

And it all happened beside and on the church hall stage in the local village fete. What made their first meeting so deliciously intriguing was that in that first brief coming together, all the traits that we recognise in John and Paul, were tantalisingly glimpsed then too ambitious and competitive, musically inquisitive and open, single-minded and with a steely determination to pursue their own musical interests in their own way and on their own terms. He looked a bit like Elvis too and was clearly head and shoulders above everyone else in the group, maybe even him. He hid his admiration, but recognised that McCartney was good and had quite a musical repertoire, with tastes similar to his. At 16, John was over a year and half older than Paul. He correctly re-tuned it, turned it upside to be able to play it left-handed and treated the gang to an impromptu, word perfect, virtuoso performance of Eddie Cochran’s minor hit, 'Twenty Flight Rock'.Īfter playing a few other songs including one on piano in front of the stage too, it was John’s turn to be impressed.

When the group, together with Ivy and Paul, were all kicking their heels waiting for the evening’s performance in a small ante-room, just off from the stage, Paul, quite audaciously, asked for a ‘go’ on John’s guitar. They were his gang, no one could doubt or challenge that. John was clearly the leader of The Quarrymen. Paul and Ivy mooched about the fete until the evening, resolving to see them perform in the church hall. John looked great, certainly knew his music and had attitude. When he heard them perform the little-known doo-wop song 'Come Go With Me' by The Del Vikings, replete with John’s cleverly improvised lyrics, he was smitten. This group of schoolmates from Quarry Bank High School had some chutzpa. On the day of the fete, The Quarrymen first played in a field under the blue suburban skies of a glorious Woolton afternoon. For Paul, ever the diplomat, education could go on the back burner. Despite her hopes, the life of a ‘brummer striver’ - John’s description of miserable life in a hated job - was not for him. John’s Aunt Mimi expected him to pick a career. Once they heard Elvis taking that walk down lonely street into 'Heartbreak Hotel' in 1956 – a seismic event in their lives - they were mentally checking out of academia and dreaming of a world of music and thrills – a life in rock and roll. John and Paul were bright Grammar-school boys. And he thought there may just be some girls there too. They met because of their fierce passion for music. Weeks after Paul's 15th birthday he was invited by his school pal, Ivan ‘Ivy’ Vaughan, to see his mate John’s skiffle group, The Quarrymen, play at the local church fete. Although not exactly planned, this was no chance encounter. What makes that first meeting so momentous wasn’t just that they met, but how and why. Now at Wondrous Place gallery at Museum of Liverpool.

It’s difficult to think of a more un-rock-and-roll location than a suburban church hall stage and it’s even harder to think of a more profound moment in musical history. That meeting didn’t just change the lives of John and Paul, it was the spark that lit the creative touch paper on a cultural revolution that would reverberate around the world, reshaping popular music forever. But for me, it really all began the day John met Paul at St Peter’s Church Hall fete in Woolton on 6 July 1957. Some, like the Cavern, were hugely influential in launching the Fab Four to the toppermost of the poppermost. The Casbah Coffee Club, The Jacaranda Club, The Cavern Club, the seedy clubs of Hamburg, even Litherland Town Hall, all played a part. Many places can lay a very justifiable claim to be the birthplace of the Beatles phenomenon. That meeting didn’t just change the lives of John and Paul, it was the spark that lit the creative touch paper on a cultural revolution that would reverberate around the world, reshaping popular music forever.
