Paul McCartney Letter Offers Drummer Tryout


First Posted: 10/17/11 11:56 AM ET Updated: 12/17/11 05:12 AM ET

By GREGORY KATZ, The Associated Press

LONDON — Somewhere, an aging drummer (identity unknown) is probably still kicking himself.

A newly discovered letter found folded in a book at a Liverpool yard sale has shed new light on the Beatles' early days, revealing that Paul McCartney offered an audition to a mystery drummer in 1960, just a few days before the band left for a formative two-month gig in Hamburg, Germany.

The letter, to be auctioned next month by Christie's, has surprised Beatles scholars. It was written two years before the band bounced drummer Pete Best in favor of Ringo Starr, who arrived just in time to help the Beatles' conquer first England and then the world, earning untold millions along the way.

The Aug. 12, 1960 letter handwritten by McCartney offers an audition to someone who had advertised their availability in the Liverpool Echo newspaper four days earlier. The unsigned ad said simply: "Drummer_Young_Free."

McCartney, who was then playing guitar in the band while the late Stuart Sutcliffe handled bass guitar, offered the drummer an audition with the caveat that if he joins the band he must be ready to travel almost immediately to Hamburg. The Beatles honed their musical chops playing at low-rent clubs in the German's city's famed red-light district.

"Expenses paid 18 pounds per week (approx) for two months," McCartney writes. "If interested ring Jacaranda club."

The letter is signed, "Yours sincerely, Paul McCartney of the BEATLES."

It is not known if the drummer came for an audition, and failed to impress McCartney and the others, or if he simply didn't followup. McCartney addressed the letter "Dear Sir," assuming the drummer was a young man, as there were very few female drummers on the Liverpool rock scene at the time.

Christie's spokeswoman Leonie Pitts said the auction house's Beatles experts are certain that the letter was not an early feeler to Starr, who was a successful drummer with a rival Liverpool band, Rory Storm and the Hurricanes, before he joined the Beatles.

She said auctioneers had not contacted McCartney to ask if he knew anything about the drummer who had placed the ad.

"We think he's on his honeymoon," she said. McCartney married U.S. heiress Nancy Shevell eight days ago. His representatives did not immediately return an AP request for comment.

Christie's auction house said Monday the letter would likely draw more than 7,000 pounds ($11,000) when it is sold Nov. 15 along with other pop memorabilia.

The letter was discovered by a man from Liverpool who has asked to remain anonymous. The auction house said he is a devoted collector of antique coins who regularly checks yard sales.

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By GREGORY KATZ, The Associated Press LONDON — Somewhere, an aging drummer (identity unknown) is probably still kicking himself. A newly discovered letter found folded in a book at a Liverpool...
By GREGORY KATZ, The Associated Press LONDON — Somewhere, an aging drummer (identity unknown) is probably still kicking himself. A newly discovered letter found folded in a book at a Liverpool...
By GREGORY KATZ, The Associated Press LONDON — Somewhere, an aging drummer (identity unknown) is probably still kicking himself. A newly discovered letter found folded in a book at a Liverpool...
By GREGORY KATZ, The Associated Press LONDON — Somewhere, an aging drummer (identity unknown) is probably still kicking himself. A newly discovered letter found folded in a book at a Liverpool...
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08:49 PM on 10/17/2011
Oh, this is so Yesterday! Come out of those Strawberry Fields you Day Trippers.
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07:25 PM on 11/17/2011
It is better to keep silent and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt
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johannesrolf
just a poor Tyrolean boy.
07:53 PM on 10/17/2011
Around 1963 or so I and my mates cruised the stores who had a record section in Staten Island. I believe it was Majors, a department store , where we spotted the first Beatle album in the States, on Vee Jay records, because none of the majors would touch them, as there was no market for anything other than American rock n roll. We did not bite either, silly us.
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Apollo C Vermouth
I come, I listen, maybe I'm amazed.
09:44 PM on 10/17/2011
'Introducing the Beatles' (VeeJay) was scheduled to be released July 1963 but actually came out 10 January 1964.
'Meet The Beatles' (Capitol) came out 10 days later.
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earlyblue
06:18 PM on 10/17/2011
I wonder why Christie's didn't mention that August 12, 1960 (the same date as the letter) is widely held to be the date that the Beatles hired Pete Best . . . just a day or two before leaving for Hamburg. So, either the acknowleged Pete Best hire date is a little early OR they left for Hamburg a little later OR Pete was hastily hired the day before they left for Hamburg since time had run out (due to their travel obligations) to find a great drummer that was a really good fit with Paul, John, George and Stu
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Readbetweentheelevens
You can't turn the wind so turn the sail.
08:37 AM on 10/18/2011
Pete Best was and is a great drummer.
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earlyblue
03:31 PM on 10/18/2011
He may be now . . . but he was not then.
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Apollo C Vermouth
I come, I listen, maybe I'm amazed.
07:48 PM on 10/18/2011
No.
Whatever nice or generous remarks George Martin (or anyone) made in the past 40 years don't mean PB was a great drummer. There are, of course, recorded tracks with the other Fabs that most would say reveal but 'pedestrian' drumming.

