The Other McCain

"One should either write ruthlessly what one believes to be the truth, or else shut up." — Arthur Koestler

In The Mailbox: 08.07.25 (Afternoon Edition)

Posted on | August 7, 2025 | Comments Off on In The Mailbox: 08.07.25 (Afternoon Edition)

— compiled by Wombat-socho

Silicon Valley et Hamas delenda sunt.

Shamelessly stolen from Instapundit.

OVER THE TRANSOM
357 Magnum: You Are Not Protected By Your Zip Code
EBL: Saved by Hiroshima, Ted F**king Williams, and World’s Best Tasting Accidental Catch?
Twitchy: The Biden Years Just Got WORSE, Ghostbusters Fan Account Claims Gozer Was The First Troon Character, and Ben & Jerry’s Co-Owner’s Creepy Disney Doll Stunt
Louder With Crowder: DOGE’s “Big Balls” lives up to his name, Cancelled or quitting? The streets are saying this might (finally) be the end of Howard Stern, and WNBA faces a dildo epidemic as a THIRD artificial phallus is thrown onto the court
Vox Popoli: Tripling Down on Failure, The Russia That Will Say No, Convergence in the Home, WWIII is Already Underway, and Russia Bans International Satanism
Upstream Reviews: Ranger’s Heart
The Abbey of Misrule: The Nowness of Things
Cedar Sanderson: The Queen of Fairies, also, Publishing News!
Wright’s Writing Corner: Read, Friend, And Enter

RIPPED FROM THE HEADLINES
Baldilocks: How To Fall
CDR Salamander: Take Your Globe And Tilt It Towards You 90 Degrees
Don Surber: Nazi heiress supports Palestinians
Matt Taibbi: Lies, Damned Lies, And Statistics, FIRE Sues SecState Rubio & Trump Administration Over Free Speech, and Note on the FIRE Suit

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In The Mailbox: 08.05.25 (Evening Edition)

Posted on | August 6, 2025 | 1 Comment

— compiled by Wombat-socho

Silicon Valley et Hamas delenda sunt.

OVER THE TRANSOM
357 Magnum: Science Isn’t What You Think It Is
EBL: MAGA Epstein Subpoena Storm, The World’s Finest Bluefin Tuna, The Story Of Mark Twain’s 1867 Journey To Jerusalem, Admiral Farragut, and FREE TROY LAKE – EPA Political Prisoner
Twitchy: Megyn Kelly Drops Sarah Longwell Over Beyonce’s Knockoff Jeans Ad, Jarvis Shares Totally Real Excerpt From Kamala’s 2024 Campaign Memoir, and 50 Years Ago Today The Runaways Changed The Face of Rock
Louder With Crowder: Democrat congresswoman pledges her allegiance to a foreign country over America while speaking to anti-American org, also, Woke rocker lashes out at “racist country star” in new song, and the streets say she’s talking about Morgan Wallen
Vox Popoli: The Swamp of Retarded Evil, The Revised Schedule, Inevitable Iconoclasm, Mr. McCarthy Responds, and Umberto Eco was Wrong
Cedar Sanderson: Bad Ash
The Bugscuffle Gazette: Woo hoo!
Jim McCoy: The Unexpected Enlightenment of Rachel Griffin

