Brow Beat is following the Beatles in “real time,” 50 years later, from their first chart-topper to their final rooftop concert. This month we’re looking back at Please Please Me, which the Beatles recorded 50 years ago today.
In this weekly installment we take a look at Arthur Alexander, one of
the Beatles’ biggest early influences and the songwriter behind Please Please Me’s “Anna (Go to Him).”
Born in 1940 in Sheffield, Ala., Alexander recorded his first song, “Sally Sue Brown,” when he was just 20 years old. (Dylan did that one in 1988, on the album Down in the Groove.) The next year he wrote his first hit: “You Better Move On,” the first big record for FAME Studios, the legendary pop music factory in Muscle Shoals, Ala., where Redding, Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, and others would later make some of their best music. That song was done by the Rolling Stones in 1964 and appears on their ’65 album December’s Children (and Everybody’s). It became the title track of Alexander’s 1962 album.
FAME Studios used their proceeds from “You Better Move On” to move on themselves and build a better facility elsewhere in Muscle Shoals, where they are still located. But Alexander himself never made much money off his music; though a string of singles followed, a second album didn’t come together until 1972. That one, which was self-titled, had yet another song that was turned into a hit by rock royalty: Elvis Presley recorded “Burning Love” just a few months after the album appeared, and it became his last top-10 single, reaching no. 2 on the Billboard charts.
The first of the six covers that appear on Please Please Me is a mid-tempo ballad called “Anna (Go to Him),”
which was written and first recorded by Arthur Alexander.
Chances are that most people who hear the version sung by John Lennon have no idea who Arthur Alexander is—but the Beatles certainly knew, and so did the Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan: Alexander is reportedly the only songwriter whose tunes have appeared on studio albums by those three hallowed acts.
Elvis Presley recorded one of his songs as well—albeit one that Alexander co-wrote—and so did Otis Redding and Tina Turner and Jerry Lee Lewis and Percy Sledge.
Ringo Starr said that one of the advantages of being in Liverpool was that, since it’s a port city, “All these records were coming from America, so you could find out about Arthur Alexander and people like that.” Lennon idolized him in particular, and McCartney summed up his influence in 1987: “We wanted to sound like Arthur Alexander.” (In addition to “Anna,” the Beatles frequently performed Alexander’s “Soldier of Love” and “A Shot of Rhythm & Blues” in their early years.)
Chances are that most people who hear the version sung by John Lennon have no idea who Arthur Alexander is—but the Beatles certainly knew, and so did the Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan: Alexander is reportedly the only songwriter whose tunes have appeared on studio albums by those three hallowed acts.
Elvis Presley recorded one of his songs as well—albeit one that Alexander co-wrote—and so did Otis Redding and Tina Turner and Jerry Lee Lewis and Percy Sledge.
Ringo Starr said that one of the advantages of being in Liverpool was that, since it’s a port city, “All these records were coming from America, so you could find out about Arthur Alexander and people like that.” Lennon idolized him in particular, and McCartney summed up his influence in 1987: “We wanted to sound like Arthur Alexander.” (In addition to “Anna,” the Beatles frequently performed Alexander’s “Soldier of Love” and “A Shot of Rhythm & Blues” in their early years.)
So who was Arthur Alexander?
Born in 1940 in Sheffield, Ala., Alexander recorded his first song, “Sally Sue Brown,” when he was just 20 years old. (Dylan did that one in 1988, on the album Down in the Groove.) The next year he wrote his first hit: “You Better Move On,” the first big record for FAME Studios, the legendary pop music factory in Muscle Shoals, Ala., where Redding, Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, and others would later make some of their best music. That song was done by the Rolling Stones in 1964 and appears on their ’65 album December’s Children (and Everybody’s). It became the title track of Alexander’s 1962 album.
FAME Studios used their proceeds from “You Better Move On” to move on themselves and build a better facility elsewhere in Muscle Shoals, where they are still located. But Alexander himself never made much money off his music; though a string of singles followed, a second album didn’t come together until 1972. That one, which was self-titled, had yet another song that was turned into a hit by rock royalty: Elvis Presley recorded “Burning Love” just a few months after the album appeared, and it became his last top-10 single, reaching no. 2 on the Billboard charts.
This, too, was not enough to make Alexander a rich man; by the 1980s,
he had abandoned the music business entirely and gone to work in
Cleveland “at a center for disadvantaged kids,” driving a bus for a living. (It’s been said that he also didn’t like fame and that he found God.) In the early ’90s, though, the producer Ben Vaughn coaxed him out of retirement, and he recorded one last album, Lonely Just Like Me,
which was released in 1993. He planned to tour in support of the album,
but he died in June of that year, at age 53, of heart failure.
While Lennon’s vocals on “Anna” are terrific, no one interpreted
Alexander’s songs as well as Alexander did, with his warm, plaintive
voice perfectly suiting the lovely straightforwardness of his lyrics.
“If it’s really got to be this way, I can take it, I know,” he sings on the opening track of Lonely Just Like Me. “I’ll just carry on day to day, until I make it, on my own.”
With many thanks to Slate
More articles at the link.
Paul McCartney chats to Ronnie Wood about The Beatles lesser known song 'Anna (Go To Him)', written by Arthur Alexander from the 'Please Please Me' album, and The Beatles' BBC radio show, 'Pop Go The Beatles'.