Just think, in the heady days of 63-64 Beatlemania, Pete could have likely gotten a major recording contract with a put together front group simply by 'raising his hand' saying I was a Beatle. Didn't happen.
He simply wasn't good enough and/or had the drive to be a pro.

You offer as a 'quote'.
"Pete was the better drummer, but Ringo was the better Beatle." -- John Lennon

Yeah, I've seen this.
But there are many so called JL quotes that are misleading if not meaningless. Such as the infamous "Ringo isn't even the best drummer in the Beatles".

At best, it's John making a backhanded compliment for PR when his actual focus was on emphasizing Ringo's importance to the Beatles.

Can you back the specific Pete quote with a credible source?
06:10 PM on 10/17/2011
Good lord, can you magine coming across a letter like this at a yard sale???

The collector that found it must have had quite a jolt when he got to the signature at the bottom of the letter!

Good for him, great story, and a great pie.ce of music history trivia. i'll bet it sells for a lot more than the "estimate" mentioned...
12:15 PM on 10/20/2011
My boyfriend when I was twenty found a diamond ring inside a book at a used bookstore. He took the ring and didn't buy the book. There was a reason we broke up.
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05:43 PM on 10/17/2011
The white-glove photo is ridiculous, but this letter will sell for far more than $11,000.
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headly67
Well raise my rent
05:51 PM on 10/17/2011
I know, more like 50K - this is a great piece of rock history.
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08:36 PM on 10/17/2011
My guess is around $120,000. It'll be interesting to see.
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SLCPunk
Nobody cuts and runs on Sheriff J. W. Peppah!
06:39 PM on 10/17/2011
Why is it ridiculous? The last thing you want to do with a 50 year old piece of paper worth salvaging (behind setting it on fire) is expose it to the oils commonly found on human skin. The easiest way to do that is with a 10 cent pair of cotton gloves.
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beauwulff
I'm dyin' last
05:38 PM on 10/17/2011
As with "hero", the word "amazing" has become seriously debased.
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Soundofthunder
Listen to the thunder
06:33 PM on 10/17/2011
True. It's just a collectible. Nothing amazing about it.

S
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tenzenz
Save the Nation Boil a Tea Bag
07:13 PM on 10/17/2011
Yeah, I would call it a pretty cool find. The Amazing part is that it was folded up in someone's book collection, maybe the book collection of a few different owners over the years, and was never discovered, until a Coin Collecting Yard Saler happened upon it. So did he find it, before purchasing the book, hiding it from the seller, or did he find after he bought the book and had it home.
The moral of this story, is; Check your second handbooks, and inside or behind the frame of second hand pictures, especially, before you throw something up in a yard sale. The Seller has apparently lost out
05:21 PM on 10/17/2011
That oughta be worth somethin
04:55 PM on 10/17/2011
1.. Is it real?

