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When the Beatles embarked on the tour that helped launch the British Invasion in 1964, Paul McCartney had a 35mm camera on hand to help document the history-making mayhem.
The impact of The Beatles on the world in general and the United States in particular in 1964 really can't be measured. "Beatlemania" is a nice way to sum it all up in a single word, yet it simply ...
Who wouldn’t want a peek at Paul McCartney’s personal pics of The Beatles? See them in “1964: Eyes of the Storm,” a new book of 275 of his photos.
NPR's Steve Inskeep talks to Paul McCartney about his book of photographs from the time the Beatles first visited the United States.
Paul McCartney’s photos of the Beatles at their peak ‘1964: Eyes of the Storm’ collects images from the band’s time in Liverpool, London, Paris, New York, Washington and Miami ...
The Beatles went from being virtually unknown in the U.S. in 1963 to global icons in 1964. Here's how they did it in the pre-internet era.
The Feb. 9, 1964, Post-Dispatch listed the following in its TV guide for that Sunday night: 7:00: Ed Sullivan: The Beatles of London, Georgia Brown, Tessie O'Shea and Frank Gorshen.
When the Beatles embarked on the tour that helped launch the British Invasion in 1964, Paul McCartney had a 35mm camera on hand to help document the history-making mayhem.
‘1964: Eyes of the Storm’: Paul McCartney Releases Unseen Photos of The Beatles in New Book Get a peek at the band's first transatlantic trip through the lens of McCartney's camera, available ...
The book, co-written with Andy Neill, features never-before-seen photographs of the hysteria that engulfed Melbourne during The Beatles’ five day visit. “It wasn’t only teenagers, it was ...