuses Ringo for George and George for Ringo! hahaha
The teenagers of the show were chatting in the middle of the interview, they just didn't care lol
WRONG. The Beatles were introduced to America in very early February, 1964 on Ed Sullivan. I saw it on TV while it was happening.
Jack Paar show had the first clips of the Fab Four. But yes their first tv performance in America was on Sullivan's. I know it's splitting hairs. Kudos to Ed for getting them on.
Too bad they didn't have Zoom back then...
Oh gosh ! Dick clarks really existed and American Bandstand too I‘m so choked
whaat square means ?
Oh ok? sorry I'm not american and I wasn't even born when this show excisted. i know american bandstand and Dick clarck from American dreams
sorry i don't get what does your sentence mean ? easy way to tell what ?
Something about this still-modern sounding music and the antique-looking black and white footage simply doesn't mesh. Their music was well ahead of its time. Shortly thereafter, the likes of Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath would rule the airwaves.
"... you'll see a FANTASTIC change... you'll notice a definite change between then and now"
Uhhh yeah Dick, if it weren't for them appearing (cough) on the show next week, we'd never know.
President Kennedy was assassinated November 22, 1963. The Beatles came to America February 1964. In deep mourning we needed them very badly.
I’m looking for the 1958 videos I won the dance contest and would love to show my Grandchildren!!!
@Marsha Were you a frequent dancer on the show back then? 😊
Unfortunately nearly all pre 1964 shows have been lost. ABC dumped a lot of films back in the early 70's and Bandstand was affected the most.
Never knew this happened
4:04 That look really caught on!
It's too bad that all of the AB footage isn't this clear.
Prerecorded interview sent to DJs, mistakes George for Ringo, etc., but on Live at the Hollywood Bowl it's Dick Clark who says, "And now, here they are! The Beatles!"
Actually, it's NOT. It's Bob Eubanks and the other KRLA DJ's who intro The Beatles. Eubanks was the Hollywood Bowl promoter who booked the group.
This interveiw is actually from an open ended interview they did in 1964, they could ship it out to as many radio stations as they wanted so they too could get a “Beatles Interview” without the boys actually having to be there
Dick must’ve just gotten his copy 🤣
Misleading title as you think it’s a 1967 interview which it isn’t. The episode of American Bandstand with the promo films of Strawberry Fields and Penny Lane is worth watching as very little US tv from that period.
Was the show still in black and white in 1967?
For most of 67 it was still in B&W. But by the later part of the year, they finally switched over to color.
@@oldiesgeek454 A bit like The Beatles, themselves.
Full color on television took place by 1968.
Why does 1967 look and sound like 1964?
They made their first record in 1961 with TONY SHERIDAN
This was an interview with the Beatles while they were in prison
They raped Ringo?
Pris
Funny how Dick Clark didn't know George from Ringo!
George formed Ringo?? I thought God formed Ringo.
If he did a phone call to The Beatles 4 years earlier it would be 1963. At that time he played She Loves You on Rate-A-Record in October and the kids gave it a low score average. DC figured The Beatles were not worth any interest because of that and so I really doubt he would have bothered to call them at that time.
The Beatles weren't American so the producers of AB ignored them until American bandstand's TV ratings started dropping like a rock.
They were so used to deciding what acts would have hit records they couldn't understand how these four guys could be so popular without Dick Clark and the shows blessing.
Yes, promotional EP issued by Capitol Records to radio stations for the album Meet the Beatles in early 1964. Open-end interview and song I Want to Hold Your Hand on side one. Tunes This Boy and It Won’t Be Long on side two.
Damn Dick Clark was soooo cute !!!
Beatles
D.C. did say the interview was a couple of years old. He did say they looked different. Boy did they look different. And he mistook George for Ringo. Easy mistake for him to make, back then.
4:27 I wonder what they look like now? I'll bet it's a fantastic change.
Yes, they all sprout moustaches. John wears his round specs, and George has a beard. Oh, and no more matching suits!
I had a vision when I was twelve i t was of a man on a flaming pie he said you will be the beetles with an a
I knew that was fake because he asked a question to Ringo and it sounded like George who answered.
In Oct. of '63 DC played (on his rate the record thingy) 'She Loves You' and the kids gave it a low rating (I would have also... don't like it much). If he had just played the flip side 'I'll Get You' I think he might have spawned an interest in the states before 'IWTHYH' and Sullivan.
I recall reading in Dick Clark's ROCK, ROLL & REMEMBER that "She Loves You" got a 78 on AB's "Rate The Record." "I'll Get You" is a great flip side, as were many other Beatles B sides! CHEERS!
What's my favorite song ? My Goodness , theres so many hits . I think it would have to be , The Crystal Ship . Bonnie
I love thé process of Amerikans trying to understand how the Beatles were far beyond their comprehension.