RIPPED FROM THE HEADLINES
Adam Piggott: The Evil is Obvious
American Conservative: Pursuing Regime Change in China and Russia Is Delusional
American Greatness: Trump and Musk Call For DC to Be Federalized After ‘Big Balls’ Beaten By Savage Mob, White House Prepares Executive Order Punishing Banks That Discriminate Against Conservatives, Comer Demands DOJ Release Epstein Files; Subpoenas Bill and Hillary Clinton, James Comey, Merrick Garland and Others For Depositions, ICE Says ‘Arrests and Deportations Will Continue’ After Arsonist Hurls Rock, Sets Fire at Back of ICE Building in Washington State, and US Considers Requiring Visa Bonds of Up to $15K for applicants From High-Risk Countries
American Thinker: No More Free Rides for Leftism – Biased ‘Public Broadcasting’ Meets Its Reckoning, Will Restoring Justice be Trump’s Greatest Achievement, A Palestinian State Is a Threat to All of Us, Antisemitism Permeates an Entire School District in Philadelphia, and What Moment in Time Did the Shroud of Turin Actually Capture?
Animal Magnetism: Goodbye, Blue Monday, also, Animal’s Daily Bat-Eating News
Baldilocks: The Battle Is Heated
BattleSwarm: BlackRock ESG Lawsuit Moves Forward, Tokyo’s Massive Disaster Recovery Infrastructure, Harris County Jail: You’re Free To Go. Inmate: You Can’t Make Me Leave. Jailers: Watch Us. Fatality Ensues, and 
Behind The Black: SpaceX launches 28 more Starlink satellites, Rocket Lab and China complete launches, Firefly raises stock price for its initial public offering, and Amazon’s Kuiper constellation wins contract from Australian telecom
Cafe Hayek: Trump’s Tariffs Are Paid Overwhelmingly By Americans, The Case for Protectionism Is Clear (As Long as Economics and Facts Are Ignored), and U.S. Tariffs Are Taxes On Americans
CDR Salamander: Australia Is Turning Japanese
Chicago Boyz: Fanny Kemble (updated), Pop-Culture Kerfuffle*, and The New York Times and the “$5 Rule”
Da Tech Guy: Chris Harper (1951-2025) Magnificent!
Don Surber: August begins – lies and TDS continue
First Street Journal: The Philadelphia Inquirer harbors illegal immigrants, also, Y’all in a heap o’ trouble, boys!
Gates Of Vienna: Can We Vote Our Way Out Of Civilisational Collapse? The Joys of Diversity in Lyon, Afghan vs. Afghan in Mönchengladbach, Headhunting in Portugal, and Let’s Hire Some Hookers For Allah!
The Geller Report: Texas Gov. Abbott Orders Arrest of “Fleebagger” Democrat Legislators, Nazi Zyklon B Heiress Leads Anti-Jewish Riots in Europe, The House Oversight Committee Issues Subpoenas to Hillary and Bill Clinton And Many More, Israel To Take Control of Gaza, and Attorney General Bondi Orders Evidence Sent to Grand Jury for Russia Collusion Hoax Coup
Hollywood In Toto: Ghost Dog – Part John Wick, All Jim Jarmusch, Left’s Woke Playbook Won’t Work on Sydney Sweeney, Fallon Invites Gutfeld on ‘Tonight Show,’ Media Meltdown Ensues, Together Makes Monogamy a Body Horror Nightmare, and Sketch – Heartfelt Message, Scary Results
Legal Insurrection: Trump Admin Planning Test of Golden Dome Missile Defense System in 2028, Florida State U Student Who Harassed Jewish Peer May Face Criminal Charges, High-End and Celebrity Homes Targets of Recent Burglary Spree in Los Angeles Area, House Democrat Doubles Down on ‘Proud Guatemalan Before I’m an American’ Comments, and Will $1.5 billion Rhode Island Foundation escape accountability for helping create, administer, and fund anti-White teacher hiring program?
Matt Taibbi: Why Would Media Report on Public Broadcasting Financing & Ignore Their Financial Records?
Outkick: 8 Reasons For Betting Washington Commanders To Struggle This Season, NBA Villains Kwame Brown, Gilbert Arenas Trade Barbs After Agent Zero’s Arrest, Another Sex Toy Is Thrown Onto WNBA Court During Fever-Sparks Clash, Third Dildo in a Week, Angels’ Yoan Moncada Misses Game Over U.S. Citizenship Test, and Christie Brinkley, 71, Wants Younger Women To Know That She Could Steal Their Man If She Wanted
Power Line: Lawfare, Biden Style, Our Artificially Intelligent Judges, Laugh, don’t laugh, Lies, Damned Lies, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and Trump debanked
Shark Tank: David Jolly Collects Endorsements From 60 Current & Former Democrat Leaders In Bid For Governor
Shot In The Dark: A Semi-Serious Question, Close, and Chicago on the Mississippi
STUMP: 2024 Top Ten Causes of Death in the U.S. 
The Political Hat: With Bureaucracy, Form Follows Function, also, Marxism, Western vs. Eastern
This Ain’t Hell: Titan Sub Disaster Report, Supreme Court to rule on race-conscious redistricting, GOP agenda popular, DNC agenda not so much-Pollster, US recruiters used CCP-controlled app to pitch to Chinese nationals, and Happy Birthday Coast Guard!
Transterrestrial Musings: Trump’s Second-Term Space Policy
Victory Girls: Texas Democrats Run Away To Illinois To Avoid Redistricting Map, also, Israel to Reoccupy Gaza – It’s Time to Finish the Job
Watts Up With That: Ditching Ed Miliband’s Net Zero Madness Could Save Every Family £1,000 a Year, Yet Another Misleading Report on “Low-Cost” Wind and Solar, EVs Stuck Below 22%, and If Global Warming is a Problem, Why is there So Much Snow in Australia?
The Federalist: The News Media Aren’t Biased On Accident And There’s No Saving Them, 41 Planned Parenthood Facilities And Counting Set To Close As Trump Defunds Abortion Giant, Nuking The Redskins’ Name Did Nothing To Help American Indians, And Nobody’s Surprised, Redistricting Isn’t A ‘Threat To Democracy,’ But These 4 Dem Vote-Rigging Tactics Are, and Homeland Security Committee Member Says She’s Loyal To A Different Homeland
Mark Steyn: On the Town – Love Alone, I Get A Kick Out Of You, Gold Diggers Galore – Carole Lombard in Hands Across the Table, Keeping It Simple, and Cheek by Jowl

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In The Mailbox: 08.05.25 (Morning Edition)

Posted on | August 5, 2025 | Comments Off on In The Mailbox: 08.05.25 (Morning Edition)

— compiled by Wombat-socho

Silicon Valley et Hamas delenda sunt.

OVER THE TRANSOM
Director Blue: Top 20 Posts of Interest
357 Magnum: Good Guys 1, Bad Guys 0
EBL: Governor Abbott Warns Texas Dems To Return, Or Else, It’s a Long Way To Tipperary / Pack Up Your Troubles In Your Old Kit Bag, Loni Anderson RIP, How Dog Snapper Got Its Name, and Mary Shelley
Twitchy: Whitlock’s Lame Sauce Apology, Something’s Rotten In Denmark, and Watch Nicolle Wallace’s Pinched Face As She Reports On Russia Collusion Grand Jury
Louder With Crowder: Breathe easy, ladies! They hunted down and arrested the person who threw a neon green dildo on an WNBA court, Texas Democrats run away (again) to block redistricting, causing Texas Governor to make MASSIVE threat, and Sydney Sweeney OUTED as a registered Republican, while both Trump and JD Vance have thoughts on the matter
Vox Popoli: Don’t Stop, Epic Beats Google, Sea Power vs Land Power, Express Yourself, and Report Says Russia Captured British Officers
Upstream Reviews: August New Releases, Beyond the Scarlet Moon
Cedar Sanderson: Foresight May Be Vain, Food ‘Round The World, and Dragon August
The Bugscuffle Gazette: When “Bioethics” Is Biological, also, Go Out & Touch Grass
Stoic Observations: A Few Words About Asia
Based Book Sale: Top Based Books For Male Readers
Draw & Talk: Before The MCU There Was Sky High 
L’Ombre de L’Olivier: Hostage Puppy vs. Hostage
The Abbey of Misrule: American Book Tour

