The Beatles: The Authorized Biography

by Hunter Davies

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This worldwide bestseller is the biography that defined a band—and an era.

As the friend and only authorized biographer of the most famous musical group in history, Davies had full access to the Beatles—including their family, friends, and colleauges—as well as their help and encouragement in writing this biography. He spent eighteen months with them when they were at the peak of their musical genius and the pinnacle of their popularity, making a mark on history and popular culture show more that would never fade. Davies stayed on with the Beatles through their breakup and remained friends with the individual members afterwards, enabling him to write the continuing story of their solo careers.

First published in 1968, this newly revised edition has added information, including a new introduction and a newly discovered song lyric by George Harrison.

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6 reviews
John Lennon famously once described this authorised biography, first published in 1968, as a whitewash (except he used rather stronger language), and his view has been echoed by many others down the decades. The general consensus seems to be that it’s a sanitised portrait of the Beatles. It was amusing to read, in Davies’ introduction to the 1985 edition, that when he delivered the manuscript back in 1968, Lennon was at the front of the queue of those primed with buckets of whitewash (he claimed that Aunt Mimi was upset). In retrospect the book actually seems more remarkable for its candour than the odd white lie Davies was made to tell: the Beatles no longer take drugs, he informs us with a straight face, following a detailed show more account of their drug-taking. He wasn’t allowed to say that Brian Epstein was gay but found ways of making it perfectly clear anyway. The full story of the Beatles is here even if you have to read between the lines occasionally.

Davies was certainly granted a now unimaginable degree of access to the then most famous group in the world. He just seems to have breezed into Brian Epstein’s office, after meeting Paul a couple of times, and next thing he was virtually a fifth Beatle. He spent a lot of time with them and this gives the book some unique insights. There is a fly on the wall account of Lennon and McCartney writing A Little Help From My Friends, and the Beatles recording It’s Getting Better and Magical Mystery Tour. He interviewed all the surviving parents, and of course the inimitable Aunt Mimi, in the posh houses bought for them by their sons. He also interviewed Pete Best who, at the time, was slicing bread in a bakery in Liverpool for the princely sum of £18 a week. This is all evocative and poignant stuff.

This wasn’t the first book about the Beatles, but it was the first attempt to chronicle the band’s early history and family backgrounds, and Davies did a huge amount of primary research. The classic tropes of the Beatles saga (the Quarrymen, John meeting Paul at the Woolton fete, Hamburg, the Cavern, Brian Epstein, the sacking of Pete Best) are marshalled into place for the first time. If it now seems a tad over-familiar that’s mainly because its basic structure, and many of the stories, have been repeated in countless subsequent books. This is the foundation stone of Beatles scholarship or, if you prefer, mythmaking. Even Albert Goldman’s iconoclastic biography of Lennon was essentially an attempt to explode a myth first set in train by Davies.

The book ends with profiles of the individual Beatles as they were in 1968: the working-class heroes from Liverpool self-immured in their mansions in the South of England, increasingly isolated from the outside world and each other. They talk about themselves with striking openness, each of them a curious mixture of the naive and the knowing, the exceptional and the ordinary. The seeds of the breakup are evident in hindsight - Lennon and Harrison were clearly bored to death with the Beatles - but Davies is honest enough to admit that he didn’t see this at the time. Early ‘68 is not a bad point to end the story of the greatest group in the history of pop music: the Beatles in their post-Pepper pomp, just before it all fell apart.

By the way, John Lennon eventually apologised to Davies for his outburst. Quite right too. This is a warm and informative Beatles biography: a groundbreaking survey of their early history and frontline reports from history as it happened.
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This is hardly comprehensive, but it's a very essential read for any hardcore beatles fans (like myself). I will say most of its value comes from the fact that it was written before the Beatles had finished per se, right before it all went horribly wrong, so its a unique perspective. Most biographies after the fact muddy the water by treating the breakup as an inevitability so here its refreshing to see something with a completely different beatles "myth". Also the way John's marriage with Cynthia is described is...well, positive, which every sign after the fact indicated it not to be. I particularly enjoyed Davies' earnestness and transparency - at every stage it seems he was aware of his bias and present it forthright. It made it show more easier to make your own assumptions about things. As it stands its a bit of an authority of a book, where most of the facts come from and were originally presented (and which ones were later denied). Written pretty well. show less
Hunter Davies' authorised 1968 biography of the group, bookended with a 2002 introduction and his 1985 postscript. I found the introduction very insightful, revealing the writing process behind the original biography, plus what was taken out and why, but Davies' firsthand account of the Beatles makes this perhaps the definitive version of all the many books out there. Nothing stays the same, of course - the introduction mentions Paul McCartney's marriage to Heather Mills, wishing them many happy years together, which some library wit has highlighted with an exclamation mark - but for new fans of an old group, like myself, Davies' informative and entertaining bio is a safe introduction. I was surprised to read about Stu Sutcliffe's show more death, and felt sorry for Pete Best, so by the time Ringo made up the final Fab Four, I already had a different impression of the group, but background details like this are probably trivia for true fans. No matter. I learned a lot, picked Paul and then Ringo as my favourite Beatle, and now love their music even more, so all in all a successful biography! show less
It's hard to convey to youngsters the incredible intensity of beatlemania. I'm not aware of anything like it since, unless Obama keeps on keepin' on. At any rate, Davies' book was the first to gather together a mountain of fun fan facts and put them all between two covers. This is the "authorized" biography, so it's definitely rated PG. Others have mined deeper, and should probably be preferred. However, the final chapter of the original edition (published 1968) is so totally wistful! The group was still together; John was just breaking up with Cynthia; George was with Patti and Paul was with Jane. They still went over to each other's houses. All was well with the world.
Originally out in the 70s, this book was an authorized biography of the group from the rise of Beatlemania to its height (including disabled brought for miraculous backstage healing ) the to end of the touring Beatles, making a complete mandala of this epic pop group. It is quite insightful and peering and this audio edition has updates and additional material from the 1985 edition (after Lennon's death and the definitive end of the group without hope of reunion) and 1996 looking back on solo careers and forward to a second generation. Any serious Beatles fan or historian should or has read this book.
Excellent biography of the world's most celebrated pop band, through 1977, when all four members were still living.

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340 works; 13 members
Best Sellers / Popular 1968
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Author Information

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109+ Works 2,295 Members
Hunter Davies is the author of more than forty books, including the international bestseller The John Lennon Letters, and he has written for The Guardian, the New Statesman, and the Sunday Times. He lives with his wife, the novelist and biographer Margaret Forster, in London.

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Beatles: The Authorized Biography
Original publication date
1968
People/Characters
Pete Best; Brian Epstein; George Harrison; Cynthia Lennon; John Lennon; Julian Lennon (show all 10); Linda McCartney; Paul McCartney; Elvis Presley; Ringo Starr
Important places
Liverpool, England, UK
Dedication
For Brian Epstein
First words
Introduction:  Liverpool is up in the top left-hand corner of England just above the bump on the map which is called Wales.
Chapter 1: Fred Lennon, John's father, was brought up in an orphanage.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"What I'd like to be is in school history books and be read by kids."
Canonical DDC/MDS
780.922
Canonical LCC
ML286.5

Classifications

Genres
Music, Nonfiction, Biography & Memoir, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
780.922Arts & recreationMusicMusicBiography And HistoryBiographyCollected biography
LCC
ML286.5MusicLiterature on musicLiterature on musicHistory and criticismBy region or country
BISAC

Statistics

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Reviews
6
Rating
(3.93)
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Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
36
ASINs
21