2. Is it really amazing? Not really.
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headly67
Well raise my rent
05:52 PM on 10/17/2011
To people with a sense of reality it is.
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earlyblue
06:29 PM on 10/17/2011
I agree. F&F
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pjordan52
We are the government we detest
04:53 PM on 10/17/2011
OMG! I was the one who wrote that letter to Paul! Now I find out some guy hacked my postal service account and stole my mail! Damn you Rupert Murdoch!!!
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filo
We're all Bozos on this bus.
04:50 PM on 10/17/2011
Everything happens for a reason. Ringo was meant to be the drummer for The Beatles.
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theanti-capitalist
Under Heavy Manners
11:52 PM on 10/17/2011
Ringo was the luckiest man in rock and roll history
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04:36 PM on 10/17/2011
Funniest part about all of this: The guy who wrote the letter is still alive! All this hub-bub about auctioning relics usually take place after the originator of the relic has died.
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Drew Puli Wolf
dog trots freely in the street and sees reality
05:11 PM on 10/17/2011
I think even funnier is that there are "Beatle Scholars". Certainly there must be more important things for people to study; Global Warming, World Hunger, the Cosmos? Too many Liberal Arts students in University with nothing to do.
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05:38 PM on 10/17/2011
I'm a major Beatles fan, but I was thinking the same thing. And are there Dave Clark Five scholars?
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headly67
Well raise my rent
05:54 PM on 10/17/2011
Yeah, they're only the most important cultural impact of the last century.
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headly67
Well raise my rent
05:52 PM on 10/17/2011
No one knows who he is so no one knows if he's alive.
08:01 PM on 10/17/2011
He was talking about the guy who "wrote" the letter, Paul McCartney.
04:31 PM on 10/17/2011
I would say that The Velvet Underground sound/influence is far easier to find today than that of The Beatles. Personally I think VU has had a more lasting impact. The Beatles are nearly a 60s curio at this point. Don't get me wrong, I like The Beatles but I just think the Velvets have influenced more of the music you hear than probably any other band. I cant honestly think of any groups in the last 20 years or so that sound like The Beatles.
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TomStewart
Author of Robert E. Howard: The Battle for Conan
04:51 PM on 10/17/2011
the thing is people today are influenced by people who who influenced by the Beatles. The groups influence in music and culture is so pervasive it's hard to see.
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newscott
04:52 PM on 10/17/2011
Oasis?
04:26 PM on 10/17/2011
From 1960? This is the greatest discovery since the Dead Sea Scrolls.
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goodog
Honk if you believe in a public editor.
04:13 PM on 10/17/2011
"She said auctioneers had not contacted McCartney to ask if he knew anything about the drummer who had placed the ad. 'We think he's on his honeymoon,' she said."
Kind of reminds me of the time that biblical scholars were unable to contact God to verify the authenticity of anything.
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Stephen Thorpe
Every breath you take - I'll take one too!
04:59 PM on 10/17/2011
Funny you touch on that line of thought,....perhaps in 2000 years the religeon will be Beatolocism. ;-)

Someone should publish a book of Beatles lyrics and interviews and arrange it like a Bible.

The Gospel or the words according to Paul
The Gospel or the words according to John
The Gospel or the words according to George

With exerps from Ringo.

Of course you'd likely get sued by them. Hahaha!
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jimtpat
Hell's Pretty Pink Bells
05:48 PM on 10/17/2011
As I recall, there's some of that in the book of Psongs in the Boomer Bible.
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Apollo C Vermouth
I come, I listen, maybe I'm amazed.
06:18 PM on 10/17/2011
You speaketh the truth.

The Beatles' will be one of the world's greatest cults in coming centuries.

I have no doubt.

Unlike the most popular 'cults' of today,
The Future will know that they existed, that they sought and brought love, peace and understanding.
And their own words, in their own voices, will continue to be heard.
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JonShank
Changing the world one person at a time...
04:04 PM on 10/17/2011
Pretty cool!