RIPPED FROM THE HEADLINES
CDR Salamander: A Midrats High Summer Free For All, also, Surface Drones…More Faster, Please
Don Surber: Trump fires PhD who can’t count
Elizabeth Nickson: The Demented Dominion Is In A Lather, also, How Oligarchs Steal America’s Public Lands
Glenn Reynolds: When The Gods of the Copybook Headings Smile
Matt Taibbi: Open Letter To The Columbia Journalism Review On The Atrocious New York Times
STUMP: Chicago Pension Artificial Sweeteners

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Rule 5 Sunday: Gother Than Thou

Posted on | August 4, 2025 | 3 Comments

— compiled by Wombat-socho

Maybe not as Goth as, say, Ally Slayter, but she’ll do, she’ll do.
Post title from the Most Pretentious Card Game Ever Made, which is unfortunately out of print.
Ceterum autem censeo Silicon Valley et Hamas delendam sunt.

ANIMAL MAGNETISM: Rule Five Bad Ideas Friday, and the Saturday Gingermageddon.

EBL: Saturday Night Girls With Guns, Chief of War, The Most Reluctant Convert, Code of Silence, “Barbarossa”, National Wing Day, Lockheed Claims It Has Something up Its Sleeve, Sydney Sweeney, Doc Martin, The Mulligan, Zsa Zsa Gabor, and Tobacco Comes to Great Britain

A VIEW FROM THE BEACHTaylor Noel FreemanGrassley Releases Declassified “Durham Annex” Implicating Soros ClintonFish Pic Friday – Valentine ThomasEconomy Beats ‘Expectations’I Only Want YouThe Dog Days with Sydney SweeneyThe Wednesday WetnessEU Caves to TrumpTattoo TuesdayTrump Soars While Dems CrashThe Monday Morning Stimulus and Palm Sunday

BACON TIME: Rule Five – A Trip To Hooterville

Thanks to everyone for all the luscious links!

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Why Decca Didn’t Sign the Beatles (and Why That Was Really a Lucky Break)

Posted on | August 3, 2025 | 1 Comment

The Beatles (including Pete Best) in 1962

How long have I been a Beatles fans? Since the mid-1970s, when there was a sort of reverb echo of “Beatlemania.” Born in 1959, I’d been much too young to take notice of the Beatles craze that swept America in 1964, although I do recall my cousins Deb and Trish (teenagers at the time) being fans of the four moptop lads from Liverpool. It was about a decade later that I started listening to the Beatles, especially one of my older brother’s albums (The Beatles 1962-1966, the so-called “Red Album.”) By 1976, after reading Hunter Davies’ Authorized Biography (checked out of the library at Lithia Springs High School), I was a full-blown Beatlemaniac, and soon discovered I wasn’t alone. Working at Six Flags that summer, I met a skinny girl who jumped in harmonizing perfectly when she overheard me singing “Eight Days a Week.” Her favorite Beatle was George, whereas I was more of a John fan, but despite this difference we got along just fine. And there were many thousands like us across the country at the time, born too late to have experienced the original “Beatlemania” craze, but hoping for a reunion while digging on the old songs and accumulating trivia about the band’s history.

One bit of Beatles lore known to every true fan is that in 1962, the band auditioned for Decca Records but were rejected because “guitar groups are on the way out,” as an executive at the label supposedly told the band’s manager, Brian Epstein. This tale has taken on a life of its own, with the “on the way out” line being cited as a classic example of institutional cluelessness. But is this legend really accurate?

A few days ago, I was skimming through an article that mentioned an early song written by John Lennon (“Hello Little Girl”) that was one of three originals included in the Decca audition. So then I went to YouTube and listened to that song, as well as several others (both originals and covers) recorded during that audition. And I can say without hesistation it’s no surprise Decca rejected the Beatles based on that tape.

A brief summary of what’s wrong with it: Everything.

For the most part, the band on the Decca audition tapes doesn’t even sound like The Beatles, i.e., the group we know from their subsequent recordings for EMI with George Martin as producer. Of the 15 tunes they recorded during that session at Decca’s London studio, only two — “Money (That’s What I Want)” and “Till There Was You” — were later released on Beatles albums, and a direct comparison of those songs (the Decca audition versions versus the versions recorded for EMI) tells you a lot about why George Martin has so often been called “the fifth Beatle.” His skill as a producer made all the difference in the world.

From Liverpool to Hamburg to the Decca Session

For those who aren’t steeped in Beatles trivia, permit me to share the backstory leading up to the Decca audition. Originating as a skiffle group known as The Quarrymen (so named because they attended Liverpool’s Quarry Bank High School) led by John Lennon, the core of what would become the Beatles was formed when Paul McCartney showed up at a Quarrymen’s gig in 1957 and impressed John with a performance of Eddie Cochran’s “Twenty Flight Rock.” McCartney, a year-and-a-half younger than Lennon, then brought along his still-younger friend George Harrison, who earned his membership in 1958 by performing the instrumental “Raunchy.” This trio of guitarist/singers played in various permutations (sometimes Lennon and McCartney as a duo, or as a larger band with different players joining on drums, bass or piano) around Liverpool. In 1960, John convinced his art school classmate Stuart Sutcliffe to purchase a bass guitar and join the group. Among the places they played in Liverpool was the Casbah Club, operated in the basement of a home owned by Mona Best, whose son Pete was a drummer. In August 1960, the group’s then-manager, Allan Williams, arranged for them to play as the house band at the Indra nightclub in Hamburg, Germany, and they recruited Pete Best as their drummer for this gig.

