Beatles Success -- Why The Beatles Success Term Paper

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¶ … Beatles Success -- Why?

The Beatles success as a rock n' roll musical group has become so ubiquitous that it's almost an unquestioned fact of music history that the group was destined to propel itself to the top through sheer force of collective talent. In retrospect, it seems inevitable. But why did the Fab Four become such an integral part of contemporary music history?

One of the explanations for this may be found in the screaming response of American female teens upon the Ed Sullivan show -- the Beatles appeared, despite their working class Liverpool backgrounds to be nice, young respectable and respectful young men in ties whom could translate the rhythms and blues beat of African-American artists in a way that was catchy and successfully accessible and palatable, yet still had an undercurrent of illicit teenage sexuality. Also, they were funny -- "I'm a mocker," Ringo famously and cheekily replied, spoofing the Beatlemania phenomenon in a film that managed to both valorize the Beatles as artists and yet not take the worship of the group too seriously in the form of "A Hard Day's Night."

But by fusing Brit Pop with sexuality and rock n' roll, the Beatles highlighted a larger truth about themselves as a group -- they had an ability to plug into whatever cultural trope currently seized the heart and imagination of American teens and to make it into something artistic and interesting and unique, yet make it enough 'of the moment' that it could become popular. The integrated experience of the rock concert concept album, seamlessly transporting one song to another, for instance, was brilliantly realized in "Sergeant Pepper." The counterculture was brilliantly rendered into the band's later works, but still retaining the colorful and irreverent style that made them famous in the first place. Thus a constellation of timing, of cultural savvy, and sheer collective artistic brilliance all explains the Beatles success.

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