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New book examines the Beatles' Scottish connection and their love of the country



Get "The Beatles in Scotland" by Ken McNab (from Amazon.co.uk) or from Amazon.ca (Canada)

EXCLUSIVE: Ken McNab, author of "The Beatles in Scotland," talks to George Burton about how the country was intertwined with the Beatles

Our review of "The Beatles in Scotland"

by Steve Marinucci

There seems to be a million stories about the Beatles' relationship to various countries and just as many books about them. The wonderfully detailed "The Beatles in Scotland," shows that the Beatles' love affair with Scotland was much more than the gigs they played there.

Author Ken McNab details all the various connections, beginning with the Beatles themselves and includes Paul's love of Scotland that resulted in one of his biggest songs (though not in America) and a home there, Stu Sutcliffe, who was born in Scotland, and John and Yoko's adventures in the country that included a nasty automoble accident.

The book contains a wealth of rare photos, plus interviews with fans who recalls the early Scottish gigs. It also includes interviews with friends and associates with Scottish connections, including Gordon Waller (Peter & Gordon), Tom Murray (the "Beatles Mad Day Out" photographer), Donovan, Lulu, Ian MacMillan ("Abbey Road" cover photographer), Davey Johnstone (Elton John guitarist), Hamish Stuart, Jack Bruce, the group Marmalade, drummer Andy White and many more that cover a cross section of Beatle history.

Though the group has always been connected to Liverpool, "The Beatles In Scotland" makes an excellent case for considering their Scottish ties a fundamental part of their history.

Update (12/28/08)
  • BBC Radio 4 has a 15-minute program up for a few more days called "Lennon's Private Passion: Cape Wrath," which talks about some of John's Scottish roots.

    Update (12/26/08)

  • Paul McCartney's Scottish roots are deeper than previously realized, according to brother Mike McCartney, reports Click Liverpool.

    Update (12/5/08)

  • See our review of the book above.

    Update (12/3/08)

  • George Burton has put up a podcast of his interview with Ken McNab, author of "The Beatles in Scotland," on Green Apple Radio. (Thanks to George for the link.)

    Update (11/30/08)

  • Times Online reviews "The Beatles in Scotland."

    Update (11/10/08)

  • To add to the stories of John, Paul, George and Ringo in Scotland, the Sunday Mail has added Stuart Sutcliffe.
  • And the paper says John Lennon almost became a Scottish landowner like Paul McCartney.
  • Two excerpts from the book: "We loved them, yeah, yeah, yeah"
  • And here are some Beatle pics from the Daily Mail relating to the group and Scotland. (Thanks to the Beatcomber for the link.)

    Update (11/3/08)

  • The UK Sunday Mail has published four separate stories relating to each Beatle's relationship to Scotland. Go here for John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, Ringo Starr.

    Update (10/14/08)

  • Over the weekend, singer Allison Crowe headlined a Scottish village's festival honoring John Lennon, reports the Press and Journal.

    Update (10/13/08)

  • Here's the website (with audio link) to the BBC Radio 4 program "Lennon's Private Passion: Cape Wrath."
  • Just a reminder that we have an exclusive interview with the author of "The Beatles In Scotland." See the link above.

    Update (10/12/08)

  • The Times Online ran a story Saturday repeated what you could have read head in July (see below) that the end of the Beatles had its seeds in Paul McCartney's trip to Scotland.

    (07/18/2008) From George Burton:

    The Beatles in Scotland

    The decision to break up The Beatles' legal partnership was taken on the beaches of the Mull of Kintyre in Scotland. That's according to a new book, "The Beatles in Scotland," by author Ken McNab. He reveals how McCartney's Scottish retreat saved him from a nervous breakdown during those dark, agonising days and his love affair with Scotland is fully revealed with interviews from the locals who know him best.

    The book takes us on a journey to uncover the perhaps surprising role Scotland played in the development of the group before and during its lifespan. That and the continued role the country has played within the world's most celebrated band. The book tells the story of the band's association with Scotland from a time when they were complete unknowns during their first tour in 1960, through the Scottish leg of their UK tours and to the revelation that the decision to break the group up was taken north of the border. He also explores the personal connections band members had with the country, from John Lennon's childhood holidays in Durness, George Harrison's visits to the Isle of Skye to the McCartney's bolt hole on the Mull of Kintyre all illustrated using new interviews with members of the band's inner sanctum to reveal previously unheard stories.

    McNab discloses how the Scottish Highlands would open up John Lennon's creative mind and fuel his desire to become an artist, and how the area provided an escape and a stark contrast to the austere background and grime of post war Liverpool. He also tells the untold story of the Scottish Beatle, whose birthright has been largely airbrushed out of the band's history. Original bassist Stuart Sutcliffe was born in Edinburgh and was one of Lennon's closest and most influential friends. It was Stuart who gave the band their name and it was he who was pivotal in introducing the famous Beatle hairstyle. Sutcliffe, who has since been hailed as one the great painters of his generation died aged just 21 and only months before the group began their journey proper, en route to their destination as the biggest band in the world. McNab investigates Sutcliffe's family origins exposing a strong Scottish connection and explores the lasting influence he continued to have on the Beatles.

    The first Beatles tours were in Scotland, and this book gives the background story of how they cut their teeth in locations such as Alloa, Peterhead, Forres and Nairn as they criss-crossed the Highlands in a beat up old van in May 1960. Unbelievably, the author has tracked down some of these original fans who saw the band play at these very gigs and their memories provide a powerful insight into what those shows were actually like. The book also reveals for the first time how Scotland was at the forefront of Beatlemania before the rest of the UK by telling the story of all of the band's Scottish concerts from 1963 through to the end of their touring days in 1965. Again, backed up with eye-witness accounts from police officers, ambulance workers, press photographers and theatre bouncers, he paints a unique picture of the madness that accompanied shows in Dundee, Edinburgh and Glasgow.

    Also, in a series of exclusive interviews, Ken McNab talks to the many Scottish personalities who were part of the band's inner sanctum during and beyond the heady days of Beatlemania. These include Lulu, Donovan, Sir Jackie Stewart, Hamish Stuart, Marmalade, Gallagher and Lyle and a host of other Scots who hitched a ride on the Beatle bandwagon.

    The book will also include a number of never-before-seen pictures of the group as well as intimate private photographs illustrating how The Beatles really did love Scotland.

    This then, as told by Ken McNab, is Scotland's role in the story as four boys from Liverpool conquered the world.




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