The Beatles in Hamburg, 1960

It was in Hamburg, where they were required to play for many hours nightly in front of rowdy audiences, that the Beatles underwent a transformation which subsequently made them Liverpool’s hottest rock-and-roll band. Their popularity brought them to the attention of Brian Epstein, whose family owned the city’s largest record store, NEMS (North End Music Stores). In November 1961, Epstein visited the Cavern Club to see the Beatles perform. (By this time, Sutcliffe had left the band, moving in with his German girlfriend Astrid Kirchherr in Hamburg; Sutcliffe tragically died in April 1962). Epstein was sufficiently impressed by the Beatles’ Cavern Club performance that in December 1961 he proposed a management deal. Because his job as manager of NEMS gave him business connections with England’s record labels (which were all based in London), Epstein was quickly able to convince a Decca producer (known as an A&R man, for “artists and repertoire”) named Mike Smith to visit Liverpool and hear the group for himself. Smith liked them enough that he arranged for the Beatles to do a recorded audition session at Decca’s studio in London, scheduled for January 1, 1962.

Less than 16 months had elapsed between August 1960, when the Beatles first went to Hamburg, and their Decca audition on New Year’s Day 1962. They were all still very young. John had only recently turned 21, Pete Best was 20, Paul was still 19 and George was just 18. It would be unfair to expect this group of young rockers to sound like seasoned professionals in a recording studio. But that doesn’t explain everything that’s wrong with their sound on the Decca audition recordings. Wikipedia tells us, “At the audition, the Beatles performed songs chosen by Epstein” [emphasis added], citing renowned Beatles musicologist Mark Lewisohn.

This may be the biggest clue about the basic problem with the Decca audition. Epstein notably sought to “clean up” the Beatles’ image, putting them in suits and ties to replace the jeans-and-leather-jackets look they’d adopted in Hamburg. Epstein’s effort to make them “presentable” likely extended to the song selection for the Decca audition. Of the 15 songs they recorded during the session, only two (“Money” and the Chuck Berry tune “Memphis”) are really rockers. They also included two do-wop hits by the Coasters (“Three Cool Cats” and “Searchin’,” the latter of which features McCartney’s best vocal performance of the session). Evidently, in pitching them to the big London record label, Epstein wanted the Beatles to come across as more of a conventional pop music act, downplaying their rowdy rock-and-roll aspect, which is the most likely explanation of why they don’t sound anything like what they later became.

A Very Fortunate Failure

The three Lennon-McCartney originals (“Hello Little Girl,” with Lennon on lead vocal, and “Love of the Loved” and “Like Dreamers Do,” both sung by Paul) are, to put it as politely as possible, sub-standard. Think of the very worst B-side the Beatles ever released on EMI (I’d nominate “Ask Me Why”) and all of these songs are even worse. Permit me to bullet-point the subsequent fate of each tune:

  • “Hello Little Girl” — Once the Beatles had made it big in 1963, this was recorded as the debut single by another Liverpool band, The Fourmost, who were also managed by Epstein. The record made it as high as No. 9 on the UK pop charts.
  • “Love of the Loved” — This was the debut single for Liverpool singer Cilla Black, who was also managed by Epstein after being introduced to her by John Lennon. It peaked at No. 35 on the UK charts.
  • “Like Dreamers Do” — Released as the second single for The Applejacks, it was released in mid-1964 and made it to No. 20 on the UK charts.

You see that, even at the very zenith of “Beatlemania” in England, when it seemed any Liverpool act could ride the wave to stardom, none of these Lennon-McCartney songs made it as high as the Top Five.

Another thing about the Decca audition session:

HOW ABOUT TUNING YOUR BLOODY GUITARS, BOYS?

To me, this is the most inexcusable problem. Let us stipulate that, in those days before anyone had even thought of inventing digital tuners, it might have required a bit of time to get three guitars tuned properly, and then to pause occasionally during the session to keep them in tune. But, oh, my God! To hear George go off on a solo so badly off-key as to set one’s teeth on edge — how could any self-respecting record producer have permitted this atrocity? A slightly out-of-tune guitar wouldn’t make much difference when you’re playing a Hamburg bar gig for a bunch of drunk Germans, or a Cavern session for teenage fans, but in a recording studio, it matters — a lot. Any musician who’s ever done any recording knows this, and the intonation problems on the Beatles’ Decca tapes are simply inexcusable. Mike Smith must be blamed for this.

Remember, this recording session was on New Year’s Day. The Beatles showed up at 10 a.m., as scheduled, but Smith arrived late, because he’d been out drinking all night on New Year’s Eve. Perhaps that affected what happened during the session. It is believed that all 15 songs were recorded in one take, with no overdubs or retakes, and the whole thing was probably wrapped up not much later than noon. This hurried pace no doubt accounts for much of the general sloppiness of the Beatles’ performance in the Decca audition. If you’ve paid any attention at all to the Beatles’ subsequent discography, you know that they nearly always did multiple takes with George Martin as their producer, even on fairly simple songs (e.g., nine takes for “I Saw Her Standing There”).

