
A Day In The Life - Beatlemaniacs flights of fancy
On September 12, 1965 the Beatles appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show. Here's the program:
1. ED’S OPENING
2. SOUPY SALES - REMINISCES WITH ED
3. CILLA BLACK - “SEPTEMBER IN THE RAIN”
4. FANTASIO - SLIGHT-OF-HAND ARTIST
5. THE BEATLES - “I FEEL FINE”
6. THE BEATLES - “I’M DOWN”
7. THE BEATLES - “ACT NATURALLY”
8. ALLEN & ROSSI - “TRY TO REMEMBER”
9. CILLA BLACK - “GOIN’ OUT OF MY HEAD”
10. SOUPY SALES - “THE MOUSE”
11. THE BEATLES - “TICKET TO RIDE”
12. THE BEATLES - “YESTERDAY”
13. THE BEATLES - “HELP!”
What is not generally known is that Soupy Sales wrote the song "The Mouse" WITH THE AID OF GEORGE HARRISON AND PAUL MCCARTNEY the previous day during rehearsals. Here's Soupy... but only listen if you can stand his incredibly horrible vocals:
http://www.onthemedia.org/transcripts/transcripts_020604_soupy.html
1. ED’S OPENING
2. SOUPY SALES - REMINISCES WITH ED
3. CILLA BLACK - “SEPTEMBER IN THE RAIN”
4. FANTASIO - SLIGHT-OF-HAND ARTIST
5. THE BEATLES - “I FEEL FINE”
6. THE BEATLES - “I’M DOWN”
7. THE BEATLES - “ACT NATURALLY”
8. ALLEN & ROSSI - “TRY TO REMEMBER”
9. CILLA BLACK - “GOIN’ OUT OF MY HEAD”
10. SOUPY SALES - “THE MOUSE”
11. THE BEATLES - “TICKET TO RIDE”
12. THE BEATLES - “YESTERDAY”
13. THE BEATLES - “HELP!”
What is not generally known is that Soupy Sales wrote the song "The Mouse" WITH THE AID OF GEORGE HARRISON AND PAUL MCCARTNEY the previous day during rehearsals. Here's Soupy... but only listen if you can stand his incredibly horrible vocals:
http://www.onthemedia.org/transcripts/transcripts_020604_soupy.html
“The urge to save humanity is always a false front for the urge to rule it.” ....H. L. Mencken
Was Soupy Sales ever funny? Was the Ed Sullivan show ever entertaining when rock and roll guys weren't on it?
Because those 4 Ed Sullivan shows I have on the DVD are basically awful. "Comedians" who get zero reaction from the audience, giant dancing puppets, and the spinning plate guy (OK, I don't think he's actually on any of those 4 shows but you know what I mean).
Because those 4 Ed Sullivan shows I have on the DVD are basically awful. "Comedians" who get zero reaction from the audience, giant dancing puppets, and the spinning plate guy (OK, I don't think he's actually on any of those 4 shows but you know what I mean).
Listen to that sustain!
Ed was a throw back to vaudeville era I suspect and his show was masked under the guise of family entertainment. The odd circus act, magicians, rock star(s) and big band era singers made for a weird line up. There was actually something quite "wholesome" about it in many respects.
It, much like the London Palladium show in England showcased a lot of great up and coming "young" talent.
It, much like the London Palladium show in England showcased a lot of great up and coming "young" talent.
“We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.” - Albert Einstein
"You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother" - Albert Einstein
"You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother" - Albert Einstein
yup throw back to vaudeville era is exactly right .... if I can stretch my memory back that far, I can hear my mother telling me that bedtime was right after Ed Sullivan.
Of course my older sister was more hip to current happenings and she insisted that we watch a certain singing group on Ed Sullivan in Feb of '64. Apparently these guys sang and played guitar but the only people I was aware of who did that sort of thing were singing cowboys (I was apparently oblivious to Elvis and the Everly Brothers). After the show my sister was on cloud 9 and I (of course) had to tease her because the songs were about "LOVE"... na na na na na na.... but I do remember that it was obviously new and different and I wondered why one of the guitars had only 4 strings. The next day in school (4th grade?) EVERYTHING was different and (led by the girls who seemed to know a lot about stuff that us boys were oblivious to) EVERYTHING was now Beatle-this and Beatle-that. Nothing was ever the same again. Anyways, I ramble... back to work.
Of course my older sister was more hip to current happenings and she insisted that we watch a certain singing group on Ed Sullivan in Feb of '64. Apparently these guys sang and played guitar but the only people I was aware of who did that sort of thing were singing cowboys (I was apparently oblivious to Elvis and the Everly Brothers). After the show my sister was on cloud 9 and I (of course) had to tease her because the songs were about "LOVE"... na na na na na na.... but I do remember that it was obviously new and different and I wondered why one of the guitars had only 4 strings. The next day in school (4th grade?) EVERYTHING was different and (led by the girls who seemed to know a lot about stuff that us boys were oblivious to) EVERYTHING was now Beatle-this and Beatle-that. Nothing was ever the same again. Anyways, I ramble... back to work.
“The urge to save humanity is always a false front for the urge to rule it.” ....H. L. Mencken
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shamustwin
- Senior Member
- Posts: 5287
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2003 5:00 am
Ed Sullivan wasn't the guitar virtuoso that Ringo was (is), but I think Ed did some tasty maracca work on "You Know My Name, Look Up The Number". I have it on good authority that it was Ed who came up with the name "Dennis O'Dell", who was a Hollywood Producer/Director and one of Ed's business partners.
“The urge to save humanity is always a false front for the urge to rule it.” ....H. L. Mencken
Actually Ed played packing cases while extremely inebriated on "Words of Love". Ringo was credited with that innovation.
“We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.” - Albert Einstein
"You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother" - Albert Einstein
"You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother" - Albert Einstein


