THE COMPLETE BBC SESSIONS
(HERE WE GO DISC 10)
(CD 1994 GREAT DANE GDR CD 9326/10)
About Here We Go and the sessions contained on
this CD.
This episode of Here We Go was recorded at the Playhouse Theatre, Manchester on Wednesday,
6 March 1963, in front of an audience. It was broadcast by the BBC Light Programme FM,
nationally, on Tuesday, March 12, 1963, 5.00pm to 5.29pm.
The tape featuring the three Beatles numbers contains a total of 13'46" of the show.
disc10.lst
The tracks surviving are:
1) The Trad Lads: Instrumental
Total Time 01:11
2) The Beatles: Misery
(Lennon-McCartney)
3) The Beatles: Do
You Want To Know A Secret
(Lennon-McCartney)
4) The Beatles:
Please Please Me
(Lennon-McCartney)
Total Time 06:33
5) Ben Richmond: Warmed Over Kisses (Left-Over Love)
Written by P.Udell and G. Geld. Publishing credit on the original USA single
by Brian Hyland is Pogo Music Corp, ASCAP. On the Dave Edmunds UK single from
1982 publishing credit is given to the Welk Music Group Ltd/Heath Levy Music Co Ltd.
6) The Northern Dance Orchestra: Waltz in Jazz Time
Composer is unknown, but this was originally recorded by Si Zentner on Liberty
Records and probably is a Zentner composition.
7) The Trad Lads,
unknown song
Total Time 06:00
(It is also likely that the Northern Dance Orchestra played a
number before the Trad Lads,
at the opening of the show.)
Here We Go was normally broadcast on Fridays, but for some reason this show was broadcast
on a Tuesday. This was the Beatles' fifth and final appearance on the show, but host Ray
Peters incorrectly refers to it as their fourth. Brian Epstein later cancelled three
appearances scheduled for June and July. The series was originally titled Teenagers Turn:
Here We Go and was the show on which the Beatles made their radio debut in March 1962.
The Beatles also recorded I Saw Her Standing There for this particular show, but it was
edited from the final broadcast. This was the first time that the public got to hear Do
You Want To Know A Secret and Misery as the Beatles' debut LP wouldn't be released until
22 March - on the same day that Kenny Lynch released Misery. His was the first cover
version,
while Billy J. Kramer & the Dakotas' version of Do You Want To Know A Secret would be
released
in April.
This show was recorded three days before the beginning of their U.K. tour, opening for
Tommy
Roe and Chris Montez. The single version of Please Please Me had just topped the New
Musical
Express chart, hence the reference in Ray Peters' introduction, although this wasn't the
chart
which the BBC normally used.
Here We Go's house band was the Northern Dance Orchestra, aka the NDO, one of several
bands
employed by the BBC to fulfil a long-held agreement with the Musicians Union. Bands like
the NDO, the Midlands Dance Orchestra, etc., were Musicians Union members and had to be
employed to fulfil the BBC commitment to "live" music. It was because of this
agreement
that bands like the Beatles were booked to play live. A certain amount of "live"
music
time had to be alloted to counter the then-growing amount of time given over to the
playing
of records, so-called "needle time" in radio parlance. Hence, some shows like
Here We Go,
Pop Go The Beatles, and others were entirely live with no records played, while Saturday
Club and Top Gear were a mixture of records and pre-recorded live sessions. Radio
Luxembourg
and the pirate stations (which appeared in 1964) had no such agreement with the Musicians
Union and just played records.
The Trad Lads may have been another Musicians Union member band, specially formed for the
purposes of radio work on the BBC. However, a group called the Trad Grads recorded for
Decca in 1963. Ben Richmond recorded two songs for Pye's Piccadilly label in 1963. Warmed
Over Kisses was not one of them.
About the survival of this particular tape
This show survives only because one of the evening's performers taped it directly off of
FM radio onto a domestic tape recorder (which explains the superb sound quality). The
13'46"
worth of Here We Go featuring the Beatles' three songs was buried in the middle of nearly
three hours' worth of recordings of children playing, a few other minor off-air
recordings,
and the like. The original tape - believed to be in the possession of the original taper -
is complete as reproduced here, but it is shedding oxide and was poorly spooled.
Additionally,
it was recorded as four mono tracks to get the maximum recording time, so it is impossible
to
play back on most conventional domestic open-reel decks.
The tape was salvaged by a recording expert in the UK, who transferred it onto analogue
cassette while performing some minor tweaking. All that was done after this transfer was
to feed the recording through No-Noise and Sonic Solutions to eliminate the prominent
hiss,
while a touch of boost was added to the drums. Unlike most Beatles' BBC sessions, this
recording comes directly off an original open-reel copy, via a single generation of
professionally recorded cassette without Dolby noise reduction. As such, you are hearing
a fourth-generation-from-source recording (two analogic and two digital generations),
which is closer to source than most commercial recordings. Any minor drop-outs are due
to the age of the original open-reel tape; however, whenever possible these were edited.
This recording came to light just after the release of Great Dane's 9CD box set, in the
Spring of 1994, and was donated to Great Dane to help complete the saga of the Beatles at
the BBC.
Great Dane Records is proud to offer this exceptional tape to all Beatles fans and
collectors,
and also wishes to express sincere thanks to the owner of the original tape for having
made
this possible. Enjoy and ... stay tuned!!!

Steve's Beatles Page © 2000