History Of The Beatles

Coming to America, February 7, 1964

Bill Petro
ILLUMINATION

--

The Beatles
The Beatles arrive in NYC at JFK. Image: Beatles Bible

On February 7, 1964, The Beatles landed at JFK Airport in New York. The airport was recently renamed by a mourning country in honor of President Kennedy, who had been assassinated just 77 days earlier.

The airport was now full of 4,000 greeters. Not realizing why there was such a crowd, Paul McCartney wondered aloud,

“Who is this for?”

as the screaming fans rushed to the gates to meet The Beatles. Two days later, on Sunday night, they would appear on The Ed Sullivan Show for their first of three consecutive Sunday night appearances.

First American Record Album

Meet The Beatles was the first record album I ever bought. A monochrome cover and a dozen monophonic songs opened with the clap-track augmented I Want To Hold Your Hand, followed by I Saw Her Standing There; both were already massive hits in the U.S.

To get a glimpse of the cultural impact it had in America — and the value of a clap track — watch the Tom Hanks movie That Thing You Do.

Ed Sullivan Show

On Sunday nights in the ’60a, everyone watched The Ed Sullivan Show. My family watched it. Seventy-three million other Americans watched this particular show on…

--

--

ILLUMINATION
ILLUMINATION

Published in ILLUMINATION

We curate and disseminate outstanding articles from diverse domains and disciplines to create fusion and synergy.

Bill Petro
Bill Petro

Written by Bill Petro

Writer, historian, technologist. Former Silicon Valley tech exec. Author of fascinating articles on history, tech, pop culture, & travel. https://billpetro.com