Paul McCartney chats to Ronnie Wood about The Beatles lesser known song 'Anna (Go To Him)', written by Arthur Alexander from the 'Please Please Me' album, and The Beatles' BBC radio show, 'Pop Go The Beatles'.
Pictures previously cited.
Bob Dylan Is Eminently Worthy Of The Nobel Prize In Literature
The Beatles: Good News For Fans This week
Paul McCartney: Destiny Game Song "Hope For The Future"
Beatles Lyrics Reveal Enduring Words Of Love And Life
Glyn Johns: Defining That Classic-Rock Sound
The Traveling Wilburys: Their History
George Harrison and The Bee Gees To Receive Recording Academy Honors
John Lennon or Paul McCartney? Matt Schichter Documentary Offers 550 Answers
Sir Paul McCartney To Induct Ringo Starr Into Hall Of Fame
The Rolling Stones: New Tour Announced - Zip Code Updated: Releases from The Vault And A New Album for Keith Richards
'American Pie' Lyrics Sell For $1.2 million In New York
Penny Lane: Original On The Block, Minus The Fanfare
The Rolling Stones: Sticky Fingers: Super Deluxe Edition
Bill Wyman: The Rolling Stones Never Forgave Me For Leaving
Lost Beatles US Concert Movie Blocked From Release
The Rolling Stones To Create Their Own Museum
Don Henley Recruits Mick Jagger And Dolly Parton For Country Album Cass County
The Three Lennon-McCartney Hits That Went to No. 1 Without Lennon or McCartney
Rolling Stones' Ronnie Wood’s - "How Can It Be? A Rock & Roll Diary"
The Who Release First Song In 8 Years: Be Lucky
Bob Dylan Named Greatest Songwriter Ahead Of Lennon and McCartney According To Rolling Stone
Beatles’ First Recording Contract to Be Auctioned For An Estimated $150,000
Keith Richards ‘Under The Influence’
The Beatles 1 To Be Reissued With 50 Videos
John Lennon Born 75 Years Ago Today
John Lennon's Long-Lost Gibson J-160E Guitar Sells for Record $2.4 Million
George Harrison's Catalogue Is Now Streaming
Ringo Starr Reflects On His 35 Year Marriage
Keith Richards Says Jagger’s Ego Sent Him Solo
George Harrison: Tribute GeorgeFest Is Coming
The Rolling Stones’ 'Satisfaction' Was The Result Of A Faulty Amp
A History Of Mick Jagger On Film
'Vinyl' Mick Jagger and Martin Scorsese's Mini-series
'Vinyl' Mick Jagger and Martin Scorsese's Mini-series
John Lennon's Rock 'n' Roll Album - Update: Vale Sir George Martin
The Beatles Anthology: Streaming Now.
The Rolling Stones To Create Their Own Museum - #StonesIsm
Unseen Beatles Footage Released
George Harrison Makes Guest Appearance On Eric Clapton's New Album
George Harrison - This is Love
The Rolling Stones Reveal ‘Totally Stripped’
Celebrating The Beatles' Revolver 50 Years On
The Beatles: Eight Days A Week - The Touring Years
The Rolling Stones: A New Movie About The Making of 'Exile on Main Street'
The Beatles 'Love' And Cirque du Soleil
Long Lost Live Beatles Exhumed!
The Rolling Stones’ ‘Havana Moon’ In Cinemas Worldwide
Rollings Stones’ Keith Richards Is Evolving, Not Ageing
The Rolling Stones:Olé Olé Olé: A Trip Across Latin America
The Rolling Stones: First Music From New Blues Album
Bob Dylan Wins The Nobel Prize In Literature
Sgt. Pepper Lonely Hearts Club Band by The Beatles; It was 50 years ago today ...
Rolling Stones Reclaim Soul On Blue & Lonesome
Celebrating George Harrison
The Beatles Anthology: Streaming Now.
The Rolling Stones To Create Their Own Museum - #StonesIsm
Unseen Beatles Footage Released
George Harrison Makes Guest Appearance On Eric Clapton's New Album
George Harrison - This is Love
The Rolling Stones Guide To Business Success And Survival
Traveling Wilburys To Travel Into New Territory - Streaming
Bob Dylan's Sinatra-inspired 'Fallen Angels' Is Another Musical TriumphTraveling Wilburys To Travel Into New Territory - Streaming
The Rolling Stones Reveal ‘Totally Stripped’
Celebrating The Beatles' Revolver 50 Years On
The Beatles: Eight Days A Week - The Touring Years
The Rolling Stones: A New Movie About The Making of 'Exile on Main Street'
The Beatles 'Love' And Cirque du Soleil
Long Lost Live Beatles Exhumed!
The Rolling Stones’ ‘Havana Moon’ In Cinemas Worldwide
Rollings Stones’ Keith Richards Is Evolving, Not Ageing
The Rolling Stones:Olé Olé Olé: A Trip Across Latin America
The Rolling Stones: First Music From New Blues Album
Bob Dylan Wins The Nobel Prize In Literature
Sgt. Pepper Lonely Hearts Club Band by The Beatles; It was 50 years ago today ...
Rolling Stones Reclaim Soul On Blue & Lonesome
Celebrating George Harrison