Were “guitar groups on the way out”? Was this why Decca rejected the Beatles? That explanation doesn’t make sense because, on the same day the Beatles recorded their audition tape for Decca, another band — Brian Poole and the Tremeloes — also recorded an audition tape for Decca with Mike Smith as producer. They were also a “guitar group” (although their rhythm guitarist also played keyboards) and what actually happened was that the executives at Decca told Mike Smith he could give a contract to one group or the other, but not both. Because the Tremeloes were from London, it would be easier to work with them than with the Beatles some 200 miles away up in Liverpool. That seems to have been the key factor in Smith’s decision to sign the Tremeloes and reject the Beatles.

Of all the lucky breaks the Beatles ever got, this rejection by Decca Records might have been the luckiest of them all, because it ended up connecting them with “the fifth Beatle,” George Martin.

George Martin circa 1962

Arguably the biggest lesson we can learn from listening to the Beatles’ failed Decca audition is how important George Martin was to their subsequent success. In giving Martin his due credit, we do not in any way diminish the talents of John, Paul, George and Ringo. We can analogize this to a football coach and a great team — the University of Alabama attracts fine football talent, but coaches like Bear Bryant and Nick Saban are crucial to producing championship teams, and the same could be said of the relationship between George Martin and the Beatles.

‘For Starters, I Don’t Like Your Tie’

George Martin was a classically trained musician, having played piano since childhood, and later studying for three years at the Guildhall School, including courses in composition and orchestration. He was 24 when he joined EMI in 1950 as an assistant to the head of the subsidiary Parlophone label. In addition to his work on Parlophone’s classical music catalog, by 1962, Martin had already produced a No. 1 UK hit (“You’re Driving Me Crazy” by the Temperance Seven) as well as other pop records that had reached the Top 20 in England. He knew a thing or two about how to make a hit record and, after the Beatles’ failure to land a Decca contract, the fates swiftly steered them into Martin’s capable hands.

After Decca rejected the Beatles, Epstein took the tape of their Decca audition and went to EMI, where he met with Martin in mid-February 1962. Martin was not particularly impressed with what he heard on tape. Separately, however, Epstein was also trying to land a publishing contract for Lennon and McCartney as songwriters. This attracted the interest of the head of EMI’s music publishing division, Sid Colman, who pressured his EMI bosses to sign the Beatles in hopes that this would give him leverage toward signing the Lennon-McCartney songwriting team. It so happened in spring 1962 that there was bad blood between George Martin and the managing director of EMI, Len Wood. Not only was there a disagreement over business decisions, but Wood had discovered that Martin was having an affair with Wood’s secretary. To appease Colman, and also to punish Martin, Wood directed Martin to sign this weirdly-named rock band from Liverpool (who weren’t good enough for Decca).

It’s amazing to consider how many things had to go wrong for this fortuitous combination to come together. At any rate, Martin met with Epstein again in May 1962 and said he’d offer the Beatles a deal for three singles. The Beatles’ first EMI recording session was scheduled for June 6, 1962. Martin had not yet even met the band. After the session got underway, the group’s limitations were apparent to Martin. To begin with, he didn’t much care for the three original songs (“Love Me Do,” “Ask Me Why” and “P.S. I Love You”) they brought to the session. Beyond that, however, Martin wasn’t satisfied with Pete Best on drums.

Things didn’t look very promising until, at one point, Martin switched on the microphone connection from the control room to tell the Beatles in the studio to let him know if there was anything they didn’t like. Immediately, George Harrison quipped back, “Well for starters, I don’t like your tie.” This wisecrack broke the strain and, despite the other problems, the relationship between Martin and the Beatles began to warm up. Another issue facing Martin was whether to focus on Lennon or McCartney as the group’s primary lead singer, but he had a Solomonic insight: “Suddenly it hit me that I had to take them as they were, which was a new thing. I was being too conventional.” Both John and Paul would take their turns as lead singer (with occasional spotlights for George and, later, Ringo Starr). The June 6 session finished without producing anything worthy of commercial release, but Martin conveyed to Epstein his complaints about Pete Best. A follow-up recording session was scheduled for September and, in the meantime, the Beatles had to find a way to get rid of Best and replace him with Ringo.

Ringo and George in Hamburg, 1961

The Beatles had known Ringo for a couple of years. He was the drummer of Rory Storm and the Hurricanes, one of their rivals for most popular band in Liverpool, and also veterans of the Hamburg scene. There was probably no good way to accomplish the business of ditching Pete Best, which caused a furor among the Beatles’ fandom in Liverpool, and swiping another band’s drummer didn’t exactly endear the Beatles to their fellow musicians. But this was a major upgrade for the Beatles, as Ringo had a much more polished style, and George Martin deserves credit for forcing the group to make this change.

Ringo shaved his beard and got a new hairstyle, and the band returned to EMI’s Abbey Road studio on September 4. They re-recorded “Love Me Do.” They also tried recording a new song they’d written, a ballad called “Please Please Me.” But because Martin didn’t think their originals were good enough, he wanted the Beatles to record a professionally written song called “How Do You Do It?” The Beatles dug in their heels, however, insisting that they’d stand or fall on the basis of their own original material. Reluctantly, Martin told them to work up more new material, while deciding to go ahead and release “Love Me Do” as their first single (backed with “P.S. I Love You” on the B side). Another studio session was scheduled for September 11 to try and get better recordings of these songs. Martin brought in a professional session drummer, Andy White, to play on “Love Me Do,” a snub of Ringo that the band resented, although subsequently Martin praised Ringo’s ability as a drummer.

“Love Me Do” is a childishly simple song and arguably its strongest selling point is Lennon’s harmonica part. One almost suspects that Martin shared the belief attributed to Decca executives that “guitar groups” were obsolete, which may explain why the first three Beatles singles (“Love Me Do,” “Please Please Me” and “From Me to You”) all featured John’s harmonica. Released in early October 1962, “Love Me Do” made its way up the charts to peak at No. 17 in November.