Paul's answers are dubbed in and added later. Paul's answers are not the originals
Could you imagine if the beatles had not changed their style and were moptops from 1963 to 1969 they would have been laughed at
Yes, a canned interview.....Dick Clark could have cared less about The Beatles in '64, '65 and '66. Why was Dick so intrigued with them in '67, as most of the kids were shocked with their image change? He never had them live, or a video of them, on his show before '67, did he? Maybe because they were English, he was hoping they'd lose their popularity with the image change, and leave the charttopping for his American bands (?)
He dedicated whole shows to the Beatles in 1964, especially. If he disdained them, the above clip wouldn't exist.
@@aboxofbroken8tracks983 I saw one of those "Beatles Day" shows on VH1 in about 1997 I believe. It would probably be here on youtube, but copyright laws or whatever won't allow it.
The ad ruins this video
Now I know what Syd Barrett was talking about when he said "John Lennon doesn't have to do this"
Spin Al-Fluid When did he say that? Would love to look up that clip or interview
it will be nice to actually see performances if they ever clear music rights
He referred to George as Ringo.
He mixed up George and RIngo's names vs. their interviews, so obvious he wasn't actually interviewing them.
You can hear the clicks on the vinyl haha
They got their HAIR STYLE from STU SUTCLIFFE Johns friend and bass player
At approx. 4:24 min. In , doesn’t Dick say Faul, then corrects it, and says Paul?? I think he does. (IF) I’m correct, THAT is VERY INTERESTING!!! Anyone else HEAR THIS??
He mixed up Ringo and George and these responses were pulled from Beatles interviews, they weren’t talking to Dick.
Dusty , if your out there some place , it's me Bonnie . Use to live in Blowmont, now i live some where else . If your steal single , hit me back . Bonnie
That isn't Ringo.
It's Beatles with an A !!!
"We all grew guitars".
Dick Clark did in fact interview the Beatles while hosting AB, It was a phone conversation that aired live on AB, Some 4 years
before this "Revisit"
He never interviewed The Beatles
Dick Clarke is telling a fib! LOL.
Burco1 The Beatles "Never" Appeared on American Bandstand as did Elvis Presley and Ricky Nelson. Dick Clark also got a chance to get them signed on his Record Label Swan that he had to give up due to the Payola Hearings, and when he played She Loves You, the kids weren't too crazy about them. Dick turned them no, and the rest is history.
He did have Rick on a show of his years later, though - don't recall the name, but it was a prime time variety show, and Rick sang Mystery Train.
Can we talk about how george and ringo got mixed-
This is a non interview. Shows how out of step DK was with changing youth culture. The quips about flip answers, long hair. Did Dick ever lose the brill clean haircut
In the mid 70s he let it grow below his ears.
@@visaman Well, just about every male who still had some hair left did that in the mid 70's, sideburns and all. That doesn't really count.
DIck talks about the Beatles performing on Bandstand the following week but it was only a video of the Beatles. But he talks like they were going to perform live. He was lying.
+amsedelm No he was not lying...music video was hard to explain back then...via live...without being there.
Dick should've been more specific. He should've said "we'll have a film next week of the Beatles performing".
Dick isn't lying. He is just addressing a bunch of kids and doesn't really care too much about accurate details. They're just kids. They don't have any influence or importance!
I , would like to go to a , Doors Concert . Holagrams .
He confused George and Ringo.
Just to think the Beatles are aware of Jimi Hendrix and the experience at this moment is mind boggling.
So?
and before that he said it was George when it was Ringo
This entire snippet is disappointing on several levels. First, the interview never happened - though Dick Clark infers that it did. Sadly, it makes Mr. Clark (who I always respected) a deceiver. Second, the Beatles interview snippets are from an open-ended interview record that Capitol sent out to radio stations all over the country in early 1964. Any disc jockey could read the questions on the record sleeve it came in and make it sound like the Beatles paid that station a visit at some point in time.
johnlorican wow dick Clark is fibbing
check out collective soul, howard stren, heavy, live, wow...to bad dickie c pay...
🔵AND THE BEATLES DIDN'T APPEARED THE FOLLOWING WEEK AND NEVER DID APPEARED ON BAND STAND AND DICK CLARK DIDN'T FORGAVE THEM FOR THAT AND NEVER AGAIN WOULD PLAY THEIR RECORDS ON BAND STAND.🔴
Bizarre - the answers are so americanised for the USA public, ie; their first disc was 63...try 61. As for the USA albums, they wore just torn to shreds by capitol
No body bttr!
That wasn't Ringo that was george
He says George and Ringo speaks...he says Ringo and George speaks. Lol
This is so fake....Dick Clark co-opting an "interview" done by others. Otherwise, why not just play the whole audio clip, with Clark's voice asking the questions? How facile and dishonest can you get?!
Fake news 1967 ! !
He was honest here, what are you talking about..He said he asked...then played the recorded response. He never said he had them on the phone live.
How come you don’t hear Dick asking the question on the tape?