Unlike Paul McCartney, Ringo no longer has any living relatives remaining in Liverpool, which means he no longer has any current connection to the city - and a reason to go there. Which is likely to have been on his mind when he said that he wouldn't want to live there any more. After that show, a lot of people in Liverpool turned their backs on the drummer, and even now, otherwise intelligent people are referring to Ringo as "the lucky guy who managed to join the Beatles just as fame struck". This is really a sorry state, and as someone who both loves Liverpool (I just came back from spending this week there), and who has more than just a tad of knowledge about the Beatles, I'm not happy with this situation. It was taken wrong, and now it's all this.
Still, Ringo returned to Liverpool in 2011, playing at the Empire Theatre, where the Beatles also held a few concerts in the sixties. Sadly, people who would have enjoyed the show didn't turn up, because they were still angry with Ringo. The local newspaper Liverpool Echo had a commentary titled "We are a city that forgives", unfortunately this was not the case.
Ringo has a lot of love for Liverpool, and his last three solo albums have all had a song about Liverpool on them.
- Liverpool 8 on "Liverpool 8"
- The Other Side of Liverpool on "Y Not"
- In Liverpool on "Ringo 2012"
7 comments:
Six years on, why bring this all back up again today?
Because I just came back from Liverpool, and I still felt that sentiment among the Liverpudlians. It was fresh on my mind, and I wanted to say something about it.
I was in Liverpool on Ringo's birthday in 2013 and I was surprised how much dislike for him people still had. I understand what Ringo was saying and I do not think it was meant in any way as an insult to the town or the people there. And obviously he has no bad feelings towards the place, because he has a Liverpool song on almost every album. I think it is sad that his hometown has turned their back on him and aren't very nice about it.
I always considered "The Other Side of Liverpool" as a kind of answer to the (mostly misunderstood) criticism raised against Ringo after 2008. I personally think it's the greatest song Ringo has recorded since the mid-70s, and its lyrics seem to explain why he has somewhat mixed feelings about Liverpool.
"The other side of Liverpool
Is cold and damp
Only way out of there
Drums, guitar and amp"
"Liverpool" (or rather the purveyors of this sentiment, readers of sub-gutter press) isn't owed sh*t by any of The Beatles. Paul never left it, in any real sense and seems to be somebody everybody has met in some or other 'chip shop' style context so there's a lot of respect for him, especially during his fight to get LIPA happening (which, it's hard to remember now, was for a long time a less than sure thing).
But it's not like the city celebrated its favoured sons in any way, other than naming four streets on a new housing estate during the 80's.
The bands of 80's Liverpool scence built around Eric's were well known for expressing their hatred of The Beatles.
I've visited the city many times and found that only when the tourists are around is there any love shown for The Fabs.
Only the kerching hangers-on from circa 1956 kept the spirit alive until Macca's Cavern return really kicked Beatledom into big business after 2000. I was at that year's massive surge of a Beatle Week and it seemed that it had taken the city by total surprise.
But in an exclusive I can reveal that among those who were taking advantage, selling hastily-made Beatle souvenirs, was none other than Randolph Peter Best who was selling digital prints with Beatles' faces resembling Peter Gabriel's famous 'dripping polaroid' shot.
Bizzarely, I was seemingly one of the few visitors to recognise him and he had a good laugh about that, yet know he IS actually Indian!)
Another thing about Liverpool is that Statue of Lennon at 'Lennon airport' whose genesis I was sadly privy to at close hand.
To say that it had little to do with Lennon or The Beatles and all to do with the worst form of local and small-time political ambitions and in-fighting is an understatement. I really wanted to write to Yoko to advise her to have nothing to do with it but never got round to it.
The fact that the (not very Apple Corps) Yellow Submarine (which had sat by the river for years as an 'undocumented' feature for tourists) had to be moved to 'John Lennon Airport' after the conclusion of these political wranglings evoked a sense of what would have happened if Allan Williams and Alistair Taylor had been elected to opposing political parties with the purpose of securing a Beatle tourist income.
Quite frankly, as has often been said before in moments of transcendental illumination (usually while listening to 'Octopus Garden') by acid-heads,
"RINGO WAS RIGHT"
:P
The gag about Ringo not being the best drummer in The Beatles was by Jasper Carrott. John Lennon never said any such thing...
It was/is a ridiculous overreaction to Ringo's Jonathan Ross appearance. Mind you, it isn't the first time that Scousers have gone over the top in this manner.
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