The record’s popularity surprised Martin, who hadn’t expected such strong sales, and he then scheduled a new recording session. He already had the Beatles’ earlier recording of “How Do You Do It?” in the can, and was considering making it their second single, but they returned to London with a renovated version of “Please Please Me” that was much better than the first time they tried it. Lennon later explained it was inspired by Roy Orbison’s “Only the Lonely,” and the first version was a slow ballad that Martin found “dreary.” Now, however — perhaps feeling pressure because they knew Martin wanted to release “How Do You Do It?” — the Beatles brought in a turbocharged uptempo version of “Please Please Me.” They did 18 takes of the song on November 26, 1962, before Martin was satisfied, but when the band came up to the control room afterwards, he told them, “Gentlemen, you have just made your first number one record.” His prediction was soon proved correct.

The single was released on January 11, 1963, and the Beatles made their first nationwide TV appearance eight days later, quickly pushing “Please Please Me” to the top of the charts. Seeing a chance to capitalize on this success, George Martin hastily arranged an all-day recording session for February 20, 1963, where in the span of about 12 hours, the Beatles recorded 10 songs which (along with the two singles and their respective B-sides) would comprise their first album, Please Please Me. That session yielded two classics, “I Saw Her Standing There” and a rave-up cover of the Isley Brothers’ “Twist & Shout” which became a crowd favorite during the band’s early concert tours. Released on March 22, the Beatles’ first LP almost immediately soared to No. 1 on the British charts.

Screaming for the Dominant Fifth

Even before the first album could be released, however, the Beatles had returned to Abbey Road on March 5 to record their next single, “From Me to You,” which was released on April 11 and was an even bigger hit than “Please Please Me.” This was the point where the “Beatlemania” phenomenon really began to break out in England, partly because of a clever trick in the bridge of “From Me to You.” The bridge works its way up to the dominant fifth chord as John and Paul harmonize on the phrase “keep you satisfied” then punctuate it by hitting a falsetto “ooh!” When they performed it in concerts, the Beatles would shake their heads on that falsetto note, which made their mop top haircuts flop around, and this absolutely drove girls crazy. That’s when screaming became ritualistic at Beatles concerts. You may be thinking, “What do screaming girls have to do with George Martin?” Remember I said he’d studied composition at Guildhall? Music theory, my friends, is involved with the way that a song’s chord progression can build up tension — peaking on the dominant fifth chord (G, in the key of C) — which is released by the return to the tonic (C) chord. This is what drove girls crazy.

“Beatlemania” in Manchester, England, 1963

Working with George Martin was an educational experience for the Beatles, and they were eager students. Martin himself said:

“I taught them the importance of the hook. You had to get people’s attention in the first ten seconds, and so I would generally get hold of their song and ‘top and tail’ it—make a beginning and end. . . . I would meet them in the studio to hear a new number. I would perch myself on a high stool and John and Paul would stand around me with their acoustic guitars and play and sing it. … Then I would make suggestions to improve it and we’d try it again.”

Martin was publicly modest about his contributions to the Beatles success, insisting it was due to their genius, not his. But there was a symbiotic relationship to it. While “From Me to You” was almost as simple as “Love Me Do,” Martin still insisted on six takes (plus overdubs) before he was satisfied with it. The next Beatles single — arguably the best of their early hits — again employed the trick of adding a falsetto whoop on the dominant fifth: “She loves you and you know you should glad — ooh!” If Beatlemania had been breaking out before “She Loves You” was released in August 1963, now it went pandemic. With its memorable “yeah yeah yeah” refrain, it broke every existing sales record for British singles, and remained on the UK charts for an astonishing 31 weeks. If it was George Martin who had taught the Beatles “the importance of the hook,” they had obviously aced the exam.

The Beatles had begun 1962 with that Decca audition session that flopped, when Lennon and McCartney were writing miserable dreck like “Hello Little Girl” and “Like Dreamer Do.” But by January 1963, they’d released what would become their first No. 1 hit, and swiftly followed up that success with their first album, as well as two more chart-topping hit singles. Before 1963 was over, they would release yet another No. 1 hit, “I Want to Hold Your Hand,” which would finally break them into the U.S. market, and by February 1964, they were on the Ed Sullivan show driving the American girls crazy with their falsetto whoops.

Getting rejected by Decca was surely disappointing for the Beatles when it happened, but because it ended up putting them under the tutelage of George Martin, it was the biggest break they ever got.



 

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FMJRA 2.0: 1973 World Series

Posted on | August 3, 2025 | Comments Off on FMJRA 2.0: 1973 World Series

— compiled by Wombat-socho

While I’m sorting through my roster trying to figure out which ten -I think it’s ten- players I want to keep*, the Cincinnati Reds are playing the Baltimore Orioles for all the marbles in Pete’s league. The Chicago Cubs (79-83) and Montreal Expos (66-96) are looking for new managers, so if you want to give Dynasty League baseball a try, you could do worse than take over one of these teams.
Ceterum autem censeo Silicon Valley et Hamas delendam sunt.

In fond remembrance of Wally The Beer Man (no, he’s not dead)

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Thanks to everyone for all the links!

*No offense to Pete, but the player retention rules really don’t seem like they were intended to cover situations where multiple teams are tied in terms of wins and losses.

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RussiaGate: ‘But I Didn’t Know Until This Day That It Was Hillary Clinton All Along’

Posted on | August 2, 2025 | 1 Comment

Of course I’m kidding. We’ve all known from the get-go who was really behind the “Russian collusion” hoax, but I just had to use that line from The Godfather now, because the release of the so-called Durham annex (previously classified evidence obtained by John Durham during his Special Counsel investigation) has finally proven what we’ve suspected. We have reached that “a-ha!” moment, like Don Corleone watching Barzini play puppet-master to Tattaglia in the meeting of the Five Families, where everything is now crystal clear.

Matt Taibbi, who has been covering this story for years, points out that it “has long been one of the most convoluted, hard-to-follow news stories of all time,” but the convolutions are now resolved:

Now, we know. With the help of the declassified Durham material, we can explain the whole affair in three brushstrokes.
One, Hillary Clinton and her team apparently hoped to deflect from her email scandal and other problems via a campaign tying Trump to Putin. Two, American security services learned of these plans. Three — and this is the most important part — instead of outing them, authorities used state resources to massively expand and amplify her scheme. The last stage required the enthusiastic cooperation and canine incuriosity of the entire commercial news business, which cheered as conspirators made an enforcement target of Trump, actually an irrelevant bystander.

It’s the motive that explains everything, you see. Too many people have forgotten — or, if they were getting their news from the mainstream media, never knew about — the scandal of Hillary’s private email server. As Secretary of State during the first term of Obama’s presidency, her official communications were covered by the Federal Records Act, but it was discovered that she had used “a private email server for official public communications rather than using official State Department email accounts maintained on federal servers.” The FBI investigated and found that at least 100 of these emails “contained information that should have been deemed classified at the time they were sent, including 65 emails deemed ‘Secret’ and 22 deemed ‘Top Secret.'”

Hillary Clinton broke the law and, in doing so, jeopardized national security. And then there were the more 30,000 deleted emails, which looks an awful lot like obstruction of justice to me, but I am not a lawyer.

That is the email scandal from which Hillary wanted to “deflect,” as Taibbi says, by ginning up the Trump-Russia hoax. It should not be confused with the DNC email leak (or “hack”), although the two are closely intertwined. What was the content of those emails?

The leaks resulted in allegations of bias against Bernie Sanders’s presidential campaign, in apparent contradiction with the DNC leadership’s publicly stated neutrality, as several DNC operatives openly derided Sanders’s campaign and discussed ways to advance Clinton’s nomination. Later reveals included controversial DNC–Clinton agreements dated before the primary, regarding financial arrangements and control over policy and hiring decisions. The revelations prompted the resignation of DNC chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz before the 2016 Democratic National Convention. The DNC issued a formal apology to Bernie Sanders and his supporters “for the inexcusable remarks made over email” that did not reflect the DNC’s “steadfast commitment to neutrality during the nominating process.” After the convention, DNC CEO Amy Dacey, CFO Brad Marshall, and Communications Director Luis Miranda also resigned in the wake of the controversy.

What the DNC emails showed was that the Democratic Party’s nominating process had been rigged in Hillary Clinton’s favor, which Bernie Sanders’ supporters had believed even before the emails were released by Wikileaks in July 2016. It had the effect of de-energizing a substantial fraction of the Democrats’ grassroots “base.” So these were two separate email scandals affecting Hillary’s campaign, both of which lent credibility to Trump’s “crooked Hillary” rhetoric, and the response from the Clinton team — the gambit that has since become known as RussiaGate — was to kill two birds with one stone, as it were. By claiming that the leaked DNC emails were “hacked” by Russian spies (a claim that has been asserted, rather than proven), Hillary used a DARVO (Deny, Attack, Reverse Victim and Offender) strategy. Instead of her being the perpetrator of wrongdoing, Hillary presented herself as being the victim of wrongdoing, targeted by the sinister Vladimir Putin, of whom Trump was accused of being an ally. This had the added benefit, as Taibbi says, of distracting from the scandal of Hillary’s illegal use of a private email server during her tenure as Secretary of State.

The revelations from the Durham annex, coming in the wake of other disclosures by Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Tulsi Gabbard, provide us with a very detailed understanding of how Team Hillary got the Obama administration’s intelligence community (IC) to support the “Russian collusion” narrative, which is how former DNI James Clapper, former CIA Director John Brennan and former FBI Director James Comey are involved, along with many others (e.g., Susan Rice) who participated in the corrupt conspiracy that is RussiaGate.

An interesting side note — adding another convolution to the saga — is how an operative from the George Soros organization suggested the idea of designating the (imaginary) Russian “election interference” as an attack on “critical infrastructure,” to justify invoking the Patriot Act. This is how the IC got into the business of censoring alleged “misinformation” on social media, to “fortify” elections against “interference.”

We thus arrive at the scene where the Godfather realizes “it was Barzini all along” and you know what that means. Eventually, someone must settle all family business, and Carlo gets handed an airplane ticket.



 

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In The Mailbox: 08.01.25

Posted on | August 2, 2025 | Comments Off on In The Mailbox: 08.01.25

— compiled by Wombat-socho

Thanks to everyone who bought stuff through my Amazon links in July. I do appreciate you!
Usual weekend deadlines for the usual weekend posts.
Ceterum autem censeo Silicon Valley et Hamas delendam sunt.

OVER THE TRANSOM
357 Magnum: Brandon Herrera on the Sig P320, also Don’t Bring a Machete to a Gunfight
Director Blue: Clinton Cash – The Graphic Novel
EBL: THE MOST RELUCTANT CONVERT – THE UNTOLD STORY OF C.S. LEWIS, Mashed Potato Time, Can GOP gain seats in the midterms? Will A.I. lead to Human Extinction? and Is Bigger Better? 
Twitchy: Democrat Neera Tanden Says Donks Should Be Trusted On “New” Immigration Plan, Oklahoma’s New “America First” Teacher Test For Blue State Refugees Is A Bold Plan To Keep The State Red , and Trump Dumps Biden BLS Hack For Fudging Job Numbers
Louder With Crowder: Failed candidate Kamala Harris shocks Stephen Colbert with word salad on why she won’t run for office again, also, Liberals are delivering caskets to GOP congressmen’s homes, and yes…their reasoning is stupid
Vox Popoli:Castalia and the Cost of Tariffs, I Stand Corrected, CIA vs FBI, and Shadows Ride mix
According To Hoyt: The Dreams Of The Past, Two Realities Not Even Vaguely Alike In Dignity, No Scapegoats, and In The Name Of Freedom
Jim McCoy: War Demons

RIPPED FROM THE HEADLINES
American Conservative: The Truth About the Indo-American Relationship
American Greatness: President Trump – Recognize Somaliland, Senator Cotton’s Bold Plan to Reform an Overstaffed Intelligence Behemoth, Biden-Appointed Judge Blocks Trump Admin From Revoking Protected Status From Migrants – Plays Race Card in Ruling, White House Press Secretary Slams Press Corps Over Silence On Russia Collusion Hoax Bombshells, and Police Officers Disciplined in Colorado For Sharing Info With ICE
American Thinker: Submission Accomplished – Europe Blinked. Trump (and America) Won
Animal Magnetism: Rule Five Bad Ideas Friday
BattleSwarm: LinkSwarm For August 1,
Behind The Black: B1M – Building the newest biggest neutrino telescope, Echostar issues contract to build satellites for direct-to-phone constellation, Russia desperately lobbies the U.S. to continue and expand its space partnership, and Endeavour launched successfully, carrying four astronauts to ISS
Cafe Hayek: More on Phil Gramm’s and My Book, “The Triumph of Economic Freedom”, also, There Was No “Spike” In the U.S. Trade Deficit That Could Legitimately Have Prompted Trump’s “Liberation Day” Punitive Taxes on Americans
CDR Salamander: Fullbore Friday
Don Surber: When I was young
First Street Journal: Even a Participation Trophy is Too Big a Burden for the Special Snowflakes™
Gates Of Vienna: Game of Thrones, Southeast Asian Style, also, We Don’t Want ’Em Back!
The Geller Report: Muslim Guard at U.S. Embassy in Norway Charged With Spying for Iran, Victims of UK Muslim Child Rape Gangs Were Then Victimized by Police, Trump Announces Sweeping New Global Tariffs, Media Censors Brutal Cincinnati Racist Beating While Democrats Cheer Savage Attackers, and EPA Chief Lee Zeldin to Repeal Obama’s $1 Trillion Green-Reg Machine
Hollywood In Toto: David Zucker Ends Personal War Against Naked Gun Reboot, Why Fantastic Four Fizzled the First Time Around, Variety, Hollywood Reporter Decry Left’s Sweeney Ad Outrage, and Fallon’s ‘Tonight Show’ Welcomes Fox News’ Greg Gutfeld?
Legal Insurrection: NY Times Essay Notes That Trump Isn’t the One Defying the Supreme Court, Exposing The Movement To Undermine MAGA, with James Lindsay, U Wisconsin-Madison Suspends SJP Chapter After Protest Causes Disruption, The Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Which Funds NPR and PBS, Will Close its Doors, and Judge Blocks Ending TPS Protections, Claims Trump Admin is Telling Illegal Aliens to ‘Purify Their Blood’
Matt Taibbi: No Doubt Left – Russiagate Was A Coverup, The NYT Can’t Stop Sucking, and FOIA Files, Russia Edition
Outkick: Kenny Dillingham’s Epic Rant After Arizona State Practice Would Make Nick Saban Proud, Could Diminutive QB McCae Hiilstead Win The BYU Starting QB Competition? It Happened Again – Another Dildo On The Court Stops Play In A WNBA Game, Josh Allen Praises Scottie Scheffler, Contradicts Tom Brady, and Paige Spiranac Wears PJs That’ll Have Boob-Hating Libs Sweating, Kay Adams Turns On Target & Kamala Said What? BONUS: Ranking Gas Stations Based On Sketchiness After Recent Wawa Shooting
Power Line: CPB is no more, Another fraud done gone, Lefties Losing It, and Thoughts from the ammo line 
Shark Tank: FSU Coed Suspended After Harassing Jewish Student In Viral Video
This Ain’t Hell: Valor Friday, UK knife control laws – gardener arrested in his own garden, More evidence of Team Hillary’s fabrication of the Russian collusion hoax, and Democrats keep having bad luck with polling
Victory Girls: Tim McBride in Congress: When Fantasy Gains Political Legitimacy
Watts Up With That: The Hill Allows a Clinton Crony to Lie About Climate Change Tearing Our Nation Apart, The Ongoing Fiction of Cheap Wind and Solar, Grid on the Brink – PJM’s Record Auction Proves We Must Keep—and Build—More Coal Plants, and Misuse, Misquote, or Just Misunderstood?
The Federalist: Immigration Crackdown Protects Americans From Murderers And Rapists Biden Released Into The Streets, Everything Damaging To Democrats Is ‘Russian Disinformation’ To The Media, Georgia Secretary Of State’s Office Hooks Up With Democrats To Disparage Election Integrity Grassroots, Justice Kavanaugh Highlights Separation Of Powers Issue Congress Keeps Making Worse, and Don’t Believe The Lies From NYT Russia Hoaxers About The Durham Annex
Mark Steyn: A Baroness on Barrenness

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